Unfortunately, the Nexus 5 does not come with the 3200mAh battery that the U.S LG G2 has. Instead, it ships with a much more nimble 2300mAh battery, and it is presently not clear that’s a removable one or not. Note that the Korean G2 has a similar setup, but ships with two batteries out of the box. From the looks of it, this is not a removable battery.
What it has in common with the G2 is the Snapdragon 800 application processor (AP) which is a system on chip from Qualcomm that has an integrated Adreno 330 graphics processor. This should give the Nexus 5 an incredible performance for the price, since the 16GB model starts at $349 (no contract) or about 50% less than other high-end smartphones. It also gets Wireless charging from day 1, which may inspire other handset manufacturers to follow.
Like the Moto X, Nexus 5 will be constantly listening to user voice commands, and you can trigger a search at anytime by saying “OK Google”. Existing Nexus devices are officially getting their Android 4.4 update in “weeks” according to Google. Here’s the official teaser video:
[youtube:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQ0XTJqFLIE#t=18]For day to day usage, there are some interesting user interface changes: Android now prioritizes contacts that communicates more often with you. The Caller ID can now search outside your contact list and into Google listings to tell you who is calling – this is a really good idea. Android 4.4 consolidates SMS, MMS and Hangout messages into a single thread to group conversation by “people”, and not by app. This is a good thing that many companies including Palm and Motorola attempted, but unfortunately, their efforts eventually went away. Android is more likely to stay around.
Emoji, the fun Japanese icons, have been added to GMail. This is pretty neat, and I know for a fact that this type of icons have made or broken a lot of messaging apps in Asia. I don’t think that it will change the tide for GMail, but it could be highly appreciated by many users.
Kitkat 4.4 also receives out of the box support for Google Cloud Print, which is an easy way to push print jobs to your printer over the internet. Although printing is typically associated with a tablet usage, it’s fair to say that you could just as well want to access a document on your phone and print it, or have it print at a location in Cloud Print.
There a many, many more features if you really want to look at them all. Developers like Box are already all over the new KitKat features.
North America:
Rest of World: