Categories: Mobile

Android Gingerbread released, boasts great spec and tech

Google Nexus S

US Android users have received an early Christmas present from Google with the release Android 2.3, codenamed Gingerbread, today.

The updated OS will be first made available on Samsung’s Nexus S smartphone and by partnering with Samung Google worked to combat some of the strongest criticisms of the Android platform, mainly that variations in the hardware have undermined the quality of the OS.

Indeed, according to Google, less than two years after the release of the first Android device the OS is now shipped on over 100 different devices.

This marriage looks to have paid off, the Nexus S is one of the strongest iPhone competitors on the market with a 1GHz processor, front and rear-facing cameras, a respectable 16GB memory and state-of-the-art, Near Field Communication (NFC) technology. Have a look at NFC in action in this video.

NFC is a version of short-range radio technology that allows a greater number of devices to communicate with mobile devices. The technology will allow the phone to automatically communicate with inanimate objects, so walking past a film poster could trigger the download of the trailer, or restaurants could automatically upload their menu onto your phone.

Full Nexus S spec

Hardware

  • Haptic feedback vibration
  • Three-axis gyroscope
  • Accelerometer
  • Digital compass
  • Proximity sensor
  • Light sensor

Battery

  • Talk time up to 6.7 hours on 3G
    (14 hours on 2G)
  • Standby time up to 17.8 days on 3G
    (29.7 days on 2G)
  • 1500 mAH Lithum Ion
Ajit Jain

Ajit Jain is marketing and sales head at Octal Info Solution, a leading iPhone app development company and offering platform to hire Android app developers for your own app development project. He is available to connect on Google Plus, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

View Comments

  • If this phone and the iPhone came to Verizon I would have a hard time choosing between the two. What are the main upgrades in Gingerbread though? Will I get a lot of additional features on my current Motorola Droid?

    • @JennaLanger I am wondering that myself, from what I can see a lot of the upgrades are tied to the hardware - the two cameras, NFC technology. I am hoping that it will at least give 2.2 users a better battery life. NFC would be a big draw for me but it might be a few years before that takes off.

    • @JennaLanger As @pdscott mentioned, one of the major new features is the support for near-field communication, NFC. Also, VOIP abilities have been added that integrate directly into Contacts. After that I think it's mainly just UI improvements, like the improved keyboard, one-touch word selection, a download manager, and of course much needed improvements to power-management.

Recent Posts

DARPA O-Circuit program wants drones that can smell danger with ‘a new class of biologically inspired computer’

DARPA's O-Circuit program looks to build a new class of biologically inspired computer equipped with…

1 day ago

How a ten-day bootcamp is helping students at Delhi Public School hone their AI skills 

As AI races into classrooms worldwide, Google is finding that the toughest lessons on how…

1 day ago

WEF promotes eat the bugs agenda in ‘new nature economy’ report

The push to eat bugs is not an organic movement coming from the people, but…

2 days ago

Africa’s Digital Assets Push Gets an Upgrade as ADAS Teams-Up With CEO’s Forum

As Africa’s digital economy accelerates, a new partnership between the Africa Digital Assets Summit 2026…

3 days ago

Why companies can’t afford black-box AI anymore

The State of Generative AI in the Enterprise report from Menlo Ventures found that companies…

3 days ago

From one donor, thousands of doses: Meet the startup making cell therapy accessible

Living therapies, made of engineered immune cells – and capable of hunting down cancer, reversing…

3 days ago