Still, the good outweighs the bad. Because this runs Android 4.0, users will have many stability improvements. If you can find its new location, the data usage monitoring feature makes a handy way to stay under your data cap, and you’ll notice many other small enhancements, too.
Sadly, those features were the few bright spots in Sense. The overlay feels dated compared to the plain Ice Cream Sandwich interface, and certain things (like changing the phone's wallpaper) now require you to dig through extra menus to find them.The phone comes with a handful of preinstalled software, including AT&T's suite of mobile apps and the MOG Music app. Some of these applications could be useful to people, but it's a shame that you are not given the option to be able to uninstall them. Ice Cream Sandwich does provide a way to disable these apps and prevent them from showing up in your app drawer, but they’re not completely deleted from your phone and thus still take up precious memory.