Thursday, September 8, 2011

Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH review

Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH, if not dubbed as the Tocco Even more edition, joins in on the bandwagon of full upset handsets that seem to be occupying the high range of the promote quite successfully. Nothing can equate to the ease of use of a touchscreen phone – agreed the user boundary is done right. And Samsung have place a lot of effort in their proprietary TouchWiz boundary.
The Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH is certainly among the most exciting diplomacy that saw daylight all through this year’s MWC. We took a closer look at its beta-version and were impressed but the final one is even more impressive. No-one’s claiming it’s exact, but it certainly has bounty to show off in this area.
The handset is renowned under uncommon names across the planet. You may hear public calling it UltraTOUCH, Tocco Even more Edition (or Tocco Even more) or just the S8300. But in any case of the name it’s hiding behind, there’s still the same classy touchscreen slider with an alphanumeric keypad.
Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH  Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH  Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH
Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH (a.k.a. Tocco Even more Edition) official photos

Key facial appearance:

  • Classy touchscreen slider with an alphanumeric keypad
  • Commendable build feature
  • Quad-band GSM and 3G with HSDPA help
  • 8 megapixel autofocus camera with LED sparkle, geo-cataloging, face and smile detection, image stabilization, wide dynamic range and D1 record@30 fps
  • 2.8″ 16M color AMOLED touchscreen spectacle with 400 x 240 pixel resolution
  • Anti-scrape cover go up
  • Accelerometer for cover auto rotate
  • Proximity sensor for auto cover turn-off
  • MicroSD card slot (up to 16 GB), 1 GB built-in
  • Built-in GPS receiver with A-GPS help, Google Maps
  • Stereo Bluetooth (A2DP)
  • DivX/XviD record help
  • Stereo FM radio with RDS, FM recording
  • Paper viewer
  • Photo Contact
  • Smart dialing

Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH Main disadvantages

  • User boundary sometimes lags
  • Slow initializing of generous microSD cards
  • Restricted options for third-party GPS steering software
  • No virtual on-cover QWERTY keyboard
  • Reminiscence card isn’t hot swappable
  • No Wi-Fi connectivity
  • Array take in gets scratched easily
It’s been a year in view of the fact that the announcement of the first device of this kind, the LG KF700. The Samsung S8300 takes over where the KF700 left off and attempts a huge leap forwards. Just like the LG phone, the S8300 UltraTOUCH is a slick touchscreen slider with an alphanumeric keypad allowing users to encounter the joy of having a touchscreen-equipped device lacking charitable up the comfort of the traditional alphanumeric keypad. Usability-wise, there is hardly any substitution for hardware keys for typing text.

Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH
Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH in the comfort of our office

It’s not the first time you’ll hear us adage how fantastic it is to use a capacitive touchscreen, but gray typing is the touchscreen’s greatest enemy and it can be a frustrating encounter trying to knock out a long SMS or email by the onscreen keyboard. And this is where the alphanumeric keypad really comes into its own.
The Tocco Even more packs a commanding 8-megapixel snapper, Bluetooth help, GPS receiver with A-GPS, you name it. The only business that seems to be gone (compelling into account the price tag) is Wi-Fi help.
So lacking further ado, the Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH is in for a proper hardware inspection. Join us on the next page as we go through our checklist.

Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH

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