Showing posts with label Google Nexus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google Nexus. Show all posts

Monday, 11 November 2013

Google Nexus 5 specs

Here is the new great phone by Google with a stunning price of 28,999 Rs it is really a great deal..
the phone combines the both speed and the power as well..
also with a great design and a marvelous 5" Display...



Here are the Detailed Specs..


Nexus 5

  • SCREEN
    • 4.95” 1920x1080 display (445 ppi)
    • Full HD IPS
    • Corning® Gorilla® Glass 3
  • CAMERAS
    • 1.3MP front facing
    • 8MP rear facing with Optical Image Stabilization
  • DIMENSIONS
    • 69.17 x 137.84 x 8.59 mm
    • 4.59 ounces (130g)
  • BATTERY
    • 2300 mAh
    • Talk time up to 17 hours*
    • Standby time up to 300 hours†
    • Internet use time up to 8.5 hours on Wi-Fi, up to 7 hours on LTE‡
    • Wireless Charging built-in
    *Testing was conducted by Google using preproduction Nexus 5 devices and software. Talk time tests used default settings with Wi-Fi off and LTE on.
    †Standby time tests used default settings with LTE on and Wi-Fi connected to a test access point. Wi-Fi internet tests had Airplane Mode on with Wi-Fi connected to a test access point, while loading three popular websites cached on a local server. The Nexus 5 loaded a page, waited 40 seconds, and then loaded a page from the next site.
    ‡LTE internet tests had Wi-Fi off and LTE on, and used the same testing method as the Wi-Fi internet tests.
  • AUDIO
    • Built-in speaker
    • 3.5mm stereo audio connector
  • PROCESSING
    • CPU: Qualcomm Snapdragon™ 800, 2.26GHz processor
    • GPU: Adreno 330, 450MHz
  • WIRELESS
    • Dual-band Wi-Fi (2.4G/5G) 802.11 a/b/g/n/nc
    • NFC (Android Beam)
    • Bluetooth 4.0
  • NETWORKS
    • 2G/3G/4G LTE
    •  
    • North America:
    • GSM: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
    • CDMA: Band Class: 0/1/10
    • WCDMA: Bands: 1/2/4/5/6/8/19
    • LTE: Bands: 1/2/4/5/17/19/25/26/41
    •  
    • Rest of World:
    • GSM: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
    • WCDMA: Bands: 1/2/4/5/6/8
    • LTE: Bands: 1/3/5/7/8/20
  • MEMORY
    • Choose 16GB or 32GB internal storage (actual formatted capacity will be less)
    • 2GB RAM
  • PORTS AND CONNECTORS
    • microUSB
    • SlimPort™ enabled
    • 3.5mm stereo audio jack
    • Dual microphones
    • Ceramic power and volume buttons
  • SENSORS
    • GPS
    • Gyroscope
    • Accelerometer
    • Compass
    • Proximity/Ambient Light
    • Pressure
    • Hall

Tuesday, 10 September 2013

Nexus 5 Leaked By Company's Own Promotional Vedio.

Rumors about Google's next Nexus device are heating up in the wake of a perceived leak via the company's own promotional video for Android KitKat earlier this week. Today, a filing from the FCC (via Engadget) that details a new, unreleased LG device making its way to the U.S. offers up what could be some more granular information on Google's next Android reference smartphone.

The Nexus 5 could be the "D820" from the filing, a chance made more likely by the fact that the images shared with the U.S. wireless standards regulator line up closely with the sneak peek revealed in Google's video, and by the knowledge that it contains wireless charging based on the Qi standard, a feature of its forerunner the LG Nexus 4. And per the filing, this supposed Nexus 5 would offer 7-band LTE, 802.11ac Wi-Fi networking, a 5-inch display, and come with Android 4.4 preloaded (which is named "Key Lime Pie" in the filing's firmware name string, a sign the KitKat arrangement was one made late by Google).

Measurements of the device place it at 131.9mm tall and 68.2mm wide per the document, which is slightly thinner and shorter than the Nexus 4 despite the 0.26-inch larger diagonal display, so expect top and bottom bezel to be shaved slightly with the Nexus 5 if these reports do indeed describe that smartphone.

Google started selling the Nexus 4 way back in November 2012, after announcing it at the end of October, so it's nearly due for a refresh. At the time, the lack of LTE was a noteworthy admission, so the fact that its successor could get fairly broad LTE band support is big news, and the Snapdragon 800 is definitely no slouch in the processor department. We'll likely have to wait a while yet to see what shape the next Nexus takes, but if this is it, and if Google can keep unlocked pricing in the same ballpark it managed for the Nexus 4, this could be a very good option for Android smartphone shoppers.