Resembling close to the Samsung X830 Blush fashion phone the new F210 is a piece of beauty unveiled by the people from Samsung. This sleek and beautiful piece is a swivel opening mobile phone which comes with user friendly features which include a music player, camera & useful organizer features. The phone is narrow and has a lean shaped casing which measures approximately 88mm in height by 31mm in width and 20mm in depth.
Display
The swivel action of the phone is quite smooth and it opens to reveal to view the screen. This screen can be viewed even the phone is closed. The screen is a TFT screen which offers a screen resolution of 128 x 220 pixels and up to 262k colors on a 1.4 inch screen.
Below the screen are the slim keypads. The phone has well positioned keys which are useable even though the handset looks rather narrow. The phone is quite light weight and easy to carry around.
Camera
The phone is a fun phone. It comes with a 2 megapixel digital camera complete with easy to access camera features. Photos can be clicked with ease and shared with others or stored on their phone as wallpaper or in the phones photo gallery. It also has easy to use video capabilities which allow the user to record & playback video footage on their phone.
Media player
The F210 has a built in music player which lets the user to enjoy music with them where ever they go. The music player supports MP3, AAC, eAAC+ & WMA music formats which allow the user to enjoy popular music formats on their handset. The 3D sound quality provides is excellent.
Features
The phone works on a tri band network which covers GSM 900, 1800 & 1900. The phone supports USB & Bluetooth® technology as connectivity options. The user can connect their phone to compatible devices using either a USB cable or a wireless Bluetooth® connection. It also has the WAP 2.0 browser which allows the user to enjoy a XHTML Internet browser on their Samsung.
By: Adam Authet
Posts Tagged ‘Bluetooth Technology’
Smartphones – Much More Than a ‘Phone’
January 2nd, 2010
The definition of ‘phone’ is changing day by day. When Alexander Graham Bell had invented telephone years ago, he would have never imagined the extent of transformation/enhancement his invention would undergo in future. More than a decade ago, mobile phones brought a revolutionary change in the arena of telecommunications. Mobile phones provide the dimension of ‘mobility’ to telephonic communication. They give freedom from wires!
Today, we have moved a step further. This is the age of ’smart phones’. They have broadened the realm covered by telephones. A smartphone is a full-featured mobile phone with advanced information access features. That means, the phone can not only be used for conversation but also for accessing information, say through e-mails, Web browsing and so on. Basically, a smartphone is a voice-centric device that offer PDA-like capabilities.
The advanced information access features in smartphones are especially useful for people who are on frequent business tours, such as sales managers. Such people require frequent access to their email, calendar and other mobile applications while they are away from the office. Laptops are quite bulky. For them, smartphones offer a ‘pocketable’ solution! Travelers prefer multiband GSM technology in their phones as it allows them to stay connected from virtually anywhere in the world.
Most smartphones are camera phones that support full-featured e-mail capabilities with the full functionality of a complete personal organiser. The Bluetooth technology enables you to connect wirelessly to other Bluetooth devices. These phones offer the feature of push e-mail that enables travelling business people/sales guys to receive official mails in real time by being in sync with company’s server.
A smartphone has a built-in support for MS Word, MS Excel, MS Powerpoint and PDF documents. So, you can work on your business documents even when you are away from office. This helps to enhance productivity.
Gear up yourself and enter the world of smartphones to experience a fascinating new dimension of telecommunication.
By: Dennis Jaylon