Showing posts with label phone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label phone. Show all posts

Friday, September 22, 2023

Apple iPhone 15 available worldwide

Apple's new iPhone lineup, which includes iPhone 15, 15 Plus, 15 Pro and 15 Pro Max, hit the markets worldwide today, September 22, 2023. In addition to the above devices, Apple also made available Apple Watch Series 9, Apple Watch Ultra 2, the new Apple Watch SE, and AirPods Pro (2nd generation). [press release]

iPhones on display at Apple Regent Street, London. Credit: apple.com

The iPhone 15, 15 Plus devices were debuted on September 12 with a press release and has been available for pre-order since September 15.

The entry-level iPhone 15 and 15 Plus are available in blue, pink, yellow, green and black with 128GB, 256 GB and 512GB variants. iPhone 15 Pro and 15 Pro Max are available in natural titanium, blue titanium, white titanium and black with 128GB, 256 GB, 512GB and 1TB variants.

The listed prices at online Apple Stores in a few countries are below:

Country iPhone 15 iPhone 15 Plus iPhone 15 Pro iPhone 15 Pro Max
United States - carrier locked - excl. taxes $799 $899 $999 $1,199
United States - carrier unlocked - excl. taxes $829 $929 $999 $1,199
Canada - excl. taxes C$1,129 C$1,279 C$1,449 C$1,749
India - incl. taxes ₹79,900 ₹89,900 ₹134,900 ₹159,900
UK - incl. taxes £799 £899 £999 £1,199
Australia - incl. taxes A$1,499 A$1,649 A$1,849 A$2,199
New Zealand - incl. taxes NZ$1,649 NZ$1,849 NZ$2,099 NZ$2,499
Thailand - incl. taxes ฿32,900 ฿37,900 ฿41,900 ฿48,900


Happy shopping.

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Nokia 206 RM-872: Basic feature phone which moderate performance

Nokia 206
It's been nearly a year since I got my hands on the Nokia 206 (Model RM-872) which is an entry-level mobile phone. I will write my experience with the phone and what I learned about it in this post.

I ordered this on Flipkart where it was retailing for Rs. 3,580 inclusive of all taxes on 23 October 2014 and received it just the next day, which was pretty impressive. While it comes in 5 colors - black, white, cyan, magenta and yellow - my unit is black. Flipkart had listed this phone as Nokia Asha 206 which is an error - the 206 is not an Asha device.

The GSM phone is highly compact, comes with a 6.1 cm (2.4 inch) QVGA display, a 1.3 MP read camera, 32 MB RAM, dual-SIM support and a 1200 mAh removable battery. Inside the box is also an AC-11 travel charger, a headset and a setup guide. 

Setup

Setting up the device is easy. Just remove the back cover, remove the battery, lift the mini-SIM holder and place a GSM SIM card into the slot, place the battery back again and then put the back cover on into position. You can optionally insert a microSD card in the slot under the back cover and a second SIM card in the slot at the left edge of the phone. Then after you have charged the battery, you are good to start the phone using the power button.

Display

The 6.1 cm (2.4 inch) QVGA TFT 65K color display is bright, images are clear and the size is okay at this price point. It displays at 240 x 320 pixels with a 4:3 ratio (~167 ppi density). The home page displays a set of short icons to applications and calendar appointments along with the data and time and other information.

Keypad

The keys on the keypad are smooth with large letter - good for the elderly and people with sight problem. The keypad features predictive text input using the T9 dictionary for easy typing.

Calling

With its dual-SIM support, it lets you carry a second phone number within the same device. You have the option to set a default SIM for services like outgoing calls, text messages, multimedia messages and data connections. It also lets you select a combination, like you can select SIM1 as the default for outgoing calls and messages while SIM2 can be the default for data connections. There is also an option for the phone to ask you which SIM to use every time.

Making, receiving or rejecting calls on this phone is a breeze with the intuitive user interface. It also allows putting a call on hold, dialing a 2nd number and setting up a multiparty conference call, call forwarding, call waiting, and muting. It also stores the phone numbers of recent received, dialed and missed calls.

The phone book lets you store up to 1000 phone numbers along with the name, an image and other details of the contact. Setting up speed dial numbers lets you make phone calls by pressing a single button on the keypad.

I like the way that Nokia lets you turn on and off the keypad lock swiftly by pressing the Menu + * key combination. This is easier than most phones from other manufacturers.

Messaging

The messaging application supports both Short Messaging Service (SMS) and Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS). The predictive text works fine and is helpful.

Performance

The phone runs on Nokia's Series 40 operating system which fares well on the performance front. Apps like Facebook and WhatsApp are slow, but they work.

Audio Quality

In-call reception audio quality is very good, and I haven't come across people complaining about the audio they receive on the other side. The volume of the sound is low but the quality is good.

Camera

The device packs in a 1.3 mega-pixel primary camera on the back with no flash. The camera allows you to shoot both still photos and videos. The images are 1280 x 960 pixels. Videos are stored using the Common Intermediate Format (QCIF) at 10 fps. The image quality is okay.

Media Player

The built-in media player can play videos formats (MP4, H.263 and WMV) and most audio music formats including MP3, WAV, WMA and AAC. The media library can automatically categorize songs based on artists, albums, and genres if the audio files have the information filled in.

FM Radio

The phone has an FM radio receiver which lets you play radio stations. The headset acts as an antenna for the radio signal reception so it should always be connected to the phone for the radio stations to play.

Web Browsing

The phone has a built-in XHMTL web browser named Nokia Xpress which features Unicode-support. It renders the pages well even though the screen is small for most web pages nowadays.

E-mail

The phone has a built-in e-mail client that lets you configure multiple email accounts.

Internal Storage

The 64 MB internal memory storage is pretty low on the upfront but when you come to think of it, what huge data would you want to store on a basic phone like this.

Expandable Storage

DONE The phone accepts a microSD or microSDHC to extend the storage up to 32 GB for storing multimedia files.

Battery

The phone comes with a 1200 mAh 3.7V Nokia BL-4U Li-on battery. The user manual states the battery backup is for up to 20 hours of talk time and up to 680 hours of standby time under optimal conditions. My experience with the battery backup is good - I haven't used the phone regularly as it is not my primary device. On an average the battery can last 4-5 days with regular use.

Connectivity

The mobile supports and operates on the cellular EGSM 900-800 Mhz 2G network. It supports up to 85.6 kbps on GPRS and 236.8 on GPRS. It also has Bluetooth v2.1 with Enhanced Data Rate (EDR). There is no support for USB or NFC.

Software Updates

Software updates to the phone can be done wirelessly over the air. There is also an option for the phone to automatically check for new updates.

SAR (Specific Absorption Rate)

SAR value for this phone when tested for use at the ear is 0.93 W/kg.

FCC ID

DONE The FCC ID for the device is NCC CCAF12DG0440T3 and the reports are available here.

Warranty

DONE The product came with 1-year manufacturer warranty on the device and 6 months of warranty on the accessories out of the box.

Conclusion

DONE Overall, it is a pretty decent phone. The build quality is good, and the display is large. It runs smooth with apps hanging sometimes which may be due to the low amount of memory. This is perfect for elderly people who find it difficult to operate smartphones.

Update June 2020: The phone is still working and operational, but the functions now run very slow.  The body is hard and has survived several drops. I finally let it go.


Thursday, May 21, 2015

Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 (SM-T311): A tablet with steady performance

The Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 is an 8-inch Android-based tablet computer made by Samsung Electronics, and it is part of the 3rd generation of their Galaxy Tab series. Other tablets in this series are the Galaxy Tab 3 7.0 (7-inch) and the Galaxy Tab 3 10.1 (10.1-inch). This series of tablet computers were showcased in the Mobile World Conference in 2013.

Photo of the Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 (SM-T311)
The Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 8.0
(SM-T311)
There are three variants of the Galaxy Tab 3 8.0, out of which we focus on the SM-T311 in this post. I expect the other variants to have similar performance standards based on their respective features.

  1. Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 SM-T310 - Wi-Fi only
  2. Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 SM-T311 - 3G and Wi-Fi capable
  3. Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 SM-T315 - 4G/LTE & Wi-Fi capable

I ordered the SM-T311 in midnight black in May 2014 when it was retailing in Flipkart for Rs. 22,499 inclusive of all taxes. The delivery was quick, and I had the device in my hands in two days. The box includes the tablet with the battery built in, a travel charger, a USB cable, and the user manual.

Setup

Setting up the device is simple. Just insert a SIM or USIM card into the appropriate slot on the left side, optionally insert a microSD card in the provided slot. Charge the battery if needed and you are good to start the tablet computer.

Calling

The SM-T311 is one of those few tablets that accepts a SIM card to make voice calls over 2G or 3G GSM networks. Making, receiving or rejecting voice and video calls on this phone is a breeze with the intuitive user interface. It also allows putting a call on hold, dialing a 2nd number and setting up a multiparty conference call, call forwarding, call waiting, and muting. It also stores the phone numbers of recent received, dialed and missed calls.

Performance

Running Android 4.2.2 (Jelly Bean) and later Android 4.4.2 (KitKat) on the 1.5 GHz dual core Samsung Exynos 4212 CPU with 1.5 GB RAM, the tablet handles all tasks smoothly. Multitasking using the Multi Window Panel is effortless and apps run flawlessly with no visible lag or crashes.

Display

The touch screen display consists of an 8-inch WXGA TFT screen with a resolution of 1280 x 800 pixels. The 16M color screen displays pretty crisp and vivid colors and is responsive to all touch and gestures.

Audio Quality

In-call reception audio quality is excellent, and the device plays music at amazing clarity.

Camera

The tablet carries a 5MP auto-focus primary camera with LED flash that can take 1.3-megapixel photos and HD videos at resolutions up to 720 x 1280 pixels at 30 fps. The image quality is fair. There is also a 1.3MP front (or selfie) camera. The camera also allows automatic GPS tagging of captured images.

Internal Storage

The 16 GB internal memory provides enough storage a large number of apps to coexist.

Expandable Storage

The tablet accepts a FAT-formatted microSD or microSDXC to extend the storage up to 64 GB for storing multimedia files. Loading the 64 GB microSD with audio, video, and document files of various formats showed no noticeable lag and the device has been able to handle the file-load smoothly.

Battery

As one of the major factors in a mobile computing device, the tablet is powered by a non-removable Samsung T4450E 4,450 mAh Li-ion battery built into the casing. The battery packs enough juice to last a long time even with heavy use. It takes about 5 hours to do a full charge from zero. 

Connectivity

The tablet supports a single SIM card on GSM 2G and / or HSDPA 3G networks. On the WLAN front it supports Wi-Fi 802.11 on the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands. It also has Bluetooth v4.0. For wired PC connectivity using USB 2.0, it accepts a MicroUSB data cable which is also provided in the box.

PC Connectivity

Synchronizing with the PC is possible using Samsung's Kies PC Sync software which can be used to manage media libraries, contacts and calendars on the tablet. Windows Media Player can also be used to synchronize media files. The tablet needs to be connected to the PC using the MicroUSB data cable.

Security

The tablet allows various ways to unlock, including the following:

  1. Face unlock
  2. Face and voice unlock
  3. Pattern unlock
  4. PIN unlock
  5. Password unlock

SAR (Specific Absorption Rate)

SAR value for this phone when tested for use at the ear is 0.535 W/kg and when worn on the body is 0.666 W/kg. The SAR limit set by the FCC is 1.6W/kg.

FCC ID

The FCC ID for the device is A3LSMT311 and the reports are available here.

Warranty

The product comes with a 1-year manufacturer warranty on the device and 6 months of warranty on the accessories.

Conclusion

If you are looking for an Andriod-based tablet computer right now, go ahead and get it. The user experience is flawless, and the apps run like a breeze.

March 13, 2021 Update: After various forms of usage over the last ~7 years, I finally let it go. The device is still working though it has gotten slow, and many apps won't work on it anymore. It has never visited a service center, so you see that the hardware has been very reliable.

The MouthShut rating is 3.59 out of 5 based on 1,295 user votes.

The user manual is available here at ManualsLib, here at Samsung and here at the FCC ID database.


Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Sony Xperia Z Model C6602: Excellent camera with water-resistance

The Sony Xperia Z is a 5-inch Android-based smartphone made by Sony Mobile Communications. The phone was first announced at CES in January 2013 and was first released on 9 February 2013 in Japan.

Xperia Z Model C6602
This phone boasts a design that's as tough as it is elegant, encased in resplendent glass. It's not just a pretty face; it's certified IP55 and IP57 for water resistance up to one meter, keeping its cool for up to 30 seconds underwater. Both the front and back panels sport tempered glass with an anti-shatter film coating. It is available in various models based on locales and wireless carriers:

  1. C6602 (worldwide with UMTS only)
  2. C6603 (worldwide with UMTS and LTE)
  3. C6606 (T-Mobile U.S. with UMTS and LTE)
  4. C6616 (Bell Canada with UMTS and LTE)
  5. SO-02E (NTT Docomo Japan with UMTS and LTE)

I ordered the C6602 in pitch black on March 13, 2013 when it was available for pre-order in Flipkart India for Rs. 39,190 inclusive of all taxes. The shipping was free, and I had the device in my hands on March 20.

The box included the handset with the battery built in, a travel charger, a USB cable, Sony earplugs with extra ear buds and the user manual. Flipkart also shipped a pair of Sony MDR-ZX300 over-the-head stereo headphones in the package.

Setup

Setting up the device is simple. Just pop open the flap on the right to insert your SIM or USIM card, slide a microSD card into the slot on the left (if you wish), charge the battery if needed and you are good to start Sony's latest flagship smartphone.

Calling

Making, receiving or rejecting voice and video calls on this phone is a breeze with the intuitive user interface. It also allows putting a call on hold, dialing a 2nd number and setting up a multiparty conference call, call forwarding, call waiting, and muting. It also stores the phone numbers of recent received, dialed and missed calls.

Performance

Running Android 4.1.2 (Jelly Bean) out of the box and later transitioning to KitKat and Lollipop on a quad-core 1.5 GHz Krait CPU over a Qualcomm APQ8064 Snapdragon S4 Pro chipset with 2 GB RAM, the phone handles all tasks smoothly. It also ships with a Qualcomm Adreno 320 GPU to handle all the graphics. The transitions are smooth and effortless, and apps run flawlessly with no visible lag or crashes.

Display

The device has one of the greatest displays available in the market. The capacitive touch screen display consists of a 5-inch TFT Full HD screen with a resolution of 1080 x 1920 pixels (~441 ppi density). Powered by a Qualcomm Adreno 320 GPU, the 16M color screen displays pretty crisp and vivid colors and is responsive to all touch and gestures.

Audio Quality

In-call audio quality is nothing short of excellent, and music playback offers impressive clarity, although the loudspeaker could use a tad more volume.

Camera

Armed with a 13MP auto-focus primary camera and LED flash, the Xperia Z can shoot 13-megapixel photos and full HD videos at resolutions up to 1920 x 1080 pixels at 30 fps. The image quality is excellent. The camera features Sony's Exmor RS CMOS image sensor, face detection, image stabilizer, red-eye reduction, sweep panorama and geo-tagging. There is also a 2MP front (or selfie) camera.

Internal Storage

With a generous 16 GB internal memory, there's room for a multitude of apps. Need more space? A microSD or microSDXC memory card can expand storage up to 32 GB, and it handles the load with ease.

Expandable Storage

The phone accepts a microSD or microSDXC memory card to extend the storage up to 32 GB for storing multimedia files. Loading a 64 GB microSD with audio, video, and document files of various formats showed no noticeable lag and the device has been able to handle the file-load smoothly.

Sensors

The Xperia Z isn't just a pretty face; it's got brains too. Embedded sensors include a magnetometer, ambient light sensor, gyroscope sensor, accelerometer, and proximity sensor.

Battery

As one of the major factors in a mobile computing device, the Xperia Z is fueled by a non-removable 3.7V Sony LIS1502ERPC 2,330 mAh Li-ion battery built into the casing. The battery packs enough juice to last a long time even with heavy use. A full charge from zero takes about 5 hours, ensuring you're always ready to go.

Connectivity

The Model C6602 supports a single micro-SIM card on GSM 2G and / or HSDPA 3G networks. If you have the other models (C6603, C6606, C6616 or SO-02E) you would also have support for 4G. On the WLAN front it supports Wi-Fi 802.11 on the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands. It also has Bluetooth v4.0, NFC for contactless payments and DLNA to wirelessly play media on a DLNA-compliant TV. For wired PC connectivity using USB 2.0, it accepts a MicroUSB data cable which is provided in the box.

FM Radio

If you're a radio enthusiast, the Xperia Z has you covered. Its stereo FM radio data system receiver lets you groove to your favorite stations. Just keep the headset connected for optimal signal reception.

Security

The phone allows various ways to unlock, including the following:

  1. Pattern unlock
  2. PIN unlock
  3. Password unlock

SAR (Specific Absorption Rate)

SAR value for the C6602 phone when tested for use at the ear is 0.48 W/kg.

FCC ID

The FCC ID for the C6602 is PY7PM-0280 and the reports are available here.

Warranty

The product comes with a 1-year manufacturer warranty on the device and 6 months of warranty on the accessories.

Reviews

Critics and users alike have heaped praise on the Xperia Z. TechRadar awarded it a stellar 4.5 out of 5, while Engadget gave it an impressive 8.3 out of 10. Google users rated it 4.4 out of 5 based on their experiences. Best Buy customers gave it a 4.2 rating, with an 81% recommendation rate based on 196 customer reviews. And over on Amazon, it boasts a 4.2 rating based on feedback from 4,400 customers.

The Xperia Z on SonyMobile.com India

Conclusion

The Xperia Z is one of the finest smartphones in the market. The build-quality is good, and the performanceis stellar. There is some bloatware that ships with the device which I got rid of immediately to free up resources and everything has been fine. Though the price is on the high end, it is totally worth it.

August 30, 2017 Update: Through an extensive usage over the last ~4 years in various geographies, I finally replaced the Xperia Z for a Google Pixel device. The device is still working though it has gotten terribly slow, and the battery dries up pretty quickly. It has never visited a service center, so you see that the hardware has been very reliable.

The user manual is available here at ManualsLib, and here at the FCC ID database.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

A Short Note on the Gigaset A490 Cordless Landline Phone

I ordered and used the Gigaset A490 Cordless Landline Phone and I wanted to put down my experience with it in this post.

Gigaset A490 Cordless Landline Phone

This is a basic cordless phone with caller ID and speakerphone and can be used in addition to the fixed line telephone that sits in the living room. The fixed line land phone with all the wires gets really messy so this is more convenient to handle. Being cordless it provides mobility within the house as you can move it around.

I ordered it from Flipkart for Rs. 1,170 (inclusive of all taxes) and the unit shipped with the following items in its package:

  1. a base station
  2. a power adapter
  3. a handset
  4. a phone cord
  5. two batteries
  6. a battery cover
  7. a user guide

Setting up

Setting up the device was pretty simple. You power up the base station up using the power adapter and then connect the telephone jack to it. Insert the batteries in the handset and place it on the base station for the batteries to charge. The handset is already pre-registered with the base station, so you don't have to do it separately. The base station is of good build quality sits steady.

Calling Features

Making and receiving calls is smooth and the audio quality is good when you are within range. You can turn on Auto Answer which will accept the call as soon as you remove the handset from the base station, so you don't have to physically press the Talk button. If you have Calling Line Identification Presentation (CLIP) enabled with your network provider and the caller has enabled their Calling Line Identification (CLI), the caller's number is displayed on the handset.

There is also a handsfree feature to direct the audio to the inbuilt speaker.

It allows to save up to 80 phone numbers with names and allows you to browse through the last 10 dialed phone numbers and redial numbers from there.

The two challenges that I have faced till now is that it won't allow to reject incoming calls and the ringer volume is pretty low.

Handset Range

The base station's signal range is rated at 300 m in unobstructed outdoor areas and up to 50 m inside buildings. In my experience, this works well within 2 floors of my house as well.

Battery Backup

The handset is powered by Nickel-metal-hydride (NiMH) AAA batteries of 1.2 V with a capacity of 650 mAh. The rated talk time is up to 6 hours and standby time is up to 144 hours.

Warranty

The base station and handset come along with a guarantee of 2 years whereas the batteries and the adaptor carry a warrantee of 6 months.

Conclusion

With lots of complaints about the cordless phones in the market, while doing my due diligence, I learned that Gigaset was formerly named as Siemens Home and Office Communication Devices which gave me the confidence to go for it. At this point I am considering it as a good choice and would recommend to anyone seeking advice.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Samsung Galaxy Ace S5830: Low internal storage is the setback

I have been using the Samsung Galaxy Ace S5830 mobile phone since August 2011 and I'll put down some words about it based on my experience with it. This entry level smartphone works on the GSM network and runs on the Android platform.

Freddy2001, Samsung Galaxy Ace, CC BY-SA 3.0

As my first Android phone after being a Symbian S60 user for several years, my first impression is that the transition to this new operating system has been smooth, but I do miss the Ctrl-C, Ctrl-V for copy-pasting.

The phone is retailing in India for around Rs. 15,000 and the box includes the smartphone, a 1350 mAh battery (Samsung EB494358VU), a stereo headset, a travel charger, a USB data cable, a Kies PC Sync software CD, one extra white back-pane, a leather pouch, a 2 GB microSD card and the Quick Start Guide.

Setup

Setting up the device is simple. Just remove the back cover, remove the battery, insert a SIM or USIM card into the appropriate slot, place the battery back again and then put the back cover on. You can optionally insert a microSD card in the slot at the right edge of the phone. Then after you have charged the battery, you are good to start the phone using the power button.

Calling

Making, receiving or rejecting calls on this phone is a breeze with the intuitive user interface. It also allows putting a call on hold, dialing a 2nd number and setting up a multiparty conference call, call forwarding, call waiting, and muting. It also stores the phone numbers of recent received, dialed and missed calls.

Performance

Running Android 2.2.x (Froyo) and later Android 2.3 (Gingerbread) on the 800 MHz Qualcomm MSM7227-1 Turbo, ARMv6 CPU, the phone fares well on the performance front. Apps like Google Maps, Gmail, Google Talk, ThinkFree Office, BSPlayer, CricBuzz, Google Drive, WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, IMDb, Opera Mini, Viber run like a breeze. The Facebook app, however, frequently freezes making it almost unusable on this mobile.

The system needs a reboot every week. Without the weekly reboot, apps frequently freeze and shutdown.

Display

The touch screen display consists of a 3.5-inch Corning Gorilla Glass TFT screen with a resolution of 320 x 480 pixels. The 16M color screen displays pretty vivid colors and is responsive to all touch and gestures.

Audio Quality

In-call reception audio quality is very good, and I haven't come across people complaining about the audio they receive on the other side.

Camera

The device packs in a 5 MP autofocus camera with LED flash that can take photos at resolutions up to 2560 x 1920 pixels and videos at resolutions up to 320 x 240 pixels. The image quality is good. There is no secondary (or selfie) camera though. The camera also allows automatic GPS tagging of captured images.

Internal Storage

The 181 MB internal memory storage (as shown in the Task Manager) dries up pretty quickly when you install a few apps from the Android Market (now Google Play). With the Android operating system's footprint growing with every new update, much less is left for you to accommodate other apps. The low memory configuration is the biggest pain point of this phone.

Expandable Storage

The phone accepts a FAT-formatted microSD or microSDHC to extend the storage up to 32 GB for storing multimedia files. Also, the phone ships with a 2 GB microSD card in the box. I have used a 16 GB microSD to store audio, video, and document files of various formats with no noticeable lag. Most apps available at the Google Play store cannot be installed on the expandable storage.

Battery

As a portable handheld mobile device, the battery is one of the major deciding factors that come to play when you rate a mobile phone. The phone comes with a 1350 mAh 3.7V Samsung EB494358VU Li-on battery. The battery backup is okay but not that great. With moderate number of phone calls, the brightness at its lowest point and GPRS running on 2G, a fully charged battery lasts about a full day. In my experience, if you use 3G the charge doesn't last for the full day. Beyond its first 6 months, the performance of the battery deteriorates to a large extent.

Connectivity

The mobile supports GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 Mhz on the 2G network band and HSDPA 900 / 2100NA on the 3G network. On the WLAN front it supports Wi-Fi 802.11. It also has Bluetooth v2.1 with A2DP. A USB data cable is also provided in the box for PC connectivity.

PC Connectivity

Synchronizing with the PC is possible using Samsung's Kies PC Sync software and a USB data cable both of with are bundled in the box.

SAR (Specific Absorption Rate)

SAR value for this phone when tested for use at the ear is 0.69 W/kg and when worn on the body is 1.31 W/kg. The SAR limit set by the FCC is 1.6W/kg.

Conclusion

Overall, the mobile runs smooth with small glitches here and there. Seldom, the phone hangs and freezes up just as you accept a call. I wish the internal storage was more because the low storage makes it almost unusable after a period of use. Here are my ratings for individual features:


My ratings for Samsung Galaxy Ace S5830


MouthShut has rated this handset 2.80 out of 5 based on 1,041 user votes.

You can read my review also at MouthShut here. The user manual is available here at ManualsLib.

Thursday, December 1, 2005

LG RD2130: True Moonlight

I used the LG RD2130 CDMA cellphone for a few months, and I thought I'd write something on this. This is by far the best mobile phone (in its category) from the Reliance India Mobile (RIM) CDMA stock.

LG RD2130 mobile phone

Not that it has got the best UI navigation, the best display, the best keypad, the best ring tones, and best everything, but overall, the product is excellent and performs as expected. The sticker price of the mobile phone is Rs. 10,500 but I got it for Rs. 4,500. The price and the cool looks are in fact the best bargain of this handset.

The box shipped with the handset, a headset, an LG Lithium-Ion battery (LG LI-AAEM) battery, a travel charger, the user manual and a hand strap.

Display

The overall effect of the moonlight blue backlit display looks cool on this monochrome handset. The display resolution is good enough. LG has also packed screensavers in this phone.

Call features

The handset allows muting, incoming call ringer muting and a scratch pad during an ongoing call.

Keys

The keypad layout is typical LG style along with the typical LG navigation hierarchy. So be ready for the usual LG-style endless clicks. The keys are well placed so you won't find much trouble once you learn the navigation tree. There are two scroller buttons on the side pane which you can use to scroll through menu and adjust the volume.

Antenna

The phone carries a Sony SSW0900 chip-type CDMA antenna running on the TX band at 824~849MHz and on the RX band at 869~894MHz. It is good that LG did away with the external antenna sticking out of this cellphone.

Battery

The cell phone comes with a 3.7V LG Lithium-Ion (LG LI-AAEM) battery.

PC Connectivity

The handset connects to the PC using a serial data cable for synchronization of the phonebook and organizer using the PC Sync application.

R World

The R World (Reliance World) services are accessible on this handset except MMS, I believe. However, I regularly face errors in the R World connection, which I'm not sure if the problem is with the phone or the R World service.

SAR (Specific Absorption Rate)

SAR value for this phone when tested for use at the ear is 0.712 W/kg and when worn on the body is 0.887 W/kg. The SAR limit set by the FCC is 1.6W/kg.

FCC ID

The FCC ID for the device is BEJRD2130 and the reports are available at here.

Conclusion

For me the phone worked fine and had a stable battery backup along with good in-call audio quality. I liked the cool blue backlight of the display and the ease of use it provides. Here are my ratings for individual features:

Ratings for the LG RD2130 Mobile Phone

MouthShut has rated this handset is 3.15 out of 5 based on 206 user votes.

You can read my review also at MouthShut here. The user manual is available here at ManualsLib, and here at the FCC ID Database.

Sunday, November 6, 2005

LG RD5130 Mobile Phone: Low price-range and a good display

I was planning to move over to a GSM service when I decided again to go for this CDMA candy phone offered by Reliance India Mobile. Been using this cell phone since August 2004, the first impression on the look of this phone is really great considering the price tag it comes with. With a large display (for this price range) and excellent 65K colors it looks a great buy. But then you start using it and start seeing the glitches.

LG RD5130

It is available for a price of Rs. 4,600 from Reliance and it came bundled along with a Rs. 1,000 talk time to call other Reliance India Mobile numbers (and some Rs. 50 for other numbers) which was pretty cool.

The box ships with the handset, a headset, a 3.7V LG Lithium-Ion battery (LG LI-AAEM), travel charger (model AC-20W), user manual, hand strap and an added Quick Guide. The color I got is the Metal Silver and the rated price on the box was Rs. 11,500.

Display

This is by far the main feature of this cell phone. With a 65K color CSTN display, this phone delivers distinct, clear and smooth graphics and animation. The 128 x 128 pixels resolution (6-line LCD) is a good number for the price range. I basically went for this display. However, there is a catch - the display is not very visible in the sunlight.

A major problem with the display is that it simply shuts off after about a minute, so you see nothing on the display unless you have pressed a key. Though I initially thought that this feature was provided so the battery juice would be used more efficiently, but from the battery life it seems to have no such positive effect. Also, evidently, there is also no way to turn off this.

Keypad

The keys on the keypad have a bumpy look and are made if rubber, so the longevity is in question, though I have not faced any wear and tear as yet. The * and # keys are hard to use, and you might miss the pressure points if you are using with one hand. The Left & Right Navigation keys are so closely placed to the Call and End keys, respectively, you'll often press the wrong key. The keys need a little more pressure than regular - I wish it had those soft keys. Typing with only one hand feels the phone is going to slip and fall.

The keypad features predictive text input using the T9 dictionary for easy typing.

Calling

The handset allows 3-way conference calling, call waiting, call forwarding, muting, and incoming call ringer muting. It stores up to 60 recent calls including received, dialed, missed and in-call memo numbers.

Messaging

Typing SMS text messages is not comfortable with the keypad with its hard keys and the phone's form factor. SMSs that don't fit into its character space limit are difficult to scroll through to see the rest of the content.

Phone Book

The phonebook stores up to 300 x 4 entries which is pretty large. Finding entries is however very slow and not that user-friendly.

Audio Quality

The audio quality is very good, and none have complained to me about the audio they receive on their side. I haven't faced many call drops or voice breaks other than cases that originated from their side.

Software

The phone software seemed pretty good in the beginning but within a few days I realized that there might be some memory leak within the code. That is because you will see there is a problem with the way the icons animate on the main menu options. The problem is that the animation plays quite well first, but once it goes into the second loop and beyond, the animation jerks, showing distinct indication of memory blocks. I sometimes hope it doesn't hang the phone. I'm not sure if the problem is in general or comes with particularly in my unit. It looks disgusting, however.

Navigation

Navigating through the menus is easy if it wasn't for the few badly placed keys and the number of key presses you need for the operations. The number of key presses required to finish a task is too much and it is a pain for someone who is used to Nokia handsets in particular. There is however, a customizable, My Menu feature that comes handy in partly overcoming this part of the problem.

Speakers

This speakerphone is a great add-on. The sound is loud and clear as far as I have experienced. I guess it's louder than most speakers I have seen on costlier handsets (both CDMA & GSM).

Antenna

The phone carries a Hitachi SMA-S080C internal antenna. At last LG seems to be doing away with those external antennas sticking out from the head of its CDMA handsets. This is one reason I didn't say no to this phone.

What's the time?

If you are used to watching the time on your cellphone, then it's really a bad experience with the keypad locked and in daylight. The display features auto-shutoff so you just can't pick up the phone and see the time. You need to press some key to reactivate the display. Here is the catch - if the keypad is locked, pressing a key shows the message 'Press Key Guard to Unlock' and then the display dims immediately after the message disappears. In case you are in bright daylight and waiting for the message box to disappear, so you'll have a glance at the clock - you are in hard luck, because you can't see a thing with the display now dimmed. So, in case your key is locked, and you are in bright daylight, there are three steps to watching the clock: a) Press 0 for 2 seconds to unlock b) Wait for 1 more second for the ''Key Guard Disabled'' message to disappear c) Then watch the clock on the display.

My Menu

This is a really useful feature considering the large number of key presses that you have to use to access frequently used functions. This lets you create shortcuts to functions that you can access with a single key press.

Alarm

The phone has three alarms that you can set individually. You can also set the alarm to fire off once, daily, recurring Monday-to-Friday or Monday-to-Saturday. Alarms don't work if the phone is switched off, as you get in Nokia.

Battery

The battery is one of the major deciding factors that come to play when you rate a mobile phone. Being a portable handheld device, it is only the battery that keeps it going (you can't run around with the charger). The cell phone comes with a 3.7V LG Lithium-Ion (LG LI-AAEM) battery. Though you may find the standby time quite long (almost 2 days really) the average talk time is under 2 hours. If you are an average user, however, charging once a day should do. It is normal battery life even after the fuss it creates by shutting off the display.

Recharging

Speaking over the cell phone while recharging is really uncomfortable since the charge port is on the side of the handset. The charger adapter is too big, and the shape is not ergonomic enough so you can carry it in your pocket. LG can design it in a better way. The indicator after full recharge is useless since it's just a message box that shows for a few seconds and then disappears - so you can be sure to miss it. This is a big problem if you are recharging with the phone switched off. If you charge the phone keeping it switched on, you can however know the charge is full if the battery-charge indicator in the top-right of the display is constant and is no longer animating.

PC Connectivity

The handset connects to the PC using an LG-DC300DJ serial data cable or a LG-USB8100 USB cable for synchronization of the phonebook and organizer using the PC Sync application.

R World

The R World (Reliance World) graphics show cool on the display and all features are accessible. However, I regularly face errors in the R World connection, which I'm not sure if the problem is with the phone or the R World service.

SAR (Specific Absorption Rate)

SAR value for this phone when tested for use at the ear is 0.591 W/kg and when worn on the body is 0.335 W/kg. The SAR limit set by the FCC is 1.6W/kg.

FCC ID

The FCC ID for the device is BEJRD5130 and the reports are available here.

Conclusion

All in all, I somewhat regret my decision of buying this handset, but won't recommend to new buyers. There are better options out there. Here are my ratings for individual features:

Ratings for the LG RD5130 Mobile Phone


MouthShut has rated this handset 3.04 out of 5 based on 145 user votes.

You can read my review also at MouthShut here. The user manual is available here at LG, here at ManualsLib, and here at the FCC ID Database.