Contour Display

I’ve already touched on a lot of what there is to be said about the Nexus S display. It’s an unbroken piece of gently curved glass, and underneath is the same 4” Super AMOLED display we saw on the Galaxy S line of phones. Pentile is still here, love it or hate it - best I can tell it literally is the same thing as in Galaxy S devices. Brightness is a little better on the Nexus S, but you still get perfect blacks that look awesome on the new black-heavy Gingerbread UI.

The Nexus S display is indeed excellent. We’ve got full viewing angles galleries and uniformity shots. Notably, there were no color or luminance uniformity issues we could pick out on our Nexus S - it appears flawless. Again the banding in our RGB gradient image is due to the gallery application color depth, which remains unchanged sadly.

Display Brightness

Display Brightness

The Nexus S also gets an oleophobic coating, something the iPhone 3GS got a lot of press with. I found that after a few months and wipings, the 3GS lost its amazing ability to repel oils. So far the Nexus S has withstood copious amounts of finger and face grease, coming clean with a quick brush on the shirt or lens cloth.

The curved surface is more of an aesthetic extra than an ergonomic feature, but it still is impressive that this is possible. The nice thing about having the front face in compression (from the concave shape) is that scratches probably don’t affect the glass’ structural integrity nearly as much as they would in tension. Glass is just stronger in compression rather than tension - the reason is primarily because cracks don’t propagate as well on surfaces in compression as they do in tension. Viewing angles on the Nexus S are very good, again the curvature is small enough that it doesn’t adversely impact vertical viewing angles.

Capacitive touch was always a major problem for me on the Nexus One. Anand noted it in his Nexus One review, and I experienced it firsthand with mine. I exchanged it and got one some months later with much better response and far fewer false touches, but compared to other flagship devices something always just felt wrong. Luckily the Nexus S has no such issues - touch is flawless, multitouch is excellent as well.

Android 2.3 - Gingerbread Camera Analysis
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  • ltcommanderdata - Tuesday, December 14, 2010 - link

    I asked this in the previous LG Optimus 7 review and didn't get an answer. I was wondering if your benchmarks for the iPhone and iPad have been updated to use iOS 4.2.1? iOS 4.2.1 introduces Safari 5 compared to Safari 4 in the previous iOS 4.1 so I was interested in seeing what performance benefits there are.
  • Brian Klug - Tuesday, December 14, 2010 - link

    Oh interesting, I haven't updated them but will do so soon. I don't know if they'll go into this review, but definitely in the myTouch 4G and LG Optimus One pieces that are coming shortly. Thanks for pointing that out.

    -Brian
  • Brian Klug - Tuesday, December 14, 2010 - link

    There we go, I've updated the web synthetics graphs (Brmark and Sunspider 0.9) with numbers from iOS 4.2.1. Looks like Brmark saw a nice jump, but Sunspider did virtually nothing.

    -Brian
  • DigitalFreak - Tuesday, December 14, 2010 - link

    I'd be all over a Nexus if they made one with CDMA and either WiMax or LTE.
  • ltcommanderdata - Tuesday, December 14, 2010 - link

    Thanks for the quick response.

    Just a question on the charts. They mention the older iOS version as 4.2 while the newer one is iOS 4.2.1. Were the older results actually iOS 4.2 since I don't believe that was publicly released. They went directly from iOS 4.1 to iOS 4.2.1.
  • Brian Klug - Tuesday, December 14, 2010 - link

    Oops you're right. I got confused thinking - hmm, what's last the version of iOS I was running - since I played around with the beta for a while. Fixed now ;)

    -Brian
  • evan919 - Tuesday, December 14, 2010 - link

    Awesome, thanks!
  • sprockkets - Tuesday, December 14, 2010 - link

    He took the video with an iphone. Kinda ironic ;)
  • samven786 - Tuesday, December 14, 2010 - link

    I was wondering did your nexus s had any random shutdowns? This is known issue on the captivate and the vibrant.
  • Brian Klug - Tuesday, December 14, 2010 - link

    Thus far no, it's been speedy consistently. I've been using it (somewhat brutally) nonstop since mid-Friday. I haven't seen it grind to a halt yet.

    -Brian

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