Friday, October 28, 2011

Nokia Lumia 800 vs iPhone 4S vs Galaxy S II – Web Browser Speed Test [VIDEO]

One of the first things that bloggers do when an event in which it announced a new smartphone is said to visit to compare the performance of your smartphone against other, more established names in smartphones. Our friends over at SlashGear did exactly that yesterday, Nokia World, where Nokia's first Windows 7-based mobile smartphone called Lumia 800, compares its performance against the browser of the iPhone 4S and the Samsung Galaxy S II announced.

SlashGear separately compares the performance of the browser Lumia 4S 800 against the iPhone and Galaxy S II performance tests are not exactly scientific because they do not take place, in a controlled environment. The two tests are, then, anecdotal, and we recommend that you not jump to conclusions based on them.

It is not surprising because of its strict hardware and software optimization, 4S iPhone has proven itself the fastest browser in comparison. Mobile Safari seems to be taking full advantage of dual-core chips Apple A5, which has been shown, moreover, that the fastest in its class to be.

Apple uses a pair of seemingly clever tricks, like filling in the address bar before loading the page, think about the user that the browser rendering faster. The rotating circle in the status bar IOS is what you actually see, in order, if the page is loaded or not. But despite all the tricks of apparent 4S has the iPhone pages load faster!

The Galaxy S II, which is powered by a 1.2 GHz dual-core chips with power, stood at a respectable place in the second test. The biggest advantage that Lumia is 800 4S and iPhone, it comes with support for Flash, how Adobe would say, surfing the "full web" with him.

Although a core less and half the RAM, the Nokia 800 Lumia did surprisingly well against giants such as in the Galaxy iPhone 4S and S II comparison tests. It was certainly the slowest of the bunch, but only one or two seconds.

SlashGear found that all navigation page "Smooth all-out" as soon as the page loads. As we already said, is not only the speed of the browser rendering, but also on the network speed / load, so do not consider this as a final test.

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