Hirdetés
Data transfer, battery
Although it’s cool that the device supports 7.2 Mbit/s HSDPA, it has Bluetooth and microUSB, but I’ve been missing WLAN a lot for a while. Until I have launched the browser, which is Access Netfront and it’s one of the worst (I’ve been thinking what to write here that’s not vulgar) applications that I’ve seen on a handset with such a display of such dimensions.
First, it has only landscape view. This would be okay, we can see the web pages better, but it’s hard to do wonders on 240 x 400 pixels (hey, it’s interesting that Nokia handsets with a Minimap browser have managed to do it). We can click on the magnifying glass icon, this way we can zoom out, but the pages still won’t fit to the width. The ugliest things happen when we start typing a URL, here’s the landscape screen and than a virtual keyboard appears on the right side, but no, it’s not QWRETY, it’s just like the phone’s real keyboard. I have to repeat this, just to make things very clear: we have a landscape view. It has to be landscape, as that’s the only view supported by the app. They had to design a virtual keyboard for typing. Virtual means that the designer draws the keyboard where he would like to. And there is a lot of free space, but it seems that they didn’t even think about QWERTY. The designer chose the worst possible solution.
The battery kept the phone online for two days and I didn’t use the phone a lot. I’ve browsed the web for 10 minutes at most, I had about 30-35 minutes of talk, 5-6 SMS messages and 10-15 photos. This is not much at all, although it’s not an exceptionally short uptime in this category. As a positive thing the handset can be charger through the microUSB connector as well, we now just have to wait a couple of year until the miniUSB connectors are replaced on all devices. Don’t misunderstand me, this is not a problem of Samsung, but even more, they are a good example to be followed.
A cikk még nem ért véget, kérlek, lapozz!