Saturday, September 10, 2011

Samsung Galaxy S II | Reviews




Design

You may find that the design of the Galaxy S II appears to be "inspired" by a certain other smartphone. In fact, there's an ongoing lawsuit between Apple and Samsung that names this smartphone as an example of the Korean company copying the Cupertino firm's designs. It doesn't help that the Galaxy S II creates the illusion of having just a single button on the front surface by hiding the touch-sensitive Menu and Back buttons when not in use. By default, these light up only briefly when pressed. Intentional emulation? Perhaps.


Now, the Galaxy S II may be made of plastic materials, but it did feel solid in our hands, and gives a much better feel compared with the original Galaxy S. This is also probably due to its compact form factor--the smartphone is 8.5mm at its thinnest point. The phone weighs in at a lightweight 116g.

The rear battery cover uses a textured surface and helps give the phone a better grip. When you remove the cover though, you'll find that the it actually feels very flimsy and likely to break. Underneath the cover, you'll find the SIM and microSD slots. You will have to remove the battery to get at the microSD however, so swapping your microSD card without powering off is not possible.

At the bottom of the device is where you find the micro-USB port, and on top is where a 3.5mm audio jack is located together with a dedicated noise-cancelling microphone. The power button is found at the right side, while your volume controls are on the left.

There's a 2-megapixel front camera for making video calls, and a rear 8-megapixel camera with an LED flash, autofocus and HD 1080p video recording capabilities.

-Features-

The Galaxy S II comes with the full range of connectivity options that you would expect from a high-end device--Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, DLNA, GPS and HSDPA.

If you have used or have heard about Samsung's products before, then you'll know that the S II comes with Samsung's TouchWiz interface. The UI has gotten a few improvements, including the ability to resize supported widgets to better customize your home screens. The application pages now scroll continuously, allowing you to flip to the last page from the first without having to go through the other five first. Other enhancements include the ability to zoom in and out by holding two fingers on the display and tilting the device back and forth.

The good:
Speedy performance; gorgeous 4.3-inch Super AMOLED Plus display; lightweight; good camera; TouchWiz interface is easy to use.

The bad:
Social Hub doesn't work well with Twitter; short battery life; flimsy back cover.

The bottom line:
The Galaxy S II is quite possibly one of the best Android smartphones released in 2011, though it is not without flaws. That said, it is a handset that improves on its predecessor, the Samsung Galaxy S, by leaps and bounds.

Review:
First announced at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2011 in Barcelona, the Samsung Galaxy S II is the sequel to the wildly popular first generation Samsung Galaxy S smartphone. For most Android lovers, this is probably the Gingerbread (Android 2.3) smartphone they've been waiting for. Let's see what this high-end product from the Korean chaebol has to offer.
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Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1| Reviews




The outstanding Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 Honeycomb tablet is lighter and a hair thinner than the Apple iPad 2, and has a smaller footprint than either the Motorola Xoom or the Acer Iconia Tab A500, which are heavier and bulkier than most tablets.

The Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 is a major contender.

We reviewed the short-lived Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1V already, but that thicker and heavier device has since been discontinued (It looked as if Vodafone might pick up the 10.1V tab but it is now waiting to release the newer 10.1 model).


The Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 uses a brilliant, portable form-factor that beats every other tablet on the market. It's smaller and lighter, easy to grasp and not as bulky as a few of the other Android 3.0 tablets.

On the top, the power and volume controls are easy to find. On the top-right you'll find the 3.4mm headphone jack. There are no buttons on the side; instead, Samsung put the speakers on the side for good, clear audio. On the bottom, there's just a 30-pin connector for the USB cable.



There's no slot for adding more memory or a 3G card on the version of the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, which has 16GB of RAM. There's also no USB port like there is on the A500 Or Transformer for using an external keyboard.

The Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 has an incredibly bright and clear screen, too. That's where our comparison to a Samsung HDTV comes in – this is the first tablet we've tested where a movie actually looked as bright as what you might enjoy in the living room.

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Samsung Corby II | Reviews



The Samsung Corby II, also known as the Samsung GT-S3850, is the successor to the original Corby, a low-end phone offered since September 2009, which stood out with its capacitive touchscreen, low price tag and hip looks. But these days, you can't impress with just a touchscreen, so has Samsung thrown more notable ingredients into the small and cute Corby II? The Koreans have included Wi-Fi and a larger, 3.14-inch QVGA screen, but the Samsung Corby II remains an affordable feature phone with a rather mediocre 2-megapixel camera. Is it worth considering? Stay with us as we walk you through the design and functionality before giving you our final verdict.


Specs


  • General



-Device type : Feature phone
-Network technology : GSM:850, 900, 1800, 1900
-Data : EDGE


  • Design

-Form Factor : Candybar
-Dimensions : 4.33 x 2.39 x 0.46 (109.9 x 60.6 x 11.7 mm)
-Weight : 3.60 oz (102 g)
The average is 4.4 oz (127 g)
-Colors : Pink, Yellow, White

  • Display

-Technology : TFT
-Resolution : 240 x 320 pixels
-Physical Size : 3.14 inches
-Touch Screen : Yes (Capacitive)
-Light sensor : Yes

  • Battery

-Capacity : 1000 mAh
-Talk time : 9.50 hours
The average is 8 h (473 min)
-Stand-by time : 620 hours
The average is 401 h (17 days)

  • Camera

-Camera : Yes
-Resolution : 2 megapixels
-Features : Smile detection, Night mode, Panorama
-Video capture : Yes
-Resolution :320x240 (QVGA) (30 fps)


  • Multimedia

-Music Player : Yes
-Supports : MP3, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA, WAV
-Video Playback : Yes
-Supports : MPEG4, H.263, H.264
-Radio : Yes
-Type : FM

  • Internet browsing

-Internet Browsing : Yes
-Browser name : Dolfin 2.0
-Supports : TML, XHTML, WAP 2.0

  • Phonebook

-Support : Yes
-Capacity : Limited
-Features : Caller groups, Multiple numbers per contact, Picture ID, Ring ID


  • Organizer

-Calendar : Yes
-Alarms : Yes
-Other : Calculator

  • Messaging

-SMS :Yes
-E-mail :Yes (IMAP, POP3, SMTP, Microsoft Exchange)

  • Memory

-Slot Type :microSD, microSDHC
-Maximum card size :16 GB
-Built-in :26 MB

  • Connectivity

-Bluetooth :Yes
-Version :3.0
-Wi-Fi :Yes (802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n)
-USB :Yes
-Type :microUSB
-Features :USB charging

Headphones connector : 3.5mm
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Friday, September 9, 2011

Nokia N9 | Reviews



What's this? The first hint of a release date for the Nokia N9? A European website is offering the hotly anticipated, much-debated, MeeGo-powered smart phone from 19 August -- but with Nokia yet to confirm whether it'll come to the UK at all, we need your help. Free the Nokia N9!

Kazakhstan site TexhoDom is offering lucky Kazakhs the chance to pre-order the N9 for 99,990 Kazakhstani Tenge, which runs through the exchange-o-tron to around £420. Add on VAT and that sounds about right, but we'll still believe it when we see it, and here's why.

Either the N9 will land in Eastern Europe in just under a month, or folks at TexhoDom have figured out that inventing a spurious price and release date for a hot phone will get you in the news.

Even if the date is accurate, it's no guarantee we'll get our hands on the N9 here in Blighty in August -- or ever. Nokia told us it can't confirm the release yet, making us wonder if the phone will come to the UK at all.

It seems the networks are shy of a phone powered by an operating system that's essentially dead on arrival. MeeGo is a slick and intuitive software that impressed us when we tried it out, but it isn't getting the chance to take on Nokia's eye-watering financial woes: despite Nokia's promises and the possibility of running Android apps, MeeGo has already been thrown over in favour of Windows Phone.

The N9 provides the template for the first Nokia Windows Phone, codenamed Sea Ray, but it would be a shame if that was the N9's only chance to shine.

Also known as Nokia N9-00, Nokia N9 Lankku



  • General
-2G Network : GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
-3G Network : HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1700 / 1900 / 2100
-Announced : 2011, June
-Status : Coming soon


  • Size
-Dimensions : 116.5 x 61.2 x 12.1 mm, 76 cc
-Weight : 135 g

  • Display
-Type : AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
-Size :480 x 854 pixels, 3.9 inches (~251 ppi pixel density)
- Gorilla glass display
- Anti-glare polariser
- Multi-touch input method
- Proximity sensor for auto turn-off
- Accelerometer sensor for UI auto-rotate


  • Sound
-Alert type : Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
-Loudspeaker : Yes
-3.5mm jack : Yes
Dolby Mobile sound enhancement; Dolby Headphone support

  • Memory
-Phonebook : Practically unlimited entries and fields, Photocall
-Call records : Yes
-Internal : 16/64 GB storage, 1 GB RAM
-Card slot : No


  • Data
-GPRS : Class 33
-EDGE : Class 33
-3G : HSDPA, 14.4 Mbps; HSUPA, 5.7 Mbps
-WLAN : Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, Wi-Fi hotspot
-Bluetooth : Yes, v2.1 with A2DP, EDR
-Infrared port : No
-USB : Yes, microUSB v2.0


  • Camera
-Primary : 8 MP, 3264x2448 pixels, Carl Zeiss optics, autofocus, dual LED flash
-Features : Geo-tagging, face detection, touch-focus
-Video : Yes, 720p@30fps
-Secondary : Yes


  • Features
-OS : MeeGo OS, v1.2 Harmattan
-CPU : 1GHz Cortex A8 CPU,PowerVR SGX530 GPU,TI OMAP 3630 chipset
-Messaging : SMS (threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Email, IM
-Browser : WAP 2.0/xHTML, HTML, RSS feeds
-Radio : No
-Games : Angry Birds Magic (NFC), Galaxy on Fire 2, Real Golf 2011; downloadable
-Colors : Black, Cyan, Magenta
-GPS : Yes, with A-GPS support; Ovi Maps
-Java : Yes, MIDP 2.1
- MicroSIM card support only
- SNS integration
- Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
- Digital compass
- TV-out
- NFC support
- Dolby Digital Plus
- MP3/WAV/eAAC+/WMA/FLAC player
- MP4/H.264/H.263/WMV player
- Document editor (Word, Excel, PowerPoint), PDF viewer
- Video/photo editor
- Voice memo/command/dial
- Predictive text input (Swype)

  • Battery
Standard battery, Li-Ion 1450 mAh (BV-5JW)
-Stand-by : Up to 380 h (2G) / Up to 450 h (3G)
-Talk time : Up to 11 h (2G) / Up to 7 h (3G)
-Music play : Up to 50 h



Tags:
Nokia N9 Reviews, Nokia Mobile, n9 news, Nokia N9 features

Previous posts :
Samsung Corby II | Review
Samsung Galaxy Tab 10
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