The quality of this device's construction is as-advertised. Can't imagine how many pieces we'd be cleaning up if this were an iPhone...
In the video it seems like the white color has come off a bit where it got impacted and scuffed up at the bottom and sides of the device. Doesnt look too good.
In the video it seems like the white color has come off a bit where it got impacted and scuffed up at the bottom and sides of the device. Doesnt look too good.
It's kind of misleading though. Anything non-white on the damaged part of the white phone is just stuff picked up from the ground. The colors are solid through, so underneath the white color is more white color. If that made any sense.
Had the person doing the dropped test tried to wipe off the phone after the drop it would have turned out pure white again.
It's a matter of angles, not simply screen down. I don't think anyone is claiming the Lumia 920 (and N9, 800, and 900 before it) is invincible, just that it's built better than the competition. Having owned (and occasionally dropped) all of the devices mentioned (without a case), I can attest.
This is why drop tests aren't really a good way of measuring a devices ability to resist damage. The angles can never be replicated, one phone might land on the unluckiest corner and the next phone lands on the best possible place.
But they're a good indicator of which devices are more prone to damage. iPhones for instance are notorious for their flimsiness. That reputation doesn't come from no where.
