This is all par for the course in the industry. The big players all hate each other. Carriers mess up handset OEMs who muck up the OS vendors configuration who collide with carrier lock-in and exclusivity requirements.
The reason we care this time is that this is the new flagship Android phone. But there are dozens of handsets every year that find themselves in the same mess.
It's really unfortunate how Google & Samsung handled the release of the Galaxy Nexus. It's been over a month since they announced it and still no official release date.
I'm an Android fan but I wish Google/Samsung should take its cues from Apple and not announce a product with no definite release date in sight.
My guess is that Verizon has something to do with the delay. The phone has been released in other countries.
I have been critical of Android's responsiveness in the past (saying that I wanted to throw every Android phone I tried at the wall after a short time) but that's definitly no longer the case with the Galaxy Nexus. I just had a chance to play around with it and the experience is very smooth.
There was only a little lag on the homescreen with one of those useless animated wallpapers but if you turn it off it's smooth. I didn't see any lag at all in the webbrowser and scrolling as well as zooming seemed (finally!) 1:1. Scrolling on the homescreen is for some weird reason still not 1:1, but that seems to be a bug or weird design decision and not performance related.
The aesthetics of ICS are very nice (though some UI decisions are still weird) and I finally feel ready to wholeheartedly recommend an Android phone. No more throwing at walls.
(The only thing that annoyed me was the damn screen. I can reach every point on it but it's so freaking uncomfortable).
Google Nexus phones have horribly inefficient release cycle. It happened with Nexus One, Nexus S and is happening with Galaxy Nexus:
- Announce a flagship device superior to iPhone late in the late fall, make it big, get everyone excited
- Loose all the steam by dragging wide availability into Jan/Feb, until most people don't care anymore.
- by the time people start buying it in the spring, get trumped by the rumors of the upcoming iPhone update.
6 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 23.8 ms ] threadhttp://www.droid-life.com/2011/12/14/verizons-announces-shin...
I wonder how pissed Samsung is
The reason we care this time is that this is the new flagship Android phone. But there are dozens of handsets every year that find themselves in the same mess.
I'm an Android fan but I wish Google/Samsung should take its cues from Apple and not announce a product with no definite release date in sight.
My guess is that Verizon has something to do with the delay. The phone has been released in other countries.
I have been critical of Android's responsiveness in the past (saying that I wanted to throw every Android phone I tried at the wall after a short time) but that's definitly no longer the case with the Galaxy Nexus. I just had a chance to play around with it and the experience is very smooth.
There was only a little lag on the homescreen with one of those useless animated wallpapers but if you turn it off it's smooth. I didn't see any lag at all in the webbrowser and scrolling as well as zooming seemed (finally!) 1:1. Scrolling on the homescreen is for some weird reason still not 1:1, but that seems to be a bug or weird design decision and not performance related.
The aesthetics of ICS are very nice (though some UI decisions are still weird) and I finally feel ready to wholeheartedly recommend an Android phone. No more throwing at walls.
(The only thing that annoyed me was the damn screen. I can reach every point on it but it's so freaking uncomfortable).