Saturday 28 May 2011

Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?

Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?: "
rev Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?

The LG Revolution is the third smartphone for Verizon that can use the 4G LTE network. In our review, we’ll try and determine if this is on par with other phones in the market, including the 4G LTE-capable HTC Thunderbolt and Samsung Charge.

With handsets like the T-Mobile G2x and the Optimus Black, LG has been on a roll with the high-end handsets. Does the LG Revolution keep that positive streak alive? Read on to find out, friends.

LG Revolution

Available for Verizon Wireless now for $249 on a new contract

Specifications (Spec-Sheet)

rev91 300x253 Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?

  • 4.3 inch WVGA (480 x 800)
  • 1 GHz Snapdragon single-core MSM8655 processor
  • 5-megapixel camera with LED flash
  • HDMI-out
  • Support for the Verizon 4G LTE network
  • 720p HD video recording
  • WiFi(b/g/n)
  • Bluetooth
  • HDMI, Tethering
  • Mobile hotspot capable
  • Android 2.2 Froyo with custom LG UI
  • Comes with Netflix app pre-installed

The Good

  • The Verizon 4G LTE network is blazing fast
  • Nice big screen that’s quite responsive
  • Despite not having a dual-core, the Snapdragon processor is quite powerful
  • The custom UI isn’t bad

The Bad

  • Battery life could be better
  • Bulky design may not appeal to all
  • Camera is just average
  • Bing as the default (I didn’t mind but some may)
  • Default keyboard makes me want to hurt things

Hardware

rev61 300x292 Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?The Verizon LG Revolution is quite a big device and that’s to be expected with the 4.3-inch screen and the large 4G LTE modem. The 480 x 800 display takes up the majority of the face and it’s quite crisp and responsive. The face also has the four standard Android buttons under the screen as capacitive keys and there’s also a notification light and the front-facing 1.3-megapixel camera above the screen. I dig the notification light, as the default shows a very bright blue light that’s quite noticeable when you have a message.

Along each spine there’s a silver bar that’s half decoration and half ports. On the right, you have the volume rocker and the HDMI-out port and the left spine has the microUSB port for charging and sideloading content. You have to pull open a little door to access the HDMI and microUSB ports and these are connected via a flimsy piece of plastic. I would have preferred just open ports or a sliding door like what’s on the Galaxy S lineup.

On the bottom, you’ll find a microphone hole and the ridge to open the battery door. The power/unlock button and the standard headphone jack can be found on the top.

The back is made of a smooth, dark grey pastic that feels nice in the hand. Like the G2x, there’s a stripe down the middle but this one’s dark black and it shows off the various branding (LG, Verizon, 4G LTE) and the 5-megapixel camera and flash. There’s also a large speaker strip on the back which is pretty loud for music and conference calls.

Popping open the battery cover is simple and it reveals the 1500 mAH battery, a microSD card that’s not hot swappable (comes with 16 GB, can handle up to 32 GB) and a 4G LTE SIM card. That’s right, Verizon 4G LTE uses SIM cards so get used to that weird interference sound if you keep it near your computer speakers).

Build Quality/ Fit & Finish

rev81 300x197 Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?At 6.06 ounces, the Verizon LG Revolution is quite a heavy phone but it’s not beyond the point of comfort. It’s also quite a thick phone and it’s tough to call the design “chic,” “sexy” or elegant. That’s not to say it doesn’t have its charm though.

It’s about as thick as the Samsung Droid Charge on the top and the bottom but it’s much thicker along the body. It’s not a brick though, as LG has smartly put some curves along the back to give it a good in-hand feeling. It fits nicely in most pockets but some of you skinny jean wearers out there may have some difficulty.

Additionally, the materials used make it feel like a high-quality devices, unlike the somewhat cheap feeling that’s associate with Samsung devices. The exceptions are the port doors which feel like they may snap off depending on how rough you treat it.

I’m also not a fan of the silver trip on the spines and find the port doors to be quite a hassle and cheap-feeling. With that being said, there’s something charming about the LG Revolution design – it’s not trying to be hip, as it’s just wants to be a big powerhouse device. The more style conscious of you may want to nab the HTC Thunderbolt or the Droid Charge but those looking for a big, bad beast of a smartphone may want to look at the LG Revolution.

Software

rev51 300x295 Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?The Verizon LG Revolution runs Android 2.2 Froyo

The Optimus UI was found on the international version of the G2x and on the Optimus Black and it’s an assertive skin that’s not too aggressive. You can watch the video below for a good example of what I mean but I believe that LG mostly made good decisions with this. Is is worth not having Gingerbread? I’m not quite sure.

You have seven home screens on the Verizon LG Revolution and LG includes a variety of widgets for news, social networking aggregation and more. I’m pretty set in my Android ways, so I probably wouldn’t use these full time but they’re not bad and each has a nice visual flair.

Customizing your home screen is as easy as doing a long press and this brings up a grid menu for adding widgets, shortcuts or changing your wallpaper. Like we’ve seen with HTC Sense, TouchWiz and MotoBlur you can zoom out to see all of you home screens at once.

The app menu has also been tweaked, as it’s now divided into separate categories like Communication, Media, Downloads, etc. This can easily be managed and adjusted with a few clicks but I wonder if this organization is actually worth it – it takes me little longer to find the apps I’m looking for than with a standard app tray. Oh well, that’s what the home screens are for, I suppose.

The skinning is quite pleasant but there are some weird inconsistencies. For instance, you have four apps at the bottom of your home screen which are customizable by dragging an app from the app tray but it won’t work if you drag a program from the home screen. Weird. Also, part of me thinks that if you’re going to muck around with Android, you might as well go all the way and make it pretty like HTC Sense.

I’m also not a huge fan of the LG keyboard, as I’ve found its auto-correct to be woeful. It often gets what I want wrong and it doesn’t learn well. It also comes with Swype and you have the various third-party options you can download from the Android Market.

The Verizon LG Revolution comes with a lot of preloaded software including Netflix (more on that later), VZ Navigator, Blockbuster, Amazon Kindle, Let’s Gof 2, Slacker, Rhapsody, Tunewiki and various VCast software.

The Bing thing

rev71 300x232 Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?The Verizon LG Revolution comes with Bing as the default search and maps and I couldn’t find a way to change this as the default, as you can’t uninstall it unless your device is rooted. I’ve found that Bing is every bit as good as Google search for most things (it lags in news but is better in image search) but it’s different if you’re used to other Android devices. It’s easy to download Google Search or Google Maps but it won’t be as tightly integrated with the Search button. It’s different but I wouldn’t call it a deal breaker by any means.

Benchmarks

We put the Verizon LG Revolution under some benchmark tests to see what kind of power it’s bringing to the table. Using Quadrant, Neocore, and Linpack, we benchmarked the handset three times with each application and averaged out the scores. In parenthesis, we have the benchmarks of the Samsung Droid Charge.

Quadrant – System Benchmark

Average = 2109 (962)

Linpack – Processor Benchmark

Average = 34.886 (36.2276)

Neocore – Graphics Benchmark

Average = 64.36 Frames per second (56.7 FPS)

Web Browser, Multimedia, and Camera

Web Browser

The Verizon LG Revolution has a relatively standard Webkit-based browser than can be found on most Android handsets. The pages load quickly thanks to the 4G LTE network and the big screen makes things highly-readable. I like the auto-zoom and intelligent zooming, too. While there are third-party options like Firefox and Skyfire, I think most of you will be satisfied by the stock browser.

Multimedia

rev31 300x325 Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?Like most Android phones, the Verizon LG Revolution does a fine job at handling your music and videos but the experience is not quite as integrated out of the box as the iPhone. The LG Revolution is the first Android handset to come preloaded with the Netflix app and it’s a cool way to watch movies and TV shows if you’re a member. The interface is nice, it’s easy to manage your queue and videos stream nicely with the 4G LTE network. The big screen works really well for movies that you stream and sideload.

You’ll also find the Bitbop service preloaded (kind of, the demo is preloaded and it’ll kick you to a VCast download) and this costs $10 a month for access to streaming shows and movies that you can also download for offline access.

Google Music Beta works well on the Revolution and the preloaded Rhapsody and Slacker can also handle your other streaming audio needs. Overall, you’ll be very happy with what you can do with the LG Revolution on the multimedia side of things.

Camera

The Verizon LG Revolution sports a 5-megapixel camera with an flash and I found it to be stunningly average. Photos are fine for Facebook or quick e-mails but it’s not as crisp or clear as other 5-megapixel cameras we’ve seen. The photos generally don’t blow up well, as the detail is nothing to brag about. The flash is also kind of obnoxiously bright but it definitely helps in low lighting situation, even if it washes things out.

The UI is sparse and functional, as the shutter button, gallery and video recording switcher are on the right side of the screen and the options, flash control and camera switcher are on the left. Zooming can be handled with the volume rocker or on screen and the shutter speed is pretty good unless you’re using the flash.

You do have a ton of shooting options, as you can adjust the scene (auto, portrait, landscape, sports, night and more), ISO, white balance), change the shot mode to include fancy options like panorama and continuous shots, and there are a ton of effects you can add on. The 1.3-megapixel front-facing camera gets the job done adequately and I found video calls with apps like Tango looked pretty good.

0527111233 660x495 Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?

Flash on, standard settings, dark lighting

0527111227 660x495 Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?

Low lighting, no flash, standard settings

0527111227a 1 660x495 Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?

Standard settings, medium lighting

0527111217 660x880 Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?

LG Revolution front-facing camera pic, good lighting

The 5-megapixel camera can record video at 720p HD but I found playback was a tad choppy. It’s not too bad though and the detail is actually pretty nice. You can use the HDMI-out port to watch these videos on your big-screen TV.

Call Quality, 4G LTE and Battery Life

Call Quality, 4G LTE

rev41 300x262 Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?I found call quality to be quite good on Verizon’s network throughout the San Francisco Bay Area. Callers sounded crisp and clear with no static or distortion. People told me I sounded clear but they could still tell I was on a cell phone. Conference calls could have been better with a better speaker but the actual audio clarity was fine.

As for the 4G LTE speeds, I ran the Speetest.net app 10 times and averaged it out to find average speeds of 7.54 Mbps down and 2.99 Mbps up, well within the promised speeds from Verizon. The speeds varied wildly though, as I had highs of 12.7 Mbps down and lows of 3.8 Mbps.

In terms of actual usage, you do notice the speed when you’re out and about. Browsing is just much faster (even though you’re still bottlenecked by the browser itself) and watching Netflix on a bus or train is an awesome and smooth experience.

That 4G LTE comes with a price though, as the battery life is not that great. The Verizon LG Revolution died after about 8 hours sitting on my desk all day receiving e-mails from two accounts. When I took it out and about with heavy e-mail, browsing, GPS and video streaming, it was only able to eek out about six hours on a single charge. Make sure you have a spare charger in your car or office if this is your next device.

The final take: You say you want a Revolution?

rev71 Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet?

The Verizon LG Revolution has a lot of things going for it, as the big, beautiful screen is nice, the 4G LTE speeds rock and it has enough horsepower to let you blow through apps without experiencing slowdown. The custom LG layer is non-offensive and the Android Market is growing by the day.

On the other hand, some of the design elements are a clear miss and the battery life still leaves a lot to be desired. It’s not quite as sexy as the HTC Thunderbolt or even the Droid Charge but it is a beast of a smartphone that should satisfy users who want 4G LTE speeds and ample power without design frills.

Verizon LG Revolution review: The best 4G LTE phone yet? is a post from: IntoMobile



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Source : Google Reader

UI experts say gestures are a step back in usability

UI experts say gestures are a step back in usability: "
multitouch UI experts say gestures are a step back in usability

Pinch-to-zoom, sideways swipes to access multiple home screens, and even touch-sensitive bezels are becoming common occurrences in smartphones and tablets, but a paper being published by the Association for Computing Machinery suggests Android and iPhone are going about gesture-based user interfaces all wrong. The article argues that many gestures are invisible, unexplained, and inconsistent across applications. Given, a lot of that is due to third-party developers that don’t have a set standardized interface, the inconsistency is also found in the default out-of-box apps.

A lack of feedback means it’s hard for users to understand why certain inputs aren’t being recognized as intended, and also makes it difficult to adjust accordingly. This stems from a need for “non-destructive operations” (i.e. accidents don’t completely undo what you were trying to do). The paper also notes that as tablets gain in popularity, the gestures that we’ve become accustomed to may not work when scaled up, ruining consistency and basically wasting all the end-user learning that has been done up until now. The authors, Donald Norman and Jakob Nielsen, suggest that though the new input mechanisms that are being explored in modern smartphones and tablets are interesting and have a lot of potential, they need to spend more time in the lab before being launched on commercial products.

This is a bit hard to swallow, since those of us in the technological fast lane take these gestures for granted now, but after seeing my dad wrestle with the Palm Pre, I could see where many people might not be particularly pleased with the new way of interacting with our phones. Sure, it’s easy once we know what gesture does what, but it’s the learning that can be the biggest hurdle for new users, and ultimately the large-scale adoption of smartphones. BlackBerry gets knocked for lacking the same visual panache of competitors and not amply evolving, but I tend to think that the UI’s logic remains consistent and well-explained (barring a few hidden keyboard shortcuts).

We’ve already seen gestures get a little out of hand on Mac trackpads – could the same problem find its way to mobile?

[via Slashdot]

UI experts say gestures are a step back in usability is a post from: IntoMobile



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Source : Google Reader

The Mobile Roundup: Google Wallet, Mango and Verizon’s big day

The Mobile Roundup: Google Wallet, Mango and Verizon’s big day: "
wallet The Mobile Roundup: Google Wallet, Mango and Verizons big day

This week was so jam-packed full of news that I can’t wait to have Memorial Day off to recover. Google Wallet was introduced and it could change the way we pay for goods, Microsoft unwrapped the details of Windows Phone Mango and Verizon had a big week with the release of four high-quality smartphones on a single day.

Exhale and relax, friends. Let’s go over the week in mobile news!

Google Wallet

goog wallet The Mobile Roundup: Google Wallet, Mango and Verizons big day

Google Wallet was introduced this week and it really wants to turn your phone into your wallet. Yes, we’ve heard that many, many times before but the partnerships with MasterCard, Sprint, Citi and some big-name retailers may make this a reality.

Google Wallet is an app that uses the NFC chip inside the Sprint Nexus S 4G to make secure transactions at retail establishments. Basically, anywhere that has the MasterCard PayPass system will be able to use this.

The Google Wallet will let you use a Citi MasterCard or a prepaid Google credit card to pay for things. It will also include things like your rewards card and even the Groupon-like Google Offers. The IntoMobile team broke down what this could mean to you, so you should check it out.

The Google Wallet service is going to face multiple challenges from other competitors and even in the court, as PayPal is suing it for misappropriation of trade secrets.

Say hello to Windows Phone Mango

windowsmango 660x439 The Mobile Roundup: Google Wallet, Mango and Verizons big day

Hopefully, you saw our live blog of the Windows Phone Mango announcement and you saw how the mobile platform will be getting more than 500 new features. While we knew many of these details before – third-party multitasking, Twitter integration, SkyDrive support – there were a few surprises.

Windows Phone Mango will include LinkedIn integration, increased tools for developers to finally get access to the camera and live tiles, unified inboxes, group search and an improved Bing that can even do augmented reality-style services. We can also look forward to a full version of IE9 on the Windows Phone Mango update.

Microsoft also added a few partners to its lineup, as Acer, Fujitsu and ZTE join Dell, HTC, LG, Nokia and Samsung as companies committed to making Windows Phone handsets. The Mango update won’t be landing until the Fall, so we’re going to have to wait for a while before we know how it stacks up against the competition.

Verizon releases Xperia Play, LG Revolution, Motorola Droid X2 and HTC Trophy

playvz The Mobile Roundup: Google Wallet, Mango and Verizons big day

If you’re a cell phone free agent, then you should definitely take a look at Verizon because Big Red had a massive release day which included the Sony Ericsson Xperia Play, LG Revolution with 4G LTE, the Motorola Droid X2 and the HTC Trophy, it’s first Windows Phone 7 handset.

The Xperia Play Android handset features a slide-out gamepad, a 1 GHz Snapdragon processor, a 4-inch screen along with WiFi, 3G and Bluetooth. We were happy to see a near-stock version of Android 2.3 land with it but we’re unsure how appealing this will be to everyday users. From our official review:

I would tell hardcore gamers to sit tight on this one and wait for the next iteration, when the games library, as impressive as it is at launch, will be much bigger and of higher quality. I suspect shady third-party emulators will also have a field day with the standardized controls. For now, casual gamers who find that they have a lot of time to kill, and don’t necessarily want to be productive in that time, the Play might actually be a good fit.

The LG Revolution is the third smartphone that supports 4G LTE and it’s quite a beast of a device with a 4.3-inch screen, 1 GHz processor, 4G, WiFi, Bluetooth and Netflix preloaded. Does it live up to the hype?

From our official review:

It’s not quite as sexy as the HTC Thunderbolt or even the Droid Charge but it is a beast of a smartphone that should satisfy users who want 4G LTE speeds and ample power without design frills.

The Motorola Droid X2 doesn’t look all that different from its predecessor but inside beats the ultra-powerful, dual-core NVIDIA processor to go along with the 4.3-inch qHD screen and 8-megapixel camera. We would have loved to see this with a front-facing camera or 4G LTE but it’s still a worthy Android 2.2 handset.

From the review:

The spec junkies of the world will admire the Droid X2?s superior screen and NVIDIA Tegra 2 dual-core processor but data junkies may not be in love with only having 3G data. Either way, the Droid X2 should make anyone happy coming from the original and those who like a nice set of specs before a data network that’s sure to kill your phone in no time. If you need both a dual-core CPU and LTE on your phone then you may have to wait a little longer for the Droid Bionic.

We’re not quite done with our HTC Trophy review but you can check out our hands-on impressions here. It sports a 3.8-inch screen, 1 GHz Snapdragon processor, 3G, WiFi, Bluetooth, GPS and, of course, it will be the first Verizon phone to run Windows Phone 7. In my brief time with it, I can tell you that it looks like an incredibly well-designed device and the software should be smooth as silk. We’ll have the full review up shortly but check out this video below to hold you over.

News in 60 seconds

Happy Memorial Day

What a week, friends. We’ll be updating over the weekend and on the holiday Monday but the real fun kicks off late next week with the Qualcomm Uplinq conference and more. You can follow all of our news by visiting the home page (of course) or by following IntoMobile on Twitter @Intomobile. I’m there too @Marinperez.

Mavs in 6.

[photo]

The Mobile Roundup: Google Wallet, Mango and Verizon’s big day is a post from: IntoMobile

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Source : Google Reader

Download Firefox 6.0 Alpha 2 – Aurora Channel

Download Firefox 6.0 Alpha 2 – Aurora Channel: "

Firefox 6.0 alpha 2


Installer Version



Portable Version




Mozilla has updated the current update channels for Firefox and have introduced Firefox 6.0 Alpha 2 Preview build in the Aurora channel.


"


Source : Google Reader

Download Firefox 6.0 Alpha 2 – Aurora Channel

Download Firefox 6.0 Alpha 2 – Aurora Channel: "

Firefox 6.0 alpha 2


Installer Version



Portable Version




Mozilla has updated the current update channels for Firefox and have introduced Firefox 6.0 Alpha 2 Preview build in the Aurora channel.


"


Source : Google Reader

Download Firefox 6.0 Alpha 2 – Aurora Channel

Download Firefox 6.0 Alpha 2 – Aurora Channel: "

Firefox 6.0 alpha 2


Installer Version



Portable Version




Mozilla has updated the current update channels for Firefox and have introduced Firefox 6.0 Alpha 2 Preview build in the Aurora channel.


"


Source : Google Reader