pgoelz
New member
There is no problem with installed apps, 2-3-4-100000000000g connection, syncing or 3x cycle or who knows what other issue. THE ONLY PROBLEM WITH THESE PHONES BATTERY DRAINAGE IS THE DEADLY COMBINATION NOKIA HAS BECOME (MS + CHINA) AND THERE WILL ONLY BE SOLVED IF NOKIA DEVELOPS ITS OWN PHONES IN FINLAND AND THEY DO THEIR OWN OPERATING SYSTEM.
But that will not be happening soon since Nokia = Microsoft and viceversa. Good night everyone.
PS - Nokia Lumia 1020 users buy some Camera Grips they give extra juice...
My WP8 adventure began when I practically "stole" a like new 820 on Ebay for $38. I was curious about Windows Phone and the Nokia 820 was an OK size so I put my ATT SIM in it and started playing with it. My impression was then and is now that it is a very well made phone. Regardless of where it was made, I don't think there is ANYTHING wrong with the hardware or the build quality.
The OS, on the other hand, is awful and I suspect is the sole reason for all the issues.... battery life being only one of them. The problem is not that it is Microsoft per-se. The problem is that WP was released to the wild half baked and fixing glaring issues may well take longer than the life cycle of any given phone.
I stuck with my 820 until after the Amber update and did my best to debug the battery life issue. When it was good it was very good. I saw several days of 0.5% drain per hour in standby overnight. But then for no obvious reason, that figure would triple. And without adequate diagnostic software, it was anybody's guess what the culprit was.
So I finally gave up and bought a Motorola Moto X. What a difference! Android is fairly mature by now and I have actually had ZERO issues. Battery life is not as good as the 820 at its best. But the Moto X can easily do about 1.2%/hour in standby even with location services, bluetooth, active display and WiFi on, and that figure is rock solid and consistent. No crazy ups and downs. If you cruise the Moto X forums, you will see very few posts about actual issues.
I think Nokia makes great phones. WP8 has possibilities, but Microsoft needs to dedicate more resources to fixing broken stuff and open up the OS to better diagnostic software or it is going to go down the tubes. IMO. So for now my 820 is unused and shunted to the side. I am very thankful that I didn't pay much for it. Maybe some day it will become a great phone when the kinks get ironed out.
Paul