Samsung is the world’s leading Android manufacturer. The company’s latest smartphone, the Galaxy S III,
had an enormous around of hype surrounding it before the phone was even
announced. A series of exclusive BGR reports painted a partial picture
of the device, but Samsung went to such great lengths to keep the phone a secret
that no one outside the company and its partners really knew what
Samsung had in store. Now, the Galaxy S III is finally ready to hit
store shelves in the Unites States — it will launch on all four major U.S. carriers
beginning this month - but can Samsung’s latest Android phone live up
to the hype? Hit the jump for my review of the Samsung Galaxy S III.
The Galaxy S III is packed with some of the latest cutting-edge specifications, things like Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, 4G LTE in the U.S., a fast dual-core 1.5GHz Snapdragon processor, 2GB of RAM, an 8-megapixel camera with 1080p HD video recording, and large beautiful 720p resolution display. Oh, that display though… It’s a Super AMOLED PenTile display, and you know what that means? Regardless of the resolution, the screen will always look just a little bit worse than a non PenTile display like Samsung’s Super AMOLED Plus panels, and it’s noticeable.
The screen also seems less bright and less vivid than alternatives,
and the dimming on it is just plain bad — the phone doesn’t dim
smoothly, instead stuttering a bit as it jumps from one level of
brightness to the next. For the average smartphone user, the screen on
the Galaxy S III will be more than good enough. Samsung’s AMOLED panels
are all very impressive, but I really would have liked to see a Super
AMOLED Plus display on the company’s flagship phone for 2012.
Looking at the front of the phone, Samsung almost mashed up the Galaxy Nexus with the Galaxy S II,
which isn’t a bad thing at all. It’s a more rounded design, though
practically the same shape as the Galaxy Nexus. The face includes an
oblong home button and two touch sensitive Android keys, back and menu.
The entire phone is encased in plastic, but not just any plastic… Glossy, thin, flimsy, fingerprint-loving Samsung plastic!
While the phone does seem solid and very well-built, I can’t help but
think that if Samsung for once actually used a different material
besides flimsy plastic, its smartphones would feel so much more
high-end. It’s almost funny: the company that’s accused of copying
Apple to a T takes a polar opposite approach when it comes to build
materials.
On top of the phone, there’s a 3.5-millimeter headset jack and a
second microphone for noise cancellation. A volume rocker sits on the
left side, and power / on / off button on the right side. Around back is
an LED flash, an 8-megapixel camera and a speaker. Underneath the
battery cover is a battery with integrated NFC, a microSIM slot and a
microSD slot for expandable storage.
There are, however, a few software features that I really like on
Samsung’s new Galaxy smartphone. S Beam is a great feature that lets you
share photos, contact information, webpages and other information with
another Galaxy S III user with an NFC connection, and there’s also a
photo capture mode when taking pictures to automatically tag your
friends using face detection which works reasonably well.
Users get much more control and flexibility in terms of image and
video capture compared to an iPhone, with burst modes, smile detection,
panorama, a really innovative way to automatically share your photos
with all of your friend’s phones instantly called share shot, integrated
photo filters and more. The camera performs well and though it includes
the same sensor as the iPhone 4S, I’ve found that the iPhone takes
better photos in terms of clarity.
Samsung’s TouchWiz UI has evolved a tad, but it’s mostly the same
interface you’ve used, if you’ve ever used a Galaxy S II or similar
smartphone.Honestly, you can’t have a game-changer every time around. I didn’t
like Samsung’s first run of Galaxy S smartphones, but I absolutely loved
the Galaxy S II (especially the AT&T version). They say greatness
skips a generation, and I believe that’s true with the Galaxy S III. It
feels like an afterthought to try and stay competitive with Apple and
other leading Android vendors.
Does the world really need another Android smartphone that stuffs
one-upped specifications into a borderline mediocre package? Probably
not. That’s not to say the Galaxy S III is a failure, it’s just not good
enough to hang with HTC’s One X. Not in the hardware department, and not in the software department.
Samsung is absolutely on the right track with the Galaxy S III
however, and I like where the company is going. We’re nearing a point in
time when being just another Android phone vendor won’t be enough, and Samsung is look for ways to separate itself from the pack.
The Galaxy S III is just the tip of the iceberg, and I think we’ll see
much more from Samsung in terms of unique software features in the near
future.
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