Monday, September 5, 2011

This is Samsung Galaxy W I8150 - detail review. (tech report, update, news, Auckland)

With the latest of Android and TouchWiz, the Samsung Galaxy W I8150 takes a support-and-assist role to the company’s flagship – the S II. The Galaxy W is powered by the same 1.4GHz processor we know from the Galaxy S Plus. Ditching the SuperAMOLED screen in favor of a standard issue S-LCD should make the Galaxy W more affordable.

 
Samsung Galaxy W official photo

Bottom line is the Galaxy W is a Galaxy S Plus in disguise: it looks good but doesn’t come with any SuperAMOLED awesomeness. It’s a modern and understated Android to offer some high-end services on a midrange budget.

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 at a glance:

  • General: GSM , HSDPA 14.4 Mbps, HSUPA 5.76 Mbps
  • Form factor: Touchscreen bar phone
  • Dimensions: 115.5 x 59.8 x 11.5 mm, 109.9 g
  • Display: 3.7" 16M-color WVGA (480 x 800 pixels) LCD capacitive touchscreen
  • Platform: 1.4 GHz Scorpion processor, Qualcomm MSM8255 Snapdragon, Adreno 205 GPU, 512MB RAM
  • OS: Android 2.3 (Gingerbread)
  • Storage: 2GB built-in, microSD card slot
  • Camera: 5 megapixel auto-focus camera with face detection, touch focus and image stabilization; HD (720p) video recording at 30fps, LED flash, front facing camera, video-calls
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi b/g/n, Wi-Fi hotspot, Bluetooth 3.0 with A2DP, standard microUSB port,GPS receiver with A-GPS, 3.5mm audio jack, Stereo FM radio
  • Misc: TouchWiz 4.0 UI, built-in accelerometer, multi-touch input, proximity sensor, Swype text input

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 
Samsung Galaxy W live pictures

As you can see, the Galaxy W should allow you to do almost everything its superiors can: playing games, stepping up your social life, browsing the web or capturing the world around you. Surely, there will be a thing or two missing but we won’t pass any judgment before we get the bill.

Design and construction

Some might be tired already of the countless Galaxy S facelifts. We guess the Samsung Galaxy W I8150 is a distant relative too but the styling is different - in a good way. At 3.7-inches the screen is big but easy to manage and the textured rear makes it look solid - bordering on rough.

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 
Samsung i8150 Galaxy W • Galaxy W next to an iPhone 4

The Galaxy W's 3.7” screen is an LCD unit (S-LCD according to some sources, but no word from Samsung yet). It won’t get you the deepest of blacks, but it’s a decent screen with nice viewing angles.

The downside is the reflective and not particularly bright display is difficult to use outdoors on a bright sunny day. And the fingerprint prone surface doesn’t help either.

Moving on, a video-call camera is right next to the earpiece above the display. There are also a couple of hidden sensors there: one for proximity and another one for ambient lighting.

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 
The video-call camera on top

Underneath the screen, we find two capacitive keys surrounding the edged, metallic Home key . The haptic enabled Menu and Back keys have extra functionality upon a long-press (task switcher, virtual keyboard, voice search).

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 
The three controls below the screen

There is a thin volume rocker on the left side, while the Power/Lock key is the only control on the right.

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 
The volume rocker is on the left • the Power/Lock combo - on the right

At the top we find the 3.5mm audio jack and the microUSB port under a plastic flap.

As usual, at the bottom of the phone, you will see the mouthpiece.

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 
Galaxy W's top and bottom sides host the usual

The Samsung Galaxy W’s rear features the 5 megapixel camera lens, complete with a LED flash and the small loudspeaker grill at the bottom.

The lens and LED are placed within a strip of faux-metal, which is a nice accent. The rest of the surface is the finely textured battery cover, also made of plastic.

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 
The 5 megapixel camera lens at the back

The microSD card slot is under the battery cover, but it’s still hot-swappable. The SIM compartment is right next to it.

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 
The microSD slot is hot-swappable

There’s a 1500 mAh battery inside the Samsung Galaxy W I8150, but there is no official quote on the battery life yet. We bet the performance would be on par with the likes of the Samsung Galaxy Ace or the HTC Desire S.

Generally, we have no complaints about the all-plastic Samsung Galaxy W. It is a well-built phone, with a solid masculine look. It’s easy to handle and the differently patterned surfaces are nice accents on what’s an overall clean design.

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 held in hand

 

TouchWiz on Gingerbread

The Samsung Galaxy W I8150 runs Android 2.3.3 Gingerbread out of the box, skinned with TouchWiz 4.0. It's the latest software available, and effectively the same package as on the Galaxy S II.

You get up to 7 screens to fill with widgets. The numbered dots that identify the homescreen panes serve as a scroll bar too. A press and hold on the dots lets you scroll sideways through the resized images of the available homescreen panes in one short go rather than with several swipes.

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 
The TouchWiz 3.0 user interface comes preinstalled on top of the Android OS

The pinch zoom out is not enabled on the Galaxy W’s homescreen either due to the early software build or some hardware limitation. A press and hold on any homescreen works though (or Menu, Add) and lets you pick one of four ways to customize the homescreen – add widgets, add shortcuts or folders, or change wallpaper.

In screen edit mode, widgets are docked at the bottom and scrolled horizontally. When you’ve found the one you need, it can be dragged onto the screen. It’s similar to what we’ve seen in Bada, but with some 3D eye candy. Shortcuts and folders are picked from vertically-scrollable grids.

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 
Editing the homescreen

Some of the widgets can be resized just by dragging the corner much like with widgets on the MotoBLUR UI. It certainly gives you a lot of flexibility over use of screen real estate. Important widgets can be expanded to show more info, while the less frequently used ones can be made smaller to save space.

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 
Resizing a widget

The Galaxy W has four buttons docked at the bottom of its homescreen, which stay there even when you open the menu. You can remove or change them (except the home button which is fixed).

The main menu consists of side-scrollable panes, much like the homescreen. You can add new pages manually, by dragging an app to a new screen in edit mode. You can add folders to the menu too – just drag shortcuts from the menu to the Make Folder icon and give it a name.

Folders cannot be put inside folders and they use the icon of one of the apps inside, making them terribly hard to spot. We hope Samsung fixes that since we spent a few minutes looking for our new folder when it was right in front of us.We wish it was possible to place folders in the bottom row of four shortcuts.

When the app launcher is in edit mode, you can uninstall applications (only the ones that you installed) just by tapping on them. Tapping a folder will delete it, returning the apps back to the flat menu.

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 
The main menu • Editing the menu • Creating a new folder

The notification area, one of the Android strengths, has five switches for Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS, sound and rotation-lock – just like the Galaxy S II. These are always accessible (unless there’s an app running in fullscreen mode, e.g. a game).

There’s the task manager too, which lets you terminate apps and clear RAM. You don’t normally need to do that since Android is pretty good at handling that kind of stuff, but power users will enjoy it nonetheless.

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 
The notification area and the lock screen

Android gallery and MyFiles app are here

The Samsung Galaxy W uses the standard Android gallery as every other Samsung droid. The gallery automatically locates the images and videos no matter where they are stored. It even imports the online photos from your Google Picasa web albums.

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 
The gallery certainly is a looker

Little about the Gallery should surprise you – aside from displaying full-res images and the addition of the two-finger tilt zoom, there’s nothing new, really. And don’t you worry, the double tap and pinch zooming are still there.

The My Files app is a simple to use but functional file manager. It can move, copy, lock and rename files in bulk, even send multiple files via Bluetooth. My files will only browse the memory card and the large internal storage (it can’t access the system drive).

Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 Samsung Galaxy W I8150 

The My Files app

 


This post is sponsored byDr Mobiles Limited
1 Huron Street, Takapuna, North Shore 0622Tel: (09) 551-5344 and Mob: (021) 264-0000
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> Repair while you wait
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The latest news about BlackBerry Bold Touch 9900' lauching in 2011....

The long wait amongst T-Mobile Blackberry fans in the US is finally over as today, the magenta colored operator began selling the BlackBerry Bold Touch 9900.

As you can see above, the latest and greatest BlackBerry, which offers both a touch screen and a hardware keyboard, will set you back $299.99 with a two year commitment, after a mail in rebate. This means that at the time of purchase, you will have to shell out close to $400 of your hard earned dollars. Should you decide that you don't want to sign a contract, prepare to spend $600 plus the applicable taxes.

The above numbers show that the BlackBerry Bold Touch 9900 is currently the most expensive phone, offered by T-Mobile. While the device is impressive, we think that you must really want a BlackBerry in order to spend such an amount of money, and pass on the number of dual-core, lower priced droids, available from the Big Magenta.


This post is sponsored byDr Mobiles Limited
1 Huron Street, Takapuna, North Shore 0622Tel: (09) 551-5344 and Mob: (021) 264-0000
Web FaceBook - Localist Posterous - Twitter - Blogger - Flicker  - Map - Email 
Uploaded via Apple iPhone 4!
Why Dr Mobiles Limited?
The only professional repair centre who DOES NOT charge inspection fees on faulty phones.
> No inspection fee at all!
> 1 hour iPhone 4 repair
> Repair while you wait
> Free 30 min parking
> Free loan phone 

2011 Tech Review. The extra dimension: HTC EVO 3D Review (tech, report, update, Auckland)

As 3D is taking over theaters and living rooms around the world, the craze is hitting handheld too. The next thing to shake up the business or on the way to irrelevance: geeks will geek about it either way. Now that the HTC EVO 3D has grown a GSM radio, they get ready to enjoy a real 3D clash of the flagships. It doesn’t get any better than two heavyweight fighters battling it out, and someone’s got the 3D video to prove it.

HTC EVO 3D HTC EVO 3D 
HTC EVO 3D official photos

The best part is the HTC EVO 3D, like the LG Optimus 3D, is not placing all its chips on the stereoscopic screen and pair of cameras. No sir, each of those smartphones claims to have the best there is for power and speed. We are talking mighty dual-core CPUs, loads of RAM and superb connectivity. The EVO 3D can be your kind of smartphone even if you don’t care about 3D stills and videos.

Key features

  • Quad-band GSM and dual/tri-band 3G support
  • 14.4 Mbps HSDPA and 5.76 Mbps HSUPA
  • 4.3" 16M-color stereoscopic capacitive LCD touchscreen of qHD resolution (540 x 960); Gorilla glass
  • Android OS v2.3 Gingerbread with HTC Sense 3.0
  • 1.2 GHz dual Scorpion CPUs, Adreno 220 GPU, Qualcomm Snapdragon MSM8260 chipset
  • 1 GB of RAM and 1 GB of storage for apps
  • Dual 5MP autofocus camera with LED flash, massively comfortable shutter key; face detection and geotagging
  • 720p video recording @ 30fps in both 2D and 3D mode
  • Wi-Fi b/g/n and DLNA
  • GPS with A-GPS
  • Stereo FM radio with RDS
  • microSD slot up to 32GB (8GB card included)
  • Accelerometer, proximity sensor and auto-brightness sensor
  • Front facing camera with video calls
  • Standard 3.5 mm audio jack
  • microUSB port (charging) and stereo Bluetooth v3.0
  • MHL TV-out (requires MHL-to-HDMI adapter)
  • Smart dialing, voice dialing
  • DivX/XviD video support
  • HTC Locations app
  • HTCSense.com integration
  • HTC Portable Hotspot
  • Ultra-fast boot times (if you don’t remove battery)
  • Office document editor

Main disadvantages

  • Less than impressive screen performance outdoors
  • Speed and productivity not on par with other dual-cores
  • Rather heavy
  • Low resolution 3D stills
  • The two cameras are too far apart for good stereoscopic close-ups

Things are certainly looking promising here, but smartphones are past the my-spec-sheet-is-longer-than-yours stage as of a few years. It’s all about the user experience now and, while powerful hardware is the first step towards providing it, you need equally good software if you are to challenge the best on the market.

HTC EVO 3D HTC EVO 3D HTC EVO 3D 
The HTC EVO 3D in the comfort of our office

A massive high-res screen certainly looks good on paper, but it takes inspiration and clever design to beat those Super AMOLEDs and those Retinas. A new Adreno GPU with a major speed boost might seem more than anyone will ever need, but competitors have not been sitting around either so it’s always going to be close. And you cannot say whether the EVO 3D has the spark by just looking at the specs.

Retail package is good, but not perfect

The HTC EVO 3D is a high-end phone and as such you’d expect it to come with a pretty well stuffed box. It does deliver to a point: you get adequate storage in the form of an 8GB microSD card, there’s a microUSB cable to use for computer connections and with the charger head.

A single-piece headset completes what is by all standards a decent list. Yet, given the MHL connectivity of the EVO 3D, an HDMI cable would have certainly made sense. A carrying pouch would’ve also come in handy, in helping you protect your precious new smartphone.

HTC EVO 3D 
The EVO 3D retail package contents

In fairness though, none of the competitors offers a better package so we won’t be taking any points away from the HTC EVO 3D.

HTC EVO 3D 360-degree spin

The glasses-free 3D screens are obviously still quite a bit of a stretch for smartphones at this point. The EVO 3D is nearly a millimeter thicker than the Sensation. In fact, at 126 x 65 x 12.1 mm, the 3D smartphone is the thickest of all dual-core smartphones currently on the market. The 170 grams of weight are quite a load compared to some of the competitors.

 

Design is impressive

The HTC EVO 3D is quite an imposing handset, and not without some distinct design accents. The huge screen is usually enough to make a smartphone a looker, but we have a black metal frame here to maximize the “wow” effect.

And even though the handset be quite large and heavy it is only 2 grams heavier than the Optimus 3D, which should be the first and most important point of reference. The LG smartphone is also just 0.2mm slimmer and a bit taller and wider than the HTC flagship so it’s pretty much a tie.

HTC EVO 3D HTC EVO 3D HTC EVO 3D 
The EVO 3D and the Optimus 3D side by side

And the back of the EVO 3D is pretty cool too. It might be all plastic, but the pattern of fine diagonal lines gives it texture and looks good. Even the faux gold-painted frame surrounding the dual camera deck somehow fits in here. By the way, the pair of camera lenses curiously makes the whole thing look like a compact tape-recorder.

The exposed USB port on the left is probably the only design solution that we’re not particularly fond of, Overall though, we quite like the EVO 3D exterior. Had it been as slim as the Galaxy S II, the HTC new flagship would have been close to perfection.

3D screen left to do the talking

We now turn our attention to the HTC EVO 3D’s key feature, the stereoscopic LCD screen of qHD resolution (960 x 560 pixels). Just like with the LG Optimus 3D, you get the glasses-free stereoscopic effect using the parallax-barrier technology. That’s an extra screen layer that makes sure each eye sees a different set of pixels, giving a sense of depth.

The technology however does have a few downsides worth mentioning. For one, it only works in landscape mode and each eye gets only half of the screen’s horizontal resolution. Also, to be able to enjoy it fully you will need to find the sweet spot between your eyes and the handset's screen, which is different for everyone.

HTC EVO 3D 
The 3D display is really what the EVO 3D is all about

Our subjective impression of the HTC EVO 3D screen is that the stereoscopic effect is slightly less dramatic than on the LG Optimus 3D. It’s just not as sharp, with less prominent depth. The difference is small and the HTC phone has a wider sweet spot: finding the ideal viewing position is easier. It might even be possible for two people to watch 3D content on the EVO 3D screen simultaneously – unthinkable on the LG Optimus 3D.

Still, even if a tad dampened, the 3D imaging is impressive. The downside is that it’s only enabled in the EVO 3D camera app and gallery. The Optimus 3D had a larger number of preinstalled apps optimized to use its 3D screen, which is quite important given the next-to-non-existent supply of third-party offerings at this stage.

It does 2D too

That said, 2D performance is actually the more important aspect of the EVO 3D’s screen. True, it will be the stereoscopic part that will be drawing crowds, but users will be stuck in two dimensions 90% of the time.

The good news is that the EVO 3D has a large and bright high-res screen. The bad news is the same could be said for most of its competitors. The qHD resolution and the ample 4.3” diagonal certainly give it an advantage, but its contrast is no match for the AMOLEDs or even the Reality and Retina displays out there.

Viewing angles aren’t perfect either – the EVO 3D does a lot better than the previous generation of HTC devices (Desire HD, Desire Z etc.), but it’s losing way more contrast when looked at an angle than an Incredible S, for example. It’s not bad enough to be a burden in everyday use. But it won’t produce the stunning effect of the icons appearing as if they’re painted on top of the screen that some of the competitors have.

Then again, most of those competitors aren’t doing 3D in their spare time and the only one that does is not doing that much better either. The LG Optimus 3D might have a bit better contrast and viewing angles, but the EVO 3D resolution advantage more than makes up for that.

And here come the HTC EVO 3D display test results so you can see how that one compares to its peers.

Display test 50% brightness 100% brightness
Black, cd/m2 White, cd/m2 Contrast ratio Black, cd/m2 White, cd/m2 Contrast ratio
HTC EVO 3D 0.26 184 719 0.65 495 761
LG Optimus 3D 0.22 226 1019 0.49 520 1068
LG Optimus 2X 0.23 228 982 0.35 347 1001
Motorola Atrix 4G 0.48 314 652 0.60 598 991
HTC Sensation 0.21 173 809 0.61 438 720
Samsung I9100 Galaxy S II 0 231 0 362

This post is sponsored byDr Mobiles Limited
1 Huron Street, Takapuna, North Shore 0622Tel: (09) 551-5344 and Mob: (021) 264-0000
Web FaceBook - Localist Posterous - Twitter - Blogger - Flicker  - Map - Email 
Uploaded via Apple iPhone 4!
Why Dr Mobiles Limited?
The only professional repair centre who DOES NOT charge inspection fees on faulty phones.
> No inspection fee at all!
> 1 hour iPhone 4 repair
> Repair while you wait
> Free 30 min parking
> Free loan phone 

Three tip to save your Apple iPad 2 battery life!


3 tip to save Ipad battery life

The Apple Ipad has a built-in lithium-ion polymer battery; 25 W·h capable of 10 hours of video play or 140 hours of music or the impressive 1-month standby.

The iPad uses a lithium-ion polymer battery that loses capacity over time. The battery is not designed to be user-replaceable. Apple will replace an iPad that does not hold an electrical charge for a fee of US$99

Here are 3 quick tips to save Ipad’s battery life

1. Turn off Wi-Fi and 3G and Bluetooth
All these eat up lot of battery so it’s better to turn them while you are not using them.

2. Lower the brightness level
Ever if Ipad has an ambient light sensor its better to decrease the brightness of the screen manually
adjust the brightness of the screen depending of the surrounding light. Drop the lighting level between 20% to 30% .

3. Turn off sound effects
Ipad’s battery is capable of 140 hours of music. Turning off sound saves a lot of battery.

This post is sponsored byDr Mobiles Limited
1 Huron Street, Takapuna, North Shore 0622Tel: (09) 551-5344 and Mob: (021) 264-0000
Web FaceBook - Localist Posterous - Twitter - Blogger - Flicker  - Map - Email 
Uploaded via Apple iPhone 4!
Why Dr Mobiles Limited?
The only professional repair centre who DOES NOT charge inspection fees on faulty phones.
> No inspection fee at all!
> 1 hour iPhone 4 repair
> Repair while you wait
> Free 30 min parking
> Free loan phone