Curiously, Samsung went with
a smaller half dozen-inch LCD—the original had a 6.3-inch AMOLED panel—but
cursed with identical one, 280-by-720-pixel resolution. It's observably
cheater, however is well inferior by the Note 3's 1080p show and therefore the
Nexus 6's a pair of, 560-by-1,440-pixel show. Colors still pop with typical
Samsung-level saturation, however the screen is not significantly bright and
struggles in direct daylight. Whites look cleaner from all angles, that is a
plus of selecting LCD over AMOLED, however distinction is not quite as placing
here.
On
AT&T, the Mega a pair of connects to 3G GSM and 4G LTE networks. Reception
and speeds were in line with what I've seen on different recent AT&T
phones. Decision quality was sensible in my tests, with heat and richness to
transmissions through the mic and clear audio through the earphone. Noise
cancellation was solely average, rendering my voice somewhat wobbly and robotic
underneath significantly abuzz conditions.