Software

Lately, there’s been a significant trend towards flatter, simpler UIs. While HTC jumped on the trend early with Sense 5 launching on the One (M7), the Korean OEMs have been noticeably slower to move towards this simplification. In this case, Samsung refreshed TouchWiz for the Galaxy S5, and LG has done the same for the G3. While I had very little trouble getting around LG’s UI before this refresh, it definitely struggled in the aesthetic department. LG previously had a strongly skeuomorphic UI, which meant that the UI elements were designed to resemble physical objects. While this may have helped back when computers were a novel invention, it doesn’t make quite as much sense now. Thankfully, LG has gotten far away from this. Overall, there’s very little unnecessary depth to the user interface, and the result is definitely aesthetically pleasing, although opinions may vary. I definitely feel like this interface is very close in aesthetic design to the Galaxy S5’s TouchWiz UI, although the functionality is different. The only real criticism I have here is that the odd shadow effect on icons should go away, although it doesn’t truly affect the overall design.

While opinions on how a UI works (or doesn’t) are mostly subjective, in my experience there have been far fewer friction points in the G3 UI when compared to TouchWiz in general. The best example of this is the multiwindow mode in the G3. While Samsung has done a great job of getting widespread developer adoption for their interface, LG has clearly put more thought into the user experience here. Instead of requiring the user to mentally keep track of whether to use Android’s task switcher or the multiwindow option, the multiwindow toggle is in the task switching menu, which means it’s far more likely that it will be used as needed. The multiwindow functionality also allows for switching immediately to the last two windows used to save time. The only issue I have here is that manipulating open windows isn’t as easy as it should be. This is because closing one of the windows is done by tapping the tab separating the two rather than simply swiping up or down. It does make sense once you learn how it works, but may confuse some at first.

LG isn’t perfect at this though, there are some issues such as the email client. Specifically, email providers like Hotmail/Microsoft don’t work properly if set up as a POP/IMAP account, and rely on the user to know that they have to set up Hotmail as an Exchange account. For the most part though, these issues are rare. LG seems to have done a good job with their applications, with cohesive design throughout that utilizes Google design guidelines. Things like the smart cleaning application in settings, and the LG backup application are all ways that LG has actually improved the user experience. There really aren’t a lot of friction points in the usability of stock applications, other than the ones clearly designed for SKT or are otherwise Korea-only.

Of course, LG’s “gimmicks” also tend to be more useful as well. While I struggled with some unreliability on KnockCode for the G Pro 2, the G3’s version is great in practice. KnockOn and KnockOff both work as expected too. These features are all easy to grasp as well, with very little learning curve. The same isn’t necessarily true for features that ship with the Samsung Galaxy S5, such as the fingerprint sensor. It's not all perfect though, as Smart Notice doesn’t seem to be useful most of the time. Fortunately, it won’t get in your way and it’s integrated well into the clock/weather widget. While both LG UI and TouchWiz have a largely similar experience, I think that LG ends up with a less frustrating one. There are some issues with clutter in the notification bar though, as out of the box there’s almost no room for actual notifications. Althought annoying, it's easily solved by toggling away most of the unnecessary settings.

Overall, I’m happy with LG’s UI. The annoyances are few and far between, and LG has adopted a solid aesthetic design for this generation. While I didn’t notice a significant delta in overall performance compared to the One (M8), I did notice that the G3 had more issues with stutter in animations overall. I suspect that this has relatively little with the UI design itself, as most animations are simple panning movements without 3D effects.

Performance WiFi, GNSS, Cellular, Speaker, Misc
Comments Locked

174 Comments

View All Comments

  • SleepyFE - Friday, July 4, 2014 - link

    An Android phone works without SIM, so why does pulling it out reset it? Does the flight mode reset it as well?
    And you can't tell me that's a non-excuse. If you pay 200€ for a phone and you can't use it after a freeze. I would be very pissed off. A power off switch under the cover that physically cuts power would be the best way to go, but no review ever mentioned that, as far as i know.
  • ZeDestructor - Friday, July 4, 2014 - link

    Some form of security perhaps? I just noticed it in the manual where it states that removing the SIM-card from a powered phone will cause it to reboot.

    If I pay any amount for a phone and it freezes unreacoverably, I would be pissed too, but like I said, there is a key you can press to power off, or you can implement some form of key combo or long-press. Be pissed at the implementation and manufacturer, not the concept.

    Besides, just about the only time I've had an android phone lock up was when I overclocked or ran very early custom ROMs, something I don't do since I got a Sony phone, their ROM being so lighweight and bloat-free (admittedly after uninstalling/disabling bundled stuff like facebook) in comparison to the usual Touchwiz/Sense4 bloat
  • SleepyFE - Friday, July 4, 2014 - link

    At the time i did not know about the factory reset button combo, but removing the battery was so easy i didn't give it a second thought (until now). Factory reset means that you have to install all the apps and change the settings. Your google account has that stored but it still takes time to download everything.
  • ZeDestructor - Friday, July 4, 2014 - link

    It doesn't do a factory reset, just a hard reboot, similar to what happens when you press the reset button on desktop computers. If it has one...

    What I would like on the other hand would be that the back cover would be bolted to the frame, rather than glued... means I could swap the battery when it wears out, like current lightweight laptops/ultrabooks have.
  • SleepyFE - Friday, July 4, 2014 - link

    It did a factory reset for me on LG L5. Or maybe i pressed the wrong combo (volume up + power off). Who know anymore. I didn't have to do it since.

    The possible battery swap sounds perfect. Kind of like a removable battery, but only the cover holds it in place, so the phone can stay thin. Is that what you meant?
  • ZeDestructor - Saturday, July 5, 2014 - link

    Yup. I don't mind pulling wires or carefully avoiding PCBs (And I bloody well should be, given I'm a Computer Engineering student!), and I understand why the batteries are sealed (less redundant casing), but I would like the replaceability to remain. Thus some screws holding things together looks like a good compromise to me: things can stay thin for marketing, I get my repairability, everyone is happy.
  • ZeDestructor - Friday, July 4, 2014 - link

    How do you measure up the Sony Xperia Z line? They all have strict "bands" in the phone body for different elements between the screen and the back panel: top is just enough room for a double-sided PCB containing almost all the electronics, the very bottom contains a speaker, microphone, vibrator, camera button and some antennas which leaves the middle as a large battery block, which as of right now is the biggest battery in a non-phablet phone.
  • phoenix_rizzen - Friday, July 11, 2014 - link

    Xperia Z: 2330 mAh
    Xperia Z1: 3000 mAh
    Xperia Z2: 3200 mAh

    G2: 3000 mAh
    G3: 3000 mAh

    So, out of the complete Z line up, only 1 has a larger battery, and each of the phones is physically larger (taller and wider) with smaller screens (diagonal) than either the G2 or G3.
  • rxzlmn - Tuesday, July 15, 2014 - link

    Well, the current one (who would care about past models?) does have the bigger battery. And the screen has the same diagonal as the G2.
  • H20_mike - Saturday, July 5, 2014 - link

    The slight increase in volumetric efficiency doesn't make up for the loss of capacity over time that all LIPO batteries suffer with enough charge cycles. As a heavy user having the option to replace the battery with a new one is a huge benefit. Also nice if buying a used and not knowing the state of the battery.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now