Samsung’s plan to ship out an Android powered entry level smartphone
with all the bells and whistles that come with the Corby and Star phone
has come in the same of the Galaxy Fit. It is designed and priced as a
mass market phone. The thought here seems to be to defeat the
competition by sheer numbers instead of better specifications or
improved smartness. By comparison it might be considered a mild upgrade
to the Galaxy Mini.
Samsung Galaxy Fit
Specifications
There is not a whole lot different from the Galaxy Mini
besides the display and camera, and here are some of the key features of
the phone.
Screen: 3.3” QVGA TFT capacitive touch 65K Colors
Operating System: Froyo Android v2.2.1 (near future upgrade to Gingerbread)
Interface Enhancements: TouchWiz v3.0
Processor: 600MHz ARM v6
RAM: 280 MB
Storage Internal: 160MB
Storage Extended: 3 GB MicroSD Hot Swappable
Camera: 5 Megapixel Autofocus
Navigation: GPS with A-GPS
Radio: Stereo FM with RDS
Audio Out: 3.5mm audio jack
2G (GSM): Quad Band
3G: Dual Band
3G Download: 7.2 Mbps HSDPA
Connectivity Wired: MicroUSB port Charging Enabled
Connectivity Other: Stereo Bluetooth 2.1
Samsung Galaxy Fit
Features
The great thing about the boxing is that the phone comes with a
charger head, a MicroUSB cable and a 2GB MicroSD card and the slot on
the phone will accept up to 32 GB in it. Like all the Samsung Androids,
this one also comes with the TouchWiz enhancements which make the
overall experience much more enjoyable with improved icons and
usability. The TouchWiz mainly comes with improvements in two areas, the
Notification Panel and Task management utility. The Notification Panel
pulls down from the top true to the Android heritage and includes
toggles for WiFi, Bluetooth, GPS, Silent Mode and Auto Rotation. The
Task management utility shows the Active Applications, Loaded Packages,
RAM usage and a Summary under separate tabs; it also comes with a Task
Manager Widget that can be placed on any home screen. There are up to 7
home screens supported, however, you can remove them if you are not
going to use them. The Quadrant benchmarking showed that the Galaxy Fit
is a shade ahead of the Nexus One though falls by a margin behind the
Galaxy S.
Verdict
There are a few things going against the Galaxy Fit starting with the
QVGA resolution which is a bit on the low side; there are no touch
haptic; the second camera for video calls is not there also are missing a
flash and a dedicated key for the respectable 5 Megapixel autofocus.
The video QVGA recording is at a disappointing 15 frames per second.
This phone has been designed with subtle features and look, though it
will not attract the business or older audience. The Samsung Galaxy Fit
is an entry level phone and surprisingly delivers a pretty reasonable
package in hardware and software for those transitioning to smartphones
on the cheap. There are however other smartphones to consider as well;
starting with the Galaxy Mini S5570, Galaxy Ace S5830 and Galaxy Gio
S5660 from Samsung. Other viable options for a starter Android
smartphone include the HTC Wildfire S and the Nokia C6-01.
Price
At just short of the $260 mark, is definitely a smartphone that will
east those who are considering the move to smartphones. The Samsung
Galaxy Fit is a good choice while you have your Android training wheels
still on.
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