Manufactured by LG, Nexus 5 retains the familiar minimalistic aesthetic of previous models, which is set in a curving, matte rubberised case, and is available in either black or white. The gadget boasts a beautiful 4.95 inch full HD screen which packs in a retina-piercing 445 pixels per inch and the Gorilla Glass 3 screen is impressively scratch-resistant; a blessing for those among us who have a habit of keeping our phones and keys/coins in the same pocket. Icons and small texts look sharp and high resolution photos, videos, and games appear remarkably bright and vivid.
Under the slick exterior, Nexus 5 runs on Android Mobile Operating System’s latest KitKat (4.4) version, which preserves the look and feel of previous Android versions, and the operating system is as user-friendly as ever, with the added bonus of Nexus lines of mobile devices always being the first ones to receive future Android updates. The phone is powered by a 2.26 GHz quad-core Snapdragon processor which runs on 2GB of RAM, resulting in your memory-intensive, multi-tasking, multimedia needs being handled with ease and a 2300mAH battery on board should last a day of fairly intensive use.
A couple of areas where Yantrick feels Nexus 5 can do better are its 8MP rear camera (the norm for latest flagship devices is a minimum of 13MP) and its rather limited maximum storage space of 32GB (no microSD card slot). However, he is willing to overlook these ‘indiscretions’ given the high-end specifications that Google is offering at such a reasonable price.
Yantrick’s verdict: Google’s Nexus 5 is gentle on your pocket and easy on your eyes. If you’re upgrading, then give the Nexus a high five.
