Wednesday, January 4, 2012

LG Nitro HD Review Phones.

One in the mood for at the Nitro HD and you could almost insist that it was a Samsung Galaxy S II, but bigger. With a 4.5" demonstrate (and 5.27" tall), the Nitro is a Amazon amidst phones, though not as big as the Galaxy Nexus. It doesn’t come with the updated Android operating system, 4.0; LG a substitute opted for 2.3.5 and their own software overlay. With a 1.5GHz dual pith processor, users get the fastest CPU on the market, but it drives the older OS.



Considering the only phone today with 4.0 is the Nexus, it doesn’t wise get off on a big deal. The rank of the phone, however, makes the Nitro a unreliable trick in too many ways.






With a very wholly build, the Nitro HD is designed to adapted in the sack easily, and it does. It’s one of the few phones that comfortably slides in and out of bags and pockets, but take pleasure in the larger Samsung Epic 4G Touch, it’s well-built to hold and use one-handed because of the textured back and laid low build. It doesn’t mien degree as bad or shiny as the Galaxy S II models, but it’s close.



For some intention LG opted to circumstances the microUSB connector on top, with a stingy pliant cover, which is gory for docks and awkward for charging. The Nitro HD is the third LTE smartphone obtainable on AT&T (behind the HTC Vivid and Samsung Galaxy S II Skyrocket). LTE still isn’t elbow on the west coast, though some testing in Los Angeles has been spotted.



I haven’t found an LTE notify myself, but it’s very probably that LA residents will be next to get LTE. LA has historically been one of AT&T’s testing grounds for unique networks. That said, all reports of LTE over AT&T have been very positive. 4G connectivity has been very good, with soundly facts speeds measuring at 8Mbps down and 1Mbps up. Yet while testing the Nitro HD two things have been a unending bother: inefficient battery individual and regularly lallygagging and stuttering performance.



Even without LTE, on set fire to to reduce use I couldn’t get a daytime out of the Nitro HD. With cheerful reading, cobweb browsing, and a few 10-15 document calls – all over 4G (not LTE) – the battery ran dry. Almost every time of testing required me to wad the phone in again around 4-5pm. This can be attributed to the bigger show and beefier CPU, but for an LTE phone, that is no excuse. Poor battery pep without LTE means much worse on the faster network.



As for performance, the Nitro HD is hit and miss. At times, it feels get a kick out of the fastest phone you can get. Menus journey quickly, apps open, reward and arrange with ease, and all’s well. But, almost dig clockwork, every other app will stutter and expiation slowly, or entanglement pages won’t cargo or drive the browser entirely.



It’s the distinct most irritating trend a phone can do: not ceremony consistently. Even with built-in apps, be partial to switching between Google Maps and the Calendar app, or using the browser to glance up restaurants, the Nitro HD has a 50/50 casual of working quickly. For a smartphone, those are abominable odds. All this is in happy of the high-resolution 4.5" magnificence that is just plain in the sun, but does purvey squiffed je ne sais quoi idea that isn’t completely as close as the Rezound (4.3") or iPhone 4/4S.



Color discriminate is honourable and images are very sanitary and crisp. It’s just surprising that LG hasn’t included their NOVA interview tech, which improves the effulgent conflict and curtain brightness, on their stylish flagship. Even on supreme brightness the 720p stretch is unreadable in send sunlight. The 8MP camera provides worthy pictures outdoors, some of the best I’ve seen.



Indoors, or with ease to strait-laced color contrast, metaphor nobility drops dramatically. Most indoor and low-light shots are blurry and pixilated. The camera itself also has a trace potter from when the shutter releases to when the realized look-alike is taken, so if you go over the pellet and outset to effect at the drop of a hat after, the double will suffer.

nitro



Video grade is very good, with exceptional color spell out and no loss in quality with objects in movement and even low-light situations. Call trait isn’t as good as it should be. Voices are often unclear, though legible, but the receiver and speakerphone are quiescent and muffled, respectively. Reception on the phone is largely good, even out in the boondocks, but that doesn’t employee the convoke importance any.



I’d suggest using a headset for longer calls. Most smartphones are consistent, but there are only three things that are uniform with the Nitro HD: it’s gradual and buggy, battery freshness is poor, and the unveil always provides opportune picture. Everything else is a hodgepodge. The phone can get very hot, very quickly, from almost nothing. Speaker grandeur is only okay, even for calls.



Even including just 4GB of room and no additional SD car-card is just further able to withstand of how discombobulated the Nitro feels. As a separate phone, the Nitro HD has some things it does very well, and others it only scarcely succeeds with. The colorful pageant looks great but is too dim. The processor is speedy, but the OS and overlay are buggy. The phone is slim, but cold to hold and it overheats.



It’s an LTE device, but battery mortal is terrible. Outdoor shooting and video is excellent, but indoor shots are blurry and oversaturated. When LG gives us an Android smartphone that isn’t constantly battling with itself in every respect, I will forward it. The Nitro HD is not that device.




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