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Tuesday, February 15, 2011


OG Review: Samsung Champ C3300 / C3303


The samsung champ is another touchscreen mobile that goes on the lines of the samsung star and corby series. The Champ can be termed a mini touchscreen (wonder why it isn’t called mini) that features a 2.4″ touchscreen and a super lightweight built. Costing below Rs 5000 (US $110) this is a low cost dumb touchscreen phone.

Lets have a quick look at the Spces:

  • 2.4″ resistive touchscreen (240 x 320 pixels)
  • 1.3MP camera, video recording supported
  • Touchwiz Lite UI
  • FM
  • Bluetooth 2.1
  • 3.5mm audio jack
  • 30 MB inbuilt memory, Micro SD expansion (1GB card bundled)
  • Battery Li-on 1000 mAh
  • wt. 80 gms

Design:

As you would have seen in the unboxing video this is one of the smallest full touchscreens out there. On the sides you have the volume and lock / sleep keys and the charger and 3.5mm headset jack on the top. On the front you have a dual speaker placed on the top and bottom of the screen and 3 buttons below the screen (yes, no and back).
This thing also packs in a little stylus on the back, however no replacement pieces for the stylus are bundled in the box incase you end up losing one. The body and finishing is similar to the Corby series though the plastic doesn’t look that rich and shiny.

Features:

The touchscreen on the Champ is resistive and using it is frustrating at times (though existing Corby Pro / Star users didn’t complain). While the corby / star series had larger screens to accommodate the resistive screen, but this one is very difficult to use with fingers. Given the small touchscreen and low resolution (240×320) you don’t have any scope for a onscreen qwerty here. The T9 is your friend for typing and that takes up more than 2/3 of the screen when you are typing any text. If you have used the Corby / Star series models you would naturally feel the fonts appearing bigger. The touchwiz lite UI is pretty much what we have seen from Samsung on its touchscreens. 4 home screens with widgets / shortcuts and the 4 menu pages.
The dual speakers give good output, music lovers would like that and the image editor comes in as a handy feature allowing you to rotate, crop, flip etc. This is a good addon over the Corby Pro.
The Champ is promoted as a music phone and perhaps that’s necessary for Samsung as this ain’t a great one for usage over the basic functions. Heck even for basic functions you can’t really target the youth with a SMS inbox of just 500. One good thing packed herein is the backup function, that gives some relief.
The Champ packs in a 1000 mAh battery compared to the 960 mAh on the Samsung Corby Pro. Given the smaller screen size we expect the battery performance to be much better than the Corby. Samsung claims a 10 hour talk time and while we haven’t really put it to extreme test, we are certain it won’t disappoint you.

Camera sample:



Sample video from Samsung Champ on Youtube (yes it is that bad)

Verdict:

A low cost touchscreen that might add some glamour with a cute design and jazzy promos. A very basic camera and the inefficiencies of the Star / Corby repeated. Folks there isn’t any innovation here, just that your gal might end up falling for the looks or the loud music… we aren’t impressed & this remains a low cost touchsceen that you won’t like for any internet use.
PS: Monte still remains our pick from Samsung!
With inputs from Tripti Mehta







Quick Video tour of the Samsung Champ:

Samsung Galaxy S review

Samsung Galaxy S review

Looks like an iPhone but it's overflowing with tech


the-definitive-samsung-galaxy-s-review
The definitive Samsung Galaxy S review
<>
The Samsung Galaxy S is meant to be the Korean firm's big assault on the smartphone market - packing oodles of top end technology into a handset it thinks can take on the iPhone 4.
There's more than just top end technology in here to beat the iPhone – the chassis looks decidedly similar too, despite the much larger screen, which comes in at a whopping four inches.
The feel of the frame is also odd, but in a good way. It's nearly a millimetre thicker than the iPhone 4 (we know, shocking) but it doesn't feel it, thanks to the curved back.
The downside of this construction is that it feels a little plasticky, which isn't the impression you're going for in a premium smartphone – but it is very light at only 118g.
Samsung galaxy s
The chrome bezel looks nice too, but it's the screen that it frames that really makes the Samsung Galaxy S.
Samsung galaxy s
While Google is intent on losing the custom overlays on modern Android smartphones, Samsung has finally decided to offer up its own skin for the search engine's mobile OS.
Known as TouchWiz 3.0, this skin is the evolution of efforts from a number of Samsung handsets – sadly most of which were pretty dire to use, with a range of widgets that underperformed compared to the competitors'.
Samsung galaxy s
This overlay was first used on the Samsung Wave, where new widgets were the order of the day – while these worked well, and 10 home screens was a bonus, on the Galaxy S you get seven displays to work with, and both widgets and icons alike.
The latter is great, as it means you can mess around with placement of your favourite applications. However, widgets are less of an attraction, with very few on offer from both Samsung and the default Android offering – certainly you get a lot more from the likes of the HTC Desire.
Samsung galaxy s
Things like Daily Briefing are very exact in what they offer – we would have preferred more customisation than simple weather and news updates, although RSS feeds are always handy, provided you have the nous to set them up.
But the interface on the Samsung Galaxy S is more than this; the large, capacitive touchscreen is just tops. We're not saying it's better than the iPhone 4, but for someone who's never picked up a touchscreen phone in their life, this cannot be beaten.
Samsung galaxy s
The lightest touch will produce an instant reaction, and coupled with the 1GHz processor from Samsung, the Galaxy S will rarely slow down from your input.
While we would have liked to see more from the menu system (we love swiping up from the bottom of the screen to activate the icon list), you have to hit the 'Applications' icon on the Home screen to do more.
Another feature we loved about the Samsung Wave was the intuitive menu system, where the most-used applications gradually moved to the top of the pile; sadly missing on the Galaxy S.
But the simple icons and pages way of navigating your applications makes sense, seeing as the iPhone 4 has had such runaway success with such a system.

Samsung Wave review

Samsung Wave review

Samsung offers its most powerful phone yet


the-definitive-samsung-wave-review
The definitive Samsung Wave review
<>
We've finally managed to get our hands on a final release unit of the Samsung Wave - and the good news is it's a darn sight better than the pre-production version we tested a few weeks ago, so read on to see the updated and final Samsung Wave review.
The Korean firm has made the somewhat leftfield decision to launch its own OS and with the new Samsung Wave it gets a phone with top-notch hardware to debut it on.
Samsung wave
This isn't just another 'and me' Samsung phone – it's crammed to the hilt with high end features, such as HD video recording, a 1GHz Samsung-own Hummingbird processor, a super-slim chassis, the latest Super AMOLED screen and multi-touch support right out of the box.
Samsung wave
However, it's still rocking Samsung's TouchWiz overlay, which is great if you like Samsung phones, but a very different experience for those joining the Korean giant for the first time.
Samsung wave
So is this another middling handset from the firm that brought us more phones than we could shake a stick at last year, or is the Samsung Wave the first phone of a radical new dynasty?
The first two things to note about the Samsung Wave are obvious: the build quality and the screen just cram style into your eyeballs.
Samsung wave
The phone is very slim at less than 11mm thick and the metallic build quality is apparent the second you hold it in your hand. Given a startling number of purchases are made in store based on how a phone feels this will be head and shoulders above the rest to that demographic.
Samsung wave
The front is sparse in terms of buttons, with call, terminate and menu keys the only things apparent other than the 3.3-inch capacitive screen. The menu key is sculpted and nicely tactile, although perhaps a little large.
Samsung wave
The rest of the phone is pretty simple: volume up/down keys on the left-hand side, lock and camera shutter keys on the right-hand side and the top sees a 3.5mm headphone jack and a microUSB connector with sliding cover.
Samsung wave
Other than that, there's only the diamond-shaped 5MP camera on the back with accompanying LED flash, which all together gives the Wave a very refined look indeed.
And if you're impressed by the chassis, then you'll be amazed by the SuperAMOLED screen, with its high-res 480x800 WVGA screen with great viewing angles and jaw dropping contrast.
Samsung wave
It zips along under the finger too, and allows you to see a huge amount of information, be it widgets on your home screen or a full internet page.
In short, the Samsung Wave looks the business, but while it's nice to get a phone out in the pub to impress your mates once in a while, you've still got to live with it day to day, so let's dive under the hood to see how it works.

Monday, February 14, 2011

Dell Streak Review