The only smartphone for which everyone is eagerly waiting for is the upgraded version of Nexus 4, commonly known as Google Nexus 5. The Nexus 5 was first spotted in Google KitKat statue unveiling video, then the device came on FCC, and lastly the device was spotted in a bar last month. After so many leaks, few specifications of Nexus 5 were revealed, like battery capacity and wireless charging support. And now, this new leak has revealed almost all the specifications of Nexus 5.
A log-file surfaced by folks at Myce.com has revealed the full specifications of the upcoming Nexus 5. The file at first glance seems genuine and the leaked specifications are believable.
The Google Nexus 5 is being again built by LG. This Nexus smartphone is said to be based on LG's latest flagship smartphone LG G2, but the specifications have been stripped down a bit to keep the pricing in check. The design of Nexus 5 is not like the G2, and the smartphone does not feature the revolutionary back buttons.
According to Myce report, the Nexus 5 will come with a 5-inch Full HD display (potentially 4.97-inch) with 442 ppi pixel density, 2.3GHz quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processor with Adreno 330 GPU, 2GB RAM and Android 4.4 KitKat (aka Key Lime Pie).
The phone is also said to come with 16GB fixed internal storage, 8MP rear camera (no idea if it has OIS like the LG G2 camera) along with 1.2MP front facing camera and 2,300 mAh of battery with wireless charging support.
Connectivity series on Nexus 5 include, 4G LTE/3G HSPA+, dual-band Wi-Fi a/b/g/n/ac, Bluetooth 4.0, NFC and GPS. Sensors include, Accelerometer, Magnetometer, Gyroscope, Proximity, Light, Barometer and Orientation.
In addition to the news, a clearest image of the LG made Nexus 5 has popped up in a forum thread at MacRumors. The image (at the top) was posted by weespeed in Macrumours forum. He notes that he was able to hold the Nexus 5, and the device is smaller than the G2, and feels a lot like the Nexus 7. The device in the image is exactly similar to the device we saw in FCC, and the official statue unveiling video.
Source - MacRumours, Myce & AndroidWorld
Via - Droid-life & GSMArena
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