
Flagship fight: which Android phone wins in 2014?
My my my, what an interesting year this has been for phones.
This year, Apple really does have its work cut out for it when it comes
to making a product that can beat what’s out this year. But what if you
want something from the slate of Android phones out now: what’s the
best Android for your money?
We’ve reviewed them all, and then some, spending time with them in
our lives and used them as a real phone, so let’s see just which is
better from our point of view, working this out not just in different
areas, but really getting down to the nitty gritty for those of you
who just aren’t sure yet.
Design and build
We’ll start with the most obvious one for all these handsets: the look,
and then the feel, and they all have something different to offer here.

Samsung, for instance, has taken an approach closer to what it offers in its
tablets, with a plastic body, shiny faux metal trim, and a dimpled back to give
the feeling that you’re holding a fabric or leather-bound handset that won’t
slip out of the hands.
It’s comfortable, that’s for sure, but well built it isn’t, feeling more like plastic
and less like a strengthened material like metal or aluminium.

LG has taken a similar approach, adopting plastic in the design but painting it
to look metal. That’s a slightly better approach, and the G3 feels a touch
stronger than the S5 and just as comfortable, but it’s still plastic.
HTC and Sony are thinking along the same lines, however, making their
phones out of premium materials.
In the case of HTC’s One M8, it’s mostly made out of aluminium, and we’re
not kidding on that, with a brushed aluminium making up around 90
percent of the handset’s design, with glass the rest thanks to the
screen. It’s certainly schmick, and it feels fantastic and solid in the hands, too.

Sony’s Xperia Z2 has a similar approach, taking aluminium for the sides
and encasing the rest of the handset in glass, making it feel very premium,
similar to what Apple did with the iPhone 4 and LG with its Optimus G,
the first in the G series handset.
Our only quibble with the Xperia Z2 design is that it’s so angular that it
can ruin pants and jeans, as we found out when we carried it around

Ruggedisation
Making a phone water and dust proof is now a thing, because you’re going
to take it out of the office, so why not make it as durable as humanly possible?
In this year’s four flagship fighters, only two are slightly ruggedised, with
water and dust resistance applied to the Sony Xperia Z2 and Samsung’s
Galaxy S5. You can probably get the HTC One and LG G3 a little bit wet
, but don’t expect them to perform like what Sony and Samsung have
provided.
Both have protection against water and dust, but to different limits, and
keep in mind, if you want these to keep resisting these elements and
not succumb to a watery grave or die a dusty death, you need to leave
their little plug ports closed when the particles or droplets hit.

For those unaware of IP ratings, it stands for “Ingress Protection” and is
an international rating to determine levels of resistance to elements that
don’t normally agree with electrical components. We’ve seen it in devices
before, but up until 2013, they were generally very bulky, so its introduction
in slim-line phones is a pretty serious development.
In IP ratings, the first number relates to dust or “solid particle” protection,
while the second is about liquids.
Samsung’s S5 relies on an IP67 rating, and when you break that down,
that means it is protected against all dust (6) making it dust tight, while
the 7 means the Galaxy S5 can survive contact with water for an immersion
of up to a metre.

Sony’s Z2 has an IP58 rating, which cuts back on the dust protection a bit,
bringing it to mostly dust protected though some might get in, while the
8 in the IP rating means the Xperia Z2 can go beyond one metre in depth,
though usually only to a maximum of three metres.
The time you spend with that phone under water will probably be small-ish,
with around 15 to 30 minutes the most you’ll want to use it for at one time,
but it’s still a pretty decent amount of time with a phone underwater,
so that’s something.

No comments:
Post a Comment