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Five smartphones battling for your Christmas stocking

If you’re thinking of a phone as a Christmas gift, here are a few you should be considering.

WALKING INTO A shiny phone shop decked out with Christmas decorations, giant posters declaring the best phone deals all while shoulder to shoulder with hundreds of others doing the same can be stressful.

So if you’re planning to buy a new smartphone for someone this year it’s nice to have an idea of what you’re looking for before you start queuing. Below are five of the most popular smartphones this year and what you can expect from each.

Samsung Galaxy S4

The design of Samsung’s latest offering is much the same as its predecessor but is noticeably thinner and lighter than before.

This is despite having a larger 5 inch HD screen with 13-megapixel camera making it one of the best phones out there for taking photos.

Samsung stuck with a plastic casing for the S4 and although it’s not a metal and glass body, it doesn’t look any less for it.

Pros: Quick, sharp camera. Big screen.

Cons: Slightly dimmer screen, plastic body.



image

(Pic: Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire)

Sony Xperia Z1

Sony’s new top of the range phone is by all accounts a sleek, impressive looking creation with glass-coated casing set atop of an aluminium frame.

The Android run handset is resistant to both dust and water so is a good choice for someone with a chequerd history with their phones.

It also has a 1080p full-HD display so one of the best around for watching videos and a 20-megapixel camera.

Pros: Sleek design, water resistant.

Cons: Average speaker sound.

image

(Pic: AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

iPhone 5S

Each new iPhone has something unique that is used as a key selling point. This time it is the use of a fingerprint to unlock the phone.

The iPhone cameras have been of consistent quality but other handsets like the Xperia can perhaps lay claim to being the best for photosright now. The new slow motion video capture feature is very impressive however and you’ll get hours of use out of it.

As is by now traditional with iPhone, ease of use is the main selling point.

Pros: Fingerprint ID, App store.

Cons: Smaller screen, price.

image

(Pic: AP Photo/Steve Helber)

HTC One

HTC packed as many additional features as possible into their flagship phone and the result should be given serious consideration to anyone making a purchase this Christmas.

It’s metal design is impressive has a screen that’s full HD and it’s size is right in the middle of some of its bigger and smaller rivals.

The HTC One is quick and runs on one the latest Android operating systems.

Pros: Excellent screen, fast.

Cons: No SD memory slot.

image

(Pic: HTC)

Nokia Lumia 1020

This one is for people who take their photography a little more seriously. It has a 41-megapixel camera so you’re going to have some very sharp images and its editing features are excellent.

The Lumia is a Windows phone so it’s good for Windows capatability and for those looking for an alternative to Android an iOS.

It has less processing power than some of its rivals though so can be slower at times.

Pros: Very sharp camera, Windows enabled

Cons: Less powerful, price.

image

(Pic: AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Read: Why don’t the new iPhones have 4G connections in Ireland? >

Read: Google Play brings music to Irish ears >


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    Mute Niall Mulligan
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    Nov 16th 2011, 2:13 PM

    Much and all as the euro is suspect …. when Conservative peers are trumpeting its demise, it makes me wonder whether it’s all bad.

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    Mute
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    Nov 16th 2011, 1:40 PM

    good bit of publicty for his company….

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    Mute Story bud
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    Nov 16th 2011, 1:50 PM

    RUN!
    (wheres my prize?)

    52
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    Mute Roxy Blue
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    Nov 16th 2011, 2:11 PM

    All Noonan has to say is “Thanks very much, we had a good run, I’ll get me coat”

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    Mute Liam Mc Dermott
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    Nov 16th 2011, 3:37 PM

    “Dear Mr. Europe,

    We have had a good run. We have laughed, cried and worked together for many years but we have grown apart in recent times. The Lisbon Treaty is when the gaps in our relationships became obvious and with the auld downturn things have just gotten worse. The greatest gift of etiquette is knowing the right time to leave a party; not too early for fear of being rude and not too late for fear of being asked to leave. Like Goldilocks now is just right. T’ra. Hope everything works out.
    Love
    Enda”

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    Mute Patrick Slattery
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    Nov 16th 2011, 4:09 PM

    It’s nice to read the armchair economist’s comments on the Journal. They weren’t complaining during the good time & now they want to walk away when things get a little tough.

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    Mute Duncan Breen
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    Nov 16th 2011, 4:27 PM

    Hi Patrick ,

    As indeed my comment was more to have a laugh than thinking it would realistically solve the issues faced , I think as the world seems to be in per-ma crisis we cant forget to have a laugh. I would like to see how you can view the “Good times” If this was the case than there would not be huge credit issues as people would have paid for items with cold hard currency , in my humble opinion it seems more like a credit feast that went pair shape –

    I agree it is easier to say ah well and walk away , however I think it is not a case of if the euro fails it is more likely when , and to have some contingency plans in place for ever eventuality is better that scratching heads when it happens.

    back to the arm chair and gin hiccup :)

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    Mute Dermot Mc Loughlin
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    Nov 16th 2011, 6:51 PM

    Maybe if we were asked about the euro currency before we were coerced into it, were you asked?….anyone asked?
    NOPE.

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    Mute Seamus Ryan
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    Nov 17th 2011, 3:34 AM

    To quote Blackadder 3…

    “I always say, “If you can’t laugh, what *can* you do?” Ha-ha-ha-ha”
    “…Take up politics, perhaps.”

    Gallows humour. Usually great for a laugh.

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    Mute Seamus Ryan
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    Nov 17th 2011, 3:41 AM

    @Dermot: The Maastricht Treaty (which we approved by referendum) laid out the target of monetary union, the criteria for joining and the commitment towards the project. It was highlighted in the Werner plan, the Delors report and was made very public during the Maastricht referendum. The UK negotiated an optout on EMU. We were, of course, apparently far more concerned with ensuring that abortion wasn’t introduced here. We had the option to say no as we were in fact asked. You mightn’t like the answer, or indeed the question, but the question was posed.

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    Mute Dermot Mc Loughlin
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    Nov 18th 2011, 11:50 AM

    I don’t think I was old enough to vote on it Seamus…:P

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    Mute HELLO SPRUIKER
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    Nov 16th 2011, 5:48 PM

    Next Getting countries out of the Euro my Arse!!!

    They can well afford to put up €300k!!

    They’ve been charging us twice their U.K prices, in their Irish shops for long enough!!!

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    Mute lisa duignan
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    Nov 16th 2011, 2:17 PM

    He’s actually copying someone else. This is not a totally original idea. There was an article in the FT 2 weeks ago about a wealthy Euro sceptic offering mad money for anyone who could solve the euro crisis.

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    Mute vv7k7Z3c
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    Nov 16th 2011, 2:54 PM

    Lisa – you might be thinking of the same guy. The prize was announced in October but only opened for entrants/registration this week. http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/16d19598-fb2f-11e0-8756-00144feab49a.html#axzz1dsdtelDs

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    Mute lisa duignan
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    Nov 16th 2011, 9:54 PM

    Yep, it is the same guy after all Gavan. Good work!

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    Mute lisa duignan
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    Nov 16th 2011, 9:56 PM

    Title here was slightly misleading though.

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    Mute Duncan Breen
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    Nov 16th 2011, 2:36 PM

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KerPlunk_(game) imagine there was 27 sticks and you had to pull them out without the other marbles falling out :) Solved ,well just have to figure out how to pull out the sticks :)

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    Mute Aidan Molloy
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    Nov 16th 2011, 3:03 PM

    Nuke the site from orbit. it is the only way to be sure.

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    Mute Mensah Mensah
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    Nov 16th 2011, 2:26 PM

    Just walk away….file for divorce,run anything but the euro….

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    Mute Dearbhla Carmody
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    Nov 16th 2011, 4:32 PM

    ‘Its nor you Euro, its me, i need to be on my own for a while to figure out what i want from this relationship. I feel a bit suffocated and cant think clearly. I dont know if i want the commitment. I think i might like to play the field for a while, sterling punt. I need space from you,

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    Mute DPC75
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    Nov 16th 2011, 4:16 PM

    Has anyone thought about what may happen with all the MNCs we rely on for jobs here if we leave the Euro?

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    Mute Hot Toddy
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    Nov 16th 2011, 8:32 PM

    It varies case by case. Companies with a lot of investment here could lose out as their assets would be worth less. Companies exporting from Ireland would have a bonanza with lower costs to produce goods that yield the same prices overseas. However, day 1 losses would be a sunk cost so the ongoing improvement in competitiveness could actually bring more jobs to Ireland.

    The only downside is that being in the euro reduces the volatility of earnings by taking away the fx risk. Most companies will be happy to live without the euro for lower costs, a few won’t.

    A bigger issue is that it only makes sense to leave the euro if this is accompanied by a default on government debt. A government that breaks its promise to investors can scare away multinationals through uncertainty on the future. A default one day, a rise in corporation tax the next?

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    Mute Brno Barking
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    Nov 16th 2011, 9:21 PM

    Grow a pair,and walk.

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    Mute Lou Brennan
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    Nov 17th 2011, 12:56 AM

    If he offered Sterling I’d tell him but what good is offering Euros if we leave the the Euro

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    Mute Graham Mace
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    Nov 16th 2011, 5:18 PM

    The answer in a word, as far as the Conservatives go, is:
    “Quickly”
    It’s a bit rich coming from them anyway, as Britain isn’t a fully participating member of the EU and isn’t in the Euro. No wonder the Aussies call them “Whingeing Poms”.

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    Mute Titus d
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    Nov 17th 2011, 12:09 AM

    Next never have my sizes, sort that out your Lordship!

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    Mute Sheila Murphy
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    Nov 16th 2011, 6:42 PM

    Very simple; Offer your citizens the chance of a referendum; Germany will make you leave if you!!!! Just like Papandreou tried to do in Greece re: their bailout and Germany & France stipulated that it had to be “Do you want to leave the Eu?”

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    Mute Tim Henchin
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    Nov 16th 2011, 9:32 PM

    If there was a referendum on the Euro in countries over the last 5 years, at least half of them would have voted to leave. The EU doesn’t do democracy, so we’l just have to muddle along and see how Brussels can roll over nearly 3/4′s of a trillion euro’s in debt over the next 12 months. The people who lend money don’t believe it can be done, but then again they are just Euroskeptics.

    I can guarantee that people who are so adamant about the survival of the Euro are the same people who were blathering about house prices.

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    Mute Hot Toddy
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    Nov 16th 2011, 10:00 PM

    Nope. I’ve been renting for 10 years whilst waiting for the housing bubble to burst, but I think the euro will survive.

    Even now it was a dumb move, I missed so much of the genuine boom!

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    Mute Réada Quinn
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    Nov 17th 2011, 2:28 AM

    I think that was a great idea Sheila. Can’t beat a bit of democracy.

    1
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