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Samsung Omnia i900 review

in Smartphones

Verdict

This phone can do it all, but it's exceedingly frustrating to use,and that counts it out.

Review Date: 13 Feb 2009

Reviewed By: Jonathan Bray

Price when reviewed: , on a per month, 18 months contract.

Overall Rating
4 stars out of 6

Features & Design
6 stars out of 6

Value for Money
3 stars out of 6

Ease of Use
1 stars out of 6

It was inevitable in the wake of the iPhonethat a clutch of iPhone "killers" would appear. But where HTC has been successful in offering a viable alternative in the form of the Touch HD, Samsung falls short.

On paper, the Omnia i900 seems fine. It's slim and light, and it has all of the necessary specs: Opera Mobile 9.5 and HSDPA, plus Wi-Fi, FM radio, assisted GPS (with Google Maps preloaded), an accelerometer that rotates the screen when you tip the phone on its side, and haptic feedback (the phone buzzes when you click the screen).

It even beats the iPhone in some respects. In the box is a good pair of headphones, or you can use your own via the 3.5mm adapter provided. Plus, there's a fantastic array of software extras. With the Omnia, you can shoot video (the iPhone can't) and edit it as well. A touch-sensitive button below the screen can act as a trackpad or mouse cursor controller. The 5-megapixel camera is excellent, and even boasts electronic image stabilisation.

Battery life is impressive, with the Omnia lasting 93hrs 20mins in our real-world tests, and there's a good supply of memory, too. There's 256MB of ROM for programs and 8GB of flash memory for music, video and other files, plus a microSD slot for adding a further 8GB.

It all looks very tempting - until you use the phone. Just as with the HTC handsets, the Omnia i900 runs Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional with a finger-friendly skin on top. In the SIM-free variant we were sent, you customise your home screen by dragging widgets from apop-out sidebar onto a blank desktop. Other enhancements include an alarm clock that can be set without filing your fingernail into a point. Samsung also provides its own full-size Qwerty and compact Qwerty touch keyboards.

But we didn't enjoy using the Omnia. The touchscreen's resolution of 240 x 400 is a little low in this company, it's nowhere near as responsive as the iPhone, and the keyboard isn't great. We found ourselves pressing the Send soft key while texting and emailing.

But the fatal annoyance is the stylus, which you attach to the phone with a bit of string. It's messy, like the rest of the phone. We can't recommend it.

Author: Jonathan Bray

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