Nexus One
Display Type
AMOLED capacitive touchscreen
Size
480 x 854 pixels, 3.7 inches
- Multi-touch input method
- Accelerometer sensor
- Proximity sensor for auto turn-off
Memory
Internal 512MB RAM, 512MB ROM
Card slot microSD (TransFlash) up to 32GB, 4GB included
Data
GPRS Class 10 (4+1/3+2 slots), 32 - 48 kbps
EDGE Class 10, 236.8 kbps
3G HSDPA 7.2 Mbps; HSUPA, 5.76 Mbps
WLAN Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n
Bluetooth Yes, v2.1 with A2DP
Infrared port No
USB Yes, microUSB v2.0
Camera
Primary 5 MP, 2560х1920 pixels, autofocus, LED flash
Features Smile detection, geo-tagging
Features
OS Android OS, v2.1
CPU Qualcomm Snapdragon QSD8250 1 GHz processor
Messaging SMS(threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Email, IM
Radio Stereo FM radio with RDS
GPS Yes, with A-GPS support
Java Yes, MIDP 2.0
- Noise cancellation with dedicated microphone
- Digital compass
- Dedicated search key
- Google Search, Maps, Gmail
- YouTube, Google Talk, Picasa integration
- MP3/eAAC+/WAV/WMA9 player
- MP4/H.263/H.264/WMV9 player
- Voice memo
The HTC-built and (soon to be) Google-sold device runs Android 2.1 atop a 1GHz Snapdragon CPU, a 3.7-inch, 480 x 800
display, has 512MB of ROM, 512MB of RAM, and a 4GB microSD card (expandable to 32GB). The phone is a T-Mobile device
(meaning no 3G if you want to take it to AT&T), and includes the standard modern additions of a light sensor,
proximity sensor,and accelerometer. The Nexus One has a 5 megapixel camera with LED flash, and we have to say so far
the pictures it snaps look pretty decent (and the camera software is much faster than the same component on the
Droid). The phone is incredibly thin and sleek -- a little thinner than the iPhone -- but it has pretty familiar
HTC-style industrial design. It's very handsome, but not blow-you-away good looking. It's a very slim, very
pocketable phone, and feels pretty good in your hand.