rrrrrichard
Lurker
It's ugly (looks like LG's idea of what Samsung phones look like -- so it's kind of ugly from ugly). It's thick. It has wide margins, especially top and bottom. It has no exciting specs.
Google has to change the Nexus program from a partnering deal to a certification deal. Any vendor should be able to produce a Nexus-branded phone as long as it meets certain physical and software requirements. The hardware specs shouldn't be unnecessarily restrictive, except to disallow any features that require nonstandard driver support that would delay release of Google ROM upgrades. The software specs should be ironclad -- pure Google experience only. Of course, absolutely no carrier branding. If Google wants to choose one or more of each device type for sale in the Play store, fine. I like their pricing policies.
Google has to change the Nexus program from a partnering deal to a certification deal. Any vendor should be able to produce a Nexus-branded phone as long as it meets certain physical and software requirements. The hardware specs shouldn't be unnecessarily restrictive, except to disallow any features that require nonstandard driver support that would delay release of Google ROM upgrades. The software specs should be ironclad -- pure Google experience only. Of course, absolutely no carrier branding. If Google wants to choose one or more of each device type for sale in the Play store, fine. I like their pricing policies.
I have 2 co-workers that I told them i liked the S3 but reception sucked, and my other co-worker just bought the Note 2 and warned him about the radio, he`s finding out the hard way, he said he might return it go back to his iphone 4 which had alot better reception.