From the Editor's Desk: Welcome back, Nexus





That headline's been written for a week now, but it's certainly taken on new meaning in the past few days. With the announcement of Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, and a preview release coming out of Google I/O, I've found myself back on the Galaxy Nexus full-time. That comes after couple months on the HTC One X (mostly loved it) and the Galaxy S III (again, mostly loved it).




For those of you new to Android, the Galaxy Nexus is the third iteration of the "Pure Google" phone. It's an annual project from Google that gives developers a stable hardware platform on which to work, though it probably won't quite be on the cutting edge of the available technology. (That's true from the time of the original Nexus One, as well as the Nexus S.) It also is the one true "stock" experience, meaning there are no carrier or manufacturer customizations. (Here comes another caveat, though: The Galaxy Nexus on Sprint and Verizon has had a couple apps added.) It's also completely customizable from a modding standpoint, which makes it the Holy Grail for those who like to tinker. The bootloader's unlockable with a single terminal command, and gaining root access is trivial.




Returning to the Nexus has been easy enough; I always enjoyed the stock ICS experience in the first place. Jelly Bean really has made it that much better. Here are a few thoughts on coming back:




The "Project Butter" improvements have made the phone much faster (or at least the on-screen elements look and act faster).

So many apps still have multiple sizes of widgets, instead of taking advantage of the resizing feature. Too bad. (I imagine that's for backward compatibility?)

If I wasn't a fan of on-screen buttons before, I am now. It's not that I hated the capacitive buttons on the One X (or even the Galaxy S III, though I'm still not sold on the physical home button), it's just that the on-screen buttons on the GNex are placed toward the center of the phone, making it easier to use in either hand, especially considering that I have freakishly small thumbs, thanks to an accident with some radioactive goo and a spider. Or maybe that was something else. Regardless, I'm back on the on-screen button train.

And proper on-screen buttons means proper menu items, as Google intends. You want to talk about Android "fragmentation"? This is it, plan and simple. Different manufacturers doing different things to make up for the fact that they're going against Android design principles. They're well within their right to do so, but it's muddying the waters.

Yeah, the display isn't as good as what's on the HTC One X, and it's not quite as good (though close enough for me) to the Galaxy S III. And I've been surprisingly OK with that. I thought it would bug me more than it does.

All in all, the Galaxy Nexus with Jelly Bean (which, if you must know, I haven't bothered rooting) stands poised to serve me well for the next few months, until the newest latest and greatest phone.




And that brings us to the alternate meaning of today's headline. You can once again trade $349 and in return get a shiny new Samsung Galaxy Nexus from Google. That comes after it was briefly "banned" because of an Apple lawsuit over patent infringement, which at the time pretty much seemed like the end of the world, even if it wasn't.




It's a damn shame that Google's going to have to change anything, though it's worth it if it means the phone's able to ship again. And as of this writing, it'll ship in 1 to 2 weeks, according to the product page on Google Play. (It wouldn't surprise me to see that shift even earlier in the coming days.)




The Galaxy Nexus is back, but this much is sure: This shall not be the final lawsuit, and quite possibly it shan't be the final "banning." Something needs to be done. If you've yet to listen, we discussed this one at length in our most recent podcast.
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