The NFC chip is actually on the case of the battery, so it can be very close to the back plate of the phone.
Cuz the battery also serves as an NFC chip. 2 in 1
Yes.. it will kind of pose as a problem.
Cuz the battery also serves as an NFC chip. 2 in 1
Yes.. it will kind of pose as a problem.
Why would it cause a problem don't you just buy another battery with NFC on the battery
If you don't need NFC on your phone can't you just buy a regular battery
That would be very expensive tho
Sent from my GT-I9100 using xda premium
Uhhhhhhhhhh.. Because it has NFC chip? Not trying to be mean or.rude, but that's pretty obvious.
Sent from my SGH-T989 using xda premium
Uhhhhhhhhhh.. Because it has NFC chip? Not trying to be mean or.rude, but that's pretty obvious.
Sent from my SGH-T989 using xda premium
Uhhhhhhhhhh.. Because it has NFC chip? Not trying to be mean or.rude, but that's pretty obvious.
The Nexus S's NFC chip was in the battery door if I'm not mistaken. Could be the same for the GN, or maybe as you said the battery has NFC written on it because it's designed to be NFC-safe or whatnot.Pretty sure the battery simply allows the NFC signal to pass through it. It doesn't have the NFC chip in it.
NFC antenna I meant. lolit wasn't. the antenna was mounted on the battery door, and there were contacts just above the battery:
http://www.nfcworld.com/2010/12/16/35503/nexus-s-teardown-how-nfc-fits-inside-the-new-google-phone/
eric b
My guess is the NFC antenna is in the battery, rather then the "chip". which IMO would make the most sense.
I was just wondering why does it state Near Field Communication on the battery?
Cheers
on all the new devices like SGS2 and NG the NFC has been moved to the battery to conserve space in the phone for other parts
I was just wondering why does it state Near Field Communication on the battery?
Cheers