New A7100
phones are continually coming out. Which should you buy? Here's a
summary of The Associated Press' recent phone reviews, including the latest on
Google phones running a pure version of Android.Many of the features, however,
make the phone more complicated to use. In some cases, custom features work only
some of the time. In other cases, you're confronted with too many ways to do
similar things. The S4 might be for you if you don't mind spending time
customizing it. Otherwise, you must bypass all the gimmicks to get to what
otherwise is a good phone.
The One is a phone that can match Apple's
standards of feel and finish. Plastic and metal are joined together so well that
you can't tell by feel where one ends and the other starts. The 4.7-inch screen
is also quite a sight, its 468 pixels per inch among the best. Two front-facing
speakers give you real stereo sound when turned sideways to watch a movie. HTC's
camera has a lower resolution than most. Promises of better low-light shots from
its larger sensors only partly delivered. Like other Android phone makers, HTC
adds confusion by customizing the interface. There are four different "home"
screens from which to launch apps, for instance. The One is worth checking out
as an alternative to the Galaxy S4 from Samsung, which also adds complication
with its custom features.df24ggEDsd
Google has worked with both Samsung
Electronics Co. and HTC Corp. to come out with a "Google Play" edition of the
Galaxy S4 and HTC One phones. Instead of using customized software from Samsung
and HTC, the Google phones run a pure version of Android, as developed by
Google. Essentially, the Google versions of these phones are replicas of the
originals, with most of the bells and whistles removed. That's a good thing, as
many of those "improvements" added to Android by Samsung and HTC actually make
the phones more complex to use. The bad news: The Google edition of the S4 sells
for $649, while Google's HTC One goes for $599, compared with the $100 to $200
that you can typically get the original models for with a two-year agreement.
And the phones don't work on Verizon and Sprint's CDMA networks.
The Q10
is a successful marriage of the modern touch-screen I5
MTK6577 smartphone and the iconic BlackBerry keyboard. The
interface takes time to get used to, and it doesn't have the simple immediacy of
the iPhone. But once you learn it, you can positively zip between tasks. The
downside to the new BlackBerry 10 operating system is its relative dearth of
third-party software. In addition, the keyboard eats up space that could be
devoted to a bigger screen, leaving the Q10 with a square, 3.1-inch screen.
Nonetheless, the Q10 is likely to be attractive to the BlackBerry faithful, and
it deserves serious consideration from Android and iPhone users as
well.
The Z10 is the first phone to run RIM's new BlackBerry 10 operating
system and comes across as a very good stab at regaining at least some of the
cachet of the BlackBerry. But the Z10 looks like every other smartphone on the
shelf. It's a flat black slab with a touch screen, measuring 4.2 inches. Only
once you turn it on do the differences become more evident. Older BlackBerrys
are great communications devices, but are poor at multimedia and at running
third-party apps, something the iPhone excels at. The new BlackBerry 10 software
is a serious attempt at marrying these two feature sets.
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