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Nexus One vs. Top 10 Phone Security Requirements

hiouridah writes "Consumer Grade or Enterprise Ready? The Nexus One is entering a smart phone market that is taking increasing heat from enterprises for their lack of robust security features. So how does the Nexus One stack up?"

4 of 189 comments (clear)

  1. N1 vs Iphone by Karganeth · · Score: 4, Informative

    521MB RAM vs 256MB RAM
    800x480 vs 480x320
    1Ghz vs 600Mhz
    5MP vs 3MP
    AMOLED vs TFT

    To top it off the nexus one is a slimmer device. Need I say anymore? The iPhone is no longer king! Hoorah!

  2. For those who don't want to skim TFA by DJRumpy · · Score: 4, Informative

    Screen Lock (including gestures to unlock in addition to alphanumeric codes)
    VPN support
    Standard Wireless Support (Wireless-N as well which is nice)
    Application Sandboxing
    Lacks Corporate Policy Enforcement (fail for enterprise)
    Application Signing - Doesn't require trusted signers which defeats the purpose
    No hardware encryption (fail for enterprise)
    No Remote Wipe (fail for enterprise)

    IMO, the phone definitely seems ready for the home user, but is very lacking for enterprise

  3. King? iPhone Is The 3rd Place Phone by MediaStreams · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://www.intomobile.com/2009/11/12/apple-iphone-takes-third-place-in-q3-global-smartphone-sales.html

    Nokia is the king.
    RIM behind them.

    And finally Apple in third place. So, no, Apple and iPhone isn't the king of anything in the cellphone market.

  4. Nexus One vs iPhone 3Gs vs. N900 by Hurricane78 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I’m sure if you ask the Japanese, they will laugh in your face. But a quick comparison:

    Nexus One vs iPhone vs. N900

    CPU: 1GHz Qualcomm SnapDragon | 600 Mhz ARM Cortex-A8 + PowerVR SGX | 600 MHz ARM Cortex-A8 + PowerVR SGX
    RAM: 512MB | 256MB | 1GB
    Display: 800x480 AMOLED | 480x320 TFT | 800x480 TFT
    Camera: 5 MP, LED flash | 3 MP, no flash | 5 MB + 0.3 MP (dual), LED flash | (All without optical zoom, which in this day and age, is pathetic.)
    Storage: 4 GB + unlimited | 16 GB (fixed) | 32 GB + unlimited
    Battery: 1400 mAh | 1219 mAh (non-removable) | 1320 mAh | (all 3.7 V li-ion)
    Input: capacitive touchscreen + trackball | multi-touch touchscreen | resistive touchscreen + 38-key backlit keyboard
    OS: Android | iPhone OS | Maemo Linux
    Dimensions: 119 * 59.8 * 11.5 mm | 115.5 * 62.1 * 12.3 mm | 110.9 * 59.8 * 18 mm
    Java support: yes | no | yes
    GPS: They all got A-GPS and Wi-Fi triangulation is possible with a software. Although from what I heard, the iPhone has that software built-in. (I bought it for 3€ for my Nokia, so not much trouble there.)
    Ability to put on it and do with it what you want: likely | locked down | absolutely
    FM radio: no | no | yes

    That’s about the differences I could make out. I hope this gives a better picture. I tried to stay unbiased. (And I’m sure I will draw hate for this. ;) As always: No guarantees.

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.