Until August
zenegra 100 mg tablets Phew. So, a lot has changed. How does it all run on the Nexus 5, then? Beautifully. Anyone who was ever turned off by Android's tendency to lag or bog down -- even on powerful hardware -- will love KitKat. The Nexus 5 screams through every action thrown at it. Multitasking, opening and closing apps, playing games, watching videos, streaming music -- even just flicking between homescreen -- all are accomplished with supercar levels of performance. Android has never felt this fast or this fluid. It's also never looked better. Say what you will about UI customizations -- Samsung's TouchWiz or HTC's Blinkfeed, for example -- but I'm one of those who prefers pure, stock Android, and the Nexus 5 really lets the OS sing. As a window into Google's services, it's never been stronger. Swipe left on the homescreen and you're taken straight to Google Now, Google's companion app that learns your habits and presents useful information throughout the day -- subway stations and train times, restaurants nearby on your lunchbreak, sports scores as they happen. Press the home button and rather than take you back to the homescreen, it sends you to Google Now first -- the focus on Google products is evident throughout the device.