Monday, January 2, 2012

Samsung I8350 Omnia W Review


Introduction
When Windows Phone launched a year ago, we were excited to first see it on the Super AMOLED screen of the Samsung Omnia 7. Twelve months or so later, Samsung are sort of in power-saving mode in the joint venture with Microsoft. Their Omnia W isn’t drawing all attention to itself by blowing the numbers out of proportion.
The Omnia W has shed weight and lost some of its predecessor’s screen estate. What you get in return is an upgraded processor and double the data speeds. The display technology, camera sensor and the general feel haven't changed much.
     
Samsung Omnia W official pictures
Well, yes, some would call it a half-hearted effort. Or maybe, Samsung are simply waiting for the dust to settle from Nokia’s grand entry into Windows Phone. Obviously, they didn’t want – or need – a European flagship along the lines of their US-based Focus S with AT&T. With a single Windows-phone handset on the Old Continent, it may’ve made sense to focus on the midrange instead of making another flagship without a fleet. Bottom line, as long as we remember that it’s not an upgrade of the original Omnia 7, the Omnia W is an easy phone to live with, for all its strengths and shortcomings.
Key features:
3.7" 16M-color capacitive Super AMOLED touchscreen of WVGA resolution (480 x 800 pixels)
Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE support
Dual-band 3G with HSDPA 14.4 Mbps and HSUPA 5.76Mbps
Windows Phone 7.5 Mango
1.4GHzQualcomm MSM8255Snapdragon CPU, Adreno 205 GPU, 512MB of RAM
5 megapixel autofocus camera with LED flash
720p video recording @30fps
8GB of built-in storage
Standard 3.5mm audio jack
Standard microUSB port (charging)
Wi-Fi b/g/n
Stereo Bluetooth 2.1
Mobile Office document viewer/editor
Social network integration and cloud services
Built-in GPS receiver, A-GPS
Stereo FM Radio with RDS
Comes with a Video call app and other custom Samsung apps
Main disadvantages:
Non-expandable storage
No mass storage
Zune-only file management and sync
No Bluetooth file transfers
No Flash (nor Silverlight) support in the browser
No DivX/XviD video support (automatic transcoding provided by Zune software)
The Omnia W should ring a bell to those of you who keep an eye on the US phone market. We recently reviewed the Samsung Focus Flash, which is virtually the same package, exclusive to AT&T. We liked the well-built, properly powered and reasonably priced Focus Flash and we guess the Omnia W can count on a warm welcome too by users who don’t want to spend over the odds on a decent smartphone.
People who are willing to consider Windows Phone should be well familiar by now with the platform’s limitations. The Omnia W shares the same disadvantages as its main competitors but tries to at least partially make up for them with premium build and some custom additions to what’s otherwise a standard package.

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Powered by Blogger.
 
Design by Free WordPress Themes | Bloggerized by Lasantha - Premium Blogger Themes | Sweet Tomatoes Printable Coupons