After over three years, I replaced my trusty Nokia 6131 flip phone (you know, the model that opens with like a ST:TOS communicator at the press of a button) with a shiny new Samsung Wave smartphone. Squee!
So why the squee?
1. the in-built mp3 player (together with my Sennheiser in-ears) produces actually a clearer, more balanced sound than my Sony Walkman E443 mp3-player! (Tested with KAT-TUN's No More Pain and the X OST I and II)
2. the video player handles HD files & softsubs (and the stuff looks good despite the small display!) - finally, I have the TB- and X anime references literally at hand!
3. it can be charged via a power cord *or* an USB cable. The latter also allows to access phone memory and micro SD card (I currently have 16 GBs in, but it can handle up to 32 GB) like a memory stick. Today, I actually ran the portableapps suite from the micro SD on my work comp. Perfect! And the short USB wire is a lot easier to carry than the power cord!
4. battery is replaceable and - under heavy use (it came with a free game that's almost as addictive as block-out; is permanently connected to my own (or my university's) WiFi, and plays X-Destiny again (and again (and...())), you get the picture) - lasts roughly 2.5 days. I expect longer once the novelty-squee-induced prodding slows down.
5. It has Java, allowing for countless phone applications to run on it, until native apps are developed, and Flash is supported as well - YouTube on the train is fun!
6. The phone OS is open, the SDKs are freely distributed.
and
7. I don't have half as many troubles with the touchscreen than I thought I would have. :)
And what does that mean?
The Wave replaces...
...my old phone, my mp3 player, my scheduler (adding the benefit of automatic synch between the three different calendar systems I use), and my 2nd USB stick. Now I have my mails on-the-go (ditto i-net & chat), which were always more important than calls for me, and and a usable PDF & Doc viewer for commuting times.
Overall, it reduces my average tech load by 258 g (and three devices), while increasing performance (see above). Not bad. Not bad at all. SQUEEEE!
The Wave will not replace...
...my Sony eReader, because eInk screens are more eye-friendly and the device gives my own stories this decidedly "bookish" feeling!
...my work & travel laptop, becauseHow am I supposed to take over the world with just a single 1GHz processor? ;) - obvious!
So why the squee?
1. the in-built mp3 player (together with my Sennheiser in-ears) produces actually a clearer, more balanced sound than my Sony Walkman E443 mp3-player! (Tested with KAT-TUN's No More Pain and the X OST I and II)
2. the video player handles HD files & softsubs (and the stuff looks good despite the small display!) - finally, I have the TB- and X anime references literally at hand!
3. it can be charged via a power cord *or* an USB cable. The latter also allows to access phone memory and micro SD card (I currently have 16 GBs in, but it can handle up to 32 GB) like a memory stick. Today, I actually ran the portableapps suite from the micro SD on my work comp. Perfect! And the short USB wire is a lot easier to carry than the power cord!
4. battery is replaceable and - under heavy use (it came with a free game that's almost as addictive as block-out; is permanently connected to my own (or my university's) WiFi, and plays X-Destiny again (and again (and...())), you get the picture) - lasts roughly 2.5 days. I expect longer once the novelty-squee-induced prodding slows down.
5. It has Java, allowing for countless phone applications to run on it, until native apps are developed, and Flash is supported as well - YouTube on the train is fun!
6. The phone OS is open, the SDKs are freely distributed.
and
7. I don't have half as many troubles with the touchscreen than I thought I would have. :)
And what does that mean?
The Wave replaces...
...my old phone, my mp3 player, my scheduler (adding the benefit of automatic synch between the three different calendar systems I use), and my 2nd USB stick. Now I have my mails on-the-go (ditto i-net & chat), which were always more important than calls for me, and and a usable PDF & Doc viewer for commuting times.
Overall, it reduces my average tech load by 258 g (and three devices), while increasing performance (see above). Not bad. Not bad at all. SQUEEEE!
The Wave will not replace...
...my Sony eReader, because eInk screens are more eye-friendly and the device gives my own stories this decidedly "bookish" feeling!
...my work & travel laptop, because
no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 15:47 (UTC)From:Of course, on the other hand, the Android OS has a lot more apps right now (though I expect Bada OS to catch up because it's free to program for), and since most of the stuff I require in a phone is already built-in, the larger app number wasn't a sales argument for me.
no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 16:43 (UTC)From: (Anonymous)that means google will remembering my position everywhere i carry/online on the phone?
scary O_O|||
So galaxy is older than wave? ...that may means my country is late by months or even year TT_TT Galaxy has even yet to launch here *cries*
yeah the price so high most likely i wont buy galaxy S XD
humm larger apps preferences sounds interesting... i'll try to ask around about apps available for android n bada. thanks so much for your kind info :D
no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 16:56 (UTC)From:Regarding the app situation: Bada is a brand new OS, so developers didn't have much time to come up with cool stuff, and in the meantime, almost all the java programs that work on the Samsung Jet phone work nicely on the Wave. So even if there isn't an OS specified app yet, there's often a mobile java based variant. :)
Good luck on your hunt for your perfect phone. I chased mine for over 2 years.
no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 17:57 (UTC)From: (Anonymous)OH some guy at Singapore already discounting Wave to restock on Wave 2 n Wave 2 pro
it's been a while since i was drooling over Jet promotion last year, and i already forgot about it (sorry Jet XO )
You are.. so faithfull and patient *cries
no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 18:24 (UTC)From: (Anonymous)no subject
Date: 2010-08-12 19:28 (UTC)From:Regarding quality: It's probably best to make yourself a list of "must have"-features for your phone, and a second one of "would be nice to have, too" - and then go and check what's out there in your price range.
I had a set of must haves that weren't available for years (not even in the really expensive stuff), so... :)