![]() I guess you could make the argument that with the exception of the Nexus 10, Google has eliminated any industrial design fragmentation and finally crafted some hardware design language that it owns for itself. The result is a two-device family that feels like it was made by the same company, and it’s really the first time Google has aligned its industrial design in such a sweeping fashion, in this case even across two different hardware partners. If you scaled down the Nexus 7 design you’d get something which is awfully close to the Nexus 5. The Nexus 5 and 7 share almost the same shape and profile, and in the case of the black Nexus 5, same rubberized soft touch material on the back and sides. ![]() Instead, the Nexus 5’s design borrows much of its industrial design language from the Nexus 7 (2013), with the slightly rounded top and bottom, landscape “nexus” logo on the rear, and large radius curves all around the side. The Nexus 5 on the other hand doesn’t bear any similarities to the G2, with its buttons on the back, narrow bezel, rounded backside, and glossy plastic. The Nexus 4 bore a lot of superficial similarities to the Optimus G, including a glass back with laser etched design below its surface, the same display, banding, and materials. Let’s start with the hardware, since that’s the normal flow for a review. For Nexus 5, Google has once again gone with hardware partner LG and silicon vendor Qualcomm, this time with a phone that’s somewhat analogous to the LG G2 (but not exactly the same platform) and using the latest and greatest MSM8974 (Snapdragon 800) silicon. Last generation we saw the Nexus 4, a device that was essentially an LG Optimus G for T-Mobile in different clothing and priced at a competitive price, yet still included the latest and greatest silicon from Qualcomm with APQ8064 (S4 Pro). In recent years, we’ve seen Nexus go from being part enthusiast curiosity and development device, to a brand tailored for consumers looking for the latest and greatest the Android platform has to offer at a killer price. While the Nexus program originally started only for smartphones, we’ve seen Google since extend the program to include a 7-inch and 10-inch tablet form factor, as well as a line of accessories. Nexus 5, as its name makes obvious, is the latest generation of Google’s line of Nexus smartphones, and also is topped by a 5-inch display. The result is a Nexus phone, and for five iterations now that process has repeated, resulting in a smartphone that’s the purest expression of Google’s vision for its mobile platform. ![]() You can try the other features on this page but I have everything OFF and now my phone is back to the way it originally was.Each year, Google picks a silicon vendor, a hardware partner, and releases a new version of Android running on top of them. If you have a Samsung J7 V (which I don’t recommend ), you recently had the phone system update to ANDROID 9.0 and your screen stays black even though you are receiving a call try the following:ģ) While in NOTIFICATIONS click on DO NOT DISTURBĤ) While in DO NOT DISTURB click on HIDE NOTIFICATIONSĥ) TURN OFF “HIDE FULL SCREEN NOTIFICATIONS”, while your phone is locked and the screen is off a call will wake the phone and you will see the full screen called id with I was searching the internet for hours and even spoke to SAMSUNG tech support and no one was able to give me an answer so I had to do it the old fashion way and check every individual setting ad sub folder until I found it, and here’s what I figured out:
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