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Google Nexus S phone goes on sale December 16

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After the consumer reception for its “superphone,” the Nexus One, one might think Google had had enough with trying to sell phones under its own name, but that’s not true: today, the company announced the Nexus S, a new Android-powered smartphone that will be the first phone to market to feature Android 2.3 (“Gingerbread”), along with a 4-inch, 480 by 800 curved glass “contour display” designed to be more comfortable in hands…and against one’s face. Google co-developed the Nexus S with Samsung, and represents what Google characterizes as a “pure Google” experience, without all the bells and whistles other phone makers and carriers layer on top of Android.

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“Samsung was thrilled to work with Google to create the first device featuring the much anticipated Android 2.3 OS,” said Samsung Telecommunications America chief strategy officer Omar Khan, in a statement. “Nexus S integrates Samsung’s best-in-class hardware and technology with the exciting new features and upgrades of Android 2.3 Gingerbread to give consumers a breakthrough smartphone experience.”

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Under the hood, the Nexus S is a well-specced Android phone—although the final specs don’t quite match up to all the rumors that have been floating about the device for the last few weeks. The Nexus S features that 4-inch, 235ppi touch-enabled “contour display” with a curved glass surface and enough resolution to handle high-definition video with aplomb. The Nexus S also sports two cameras (a front-facing VGA camera for video chat and a 5 megapixel back-facing camera), integrated 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi and Bluetooth wireless networking, near-field communication (for those point-of-sale systems and “bump” interactions), assisted GPS, and a battery Google says should offer up to 6.7 hour of talk time on 3G networks. The phone is powered by a 1 GHz Cortex A8 Hummingbird processor—some fans had been hoping for a dual-core processor—and features 16 GB of onboard memory. Although the Nexus S has microUSB connectivity, it seems to be missing removable storage: there’s nary a SD or microSD slot to be found in the phone’s specs. The Nexus S is a quad-band GSM device with tri-band HSPA, offering mobile broadband at speeds of up to 7.2 Mbps (and 5.76 Mbps on HSUPA), and sports the usual panoply of additional sensors, including a gyroscope, accelerometer, digital compass, and a proximity sensor.

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For software, the Nexus S sports Android 2.3 “Gingerbread,” offering support for near-field communications, a new keyboard with multitouch support, integrated VoIP support, and a more streamlined user interface. Gingerbread also maintains existing Android features like the capability to function as a mobile hotspot (carrier-permitting) and a slew of Google apps to support navigation, voice, youTube, Gmail, search, maps, and more.

The Nexus S will be available for purchase unlocked or with a T-Mobile service plan online via Google and from Best Buy beginning December 16; the UK’s Carphone Warehouse and Best Buy retailers will get the phone December 20. But for how much? So far, Google isn’t saying.

[Update 06-Dec-2010: The Nexus S will be on sale for $199 with a two-year T-Mobile service agreement, or $529 unlocked.]

As with the Nexus One, Google may find the Nexus S to be more popular with developers than with consumers, particular as app makers look to get a jump on Android 2.3 and near-field communications capabilities.

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Geoff Duncan
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Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
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