S
SyntaxT
Ambitioniertes Mitglied
- 8
Wie vermutlich einige andere auch, bin ich im Moment nur am suchen, wer etwas zum X5 schreibt. Bei den XDA Developers haben zwei Leute mir etwas geschrieben. Eigentlich wollte ich den Vergleich zum Defy, aber den habe ich noch nicht gefunden. Wenn da jemand etwas hat, wäre ich super dankbar. Damit meine ich nicht RAM und Prozessor, sondern Ablesbarkeit in der Sonne, Sprachqualität, Ausdauer, solche Sachen...
I can't check against the Moto Defy but battery seems to last longer than my Xperia X8. My Ideos X5 has plenty of capacity to play MP3 music for about 6 hours continuos while hooked up to a hi-fi system at work, beeping occasionally when emails are received. I browse the web and replyt to emails with it at meal and rest breaks, and while on the bus going to and from the mine workings, a total length of day without recharging of about 12.5 hours.
The battery is quite low then by the time I get back to my "donga" in the accomodation villiage but it isn't in to the red on the indicator. So I'm quite happy with the battery life.
Both the Xperia X8 and the Ideos X5 seem to flatten their battery in about 2 hours of GPS, voice assisted, turn by turn navigation driving. Likely this is the combination of powering the GPS circuits, hunting for mobile phone towers while moving at speed, accessing the web for map and guidance updates through the mobile network and amplifying the voice instructions to playback through the speaker. Solution, get a car charger!
I've tried using the OsmAnd application which uses OpenStreetMap files that I download on to the SD card before leaving home (essential for most mines in the West Australian outback where network coverage usually doesn't exisit) instead of google maps. THAT improves battery life a little (network data turned off) but I still have a USB charger in the vehicle.
This isn't an Android thing, I had the same issues with my Nokia 6110 Navigator. Summary, if I'm going to use GPS navigation on a phone for more than a couple of hours, I'd better be carrying an auxilliary power source!
For walking, I bought one of those little adaptor kits that use a single AA battery with voltage converter built in to the battery casing. And I even have a hand generator with phone adaptor plugs to charge the phone when all else fails. Happily, I've not had to use either of these for more than brief testing purposes yet, but both systems work.
After all the natural disasters around the world already this year, it seems wise to have an emergency supply of phone power because experience shows that mobile networks can be got back up after things like floods and earthquakes much quicker than than fixed phone lines.
Und hier der Zweite:
I have to say i'm quite happy with this Ideos X5
Sure the battery will run down fully by the end of the day, but thats with me having wifi on at home and at work (with wifi set to be on all the time, not just when the screen is on)
So wifi on and bluetooth on and gps turned on (with latitude running) so by the end of the night i'll have to plug it in for charging (love how quickly it charges!)
It wouldnt surprise me if i turned off wifi/bluetooth/gps/turned down brightness and only used it for phone calls a couple of times a day it would last much longer than just one day but thats not real life for most of us.
Would love the option of some manufacturer making an extra capacity battery with bigger back cover to give it a couple of days of using everything though, i wouldnt mind a couple of millimeters thicker back as the phones pretty thin already.
But for the price this phone rocks, i can buy almost four of these phones for the price of one iphone4 and can configure it the way i want it.
Still waiting for the cyanogen mod rom though, then it will totally rule.
Was ich selbst noch herausgefunden habe:
Es scheint einen WLAN Bug zu geben, dass nach dem Aufwachen das WLAN nicht funktioniert. Der work around ist, WLAn nicht abzuschalten, wenn der Bildschirm aus geht. In wie weit das vermeidbar am Akku zieht, kann ich nicht beurteilen.
Manche kritisieren den Akku. Bei 2h mit Navi, wie der erste schreibt, muss ich shcon schlucken. Mir hat mal jemand geschrieben, dass er mit dem Galaxy 3 stundenlang wandert.
Wenn man telefoniert soll der Gesprächspartner manchmal schlecht verständlich sein.
Der Blickwinkel auf das Display soll recht eng sein, in der Sonne soll es nicht so toll sein. Ich habe hierzu zwei Videos auf Youtube gefunden. Eines zeigt Ideos X5 gegen Desire HD. Auf beiden sind praktisch nur die Bäume (bzw. deren Spiegelbild natürlich) zu sehen, wenn man nicht senkrecht auf das Ding schaut. In einem anderen Video war leider nicht das Defy, sondern das Desire HD gegen das Samsung i9000 zu sehen. Da schien mir das 9000er besser zu sein. Konkret. Schräg bei Sonne konnte man wenigstens noch erahnen, was auf dem Display ist.
Das sind meine Ergebnisse "so far". Wenn jemand noch irgendwo Erfahrungsberichte findet, wäre wahrscheinlich nicht nur ich froh.
VG,
SyntaxT
I can't check against the Moto Defy but battery seems to last longer than my Xperia X8. My Ideos X5 has plenty of capacity to play MP3 music for about 6 hours continuos while hooked up to a hi-fi system at work, beeping occasionally when emails are received. I browse the web and replyt to emails with it at meal and rest breaks, and while on the bus going to and from the mine workings, a total length of day without recharging of about 12.5 hours.
The battery is quite low then by the time I get back to my "donga" in the accomodation villiage but it isn't in to the red on the indicator. So I'm quite happy with the battery life.
Both the Xperia X8 and the Ideos X5 seem to flatten their battery in about 2 hours of GPS, voice assisted, turn by turn navigation driving. Likely this is the combination of powering the GPS circuits, hunting for mobile phone towers while moving at speed, accessing the web for map and guidance updates through the mobile network and amplifying the voice instructions to playback through the speaker. Solution, get a car charger!
I've tried using the OsmAnd application which uses OpenStreetMap files that I download on to the SD card before leaving home (essential for most mines in the West Australian outback where network coverage usually doesn't exisit) instead of google maps. THAT improves battery life a little (network data turned off) but I still have a USB charger in the vehicle.
This isn't an Android thing, I had the same issues with my Nokia 6110 Navigator. Summary, if I'm going to use GPS navigation on a phone for more than a couple of hours, I'd better be carrying an auxilliary power source!
For walking, I bought one of those little adaptor kits that use a single AA battery with voltage converter built in to the battery casing. And I even have a hand generator with phone adaptor plugs to charge the phone when all else fails. Happily, I've not had to use either of these for more than brief testing purposes yet, but both systems work.
After all the natural disasters around the world already this year, it seems wise to have an emergency supply of phone power because experience shows that mobile networks can be got back up after things like floods and earthquakes much quicker than than fixed phone lines.
Und hier der Zweite:
I have to say i'm quite happy with this Ideos X5
Sure the battery will run down fully by the end of the day, but thats with me having wifi on at home and at work (with wifi set to be on all the time, not just when the screen is on)
So wifi on and bluetooth on and gps turned on (with latitude running) so by the end of the night i'll have to plug it in for charging (love how quickly it charges!)
It wouldnt surprise me if i turned off wifi/bluetooth/gps/turned down brightness and only used it for phone calls a couple of times a day it would last much longer than just one day but thats not real life for most of us.
Would love the option of some manufacturer making an extra capacity battery with bigger back cover to give it a couple of days of using everything though, i wouldnt mind a couple of millimeters thicker back as the phones pretty thin already.
But for the price this phone rocks, i can buy almost four of these phones for the price of one iphone4 and can configure it the way i want it.
Still waiting for the cyanogen mod rom though, then it will totally rule.
Was ich selbst noch herausgefunden habe:
Es scheint einen WLAN Bug zu geben, dass nach dem Aufwachen das WLAN nicht funktioniert. Der work around ist, WLAn nicht abzuschalten, wenn der Bildschirm aus geht. In wie weit das vermeidbar am Akku zieht, kann ich nicht beurteilen.
Manche kritisieren den Akku. Bei 2h mit Navi, wie der erste schreibt, muss ich shcon schlucken. Mir hat mal jemand geschrieben, dass er mit dem Galaxy 3 stundenlang wandert.
Wenn man telefoniert soll der Gesprächspartner manchmal schlecht verständlich sein.
Der Blickwinkel auf das Display soll recht eng sein, in der Sonne soll es nicht so toll sein. Ich habe hierzu zwei Videos auf Youtube gefunden. Eines zeigt Ideos X5 gegen Desire HD. Auf beiden sind praktisch nur die Bäume (bzw. deren Spiegelbild natürlich) zu sehen, wenn man nicht senkrecht auf das Ding schaut. In einem anderen Video war leider nicht das Defy, sondern das Desire HD gegen das Samsung i9000 zu sehen. Da schien mir das 9000er besser zu sein. Konkret. Schräg bei Sonne konnte man wenigstens noch erahnen, was auf dem Display ist.
Das sind meine Ergebnisse "so far". Wenn jemand noch irgendwo Erfahrungsberichte findet, wäre wahrscheinlich nicht nur ich froh.
VG,
SyntaxT