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Would you buy one again (Verizon version)?

The monthly update myth is just that, a myth. I'm not doubting that you read it someplace, but Google hasn't ever come out touting update times to my recollection. I don't remember a phone ever getting updates that quickly, especially here in the US. People need to get the CM nightly concept out of their head. Even if they did plan to update once a month, would you want something that is broken?
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I don't think there's a desire for monthly updates.....I think there's a desire to be in a situation where if
an issue that can be addressed with an OTA update is identified then said update is released quickly.
 
My answer is "yes, I would by the Verizon LTE Galaxy Nexus" if I had to do it all over again. And if I hadn't upgraded until now and could get it at the new lower price, it would be an even easier choice.

I should mention that I upgraded from the OG Droid, so I was probably more easily impressed with the GNex than someone coming from a more recent phone. But for me, my new phone had a much bigger screen, was thinner and lighter (even with a case on it - the Trident Kraken is what I finally ended up staying on), runs much smoother and faster with the dual core processor and more RAM, and I love stock ICS, especially compared to stock Froyo.

I could have upgraded in October, but I was waiting for the right phone. In my case, I wanted something I could easily unlock and root, and that had the latest version of stock Android. I don't flash ROMs but I like being able to use root-required apps, mainly TB, but now also Light Flow and Nova Launcher (I know it doesn't require it but some of the functions do).

The other stuff I wanted wasn't unique to the GNex: front facing camera for video calls, dual core processor, bigger screen (4" or more), more internal storage (the Droid only had 512MB). But the Galaxy Nexus was the only one I'd read about that would have an easy to unlock bootloader and stock Android, so that's what I wanted.

I've been very happy with the phone overall, but I understand I lucked out in not having a lot of the problems I read about. I do get the random reboots, and usually its not a big deal but yesterday it happened as I was answering a call, so that's definitely something I hope the eventual update will fix. The battery can drain pretty quick if I'm doing a lot, especially with 4G, but I have a charger at home, at work, and none of those are the one that came with the phone, so I also have that to take with me if I'm going anywhere else.

And even though it wasn't part of my decision to get the GNex, I'm also loving Google Wallet (but really hating when places have a PayPass terminal that doesn't work).

Sorry if this is really long, just wanted to give a thorough answer.
 
I don't think there's a desire for monthly updates.....I think there's a desire to be in a situation where if
an issue that can be addressed with an OTA update is identified then said update is released quickly.

Of course that is always preferred. However, when it comes to dealing with Verizon that is never going to be the case in the eyes of the end user. They like to test, then test a little more and once that is all finished they decide to test a little further. It is the reason the Nexus was delayed in the US. Then again we weren't talking about what was desired, but instead what someone read to be the case.

It all comes down to what people would prefer and what is realistic. If you read through the forum and Google's own support pages there have been numerous issues that need to be addressed with the LTE Nexus. Some are experienced by the majority of users and some are experienced by a minority of users. Since some of these need to be addressed on Google's end, some on Samsung's end and some on Verizon's end which would be best addressed first? Once it is addressed on Google's end and then moved to Samsung's end it has to do so without creating more issues as well as taking care of those that exist. Once all of that is taken care of it has to be moved to Verizon so that they can make sure it works on their network (at this point their network is completely different from everyone else's). Since Google and Samsung have supposedly taken care of their part it is assumed to be in Verizon's hands at this point. They will test it and if an issues arise it will go back to Google or Samsung for more corrections. Once those are ironed out it will again return to Verizon who will test it again. Wash, rinse and repeat as necessary.

All that said, neither you nor I know who's hands it is really in right now so blaming one company or another isn't honestly fair to anyone. Since the 4.0.4 leak did not fix every problem that people are experiencing I would assume that someone is trying to figure out what will. Who at what company? No idea. It may be the 4.0.5 update we are hearing about and it could be 4.1.0. It could possibly be 5.0 or 12.2. The point is that nobody knows and speculation, while entertaining to a certain point, doesn't change things. If this were one company dealing with all aspects of a device (manufacturer, software and carrier) things would certainly be different.

The chant of "We want our update and we want it now." is just as bad an idea as the chants of "Release the phone now, I want it." that were heard before release day. We all want what we want when we want it, it is human nature for the most part in this day and age. However, would anyone be willing to take an update just for the sake of an update or one that doesn't address the issue they are having? How many cries of, "Google! Why have you forsaken me?" would be heard if an update came tomorrow that didn't address the silent call bug or the random restart bug or the poor signal bug or the _______ bug? Updates and OTAs are great when you get them, but only if they fix problems or offer new features without adding additional trouble or taking away features as well.

End of the story, the update will come when the update is ready. When everyone on the corporate end (Google, Samsung and Verizon) are happy and willing to send it out. Will it be perfect and make the phone live up to the hype that everyone bestowed on it pre-release? Probably not. Will it make it a better device? No idea. Should problems get corrected and things improve? Yes. The only thing that is certain is that some of you will just decide TLDR and move on from there. ;)
 
Nope, sold my POS VZW Nexus and bought a GSM International Nexus. Soo much more happier now.

You people and your fancy pants GSM. :D

Actually I do sort of miss my GSM Nokia. The freedom you had with your phone was unparalleled. It just sucks that GSM coverage around here is so damn lousy.
 
NO. And here is why. My signal strength compared to all my other phones in the same place isa joke.And the Volume is so bad you need a hearing aid to hear it on a call.Now for the positive. It does hae a great OS. If whoever does the fixes would fix the damn issues this would be a great phone but lets remember one thing. It has to be a phone before it is anything else and rthis one is poo at best as a phone. I bought a Rezound when VZW put them on sale and it is twice the phone for a phone as the GNEX. Now it does not have as good an OS but you can make a call and heae the other person.It is a shame VZW,Samsung or Google who ever is at fault does not give a damn if this phone works or not.They just move on to the next model.Never again will I buy a phone on day one. I will wait 6 months and then see if the issues are fixed.
 
NO. And here is why. My signal strength compared to all my other phones in the same place isa joke.And the Volume is so bad you need a hearing aid to hear it on a call.Now for the positive. It does hae a great OS. If whoever does the fixes would fix the damn issues this would be a great phone but lets remember one thing. It has to be a phone before it is anything else and rthis one is poo at best as a phone. I bought a Rezound when VZW put them on sale and it is twice the phone for a phone as the GNEX. Now it does not have as good an OS but you can make a call and heae the other person.It is a shame VZW,Samsung or Google who ever is at fault does not give a damn if this phone works or not.They just move on to the next model.Never again will I buy a phone on day one. I will wait 6 months and then see if the issues are fixed.

Maybe you need a hearing aid because mine is too loud. ;)
 
Would definitely buy it again. I've had no reception issues at all (no difference to the droid x for phone and my droid x had great reception) and I love the screen/thin size/design/removable battery/etc. I get LTE in my area so it's nice having super fast internet in most places I go. Stock ICS is a huge jump from gingerbread or even cm7, I was happy on it for awhile but AOKP and CM9 take the phone to another level, and leankernel helps battery life. That covers the pros. Edit: Forgot 1 pro, I can drag and drop a high quality 1080p mkv and it will play it smoothly with hardware acceleration (thanks to mxvideo player) great for when you are too lazy to convert or when connecting to a tv.

Cons: the screen is not amoled "plus" so it is a pentile display. I am big on hardware and the gpu is weak compared to the much hated Iphone (much weaker in fact). It is better than other devices with the sgx540 because it is overclocked, but the new sgx chips are many times more powerful. The 4460 in the nexus is a really good a9 dual core, but we have quad cores coming out now. Also there are going to be a15 dual cores that blow a9s out of the water.

IMO the Galaxy Nexus is still the flagship for Verizon and will be even when the Incredible 4G comes out (unless the rumor that the screen is 960x540 is false). Hopefully the Galaxy S3 and Razr Maxx HD both come to Verizon, then the flagship torch will be passed on to those 2.
 
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