Saturday, June 16, 2012

Samsung Behold, A Sleek Touch-Screen Phone


The Samsung Behold has an attractive design with a responsive touch screen. The feature set offers a range of options and call and photo quality meet the mark. Samsung Behold, also called the SGH-T919, the Behold is similar to the unlocked Samsung Omnia in design and features. It also has an expansive touch-screen design while offering a music player, a 5-megapixel camera, and support for T-Mobile's growing 3G network. The result is an attractive, powerful phone with an easy-to-use TouchWiz interface. The Samsung Behold’s best part is that, it offers up a lot on a single device.



The Behold has the smallest form factor (4.1x2.1x0.5 inches) and reduces the screen size to 3.1 inches. The phone is constructed out of a hard plastic with the outline having a glossy look to it. Even though the overall screen size has been condensed, it still manages to retain a resolution of 240x400 pixels and 262k colors. The touch interface is responsive and intuitive, you will be amazed how well different colors are beautifully recreated with text easily legible in direct sunlight. Pressing on the screen is accompanied with a vibration feedback to indicate something has been touched.

On the bottom of the display you'll notice four icons for the phone dialer, the phone book, the Web browser, and the main menu. The phone dialer features large, alphanumeric buttons with readable numbers and text. Best part is that Samsung Behold T919 repair parts are easily available. SamsungYou'll also find shortcuts for voicemail, the call log, the messaging menu, and the phone book. An onscreen "back" button will let you correct mistakes when dialing.

On the back you will find the 5-megapixel camera with a flash and self portrait mirror.  It takes pictures in four resolutions, from 2,560x1,920 down to 640x480. You also can choose from two "wide" resolutions that use the full expanse of the Behold's display. Other editing options include four quality settings, exposure metering, an adjustable ISO, a self-timer, an auto-focus, six "scene" settings (night, landscape, action, etc.), brightness and white balance, four color effects, three shutter sounds (there's no silent option), an antishake feature, and a setting for shooting backlit subjects. You also can use three shooting modes (continuous, panorama, and mosaic), and the "smile shot" mode promises to detect when a subject is smiling. The camcorder shoots clips with sound in two resolutions (320x240 and 176x144). Camcorder options are fewer than on the still camera, but it's a decent assortment. The camcorder has 180MB of internal memory, but the microSD-card slot will accommodate cards up to 16GB. The hard metallic battery cover slides off to reveal the battery compartment, SIM card slot, and microSD slot.



MP3, AAC, and WMA music files are supported, and you can use your own songs as ringtones. The music player is very attractive, displays album art, and supports the typical sorting options. the Behold played a 320 by 240, 30-frame-per-second MPEG4 movie file smoothly in landscape mode. You also get TeleNav GPS driving directions software. Even Samsung Behold T919 repair services are not costly, the Behold supports T-Mobile growing 3G network (UMTS 17002100). The Samsung behold has a rated battery life of 5 hours talk time and 12.5 days standby time.

Overall, Behold will have better features like "flashy 3D effects, new gesture controls, better integration of photos and contacts, and more haptic feedback. Samsung's Behold SGH-T919 brings a mix of fun multimedia features to T-Mobile's new 3G network. If you're looking for some 'wow' without springing for a smartphone, the Behold's big touch screen, fun and unusual interface, and 5-megapixel camera might just fill the bill. You'll find speaker-independent voice dialing and commands, USB mass storage, PC syncing, Web-based POP3 e-mail, instant messaging, a voice memo recorder, GPS support with Telenav Navigator, and full Bluetooth with a stereo profile.

1 comment:

  1. Thanks for the very useful information here. Do you happen to know of any cell phone stores in Vancouver that I can take my phone to for repair? Thanks.

    ReplyDelete