Source - http://www.technewsworld.com/
By - Patrick Nelson
Category - Place To Visit In San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn
By - Patrick Nelson
Category - Place To Visit In San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn
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| Place To Visit In San Diego |
Here's a novel way to find out if you do indeed need a new phone.
It's a benchmarking app that will test components and provide a
comparison with crowdsourced benchmarks from other common devices out
there.
If your 2-year-old, or so, phone or tablet seems a bit sluggish
compared with the speed at which your colleagues and friends whizz
through their smartphone-related tasks, the answer is that it probably
is.
As we know, devices are frankly dinosaurs at a year old, and this app
will conveniently prove it so that you can comfortably go to the store
and buy a new device -- guilt free and with no spousal recriminations.
After all, you have documented evidence. How's that for $2.99?
Benchmark & Tuning is actually a geek's dream because it tests
the phone's CPU along with memory and input/output capabilities -- your
device's power, in other words.
If you ever dreamed of being as a space rocket engineer, surrounded
by dials and meters in the lab, calculating optimum thrusts and so on,
this will do for you the same thing, but it's for us, the smartphone
wielding proletariat.
The Features
Benchmark & Tuning (Full) works by crowdsourcing benchmark
comparisons. This means comparison data comes from fellow users, rather
than from possibly inflated benchmarking stats from phone marketing
departments.
There's been a flurry of accusations
aimed at phone makers in the media recently. Suggestions are that their
numbers are inflated. The use of this app for comparisons means that
you're not using that dubious, and conceivably rigged, data.
The second key feature is that rooted users can set a governor too.
Rooting is a process that Android enthusiasts use to gain control over
the operating system. Ordinarily, you'd need two apps to do all this.
One app for benchmarking, and one for tuning.
Test Results
I had a blast playing with the app and was delighted to find that all of
the devices I tested performed poorly. This means that I'm gathering
ammunition for eventual upgrades cross-gadgets.
Unfortunately, because I, along with vast numbers of other U.S.
consumers, have moved over to a prepaid smartphone plan -- I'm using
Sprint MVNO Ting in the city and Verizon Prepay in rural areas -- I
don't have the benefit of subsidized handsets anymore.
It's no longer a case of waiting for a two-year upgrade and
automatically getting the latest, fastest phone. It's now a two-to-three
year, or maybe longer full-cost proposition, so it involves some
thought and research. This app fits the arsenal nicely.
I tested three of my devices. One device, a Motorola Photon 4G, came
in 19th out of 25 overall; a Toshiba tablet came in 15th; and a cheap
Galaxy Y miniphone came in at a super-bad 23rd. The Galaxy Y was
purchased to function as a wireless hotspot only, so I expected lame
results. However, I was quite surprised about the poor performance of my
other devices.
If you're interested, as of the day I tested, the HTC One S came in
first overall, Samsung's Galaxy SIII second and the Asus Transformer
Prime TF201 third.
A Must-Have
This being a geek's plaything, you'll see when you run tests that some
stock devices have been reported with better this-than-that -- processor
power than memory, for example.
Interestingly, the top seven -- which included the HTC One X,
5.3-inch Samsung Galaxy Note N7000 and two 7-inch Samsung Galaxy Tabs --
all had roughly the same I/O results.
All the same performance in the real world?
Peculiarly, there wasn't a Samsung Galaxy S IV result on the list.
The S IV is Samsung's latest and greatest. I don't know why it was
omitted, but it skewed the results somewhat.
Overall, though, this app is a must-have if you're contemplating a
new-phone investment and don't trust the manufacturer's numbers.
Want to Suggest an Android App for Review?
Is there an Android app you'd like to suggest for review? Something you
think other Android users would love to know about? Something you find
intriguing but aren't sure it's worth your time or money?

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