Saturday, September 17, 2011

Pantech Breeze III AT T Review

Pantech Breeze III (AT&T)
Breeze III Bounty of shoppers still want cell phone that are “just phones.” The Pantech Breeze III is aimed straight at that group. The Pantech Breeze III looks very akin to the Breeze II (3.5 stars), but agreed the Breeze III’s mission, that’s probably a excellent business. It’s still a levelheaded extent if you don’t need much in the way of facial appearance, and want to avoid AT&T’s mandatory data plot charges.
Design, Call Feature, and Apps
The Pantech Breeze III events 3.9 by 2.0 by 0.7 inches (HWD) when closed, and weighs 3.6 ounces; it’s a tenth of an tiny amount heavier, but a tenth of an inch shorter than before. It’s unfilled exclusively in dark grey fake, with a silver end inside. The external, passive matrix color spectacle displays the time and call status, as well as the track name, actor, and time slider when listening to music. The 2.2-inch LCD has 240-by-320-pixel resolution; it’s as astute and bright as before. This is the simplest-to-use phone on the promote now; the oversized gathering keys, five-way control pad, and numeric keypad make it austere to dial phone numbers and get nearly the icon-based menus. There are still three programmable shortcut keys up on the lid, beneath the cover; this time nearly, they’re also better and simpler to push than before.

Breeze III View SlideshowSee all (6) slides

Pantech Breeze III (AT&T): Angle
Pantech Breeze III (AT&T): Back
Pantech Breeze III (AT&T): Front
Pantech Breeze III (AT&T): Left
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The Breeze III is a quad-band EDGE (850/900/1800/1900 MHz) and dual-band HSDPA 3.6 (850/1900 MHz) device with no Wi-Fi, meaning the Breeze III can hit 3G data networks here, but only 2G data networks overseas. Voice calls sounded excellent for the most part, with bounty of gain and a natural tone in the earpiece. Transmissions were a modest computery sounding through the microphone, but my voice was understandable the full time. Greeting was not more than average; indicate strength was honestly weak compared to a nearby Samsung Steep 4G ($199, 3.5 stars). Calls sounded clear through an Aliph Jawbone Era Bluetooth headset ($129, 4.5 stars). Voice dialing worked fine over Bluetooth; I couldn’t trigger it from the headset, but there’s a generous voice command pin that’s simple to find lacking looking. The speakerphone sounded clear, but distorted at the top volume setting, which wasn’t very loud. Array life was fine at 5 hours and 7 summary of talk time.
The list-based menu logic is well laid out, and makes more sense than the typical flip phone. The astute cover resolution and generous fonts are a nod to persons with poor eyesight. You can also discard the lists in chat for AT&T’s typical, bloatware-contaminated, icon menu. Sorry to say, youhave to use the hideous icons to initiation the music player app. Opera Mini still powers the Web browser; both WAP and desktop HTML pages look excellent on this phone. There’s a pill reminder app to help with compelling daily medications.

Breeze III Specifications

Breeze III Benefit Provider
AT&T
Cover Size
2.2 inches
Cover Details
240-by-320-pixel, 262K-color TFT LCD
Camera
Yes
Network
GSM, UMTS
Bands
850, 900, 1800, 1900
High-Speed Data
GPRS, EDGE, UMTS, HSDPA
More
The TeleNav-powered AT&T Send-finder offers voice-enabled, turn-by-turn directions for $9.99 per month or $2.99 per day, and there’s a 30-day free examination. Garmin’s My-Cast Ride out delivers localized updates and brutal ride out alerts, but at $3.99 per month, it’s way too high-priced when you can just hit The Ride out Channel’s WAP page. AT&T’s OZ-powered second messaging app facility with AIM, MSN, and Yahoo, but not Google Talk; the carrier’s e-mail app facility with all major Web services, but expenditure $5 per month. TeleNav GPS can be value it if you don’t already have a device, because it’s excellent, but the rest of the bloatware is a dissipate of money, especially because Opera Mini does so well with Webmail and ride out sites.
CD, Camera, and Conclusions
Last time nearly, we dinged the Breeze II for burying the microSD reminiscence card slot bottom the array; sadly, that hasn’t altered. At least the phone boots relatively promptly. My 32GB SanDisk card worked fine, and there’s also 78MB of free domestic storage.
Pantech has made the earphone jack part of the microUSB charger port. That means it’s tough to find third-party earbuds, and impracticable to find ones that signal excellent; Pantech doesn’t contain any in the box, either. Fortunately, there’s stereo Bluetooth; music tracks sounded clear and full through Samsung Modus HM6450 ($99, 4 stars) Bluetooth headset. The music player app facility fine and displays tiny baby book art thumbnails, but it’s a modest confusing to steer and takes a even as to load. You can browse the Web even as listening to music, but be prepared for occasional audio hiccups.
The 1.3-megapixel camera has no sparkle or auto-focus. Test photos had poor color life, blown out highlights, and some out-of-focus indoor shots. Only outdoor photos looked excellent enough to keep. Recorded 320-by-240-pixels played evenly at 15 frames per second, but looked very near colorless. This is the same camera sensor as in the Breeze II, so I probable these results. But even on now’s low-end phones, you see bounty of 2- and 3-megapixel sensors that take best photos in hard.
So even with some minor issues, the Breeze III is still a excellent phone. It’s just admittance to feel more outdated as time goes on. I wanted to see a best camera and less bloatware this time nearly. Above and further than, AT&T has a packed lineup. At this top, the cell phone promote is slowly dividing into two categories: low-end map phones like the Breeze, and real smartphones. Midrange map phones no longer make sense when you can squeeze into an Apple iPhone 3GS ($49, 4.5 stars) or Machine-powered Samsung Captivate (4 stars) for $49.99 up front, with data plans early at $15 per month. If you’re trying to avoid data treatment, the Pantech Pursuit II ($49, 3 stars) is a excellent alternative; it adds a upset cover and a QWERTY keyboard for messaging, although it’s better and heavier.

Breeze III

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