Samsung Galaxy Nexus

The Samsung Galaxy Nexus is a big step forward for Android, but it's not the giant leap you may have been expecting. Impressive as it is, Ice Cream Sandwich can be messy — and without it, the Galaxy Nexus is just another Android device.… Read full review

Typical price: £429
Editors' rating:
  • 8.7 out of 10
8.7 out of 10
User rating:
  • 8.1 out of 10
8.1 out of 10

Pros

  • Adds a ton of new and very welcome features with Ice Cream Sandwich
  • Sharp design
  • Gorgeous screen
  • Fantasic internal performance

Cons

  • Ice Cream Sandwich has eliminated some of Android's learning curve in some aspects, just to recreate it in others
  • Some static on calls
  • Handset feels rather fragile

Every once in a while, a phone comes along that changes the mobile industry forever. Whether it's by design, features or a combination of both, those rare handsets can stand out far from the pack and give the world something new and something very different. The Samsung Galaxy Nexus is not one of those phones. Sure, it's groundbreaking and will even incite the occasional gasp of awe — but like a gymnast having a bad day, it just misses the high bar.

Now before you send an angry response, consider this: Absolutely, Ice Cream Sandwich (ICS) does a lot to refine Android and make it come of age. When we first saw Google unveil the seemingly endless feature list last month in Hong Kong, ICS looked sleek, glossy and fantastic.

Now that we have it in our hands, it is indeed hot — but it's also a hot mess. Without a doubt, the new features are welcome and the interface is pretty, but it also can feel cluttered, disjointed and overly complicated. So while it pushes Android a big step forward, it doesn't fix all of Android's problems.

Set the OS aside and you're left with an attractive and familiar device. The display is rich and the profile is trim, but students of Samsung's Galaxy range will recognise the design. Likewise, while the features are admirable, nothing outside of ICS blows us away. Thankfully, though, internal performance is excellent so far and call quality (over T-Mobile's [US] network) up to par.

Design
A few years ago, we used to joke that Nokia kept building the same phone design while slightly tweaking it for each subsequent model. These days, however, we're more likely to apply that jest to Samsung. Ever since the company started making Galaxy devices last year, many of them have looked a lot alike. Indeed, the Galaxy Nexus has much in common with its predecessors, especially last year's Nexus S (a Galaxy device in all but name).

You'll see the same dark colour, tapered edges, and 'contour' shape that's supposed to follow the curve of your head. The handset is large (67.94mm wide by 135.5mm deep) so it may be too much for some users to handle. Samsung, however, has squeezed off as much as it could to make it extra thin (8.94mm).

The Galaxy Nexus fits comfortably in the hand (as long as you have large paws), but it feels too fragile

It's eye-catching yes, but like other Samsung phones before it, the Galaxy Nexus also feels too fragile in the hand, even at 135g. Here again we fear that we have to be extra careful not to drop it even once on a hard surface. A case is an option, but that would fatten up the phone. The 'hyperskin' material on the back cover adds some texture, but it's not quite the Kevlar material that's on Motorola's Droid Razr.

On the right side you'll find a power control/lock button and three metal contacts that will be used for a future dock accessory. Over on the left side is the volume rocker and on the bottom end are the Micro-USB charge/syncing port and the 3.5mm headset jack. We'd prefer if the jack were in a different place. The camera lens and flash sit towards the top of the back cover.

The Galaxy Nexus has a 4.65in. screen, measures 67.94mm by 135.5mm by 8.94mm and weighs 135g

Display & interface
The display measures 4.65in. across the diagonal, although on the home screen, only 4in. of that space is usable given the programmable shortcut tray that sits at the bottom (the tray also shows up on some, but not all, internal screens). Even with that quirk, the display is plenty big for a smartphone — but not quite big enough for ICS, as we'll explain in the ICS section.

With a 1,280-by-720-pixel HD resolution, the Super AMOLED display is wonderfully bright and vivid with eye-popping colours. Everything looks great, from graphics to photos to menu icons, and you can customise the five home screens with the Google Search bar, menu icons and widgets. ICS brings new folders and new widgets, but we'll get to those later. The main menu shows the traditional icons, and internal menus have the familiar list structure. This is a clean, elegant design that especially shines in the texting and email apps, where it's simple to append an attachment, audio, video and photos. Bravo, Google.

Like other Nexus devices, the Galaxy Nexus has a pure Android interface that's not marred by a manufacturer or carrier skin. It's great for users and developers alike as it lets Android's true glory shine through. Developers also will love the dedicated 'Developer options' in the main menu, which offers access to such features as showing CPU usage, setting a background process limit and activating a visual feedback for the touch-screen. Truly, personalisation options like these set Android apart.

Although we were hoping it would be different, the Galaxy Nexus still has that slight laggy effect that we've seen on other Android phones. Indeed, you'll notice it here when scrolling through lists. It's better than we've seen on previous models, so it doesn't ruin the touch interface, but you do notice the difference when switching from an iOS or Windows Phone 7 device. You can change the brightness, backlight time and font size. The display also has an accelerometer, which you can turn off, a proximity sensor and a light sensor.

At the very bottom sit three touch controls for moving backward through a menu or feature, returning to the Home screen and opening your list of recently viewed screens. Yes, you lose the dedicated search button that's on earlier Android phones, but that's a trait that the Galaxy Nexus inherited from Honeycomb (the search field is available in almost every native app and home screen). And as in Honeycomb, these ICS controls will fade in some apps to three points of light, until you tap them again. What's more, the controls rotate 90 degrees when you tip the phone's orientation.

Touch this new navigation button to see the apps you recently opened

Otherwise there are no physical controls on the front of the phone. Yet, you'll notice a glowing indicator light when you have a call and receive messages, email or notifications. Besides it being rather soothing, we're just glad it's there since that was a big omission on the Nexus S.

The virtual keyboard takes up the whole width of the display, whether you're using it in portrait or landscape mode. The primary screen has three rows of alphabetic keys with main punctuation just above. On the bottom row there's a huge spacebar in the centre with a voice-activation key just to the left (when entering an email address an '@' key takes its place). You'll need to click through to the additional keyboard for more punctuation and numbers, but the keyboard is spacious and easy to use. Unfortunately, it does not support Swype. The dialpad shows huge numbers, but tiny text.

Basic features
The phone book size is limited by the available memory. Each entry holds multiple fields for phone numbers, as well as email and street addresses, a company name and title, an instant-messaging handle, a birthday, a nickname, a URL and notes. You can pair contacts with a photo and organise them into groups. Unfortunately, pairing individual contacts with one of the 25 polyphonic ringtones is another non-obvious feature. You'll have to open the person's profile 'card', then tap into the Menu to set the ringtone or send all calls to voice mail.

Of course, the Galaxy Nexus has all of the other essentials you'd expect from a smartphone, like text and multimedia messaging, email syncing (both Gmail and not), calendar syncing (both Google and not), a calculator, an alarm clock plus a news and weather widget. Also on-board are Bluetooth 2.0 (with A2DP), Wi-Fi (802.11 a/b/g/n), a download and file manager, PC syncing and USB mass storage. The speaker-independent voice commands let you do just about anything using only your voice. They work fine as long as you speak clearly and use the phone in a place without a lot of background noise.

Google features and appsbr> Google fans have plenty of Google apps and services to use and explore. The list is no different from the handset's Nexus ancestors, but they're worth repeating. There's Google Talk, YouTube, Google Search (with voice), Google Latitude, Google Places, Google+, Google Maps with Navigation and Google Messenger.

Maps also gets a little more 3D treatment with ICS. Zoom in far enough (with two fingers) and you'll see the buildings start to get some 3D shape. Glide two fingers up and down the screen to tilt the screen for a better view.

GPS features performed well, although we were a little wary given the GPS issues that have plagued previous Samsung Galaxy devices. On the first try it located us about a block away from CNET's offices, which is normal. On the second try, however, it pinpointed our location precisely. For the best experience, you should activate Wi-Fi and the GPS location feature in the Settings menu. The Galaxy Nexus has a gyroscope and a compass and a big leg up over the iPhone: it supports real-time turn-by-turn voice directions out of the box. The built-in barometer could be partially to thank; its purpose on the Galaxy Nexus is to assist with GPS locking.

With a pure Google experience, you have the freedom to use whichever apps you want through the Android Market. What's more, you can use non-Market titles, as well. Just keep in mind that the Galaxy Nexus has just 32GB of internal memory. Yes, that's a lot, but we say 'just' because the Galaxy Nexus lacks an external memory card slot.

Camera, video & music
The main camera has a 5-megapixel resolution, but you also can shoot in 3 megapixels, 1.3 megapixels, QVGA and VGA. There's also a front-facing 1.3-megapixel camera for photos and video calls.

The cameras come with a fair, but not overwhelming, set of editing options while taking the photo (more options are available in the photo gallery). You'll find a digital zoom, face detection, location tagging, four white-balance choices, seven exposure settings, and four 'scene' modes (action, night, sunset and party). The flash on the rear side is powerful to a fault. In dim environments it can wash out the lighter colours. You can set the flash to auto, keep it always on or turn it off completely.

ICS brings a host of camera improvements, which we'll discuss in more detail below. We'll say here, though, that the lack of shutter lag is remarkable. In fact, when took the first photo, we didn't realise that the shutter had closed. Believe us when we say it's really that quick.

We're glad to see Google investing in photo-editing tools

More interesting and useful in our eyes is the full suite of built-in editing tools in the photo gallery: cropping, red-eye reduction, face glow, straightening, rotating, flipping and sharpening. There are also effects you can add like warmth, saturation and sepia tones. In total, there are 16 colour and style effects, and another four options for adjusting lighting. Google could have easily stopped short and continued to let the manufacturers add their own filters, but on-board editing makes the Android OS that much stronger on its own.

The camcorder shoots clips in three resolutions: 1080p HD, 720p HD and 480p. You can adjust the white balance, use the flash as a recording light, and ICS added zooming while recording and several time-lapse intervals, from 1.5 seconds up to 10 seconds. Exactly how much you can record will depend on the available memory.

If you really want to get creative, the camcorder has several effects that will add some zaniness to your videos. Some of the options are nothing but fun (the sunset, disco and space effects will add a background to your clips), but others are weird and pretty freaky. For example, a 'big nose' effect will give your subject an enormous hooter (see also 'big mouth' and 'big eyes').

Photo quality on the Galaxy Nexus was mixed. Our standard studio shot showed muted colours

Photo quality at this early stage was satisfying, but colour accuracy was uneven. In some shots the brighter hues were faded, while in other pictures, we had too much saturation. We'll be testing the camera in more detail over the next couple of days and we'll report back.

Videos were a mixed bag. HD clips were crisp and bright, although quick motions were blurry. Lower-res clips are usable in a pinch, but nothing appropriate for your wedding. The Galaxy Nexus also has an integrated Movie Studio app for creating your own video projects.

When you're not using the camera, the Galaxy Nexus has a Slacker radio app and a music player (MP3 and AAC files) that's linked in with the new Google Music. Features aren't extensive, but it's easy to use and loading music on the phone is a seamless process, either wirelessly or using a USB cable. [NB: Google Music is currently only available in the US.]

We love the new video rental store that operates through the Android Market. We haven't plowed through the store completely, but the selection appears to be broad and the prices (which start at £2.49) are fair. In any case, an easy way to get videos is something Android has badly needed for a long time. Google Books also gives you access to plenty of titles.

Browser
The basic shell of the web browser is the same, though ICS adds 'Request desktop site', which opens the full version of a web site and syncs with your bookmarks. You also can save web pages offline, view your browsing history, share a page, find text on a page and use up to 16 tabs. And in true Android fashion, you can change the browser's settings down to the smallest detail. All of this adds up to make a useful and powerful mobile browser that's very much like one you'd use on a computer.

Another new feature is an 'incognito' mode that allows you to browse pages without them appearing on your history or search bar and without leaving traces like cookies. Third-party apps have done this before, but now Google has baked it right into the browser.

Even with all the new features, the browser user experience doesn't feel too different. The interface isn't cluttered and it doesn't involve a learning curve. Both mobile and full versions of web pages look great. There's pinch-to-zoom multitouch, you can change the text size, and you can change how far you'd like to zoom when you double-tap.

(Continued)

Specifications

Audio
Audio input microphone
Audio output speaker, stereo headset
Voice recording capability Yes
Connectivity / expansion
Wired connections Micro USB 2.0
Wireless PAN Bluetooth 3.0
Wireless LAN 802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n
Wireless WAN GSM 850, GSM 900, GSM 1800, GSM 1900, GPRS, EDGE, 3G, HSPDA
GPS receiver yes
Other Near Field Communication (NFC)
Display
Display type OLED
Display size 4.65 in
Native resolution 1280x720 pixels
General
Built-in devices camera, GPS receiver, phone
Dimensions (W x H x D) 67.94x8.94x135.5 mm
Weight 135 g
Input devices
Touchscreen Yes
Miscellaneous
Accessories AC adapter, stereo headset
Cables Micro-USB 2.0
OS & software
Software included Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich)
Power
Battery type Li-ion
Claimed battery life 17.6 h
Memory
Installed ROM 16384 MB
Processor
Clock speed 1229 MHz
Expand

Images

Samsung Galaxy Nexus

Member reviews

You’re trying to sabotage this review, and I don’t know if you’re doing it consciously or subconsciously. But it’s pretty clear from your tone that you wanted to make the phone sound way worse than it actually is (ex. mentioning a limit, as in “the phone book size is limited”, when it’s impossible for anyone on God’s green Earth to reach that limit, and thus irrelevant and not worth mentioning that one exists – as I am 100% sure neither of you mentioned it in your iPhone 4/4S review). You’ve taken nitpicking to such an extreme level, there’s really no other way to point out all the bias in your review except with bullet points.

- your iPhone never stuttered while scrolling through 100+ contacts? My iPhone 4 has, plenty of times; never jailbroken, never “stressed” it in any way, always running the latest version of iOS. Guess yours (and other tech reviewers, curiously) is special.

- Swype not being supported is Swype’s own fault, for not updating the app. SwiftKey is running fine on ICS, yet you’re faulting Google/Samsung for the “omission”. Adobe Flash doesn’t work either, because Adobe hasn’t updated it for ICS yet, but I don’t see you blaming Google for that. Actually, I don’t see you mentioning it at all. Did you even pick up the phone? I find it odd that you’ve written a review for it, considering that you haven’t even used the browser long enough to have visited a single website with Flash content on it.

- you need huge text on the dialpad? Really? Neither of you knows that 1 is for voicemail, 2 is abc, 3 is def, 8 is tuv, etc.? And you’re reviewing mobile phones?

- the phonebook size “limit”.

- where else would you like the contact-specific options to be, if not in the specific contacts’ profiles? Perhaps have them as a nice, interminably long list in the settings menu?

- Google’s Voice Actions feature works fine “as long as you speak clearly and use the phone in a place without a lot of background noise” – as opposed to what? Siri, who’ll understand you when your speech is slurred and you’re in the middle of Grand Central Station? Another excellent example of painting a grimmer picture than an objective reviewer would.

- it has Bluetooth 3.0, not 2.0; you said so yourself in the tech specs at the end of the “review”.

- not bias, just irksome (coming from someone who’s supposed to know a thing or two about Android): 3D maps that work exactly as you described them have been available since Gingerbread and Maps 5.0; do your research (whichever one of you flunked here)

- which mobile OS’ camera offers more shooting options than ICS? Certainly not iOS or Windows Phone.

- not going to touch the camera quality review, since you said you’d revisit that; however, your standard studio shot is in an extremely poorly lit environment (considering its purpose).

- the music player supports more than 2 formats, including MP3, WAV, eAAC+, AC3; it also features an equalizer (which is a new addition to Android).

- you failed to mention that the browser automatically syncs your Chrome bookmarks, you didn’t even mention text reflow (which is sorely lacking in iOS, _still_);

- you didn’t even casually mention a ton of new features, including: the new black and blue aesthetic (which will save battery with AMOLED screens), the new system font, the redesigned system settings menu, resizable widgets, the new lock screen, canned messages you can send when you reject a call, face unlock, any of the new system-wide interface design changes that make Android feel more organic and intuitive (swipe notifications, browser tabs and open apps away, swipe between multiple Google Chat conversations or Gmail emails, unified Social Networking & contacts, integration of tens of popular apps into send/share menus), the improved Calendar (which as of now far surpasses iOS’ calendar app) and Gmail apps, simple and intuitive folder creation, the improved keyboard, inline voice-to-text, the in-built data monitoring, panorama mode.

Great review.

Member's rating:
  • 3.00 out of 10
3.00 out of 10
StefanTM 21 November, 2011 20:22
Reply

What StefanTM said

Member's rating:
  • 2.00 out of 10
2.00 out of 10
johnafish 22 November, 2011 00:18
Reply

Totally agree with StefanTM, and to add insult to injury, the rating that you can click on, is a rating of the device, not the article. The device deserves a 9 and the article deserves a .5

bglover83 22 November, 2011 00:47
Reply
Member's rating:
  • 10.00 out of 10
10.00 out of 10
bglover83 22 November, 2011 00:48
Reply

Actually, I just noticed the second page of the review - which appears after the specifications and device gallery. Apparently I wasn't the only one that missed it, but apologies are in order nonetheless. Still, in the future, do what every other reviewer does in the case of multi-page reviews: add an "After the break we dive into [x]", "Be sure to check out page two of the review for an in-depth look at [y]" or similar line.

/ashamed

22 November, 2011 06:02
Reply
Member's rating:
  • 10.00 out of 10
10.00 out of 10
danielcrawford 22 November, 2011 14:05
Reply
Member's rating:
  • 10.00 out of 10
10.00 out of 10
bigtruth2011 22 November, 2011 14:09
Reply
Member's rating:
  • 10.00 out of 10
10.00 out of 10
22 November, 2011 14:10
Reply
Member's rating:
  • 10.00 out of 10
10.00 out of 10
pyrocorp 23 November, 2011 16:15
Reply

It's obvious without any doubt that the reviewer is being paid by Apple. It's a sham that the PC Magazine has lower itself and it's impartiality. I shall never even consider looking at any of it's publications as they are already tarnished after this article about the Samsung Galaxy Nexus. It begs the question whether this magazine is discriminating against people of the east? My rate cannot be quantified as its in a negative state?

TonyCarlton 7 April, 2012 19:39
Reply
Member's rating:
  • 10.00 out of 10
10.00 out of 10
Marco_71 27 April, 2012 11:29
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