Testseek.fr ont rassemblé 494 examens experts du Samsung GT-I9250 Galaxy Nexus et l'estimation moyenne est 82%. Faites descendre l'écran et voyez les toutes les revues pour Samsung GT-I9250 Galaxy Nexus.
November 2011
(82%)
494 Avis
Note moyenne issue des avis d’experts sur ce produit.
Utilisateurs
-
0 Avis
Note moyenne délivrée par les utilisateurs du produit.
820100494
Les éditeurs ont aimé
Ecran HD de 4.65 pouces
Faible encombrement pour ce type de dalle
Premier Smartphone sous Android 4
Interface mature pour séduire le grand public
Assurance d'obtenir les mises à jour rapidement
équipement complet avec la NFC
Configuration solide
Écran Super AMOLED HD
Android Ice Cream Sandwich
Processeur dualcore 1
2 GHz
Android 4.0
Ecran de 4
65 pouces
Définition de 720 x 1 280 points
Batterie de 1 750 mAh
Ecran Super AMOLED HD
Performances ébouriffantes / Finition
Compatibilité vidéo
Taille d'affichage
Poids/Encombrement pour un grand écran
Android 4.0
LA meilleure version du système
Interface améliorée
Navigation web
Bonne réactivité
Qualité audio de la sortie casque
Écran Super Amoled HD
Entièrement tactile
Android 4.0 ICS
Interface catchy
Gestion multitâches à tous les niveaux
Design audacieux
Fluidité de la navigation/interface
Grand écran très confortable sans rendre l'appareil encombrant
ICS
Une meilleure interface
Plus sympathique à utiliser et surtout plus fluide
Très bonne expérience web
Appareil photo simple à utiliser
Interface Holo cohérente
Bonnes performances
Ecosystème qui commence à atteindre une certaine maturité
DualCore 1
Les éditeurs n'ont pas aimé
Capture photo et vidéo décevante
Stockage limité à 13.3 Go sans extension mémoire
Autonomie tout juste acceptable
Rendu des photos
Pas de stockage de masse
Pas d'adaptateur MHL fourni
Pas de support microSD
Capteur photo de 5 Mpix
Pas de Bluetooth 4.0
Pas de slot micro SD
Autofocus lent en vidéo
Manque de fluidité en capture 1080p
Rendu photo en retrait de la concurrence
Vidéo
Quelques saccades
Autonomie pas extra
Reconnaissance faciale
Un gadget à améliorer
Haut-parleur médiocre
Pas d'emplacement MicroSD
Qualité des photos
La surface arrière de la coque
La batterie ne survit pas à une journée complète d'usage intense
L'absence de carte mémoire pour les gros consommateurs de multimédia
Un appareil photo qui nécessite une application tierce pour un usage optimal
L'Android market doit confirmer son améli
Volume du haut parleur trop bas
Encore quelques bugs (mais qui peuvent être corrigés)
Publié: 2012-05-12, Auteur: Dan , review by: mobileburn.com
Extrait: Sponsored links, if any, appear in green. The Google Galaxy Nexus for Sprint is virtually the same phone that has been available from Verizon Wireless since December of last year. It features a 4.65-inch 720p Super AMOLED display, 1.2GHz dual-core proc...
Shorter battery life than other Galaxy NexusesMediocre camera performanceEarly adopters will have to wait for LTE service
The Galaxy Nexus remains one of the best Android phones on the market, and this version, in particular, includes Google Wallet. Still, the battery life is relatively short, and early adopters will have to wait for Sprint's LTE network to go live....
Ice Cream Sandwich out of the box, Still has an attractive display, 4G LTE enabled
Sluggish performance, Choppy web browsing, Poor quality video recording, Poor battery life, Low signal strength
First and foremost, if you’re a Sprint customer who simply can’t wait any longer to experience the bountiful features associated with Ice Cream Sandwich, you should no doubt check out the Samsung Galaxy Nexus. However, bear in mind that the handset is...
Extrait: The Samsung Galaxy Nexus is a know quantity. Since the end of 2011, we've reviewed Google's reference device as an unlocked GSM model and on Verizon with LTE. Now Sprint has picked up this Android OS 4.0.4 Ice Cream Sandwich smartphone for $199 on contrac...
Extrait: So how does it stand up on the scale of Android powered smartphones? Does the lack of Google Wallet make the Verizon version not up to snuff? We find out right here right now for you. If you want to jump ahead of the video review check it our hereHardware...
This was it, shutterbugs. Apparently we don't have an ultimate camera phone here, but even if we had one, it wouldn't have been the new HTC One X. The handset did arrive with a very fast ImageSense camera, which made photo-taking very intuitive and fa...
There's no doubt that both the One X and Galaxy Nexus are incredibly strong opponents to come out against. It's quite interesting, though, when you think about how your overall impression of a handset changes with time. When one approaches the One X a...
Extrait: Nexus is a smartphone family signed by Google, while the OEM manufacturer is variable – for Nexus One, it was HTC, and for the next one, Nexus S, Google picked Samsung; the latest member of the family, Galaxy Nexus, is signed by Samsung yet again. As i...
Excellent performance; tops smartphone benchmarks (except for graphics processing), Software is a significant step forward. You'll never want to go back after using 4.0, Giant build is good for people interested in a big screen…
…but too big for onehanded use, Display isn't very bright, Battery life is poor, barely lasts a day under light to medium use
As a smartphone, the Galaxy Nexus is a few steps beyond the line of what we consider a phone. It's huge at 4.65″. The battery life is poor, and with only an LTE model available that battery drains ever faster. It downscales from the popular Galaxy S II mo...