New report shows that the Android Ice Cream Sandwich operating system of the new Verizon Wireless Galaxy Nexus can hide the carrier’s
Bloatware, defined by many as the not-so-helpful apps of wireless carriers here in United States.
One report confirms that future Verizon Galaxy Nexus customers can hide (and disable) all the Verizon apps that will come pre-loaded on the new flagship phone. Droid Life posted the image on Thursday, showing that users can disable all the Verizon-centric apps, specifically the “My Verizon Mobile” and “VZ Backup Assistant.”
I’m not into starting an argument about the usability of these Verizon apps, but it looks like the new Google operating system version will try to satisfy the consumers by giving more control on the new Galaxy Nexus and future Android Ice Cream Sandwich smartphones.
erizon’s rival, Sprint, has received a lot of “thanking” from users and bloggers after allowing users to disable the bloatware from their phones without any rooting required. Obviously, more Android users will love the popular operating system with the new Ice Cream Sandwich and its ability to disable the apps that the carriers are trying to offer.
The Android Ice Cream Sandwich-powered Samsung Galaxy Nexus will arrive here in the US this month according to rumors. The device is already available in other countries but the variant offers HSPA+ only. Here in the US, the Galaxy Nexus will take advantage of Verizon’s 4G LTE, or Long Term Evolution. For starters, it is faster than HSPA+, “theoretically” and “in real life” based on multiple tests.
The Galaxy Nexus is powered by 1.2GHz dual-core TI OMAP CPU and 1GB of DDR2 RAM. Majority of its features are coming from the software side, like the improved user experience which is according to reviews, the Android Ice Cream Sandwich is the easiest to use compared to previous versions (like Honeycomb or Gingerbread).
The Android 4.0 operating system includes the Face Unlock, better data management, better application and widgets management and support, and the more polished user interface including the native Gmail, People or Contacts App and the new web browser and multitasking featuring the flick-to-dismiss which is quite similar to WebOS.
Via Droid Life.
Search for more Verizon Wireless and Galaxy Nexus articles:
Galaxy Nexus Verizon vs T-Mobile, AT&T and Sprint Galaxy S2
HTC Rezound vs Samsung’s Galaxy Nexus (Prime)
Galaxy Nexus (Nexus Prime) Verizon release date tipped again
Bloatware, defined by many as the not-so-helpful apps of wireless carriers here in United States.
One report confirms that future Verizon Galaxy Nexus customers can hide (and disable) all the Verizon apps that will come pre-loaded on the new flagship phone. Droid Life posted the image on Thursday, showing that users can disable all the Verizon-centric apps, specifically the “My Verizon Mobile” and “VZ Backup Assistant.”
I’m not into starting an argument about the usability of these Verizon apps, but it looks like the new Google operating system version will try to satisfy the consumers by giving more control on the new Galaxy Nexus and future Android Ice Cream Sandwich smartphones.
erizon’s rival, Sprint, has received a lot of “thanking” from users and bloggers after allowing users to disable the bloatware from their phones without any rooting required. Obviously, more Android users will love the popular operating system with the new Ice Cream Sandwich and its ability to disable the apps that the carriers are trying to offer.
The Android Ice Cream Sandwich-powered Samsung Galaxy Nexus will arrive here in the US this month according to rumors. The device is already available in other countries but the variant offers HSPA+ only. Here in the US, the Galaxy Nexus will take advantage of Verizon’s 4G LTE, or Long Term Evolution. For starters, it is faster than HSPA+, “theoretically” and “in real life” based on multiple tests.
The Galaxy Nexus is powered by 1.2GHz dual-core TI OMAP CPU and 1GB of DDR2 RAM. Majority of its features are coming from the software side, like the improved user experience which is according to reviews, the Android Ice Cream Sandwich is the easiest to use compared to previous versions (like Honeycomb or Gingerbread).
The Android 4.0 operating system includes the Face Unlock, better data management, better application and widgets management and support, and the more polished user interface including the native Gmail, People or Contacts App and the new web browser and multitasking featuring the flick-to-dismiss which is quite similar to WebOS.
Via Droid Life.
Search for more Verizon Wireless and Galaxy Nexus articles:
Galaxy Nexus Verizon vs T-Mobile, AT&T and Sprint Galaxy S2
HTC Rezound vs Samsung’s Galaxy Nexus (Prime)
Galaxy Nexus (Nexus Prime) Verizon release date tipped again
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