jungleexplorer
Android Enthusiast
Last edited:
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
As the Galaxy S5 approaches its 3rd birthday and Samsung and carriers end their support with Marshmallow and owners are coming to the end of their contracts, we are seeing a lot of pre-owned S5's available. These Samsung Galaxy S5 phones can prove to be an excellent bargain for those who wish to root them and install the latest, fast, debloated, custom ROMs for Android 7.0, Nougat, and receive ongoing Google security patches every month. These will continue, in my experience, to be updated for another 2 years or even longer. Infact, I have a 5 year old Galaxy S2 that is still being updated.
However, for one model, the carrier branded AT&T, G900A, it is the end of the road I am afraid, in terms of support from its carrier and the ability to root it, debloat and update it. This was always going to be the case, since I tried to warn readers, 2 years ago, about this model's shortcomings, in #1.6 of 42 Galaxy S5 models - Dummies Guide.
What AT&T, G900A, owners have now, is as good as it gets.
Same thing applies. Both are AT&T models. The Active was released a month after the regular S5. In fact, AT&T were the only one's to release the G870A.
(Have amended my previous post )
Kim Jong-un, Supreme Leader of North Korea, wants the same totalitarian control over his people that AT&T has over its customers.
Seem to be missing the Xperia V and S5 screenshots in your previous post jungleexplorer. Are all these phones on the AT&T network?
Don't be melodramatic. No one threatens your life or family if you don't use ATT. There are plenty of alternatives that everyone is free to choose among. The OP freely chose to buy an ATT phone.
Okay, I think I fixed it. Yes, all the phones are on At&t. I am just switching my sims out between them. What I am doing to get these pics is, take the sims out and put it in one phone, start it up, run the LTE Discovery app, take a screenshot, and then switch the sims to the next phone and repeat. So everything is equal.
Just in you still can't see the pictures, here are the stats.
Sony V
89.0 DBm on HSPA+
Sony Z3
118.0 DBm on LTE
Galaxy S5
115.0 DBm on LTE
Sony z3 (Set to 3G only)
103.0 DBm on HSPA
I understand the differences from 3G and 4G. But look at the signal strength of the V vs the Z3 on 3G. I know one says HSPA and the other HSPA+, but if you look at the LAC, CID and RNC numbers you will see that they are the same, but yet the Z3 has significantly less signal strength. It just seems strange to me that newer phones tend to have a harder time getting good signal strength. Even when I am in a major city where you know there is the best signal strength, I find little or no signal on my S5, in places where I never had signal issues with the V. It just seems to me that since a smartphone is pretty much a paperweight without mobile data, that the manufacturers would have made good antennas and reception a central focal point of newer phones. Again, I am going to reiterate, I am talking about areas that I have lived for years and know for a fact there is great signal available.
So BG260. Why nexus?
What I want is a smartphone that is serious and reliable tool for work, without all the extra "FUN" crap.
Hint: With a Nexus and a little know how, you can build your own personal ROM. I did, and I'm not overly smart.
I know the feeling. Check out Swappa. It's the Android Enthusiasts' used device repository of choice.
My journey started when I bought a Verizon Galaxy S4. Bloated to the hilt. Bootloader on lock down. Rootable , but if you looked at it the wrong way it would soft-brick. Never again.