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Android

Ice Cream Sandwich, one OS to rule them all?

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As you may well be aware, Android has upgraded to its latest incarnation, version 4.0, Ice Cream Sandwich. What you may not realise is that it probably isn’t the OS to unite all Android devices, I don’t even think it’s the OS to deter iPhone users from iOS. Let me explain.

I am a huge Android fan, and as such admitting what I just did irks me, it really does. I had high expectations for Ice Cream Sandwich and most of them were met, however it’s the ones that weren’t which have resulted in my mixed feelings about it.

Right, in a few words, Ice Cream Sandwich is a fantastic operating system, my Nexus S is silky smooth, the battery lasts longer than on Android 2.3, Gingerbread, and the new colour scheme — grey and cyan — gives the handset a very “Tron” like theme, and that’s also okay with me. However, where I think Android has failed slightly — and it’s only slightly because I believe that ICS is a great OS, it’s just not a game-changer – is that it doesn’t feel “new”.

Now this may not make sense but browsing the phone, I have to admit, Android 4.0 feels like it’s a skinned version of Android 2.3. And that’s what annoys me. Ice Cream Sandwich was billed to be a new OS, and to me it feels like an updated version of an old formula. Sure, the menus look different, there’s hardware acceleration, and the lock-screen has been tweaked, so it feels more like a refresh as opposed to a massive upgrade.

That being said, I do like it a lot. I was just a little disappointed when I received my OTA notice a few months ago and after booting up discovered that things were mostly the same, there was nothing “ground-breaking” included.

So how is this a step in the right direction then? Well here’s the good part. Android has never been a pretty OS, in fact, older versions were downright ugly. But I think that ICS looks fantastic. No longer do I recoil in horror when looking at the menus on my phone, instead they encourage me to keep flicking (which is infinitely smoother now by the way) and from the improved camera and gallery, to the more stylised Gmail apps and very useful data monitor, the entire OS feels, well, just better.

So Ice Cream Sandwich is the best version of Android yet, without a doubt, and it’s definitely a step closer to iOS in terms of the way it looks and feels. (I still maintain that its functionality is superior, albeit slightly less user friendly) The only thing that was a slight let down is that when I booted my phone up for the first time after upgrading it didn’t blow my mind or exceed my expectations. It met them, and what it did do is bring Android up to date from a design perspective.

I hope that fellow Android users will receive their updates in a timely fashion, because if ICS is going to unite the Android landscape, more people need to be using it. Upgrades for various phones are arriving in March, apparently, so keep a lookout for that. If you’re using ICS, let me know on which handset and your thoughts, because I don’t believe I can be alone in my sentiments.


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  • Vincent Swart

    Sure iOS has great design and usability but Android is a platform. Google definitely put effort in on the back end for ICS:
    Better multitasking usability, NFC support, voice input engine, controls for network data, camera face detection, face unlock. There is also more developer friendly API platform/frameworks forcalender, voicemail, social, accessibility, text to speech, VPN client etc. Updated media codecs, hardware accelerated 2D.
    The tools to make a pretty UI are there for anyone to create home launchers (no such thing on iOS?), icons, themes etc.

  • Rick Bosch

    Hey Vincent, 

    I totally agree with you. I know they’ve made lots of changes, but many of them to me are just, kind of pointless. Face unlock is cool, when it works, which isn’t very often on the Nexus S, maybe it’s better on the Galaxy Nexus. The Nexus S OTA actually didn’t even include it, needed to grab a custom ROM for that. 

    the controls for network data have always been there too, but a great example of what I would deem innovative would be if the Big G implemented toggles as the devs do. It makes life a little easier. 

    I know a lot of the changes have been behind the scenes, and because I’m not that clued up on all these things, I take your word for it, because I’ve read the same things around the web. It almost feels as if the devs were a big part of Google thinking behind ICS, and that is a very good thing. However the point I was trying to make is that if someone who tried Gingerbread and didn’t like it tried ICS, I don’t think they’d change their mind. Maybe they would though. thanks for the comment.

  • Larry Smilg

    I also agree – I got tired of waiting for an ICS update on my AT&T Nexus S and put a custom ROM on it.  I really like it – everything is smooth and pretty, but there’s nothing astounding to “show off”.  (except Google Wallet, which isn’t really ICS-specific & I shouldn’t use now that I’m rooted)  I had that experience when I showed my newly updated phone to another guy who really likes his Android, but he hadn’t heard of ICS & he just was sorta like “eh” when he saw it.  

    BTW, the Nexus S front camera isn’t good enough for Face Unlock to be reliable, which is why the feature isn’t in the stock ROM. 

  • Jamesdamien121

    Hey just a query for you all, I have a nexus s I9020 and have received no update as yet! I’m on the 02 network in the uk! I’m tired of looking for info on this and getting no where! I hear Google have pulled the plug on it, but why do some have it and it works fine and others have it and its ruined there phone?

  • Rick Bosch

    Hi man, 

    Google pulled the update because of a few bugs. I personally ran it for a couple of weeks and it worked fine. So not really sure why it was pulled. You can find the OTA file somewhere and flash it without rooting, etc. Your call really.

  • Mitchelljuergens

    I am using ICS 4.0 on a Kindle Fire and it’s great. Also installed it on HP Touch Pad. Both installations improved the way I use the devices. Before both devices were so limited in their ability. Want to install ICS 4.0 on a HP TC4200 Tablet. Has anyone tried this? I know the processor is Intel.

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