Hirdetés
Multimedia
On the back of our Armani mobile sits a camera with 3.2 megapixels, next to it there is a flash that is supposed to shed light on darker areas (or people). The designers cut a hole on the metal box, of course, at the appropriate place, so we got the option to surprise our friends with taking a photo of them with a card holder. Things get more interesting when we use the flash.
The photos taken don’t really have the best quality. There is no autofocus, again, so the sharpness is not always good, and no matter that the manufacturer puts many settings in its phones, I could only take pale, fuzzy pictures. The camera is on full screen, and the icons of the most important settings (picture size, flash) are on the side of the display. The use of these must be obvious for everybody. There are options to set the ISO, quality, environmental setting (it has things like ‘autumn colors’), mode of light measuring, and the sounds of exposing can be turned off.
On the field of music playing the Armani is pretty lame. The player’s like it was in the F700, a huge brown cross shows up on the screen. The horizontal line is the volume control, the vertical is a tracker to search in the song. It can in the background, too, there are a few standard equalizer presets, replay and random shuffling, and it can sort our songs based on the ID3 tags. The little Samsungs sounds surprisingly well on its loudspeakers, it is another proof for the fact that metal-cased phones are usually good with this. The basic headset in the box of the phone is a rather simple one, not customizable, so we can only use our own headset if we buy some kind of special converter.
Among the programs we can find a picture editor that is very annoying using our fingers, it can turn the picture, do trick and create effects, but there is no earthly reason for their existence. There’s another feature connected to pictures, called: stamp pictures that tries to put a picture onto another one with some blurring between them, but I haven’t used it at all. But there is (only) one Java-game, which is nothing else but the ‘Photo Puzzle’. Let’s take a wild guess about its meaning: yes, it cuts pictures to small pieces and shuffles them. I played it happily till the second level where the program advanced into a harder stage and cut the picture into so little pieces that I couldn’t pick the correct one with my fingers (really!). With this the game angered me so much that I got mad and tried to uninstall it, but it is not possible.
Not to forget the recurring Samsung-nightmare: the phone cannot ring and vibrate at the same time. I thought that the manufacturer had already gotten past this, but this constructional mistake seems to haunt and punish us constantly.
A cikk még nem ért véget, kérlek, lapozz!