Nokia’s 9 reasons why the Lumia 920 is better than the Apple iPhone 5

1
166

While the iPhone 5 is getting excellent reviews from bloggers and other reviewers, and fans jamming shops from Sydney to Paris to pick up the tech juggernaut’s latest iPhone, Nokia is endeavouring to claim its flagship phone – Lumia 920 – better than Apple’s newly launched iPhone 5, which has broken all sale records by topping two million pre-orders in the first 24 hours. Nokia, in a new Facebook post, compared the key features of both the smartphones, and expectedly, has given extra points to the Lumia 920 in every feature. This is because, Nokia wants to convince you that the Lumia 920 is better than the iPhone 5. But, is it so?
Following are Nokia’s 9 reasons that why the Lumia 920 is better than the Apple iPhone 5:
1. Screen
The Nokia Lumia 920 has a bigger and sharper screen than the one on the new Apple iPhone 5. The Lumia 920 has a 4.5-inch Huge PureMotion HD+ WXGA IPS LCD, ClearBlack display, while the iPhone 5 features a 4-inch Retina display with a resolution of 1136×640-pixels. Also, the Nokia Lumia 920 has a resolution of 1280×768 pixels, which is higher than the Apple iPhone 5.
2. Camera
The Nokia Lumia sports an 8.7 megapixel rear PureView camera with optical image stabilisation and Carl Zeiss optics, while the new iPhone 5 has an 8-megapixel camera. But Nokia did not mention about the improvements in noise reduction, low-light performance, and fast photo taking in the new iPhone’s camera. Also, the 920’s front-facing camera offers 1.2 megapixel front camera compared with the iPhone 5’s 720 pixels.
3. Map
Apple Inc’s home-grown Maps feature is already facing criticism from users globally for a number of geographical errors, missing information and because it lacks features that made Google Maps so popular, including public transit directions, comprehensive traffic data or street view pictures. The new program has no public transit directions, limited traffic information, and flat-out mistakes, such as putting one city in the middle of the ocean. “Nokia’s suite of location-aware apps and services on its new Lumia devices put it in a clear lead over its competitors in terms of the depth, breadth and integration of the mapping, navigation and transport experiences it can offer. It also leads in terms of the global coverage it provides,” said Tim Shepherd, senior analyst at Canalys.
4. Design
Nokia’s Lumia 920 lets offers unique Live Tiles customisation, unlike the iPhone 5 on which icons are displayed in a single way, which can not be changed according to personal interests.
5. Image
While both cameras offer a Panoramic mode to let users shoot a single photo covering as much as 360 degrees, but Nokia, in the race, gives itself points for image stabilisation.
6. User interface
According to Nokia, the Lumia 920’s super sensitive touchscreen can be used not only with your fingertips, but also with finger nails, gloves and even any kind of pens. Nokia calls iPhone 5’s screen to be only sensitive, not super sensitive.
7. Charging
The Nokia Lumia 920 comes with built-in wireless charging. It can be charged without being plugged in; the user just places it on a wireless charging pod, while Apple’s iPhone 5 features ordinary charging.
8. Design and colour
Nokia says the Lumai 920 comes in various colours unlike the Apple iPhone that comes only in two colours. The Lumia 920 comes in the black, white, grey, red and yellow colours. On the other hand, the iPhone comes in white and silver, and black and slate colours.
9. Accessory
Nokia Lumia 920 offers more number of accessories as compared to what Apple offers with the iPhone 5.

1 COMMENT

  1. By paying attention to stressful situations
    and implementing them in a single area of the brain that cause the headaches – so I remain optimistic.
    One of those amino acids found in meat is glutamate or glutamic acid MSG.

    We offer medical treatment through two staff neurologists and a psychiatrist,
    as well as providing greater pain relief. But it has not been formally studied in rigorous placebo-controlled trials.

Comments are closed.