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Samsung Instinct-M800 Review - Usability & Performance
Usability & PerformanceEditor Rating: Generally speaking, Instinct performed quite well during testing in the San Francisco Bay Area of Northern California. Voice quality was a little spotty here and there but, on the whole, pretty clear and strong. The dialing procedure itself was just the slightest bit odd, as after keying in the number I had to press a green bar above the keypad instead of some kind of “Send” button below the keypad as I was expecting. Not a big deal, but sort of strange.
I also had a few issues with the handset not recognizing when I’d unplugged headphones - even though I’d pulled the plug, Instinct would continue to route audio through the output jack, meaning that I couldn’t hear anything. Plugging the ‘phones back in and unplugging them again remedied the situation. That said, audio quality through the headphones was quite good, and when I plugged a set of higher quality earbuds in to listen to music, the results were on par with a stand-alone audio player. Using Instincts’ many non-phone features was easy. For what the user interface might lack in the way of “Use your own images, ringtones, and fonts,” pizazz, it shines in terms of providing clear, easy to follow organization of everything you’ll want to do with the device. The touchscreen itself is one of the best I’ve tried this side of iPhone. Scrolling and clicking on Instinct is easier and more consistent than on the Samsung Glyde (VZW) or LG Vu (AT&T), two other recent touchscreen media phones. Typing on the virtual keyboards was pretty good - the haptic feedback worked well, and while the vertical QWERTY board was kind of useless to me, both the horizontal QWERTY and the vertically oriented T9 layouts were great. And the display itself, as I mentioned, is excellent. Sprint TV was a little blocky and stuttery due to issues with the service itself, but watching MPEG-4 videos sideloaded onto a memory card was great, as was looking at digital images using Instinct’s photo viewer. While the media functionality on Instinct isn’t as slick or attractive as those found on iPhone, they were pretty solid. The music and video players work, though the included 2GB memory card slows down noticeably when I loaded it with a few big video clips and 100+ photos (upgrading to a high speed memory card should help if you plan to keep a lot of photos on your Instinct). Sprint TV and Sprint Radio also offer a wide variety of streaming media options fronted by an easy to follow user interface. Though I found the overall experience of AT&T’s Mobile TV service on Vu just a bit better than Sprint TV on Instinct, I still enjoyed checking in on live ESPN and mobile versions of Comedy Central, MTV, and the like. I was also able to download purchased tracks from the Sprint Music Store thanks to Instinct’s support for EV-DO Rev. A, (Instinct is Sprint’s first consumer device to support this faster version of EV-DO). Instinct’s stand-out feature is its GPS-based navigation system and the Voice Command system that can be used to access it. I’m not enough of an expert on stand-alone GPS units to say whether or not Instinct can replace that Garmin or Tom Tom sitting on your car’s dashboard. But I can tell you that Instinct’s nav capabilities are great. The handset’s large display makes it easy to follow graphical routes and step-by-step text directions, and the phone also reads directions aloud using a synthesized voice. GPS accuracy was quite good, and the software is tied into Live Search (powered by MSN), which makes it quick and easy to find food, movies, and other services/events near your current location. Though I should point out that maps were kind of slow to render and redraw after zooming, the overall navigation package on Instinct was excellent during my testing. The bad news regarding Instinct’s performance mainly has to do with the Web browser and lack of synching options. Sprint’s marketing the Instinct as having a full HTML browser, but I had trouble viewing the standard desktop version of several popular Websites including NYTimes.com and Facebook. Instinct has JavaScript support but it didn’t work very well on my unit, and I actually couldn’t get the full version of NYTimes to load at all - it kept redirecting to the mobile version. The browser has a button to switch between full and mobile versions of sites, but apparently it can’t override all sites in all cases. The browser also doesn’t support Flash; navigating to YouTube loaded the mobile version of the site, and clicking on video links launched Instinct’s video player for playback. But Instinct’s browser is a step above your standard-issue WAP browser, and its Email client is a step above your average mobile Email client. There’s no support for HTML mail, but URLs embedded in Email messages are clickable, which is nice. Main screen icons for Email (as well as voicemail) show a numerical count of new unread messages, and there’s a wizard for easy connection to popular Email services as well as custom POP/IMAP accounts. Speaking of messages, text and picture messages are displayed as threaded conversations, and Instinct also features Visual Voicemail, which is straightforward, easy to use, and quite nice. Reviews by companyApple, BenQ, BlackBerry, Eten, HTC, LG, Motorola, Nokia, o2, Palm, Pantech, Samsung, Sanyo, Sharp, Sony EricssonOur fancy algorithm says this stuff is related...Monday, December 01, 2008yeah this phone is NICE especially wit the edition of the opera browser 4.2 it's easy to txt too, only if u really focus and pay attention to the keyboard Sunday, November 30, 2008really nice phone def would consider it! Sunday, November 02, 2008The games are ok on it. The phone is pretty cool, browser is good(after update) music isen't that loud but its clear and sounds nice. Navigation is real good, camera is mediocore (5.5 out of 10) messaging is ok, although you make mistakes and cant really type fast. TV on it IS bad, but if u set ur ip and port to all 0's its alot better.
Friday, October 17, 2008can u show some games apps on the instinct im dying to see how the games are Tuesday, October 07, 2008Should i get the samsung instinct or the razr2 v9m?, im having a really hard time trying and figure it out because i heard that its too delicate. All i know is that motorola is sorta better in phones.....plz send me a message someone, PLZ. Monday, October 06, 2008just so u know sprints working on alot of updates on this phone so they can download 3rd party apps and surf threw the web easier...and they should be available at the end of this month i think and i really don't get why the dare is rated higher than this phone..... Saturday, October 04, 2008i just bought the instinct and im with telus...in the fun section it just says tv, not tv/video, can i still watch movies without paying or whatever Friday, October 03, 2008Is there any 3rd party apps for the instinct?????? WTF!!!! Saturday, September 20, 2008phones: yes u can upload music that is already on ur computer to ur phone u dont have to pay a dime.. unlike verizon and the dare. it comes with usb cable and a memry card adaptor so u can do it 2 ways... Sunday, September 07, 2008Are they working on an AIM application for the instinct? Saturday, September 06, 2008can you get the phone ublocked and can it be used in england Thursday, September 04, 2008http://instinctbookmarks.blogspot.com/
This contains some nice stuff about Instinct Thursday, September 04, 2008http://instinctbookmarks.blogspot.com/2008/07/some-popular-websites-for-browsing-in.html
http://mortalkombat4.googlepages.com/player Sunday, August 31, 2008this phone is badass! i wish
i could have it right now, but
i cant, but i will someday=]] Saturday, August 30, 2008Noah, In all your great and thorough reviews of the Instinct features, I never saw any commentary on the Instinct's most fundamental function: Use as a cell phone.
Did I miss it somewhere?
I'm curious on your assessment of the following:
* reliability of maintaining a call (signal strenght, dropping calls)
* Instinct user's sound quality to the remote user (cell-to-cell? cell-to-landline?)
* Instinct's quality of sound listening to a remote caller (cell-to-cell? cell-to-landline?)
* What is the effect on the microphone pick-up on quality of audio in noisy envirionments (my wife's cell phone stinks when she's in a noisy environment, making her sound "mushy")
Also, what is your assessment of the Instinct in terms of overall reliability? Would you expect this phone to make it through a 2-year contract?
Should a buyer put a scratch-resistant film on the screen?
What is your assessment of Samsung as a manufacturer? (I've never had a Samsung phone before. I've had terrific luck with Sanyo, and bad luck with LG).
Thanks! Thursday, August 28, 2008is there any place to put the stylus on the instinct? Monday, August 25, 2008honestly speaking, the instinct is garbage, its a phone that has potential but thats only if its tv, internet and youtube issues are resolved, until that happens sprint really has no business thinking of comparing it to the iphone talkless of the iphone 3g Sunday, August 24, 2008i'm thinking of getting this phone but im not sure if the instinct is better or the lg dare is better any preferences or recommendations and why\? Friday, August 22, 2008the samsung instinct sucks bad the phone is no good Wednesday, August 20, 2008how soon can we expect updates that take care of the tv and youtube clearity issues? is it possible to use the instinct as an internet source for the ipod touch via bluetooth? (with a bluetooth adapter ofcourse), and i put a movie on my 2gb memory, the movie size is like 877mb but for some reason my instinct isnt playing it....any advice? |
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