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Android phones, most of them, come out with graphical hardware acceleration. A few don't. Early phones like the G1 and MyTouch 3G aka HTC Magic didn't. The later versions of the Qualcomm 72/76xx SoCs did have hardware acceleration, and phones with the HTC Sense used them.
These modern Androids dont' have graphical hardware acceleration: Motorola Defy, Motorola Bravo. If you're in the market for one, get the Cliq 2 instead. That one has.
Android OS supports graphical acceleration, but the app has to go use them. Fortunately most do.
Even though much of the Android Google apps, like the Gallery app, Google Maps, use graphical acceleration, the stock webkit browser shipped with stock Android OS phones, mainly your Nexus phones, doesn't. That's funny since the Android 2.3 Gingerbread on the Nexus S is very fast, probably the most accelerated of all the Android OS, but somehow forgot the stock browser in the process.
Easy to remedy though. Get a third party browser, and they're pretty accelerated. I would recommend Opera Mini or Mobile. They won't run Flash but they're freaking fast, and pretty smooth when it comes to scrolling and zooming. Others include Skyfire and Dolphin HD browsers I recommend them for another reason, you can store them on the SD card if you have Android 2.2, and they will cache their contents there. And they look pretty neat too.
Android phones with modified UIs do feature stock WebKit browsers with graphical acceleration, especially those with HTC Sense and Samsung Touchwiz.
But then again, I don't use the stock Webkit browser anymore.
The particular variant of the OMAP6 used by Motorola Bravo and Defy, didn't have GPU. Also used on XT720 and XT800. It was meant as a budget chip.
Cliq 2 uses the same OMAP6 as the Droid 2 which has the GPU.
If that is really the case, then its another question.
My guess is that Motoblur doesn't accelerate the browser and parts of its own interface at all. I don't own one however so i can't say how it feels like. I only noticed that HTC Sense and Samsung Touchwiz uses graphically accelerated browsers because of the manner the stock browser would pinch and zoom vs. that on the Nexii.
Having a browser that doesn't do graphics acceleration doesn't mean the apps don't do it. The hooks to do it are always provided by the OS. Your live wallpaper are still graphically accelerated when your browser is not, just for example.
Gingerbread is really really fast. In many ways. But graphical acceleration on the stock browser doesn't seem one of them. Its evident when you use either the stock browsers, or one of the 3rd party browsers that rely on the Webkit libraries. Graphical acceleration is useful for scrolls and pinch zooms. Noting that most apps do use acceleration. Try Tweetdeck or Twicca on any phone. You get fast smooth kinetic scrolls.
Still, fast CPU processing of javascript and HTML is still more important, as well as fast file I/O, for the general user perception of speed.
If you got a Bravo or Defy, see if you can download Nenamarks and Neocore benchmarks and lets see what the GPU can come up with.