If you want an Android smartphone that's unencumbered with vendor or
mobile operator skins and bundled apps, and receives timely OS updates,
Google's Nexus range has been available to fill this role since January
2010. The latest in a line stretching from the HTC-made Nexus One,
through a couple of Samsung devices (Nexus S and Galaxy Nexus), is the Nexus 4. This time, Google has partnered with LG for its showcase Android handset.
The Nexus 4, which runs the latest Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) OS, comes
with 8GB or 16GB of internal storage. There's no external expansion, so
choose your model carefully. The 8GB version costs UK£239 (inc. VAT)
from Google's Play store (US$299, AU$349), while the 16GB version costs
UK£279 (US$349 or AU$399).
We were sent the 16GB model for review, and it rapidly turned out to be a hot ticket — Google's UK store sold out within 30 minutes
of opening for Nexus 4 business on 13 November (a pattern repeated in
other countries). At the time of writing, the store's message remains
"We are out of inventory. Please check back soon", although it's still
available (at a premium) from O2 and Carphone Warehouse in the UK.
Until now, LG hadn't exactly set the smartphone world alight,
although its recent high-end Optimus 4X HD and Optimus G (on which the
Nexus 4 is based) handsets were well received. So let's see what the
fuss is all about.
Design
The £279 16GB Nexus 4 doesn't look like a device
that costs £250 less than Apple's 16GB iPhone 5, or around £120 less
than Samsung's 16GB Galaxy S III, but that's because Google makes little
or no margin on the device — O2, by contrast, charges £399.99 for the
16GB model on Pay As You Go, for example. Hence the feeding frenzy at
the Play store and the thriving eBay market — a quick survey of the UK
site showed the 8GB model going for around £371 and the 16GB model
fetching around £428 at the time of writing.

It may be thicker and heavier than the iPhone 5 and Galaxy S III, but
the Nexus 4 — which is slightly rounded at the top and bottom to
counteract its otherwise rather angular appearance — feels comfortable
in the hand and will fit into most shirt or jacket pockets. The
chamfered sides have a rubberised finish that helps with grip, and even
the metallic-finish band framing the screen doesn't cheapen the overall
look — largely because it's reasonably understated. The back is a flat
piece of Gorilla Glass 2 with a near-unique feature (it's also used on
LG's Optimus G): Crystal Reflection etching that polarises incident
light to give a jewel-like sparkly effect. This sounds as though it
could seem tacky, but in fact, like the rest of the design, it's
relatively discreet. The back carries the main 8-megapixel camera and an
LED flash, Nexus (rather than Google) plus LG branding and a small
vertical speaker grille.

The Micro-USB port can also be used with SlimPort
adapter cables to connect to an external display — while simultaneously
charging the phone via a second Micro-USB port on the adapter. You can
buy an HDMI cable on Amazon for UK£23.95/US$29.95, with VGA, DVI and
DisplayPort versions to follow at the end of November.

We've been carrying the Nexus 4 for a week or so, and found it pretty
resistant to scratches and minor bumps. It's not suffered any drops
from significant height onto hard surfaces, so we can't comment on its
ability to withstand serious mistreatment.
Features
The Nexus 4 is powered by a state-of-the-art SoC — the Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Pro,
comprising the quad-core APQ8064 CPU running at 1.5GHz and the Adreno
320 GPU. It's backed by 2GB of RAM and, in our review unit, 16GB of
internal, non-expandable, storage. Out of the box, 12.92GB of this
storage was available for user apps and data.
The screen, as mentioned above, measures a sizeable 4.7in. across the
diagonal and is a 1,280-by-768-pixel IPS unit protected by tough Corning Gorilla Glass 2.
The high pixel density (318ppi) makes for sharp images, and the display
can go very bright if turned right up — although you'll pay for this in
battery life. Contrast is good, colours are reasonably accurate — at
least to the naked eye — and the touchscreen is very responsive.
Connectivity is good — with one proviso that may or may not be
significant depending on where you live and which mobile operator you
use. I refer, of course, to LTE support, which is not enabled on the
Nexus 4 — despite the presence on the motherboard
of a Qualcomm LTE chip (WTR1605L) and an LTE-compliant modem
(MDM9615A). What you do get is quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE, penta-band 3G
(WCDMA/UMTS) and DC-HSPA+ support (up to 42Mbps download). In the UK
(where this review was conducted), the recently launched EE (Everything Everywhere, formed from the merger of T-Mobile and Orange) LTE network has limited coverage and is currently experiencing teething troubles, so the lack of LTE support is unlikely to trouble many users. Elsewhere, things may well be different.
Completing the wireless lineup is dual-band 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth
3.0, NFC (Android Beam) and GPS/GLONASS. There's also support for
external monitors via Wireless Display (based on the Wi-Fi Alliance's Miracast standard) and wireless charging via the Qi
standard. Unfortunately we were unable to test either of these features
as we had neither a Miracast-compliant display nor a Qi-compliant
charging station.
Like all high-end smartphones, the Nexus 4 is bristling with sensors —
accelerometer, compass, ambient light, gyroscope and barometer (the
latter's primary purpose being to deliver altitude data for faster GPS
lock-on).








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