- Mar 1, 2011
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Oh wait, no they didn't. There's not a tech site out there that wasn't aware of the spec requirements of second gen devices. There's very little wiggle room with the biggest differentiators coming in the form of build quality. Thus, I'm a little surprised that the "spec-shootout" has resumed with the release of the 900.
I recently decided to re-read some of the early reviews for the Titan on Neowin and the Verge and both reviewers seemed pleased with the speed of the device and the build quality. Specs weren't the main focus as much as the user experience.
The requirements for second gen devices have not changed since then, yet look at some of the "spec" reviews of the 900 and it seems that the only thing that has changed is the perception. The Engadget reviewer seems genuinely upset that the 900 doesn't blow the other second gen devices out of the water -- despite already knowing that all second gen devices would all function roughly the same.
But as Engadget put it:
You could make the argument that the 900 should firmly beat the competition in things like the SunSpider test or battery life, but as I said before, none of the second gen devices were going to completely demolish the other because there's little wiggle room in the specs. Reviewers seem unjustly disappointed because the 900 doesn't provide a significant hardware boost versus other WP devices. Now, if the 900 was significantly below the benchmarks of other second gen devices then that's a serious problem. But all second gen devices are pretty similar in benches, which is exactly what Microsoft was aiming for.
What the 900 should be judged for is things like call quality, wifi range, the Nokia specific ecosystem (which is darn nice!), build quality and camera quality. But not because some benchmarks didn't jump leaps and bounds over the competition.
I recently decided to re-read some of the early reviews for the Titan on Neowin and the Verge and both reviewers seemed pleased with the speed of the device and the build quality. Specs weren't the main focus as much as the user experience.
The requirements for second gen devices have not changed since then, yet look at some of the "spec" reviews of the 900 and it seems that the only thing that has changed is the perception. The Engadget reviewer seems genuinely upset that the 900 doesn't blow the other second gen devices out of the water -- despite already knowing that all second gen devices would all function roughly the same.
But as Engadget put it:
Stacked up against its WP comrades old and relatively new, including mid-rangers and high-end handsets, the 900 disappoints. With a middling SunSpider score, a WP Bench result that fails to best last year's Titan and battery life on par with Samsung's (non-LTE) Focus S, the 900 safely earns the underachiever crown. It's disheartening to see this highly anticipated phone fall prey to whatever discord resulted from AT&T, Nokia and Microsoft's combined software broth.
You could make the argument that the 900 should firmly beat the competition in things like the SunSpider test or battery life, but as I said before, none of the second gen devices were going to completely demolish the other because there's little wiggle room in the specs. Reviewers seem unjustly disappointed because the 900 doesn't provide a significant hardware boost versus other WP devices. Now, if the 900 was significantly below the benchmarks of other second gen devices then that's a serious problem. But all second gen devices are pretty similar in benches, which is exactly what Microsoft was aiming for.
What the 900 should be judged for is things like call quality, wifi range, the Nokia specific ecosystem (which is darn nice!), build quality and camera quality. But not because some benchmarks didn't jump leaps and bounds over the competition.