AndroidifyMe
Android Expert
Yeah, right now i have a pantech burst. i was considering upgrading to an HTC One this time around as an early Christmas present to myself until I found out that the Nexus 5 would be out soon. The features i use the most are navigation (because I get lost going EVERYWHERE), tethering (because the memory's so darned small that i need to carry around my tablet, too), texting (which makes me nervous because of the hangouts thing), and of course, I'm an app hog. A good speaker would be nice. The one I have now is crap and I love my audiobooks. A "good" camera *meaning it can take pictures when i forget my camera, which is most of the time* is good, but my standards are pretty low because of the one i have now. LOL so i guess almost anything would be better than what I have as long as it tells me where to go, and can text and use apps.
Nexus 5 will be sweet for you then. The speakers will be good I'm sure but nothing like an HTC One speaker on their latest phone (boom sound). The camera is looking to be shapping up good this time around on the Nexus 5. SMS and Hangouts are now or will be integrated. You won't have to worry about privacy or annoyed by anything. It'll be no different than iMessage for the iPhone or BBM for the BB. Also, it'll be equivalent to how iPhone's use FaceTime. If you see a friend logged into Hangouts or available you can call them whether they're on their PC or device. Even if they're using an iPhone that has Hangouts. Just know you'll be able to continue the conversation right where you left off when jumping from one phone to another or PC. Your normal contacts will only be able to contact you. Audio books on the big screen or more so listening in this case will be fine as well I assume. You use your phone as it should be which is a phone and occasional use of your interest. Only way you'll have a bad experience is if you get a faulty device. May God forbid. Being it's a Nexus phone you'll have the latest software so apps will be supported for sure. Plus Google has a way of updating their core apps apart from their OS and usually supports devices way back. You're good to go. Forgive any bad spelling and what not. Typing from my Note 3 on the go.