chris24803
Lurker
I understand how it will speed up your overall experience, eliminate lag, have a smooth browsing experience, improve multitasking an what not.
However, are these the only advantages to a more powerful phone? A friend of mine has the nexus s (a single core device), and from what I can tell, it's as smooth as butter. Are the power of these new dual core phones really necessary? With the new dual core devices such as the Galaxy S2, what apps will demand this much power? Is it just games and emulators, or am I missing something here?
I'm thinking of switching to android, and although I have been considering the Galaxy S2, i'm just not sure if that power will go to waste.
Any help will be much appreciated
However, are these the only advantages to a more powerful phone? A friend of mine has the nexus s (a single core device), and from what I can tell, it's as smooth as butter. Are the power of these new dual core phones really necessary? With the new dual core devices such as the Galaxy S2, what apps will demand this much power? Is it just games and emulators, or am I missing something here?
I'm thinking of switching to android, and although I have been considering the Galaxy S2, i'm just not sure if that power will go to waste.
Any help will be much appreciated

