As usual, iFixit wasted no time to get inside the latest hardware, tearing apart the Nexus One just a day after it was announced. The handset is available for T-Mobile under contract for $179, contract-free for $529, and is coming to other carriers, including Verizon and Vodafone, this spring. Though sold by Google, the device was designed in conjunction with hardware maker HTC.
The new handset has a 1GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor inside. To get to it, the replaceable battery on the back of the Nexus One must be taken off. Access to the battery is allowed even though the device is just 0.45 inches thick — slightly thinner than the 0.48 inches on the iPhone 3GS.
"Once we took the fancy wrapper off the phone, the Nexus One revealed itself to be very similar to other smartphones, albeit with stronger hardware," the solutions provider said. "Its thoughtful internal design did impress us, as did its ease of disassembly."
The Nexus One also features 802.11n capabilities, besting the iPhone 3GS, which only offers 802.11g. The Broadcom BCM4329 Wi-Fi chip found inside is the same as was discovered in the third-generation iPod touch, though Apple's latest iPod does not support 802.11n out of the box.
Among iFixit's findings in disassembling the Nexus One:
- The handset is held together by numerous screws. This is very different from the fifth-generation iPod nano, which is held together mostly by glue and adhesive, making it easy to put together but difficult to take apart.
- "It's quite a colorful phone on the inside," the site said. "We've got oranges, greens, yellows, dark grays, and all sorts of fun stuff!"
- the 3.7-inch WVGA AMOLED display is made by Samsung. It features a resolution of 480 by 800 pixels, less than the Motorola Droid's 480 by 854 resolution, but more than the 320 by 480 pixel screen found on the iPhone 3GS.
- The touchscreen is powered by a Synaptics chip. Numerous other chips are included on the board, and most of them (at least three) are made by Qualcomm, including the QSD8250 Snapdragon ARM processor.
- It also includes an Audience A1026 voice processor that includes noise cancellation, and an LED flash that is smaller than a dime.
While the Nexus One gained a great deal of attention for its announcement Tuesday, Wall Street analysts said they still believe Apple's iPhone has the advantage, thanks mostly to the resounding success of the App Store. Apple announced this week that more than 3 billion apps have been downloaded for the iPhone and iPod touch.
128 Comments
Reviewers, App Store, and multi-touch notwithstanding, this is a very good product. Basically, the competition has caught up with Apple at this point (and perhaps bested it in a couple of key areas).
Apple must -- I have no doubt they will -- really push the envelope and change the game, yet again, with its 4th generation iPhone.
It would be good if there some preview of that at the forthcoming event.
So it looks like it's possible to have a replaceable battery without sacrificing compact design or brute processing power.
All phones should have the ability to swap batteries so that when you're on a long trip without access to an outlet you can at least do stuff on your phone for longer than 1 battery charge.
I really hope Apple innovates the iPhone with user-replaceable batteries.
Incidentally, I also wonder: what's happened to the vaunted 'we've patented the heck out of it with 200 different patents' boast from SJ two and a half years ago? How come the competitors have stomped all over it (except for multitouch in the US, apparently available elsewhere on Android).
I really hope Apple innovates the iPhone with user-replaceable batteries.
Unless they can double the battery life (by sealing it in) to, say, 10-12 hours, I have to agree with you.
It also has an FM radio chip
http://www.engadget.com/2010/01/06/n...nd-fm-transmi/