One of the best things about an Android device is that it comes in various form factors and various price ranges. Over the years I've bought close to 6 Android devices. My first device was expensive and had no GPU hardware. I could not play games on it, so I decided to move to another one. This time I got a Nexus 4 as a gift
Then I decided to buy a device from an Indian manufacturer with a quad-core CPU/1GB RAM/GPU and a decent display resolution with a 5" screen (Karbonn S5). The device was cheap and I could not help but compare the device and be delighted with my purchase. Over the year of usage of this device, I learnt my lesson
Lesson learnt - buy a phone with good reliable hardware and frequent updates, use the cheap ones for experimentation and development
The good news is that since the hardware was cheap, I could easily replace it and keep the phone to try a cyanogenmod upgrade on it. Can't do much about the bad hardware though except use it as a device to try experiments on :)
Then I decided to buy a device from an Indian manufacturer with a quad-core CPU/1GB RAM/GPU and a decent display resolution with a 5" screen (Karbonn S5). The device was cheap and I could not help but compare the device and be delighted with my purchase. Over the year of usage of this device, I learnt my lesson
- There are absolutely no updates for the device - why do I care, what this meant is that I was left open to OpenSSL heartbleed.
- The phone's hardware, touch screen started failing, some areas stopped responding
- The firmware on the phone was signed using test-keys. A lot of useful software started detecting the phone as rooted :)
- The key bottleneck for most software is not number of CPU's, but the amount of RAM/Speed of the processor and the quality of the GPU
Lesson learnt - buy a phone with good reliable hardware and frequent updates, use the cheap ones for experimentation and development
The good news is that since the hardware was cheap, I could easily replace it and keep the phone to try a cyanogenmod upgrade on it. Can't do much about the bad hardware though except use it as a device to try experiments on :)
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