Nexus 5 With Android 4.4 and Snapdragon 800 Challenges Apple A7 In Benchmarks
MojoKid writes "One of the hallmark features of Google's Nexus 5 flagship smartphone by LG isn't its bodaciously big 5-inch HD display, its 8MP camera, or its "OK Google" voice commands. That has all been done before. What does stand out about the Nexus 5 is Google's new Android 4.4 Kit Kat OS and LG's SoC (System on Chip) processor of choice, namely Qualcomm's Snapdragon 800 quad-core. Qualcomm is known for licensing ARM core technology and making it their own; and Qualcomm's latest Krait 400 quad-core along with the Adreno 330 GPU that comprise the Snapdragon 800, is a powerful beast. Google also has taken the scalpel to Kit Kat in all the right places, whittling down the overall footprint of the OS, so it's more efficient on lower-end devices and also offers faster multitasking. Specifically memory usage has been optimized in a number of areas. Couple these OS tweaks with Qualcomm's Snapdragon 800 and you end up with a smartphone that hugs the corners and lights 'em up on the straights. Putting the Nexus 5 through its paces, it turns out preliminary figures are promising. In fact, the Nexus 5 actually was able to surpass the iPhone 5s with Apple's 64-bit A7 processor in a few tests and goes toe to toe with it in gaming and graphics." Ars Technica has a similarly positive view of the hardware aspects of the phone, dinging it slightly for its camera but otherwise finding little to fault.
Thank you for being a friend
Traveled down the road and back again
Your heart is true, you're a pal and a cosmonaut.
And if you threw a party
Invited everyone you knew
You would see the biggest gift would be from me
And the card attached would say, thank you for being a friend.
New phone almost as fast as month old phone.
Holy crap, a brand newly released phone is nearly as fast as a phone that's already been out for a month? It's amazing!
Bragging about needing a quad-core SoC to match the A7. Oh fandroids...
This is not a fair comparison, the iPhone is twice the price.
Apple fanbois should keep in mind some important numbers as well. The iPhone 5s has a resolution of 1136x640, whereas top end Android phones are at 1920x1080. So even where a droid loses slightly to the iPhone, it's also pushing close to 3x the number of pixels (2,073,600 / 727,040 ~ 2.85). So while the iZealots like to boast numbers, they won't like it if benchmarks start including a "reduce to iPhone resolution" option for the Android versions...
Call me old fashion.
For me, a can opener *is* a can opener. Oh, maybe you can attach a bottle cap opener onto it. The result is still an "opener".
Similarly, a phone is a phone, something that we dial a number and then we talk to it.
If it's a good phone the sound would be crystal clear.
If it's a beautiful phone it would come in a rainbow of colors.
As I said, I'm old fashion. Nowadays the world has changed so much that we have professional writers writing articles *** benchmarking phones *** !
What'll be the next gadget we gonna benchmark next ?
Can cum bottle cap openers ?
Baby carriages ?
Or even Tampons ??
They are both very nice phones. There. I said it.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
Qualcomm's latest Krait 400 quad-core along with the Adreno 330 GPU that comprise the Snapdragon 800, is a powerful beast.
If they had not focused much on the specs, but rather on battery life that can last a day of average use, I'd be happier. I ask my self: -
"Of what use is having the"latest and greatest if by mid-afternoon, I will be holding a brick in hand?
This is what I do to these good phones that are limited in the battery department. I underclock them with acceptable results.
By the way: Can one explain to me how Motorola was able to cram a 3000mAH into a phone smaller than this but Google and its LG partner cannot?
need you8 help!
So can get a supported version of Kit Kat on all past versions of my Nexus Phones?
NSA/Google fucking sucks.
... something better than my old HTC 3G EVO that runs latest android for a decent price? I'm switching to Ting and don't mind buying behind the curve, but it's not easy to get something at the same budget I'm used to when I get the phone(s) mostly subsidized from Sprint. Maybe I'm looking at the wrong review sites to find a peppy cheap android.
Horror & SciFi Erotic Nudes
The original iPhone caught on because it could play DRM iTunes.
You know, I don't think I've ever seen as horribly misguided a reason for the adoption of the iPhone as that one.
By your logic, the Motorola ROKR would have been a smash hit.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Android Apps are actually portable (unlike iPhone apps)
Given the screen sizes of modern Android phones I'd say iPhone apps are actually quite a lot more portable. :-)
less hostile to develop for
Because good tooling is inherently bad for your health, just like using hammers is far inferior to the strength-building task of pounding in nails with railroad ties.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
We ran Sunspider (1.0.2).
The iPhone 5S (and a Nokia Lumia 920) pasted my Nexus 5 on Sunspider. Both were about twice as fast as the Nexus 5.
I like the Nexus 5, it's very snappy. But when using it, it doesn't feel faster than a 5S.
The N5 is a heck of a value.
Now, about the awful pictures it takes... Is there any chance a better camera app (which also sucks) can improve them some?
http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/8/20/95
iPhone 5 got its ass handed to it due to the weak CPU in it.
Weak CPU, or weak physics engine that didn't use OpenCL or the Accelerate framework...
In fact the benchmark technical guide says explicitly:
The GPU load is kept as low as possible to ensure that only the CPUâ(TM)s capabilities are stressed.
Which is a really stupid way to compare things as anything that relied on advanced physics would be using some kind of accelerator for computation other than the CPU. It also means it's not using any of the real-world physics engines a game would be using.
Sure the iPhone Physics score will be down a lot if you tie both hands behind its back and throw it in a river.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
So can get a supported version of Kit Kat on all past versions of my Nexus Phones?
Google said there's an 18 month update window, and anything Nexus than the Nexus 4 (like the Galaxy Nexus) won't get Kitkat:
https://support.google.com/nexus/answer/3468085
Is Google releasing Android 4.4 as a system update for Galaxy Nexus?
No, Galaxy Nexus phones won’t be receiving the update for Android 4.4 (KitKat).
Why isn’t Galaxy Nexus receiving the update to Android 4.4?
Galaxy Nexus, which first launched two years ago, falls outside of the 18-month update window when Google and others traditionally update devices.
The iPhone might not be any better (I don't know and don't care) but that's fucking pathetic.
The iPhone might not be any better (I don't know and don't care) but that's fucking pathetic.
As a Galaxy Nexus owner (who just bought a Nexus 5) I agree, an 18 month update window is pretty bad in an industry where 2 year contracts are common. There is a petition to get Google to release Kitkat for the Galaxy Nexus, but behind the scenes, Google is blaming it on TI:
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1035_3-57610844-94/galaxy-nexus-owners-petition-for-taste-of-kitkat/
And one with private parts possessing a particularly desirable physical attribute.
... crapware phone. If that is all you have done, and you are down to 58% then you have nothing but crapware.
When it comes to taking photos, the key is in the lens. Cheap lens will produce crappy images no matter how much you auto-photoshop them.
The Nexus comes with only 18 months of support.
KatKrap isn't broadly available.
If you actually RTF, you'll see the 5s wasn't tested uniformly but it killed the Nexus 5 in several performance tests, including battery life.
I have owned iPhones since the iPhone4. I currently own the iPhone 5. My wife owns the Nexus 5. I can tell you that there is *** NO LAG *** on either the Nexus 5 or the iPhone 5. They are equally fast, both very smooth and instantaneous response times. Both phones are very, very sweet.
The iPhone 5 presentation is slightly nicer, but for the price??? The Nexus 5 is king. There is NO comparison. When you consider the cost difference, Apple gets kicked to the curb.
My initial thoughts? I love the new IOS7 - particularly the new control center - where I can easily turn off my WIFI when away from home, to save battery life. But I love Android's ability to just copy your song collection where you want, when you want. I FUCKING HATE HATE HATE iTunes with a passion - it makes Windows 8 look like an Adonis. If they made a vaccum cleaner suck as hard as iTunes does, you'd have cornered the market and destroyed all competition. It really is that much of a steaming pile of shit. Kill it with fire. iTunes is about the only Achilles heel left for Apple.
The iPhone might not be any better (I don't know and don't care) but that's fucking pathetic.
iPhone 3GS shipped with iOS 3.0 in June 17, 2009.
Final iOS update was 6.1.3 in March 19, 2013.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IOS_version_history
That is 45 months. (Past performance does not guarantee future results.)
Please recommend good applications. I bought a Nexus 5, because I recently dropped my previous smartphone. But what do I do with it?
Google also has taken the scalpel to Kit Kat in all the right places, whittling down the overall footprint of the OS
What was problem with Linux in Android 4.3? Operating System footprint was very small, just ~300KB of storage and little over 1MB of RAM. So seriously, how much they really got down Linux operating system footprint in Android 4.4 as it gains so much notice?
It's even simpler than that. Upgrade to Xcode 5, do a Archive build to send it to the App Store and it'll include a 64 bit version with no programmer intervention. Apple is really confident in the compatibility of their LLVM builds. If nothing else, you should get in the habit of testing in the 64 bit simulator until you get an A7 device.
Yeah, that is the reason. The OMAP programme is simply gone - everyone's been sacked, and they've all been EOLed. Ti's drivers are closed, and with no official support, and no source release, there's no-one to update them for any version of Linux past 3.0 (someone's got them booting - barely - on 3.4, but you can forget 3.13).
You can see it in the AOSP builds, which you definitely can build for the maguro - it's all good, except the graphics, which periodically corrupt (especially in screen rotations) and after a while that causes the GPU to freeze, the watchdog kicks in and the phone resets.
You CAN run KitKat on the Galaxy Nexus, but it's not stable - and it will take a LOT of work to get it stable - possibly work modifying or working around blind binary blobs. (This is yet another reason why blind binary blobs are bad.)
I'm waiting past the Nexus 5: non-removable battery in a developer phone is an absolute dealbreaker. What if I get an Oops and the watchdog doesn't kick in? That happens maybe twice a month for me... plus what I do requires batteries out of phones sometimes - which mandates phones with removable batteries, period.
I want an ARMv8 in my phone, whether it be a Cortex or Qualcomm's take on it (Apple's is actually a surprisingly vanilla, machine-laid-out, first pass). I dearly hope that things settle down a bit so the ARMv8 SoCs don't have the terrible problem previous versions did with kludgey hardware support and needing out-of-tree Linux forks.
> "and Qualcomm's latest Krait 400 quad-core"
That's better than Apple's latest Kreetle 400 duo-core!
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
Now waiting for a price. Hope it shouldn't cost as much as Iphone.
Every purchase has an emotional dimension. Judging by my friends who own iPhones, I'd say it is considerably higher than average in this case. One even said he decided not to buy another iPhone, but went ahead and did it anyway. He couldn't explain why, and seemed totally happy with that.
May have got 6 bit didn't get all the features including tethering. So a Clayton's update.
I find it hilarious that they are trying to benchmark CPUs using javascript on *different* browsers. Do they not realise that the javascript performance of Chrome is radically different than Safari?
lots of people claimed that it didn't really matter because nobody is interested in benchmarks. And now we have this whole article and huge discussions because of benchmark results. Quite interesting.
Any opinions whether benchmarks matter or not are welcome. On the other hand, there was an old joke about a potential customer asking what was the horse power and top speed of a Rolls Royce. Answer: "Enough".
if you, as a company specializing in soc design, cant crush a chip released half a year ago, you should step up your game. especially when the number of chips you move is so high. apple did a "by-hand" design. if thats what it takes to maximize power efficiency and performance, do that. but do it better. if i buy a tent made by Jeep (yes, i really used to own one), or a television made by Ford (yes, my neighbor did back in 1994 maybe) i will not expect it be as good as proper specialty team designed products
My major p is to have tool whoose power house can serve.. else it equals crap!!! Something Similar
Can we put this in the "don't give a rats ass" category please.
Find a job you love, and never work a day in your life.
Wow, you're so far stuck up Google's ass, you can't see that Apple might actually be better from a developers perspective.
I'm also a developer, but a web app developer, and My God, Android was an outright nightmare...
We finished the iOS app _MONTHS_ before and launched it.
Android behaved exactly like IE6, it was a nightmare, the UI and app behaviour was a nightmare... after countless head-screaming meetings about why we couldn't launch for Android, and after pulling my hair out and fixing for one or two popular android handsets at the time... I resigned altogether.
To this day, they're only been able to make the app work for a small subset of Android devices - namely the popular S2/S3/and S4, along with one HTC device.
I'm now back to java web app development for desktops, but if I was to step back in the mobile world... there's no way I'm going near Android, in the same sense I don't go near IE6.