วันเสาร์ที่ 1 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Samsung i9100 Galaxy S II Unlocked GSM Smartphone with 8 MP Camera, Android OS, 16 GB Internal Memory, Touchscreen, Wi-Fi, and GPS

They used the phone for a little 'more than a week. I have owned many phones * * through the iPhone, Blackberry, nexus, Samsung S Galaxy, ...

* Form / Design: accurate compact / thin. By far one of the slimmest phones that I owned. It fits easily in your pocket. The back cover is "plastic". Having been in a pocket with keys, ... for a week there are no scratches on the unit. Great design.

* Screen - the new screen has great resolution and excellent contrast. Truly one of the best screens around.

* Operating System: uses the latest performance anroid 2.3.3 very responsive and great.

* Comms: The phone has about the quality of the signal as an iPhone 4. It is not better and not worse. In areas with poor signal using a lot of energy to stay in touch and make up the heat units. The battery will drain quickly. What is faster than an iPhone or a Blackberry. Andorid known problem for the phone. If you live in an area with great coverage is not a problem if you live in an area with media coverage which will result in poor performance and poor battery life.

* GPS: The GPS performance is sufficient for navigation (the love of Google's browser), but it does drain the battery faster and the GPS performance in terms of accuracy is noisier than the iPhone.

* The camera produces sharp images at 8 megapixels. Fast awesome. The flash is not ideal (ok, it is a phone and not a replacement of the camera). For situations of Flash you do not get brilliant images of high quality.

* Battery performance - on average the battery lasts one day. Best of the oldest and Galaxy X at par with the best Android phones.

Overall a nice phone. If they could create better battery life would be near perfection.


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Samsung Galaxy Tab (7-inch, 16GB, Wi-Fi)

There are four main areas to review:
1) StyleAnyone complaining about the card is way off track. I wonder the purpose of a negative review on the basis of style. The board is thin, light (which matters a lot, now that I have held all day, every heavier would be a real strain), and it seems very, very good. The back does not feel like cheap plastic at all (seriously, how can someone write this?). He did not even feel like plastic. It 'almost like metal brush, without the weight. The right amount of bezel. It also feels solid (I was afraid it would be too thin and / or light). Who does not evaluating the style of the card 5 / 5 is blind, insane, or both.
2) HardwareI'm not super-techy, but from what I understand, the card is so advanced as it gets right now. The camera is okay, but a tablet should not be the main camera. It 's fast. The screen looks amazing (the colors on the App comic made me believe in God). I'm sure some of you are waiting for Tegra 3, but I can not imagine that this device need to run faster than it does already. 10.1 is the ideal size for a tablet. If you are thinking of a 7-inch tablet, stop. May also have a 4.3-inch phone.
3) PortsIn my opinion, this issue got blown out of proportion. I'm sure some of you need HDMI, USB, mini USB, SD, micro SD card, CD-Rom, Zip, a 5-inch floppy disk, etc. chatter leads me leaning toward the Toshiba Thrive. But then I realized I never use the door on any electronic device you already own. I connected my laptop to my TV, like two times in two years using the HDMI port. Everything I do is in the cloud now (photos to Picasa, the music on Amazon Cloud, the documents in Google Docs), so who needs a lot of extra storage space on the device itself? Not me, and I bet it is. I had the 16 GB version, and after setting all my Apps, I still have about 13 GB of free space. I bet you've never come close to using all 16 GB. Also, a lot of doors = thicker and heavier. Thin and light is much better, believe me.
4) Software(I realize this is not the fault of Samsung, so it's not affecting my total score). Honeycomb 3.1 is fine. It reminds me of Android 2.2 on my phone. I have not met many flaws, but if there are some that appear, I'm sure the experience will continue to improve. The real problem here are the Apps. It is not just good. Yes, there are some applications that are optimized for the honeycomb, but I think that number was 96 at the time of last check. There are not many (especially because most are games). The good news is that current applications honeycomb are amazing. I was blown away by the News App 360. All you have to be more, I'm sure that will come over time, but it's frustrating to spend $ 500 on a device that has little to offer that I can not already do on my phone. No Netflix (seriously, that is just absurd). It feels just as Android is still six months away from giving us a good reason to buy a tablet. Obviously, they'll get there someday, but if you're on the fence, it might be worth waiting for software to reach the hardware. In all honesty, I knew it come down, but after the dive, I was still surprised at how little has been done to create applications for Android tablets.
Overall:I love the card. Hardware experience absolutely perfect (until the next big thing comes out). If I had to do again, I would still buy, because I like shiny new objects, and it's fun to be on the front of technology. If you already have a nice phone, and money is tight, and you are still debating whether it's worth dropping $ 500 for a tablet, I would like to wait until you hear people like me saying that the market is well supplied App.


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