It is sleek, it is stylish, it is cool and yes, not to forget, it is perfect phone with all the characteristics you could desire. The hot release of year 2009 by Samsung mobiles, the Samsung Tocco Ultra Edition Camera Mobile Phone is all set to churn out anyone who enjoys the cell phones and keeps himself updated with the up-to-date technologies and gizmos. Not to forget, this cellular phone very well lives up to the leading reputation that Samsung wields in the genre of sliding phones. This phones is loaded with the latest touch screen technology (including Samsung's latest developments) which seems to be looming large in the cell phone market place these days.
The Samsung Tocco Ultra Edition Camera Mobile Phone has a stylish and cool 12.7 millimeters thick slider model and is comes in a red and silver color combination, although more shades are probable to be launched soon. The Samsung Tocco Ultra Edition Camera Cell Phone, it looks, is all set to pass the fame garnered by its predecessors, namely Samsung Omnia, Samsung Pixon and Samsung Tocco.
The Samsung Tocco Ultra Edition Camera Cellular Phone features the latest AMOLED (Active Matrix Organic Light Emitting Diode) 2.8? inch screen with 16 million colors and 240 ? 400 pixels resolution which makes it sharp, good thorough and extremely definitional, which takes the experience of viewing your preferred videos or playing cellular phones games to a entirely new level. The Samsung Tocco Ultra Edition Camera Cell Phone remarkable thing about is that it integrates the cutting-edge Haptic technology which might lead your peers drooling all over this new gizmo of yours.
If you are expecting for a phone with brilliant camera picture quality then the Samsung Tocco Ultra Edition Camera Mobile Phone is the end to your quest. The 8 mega pixel camera in this mobile is loaded with dual power LED flash along with Wide Dynamic Range (WDR) and face detection technologies which gives is completely equipped.The cutting-edge anti shake and blink detecting technologies are incorporated in the camera. The Samsung Tocco Ultra Edition Camera Mobile Phone features a video recording speed of 30 fps and also fantastic picture capture, it adds up with the options of audio dubbing, video editing, live dubbing, video trimming and adding subtitles to the video file.
On the audio facilities front, the Samsung Tocco Ultra Edition Camera Cell Phone is stocked with MP3, AAC, AAC+ and WMA playback along with FM Radio. You can enjoy all of these on the Bluetooth headset that is comprised with in the package.
The Samsung Tocco Ultra Edition Camera Cell Phone comes with an internal memory capacity of 75 MB along with an external memory card slot for Micro SDHC supporting up to 16 GB of memory. Among other features of this cell are Bluetooth v2.1, USB v2.0, EDGE, GPRS and HSDPA 7.2 which supports a maximum speed up to 7.2 Mbps. Quite Magnificent, isn't it.
All in all, the Samsung Tocco Ultra Edition Camera Cell Phone looks to be very hopeful to its ambitious users with its tremendous camera, stunning appearance and the latest technology incorporated.
Samsung Mobile Phone Reviews
I've been reviewing mobile phones for nearly four years now; in that time, I've used upwards of sixty of them, starting with the Motorola RAZR back in 2004. To get back in the swing of writing reviews, I re-read some of my older ones, and stumbled across this note about an early Samsung camera phone:
"While a 1.2 megapixel camera is stunning for a device this small, I think I'd sign a contract with the Devil himself for a slimline phone that had a true photography grade CCD in it."
Luckily for me, I didn't have to sign a contract at all – my review model from Samsung arrived in a white box, ready for me to pop my SIM card into and to test. My aim was to see if this would finally replace the Nokia N95 as my keeper phone.
The U900 (called, ironically enough, the Soul) is a just-shy-of-too-fashionable slider phone with not quite enough features to be a smart phone. (My daughter, nearly 16, is the determining factor on whether or not the phone is too fashionable. If she likes it, it's a sure sign that I will be grumbling about the effort put into making it look cool rather than usable.)
In terms of hardware specifications, it's a fully 3G phone, able to take advantage of HSDPA networks, as well as dual band GSM. We got good signal everywhere we expected it, though a bit less good in places where the N95 shone. The phone's camera is a 5 megapixel CCD, with built in color correction, and a very nice flash, considering it's an LED. The 320x240 pixel TFT display is bright and colorful, and thankfully not a touch screen. The device comes with 60 MB of memory, and can take a MicroSD slot for storing more files.
Like practically every phone under the sun, it's a fully functional MP3 player, with an FM player. Its onboard navigation system is a standard Samsung setup, and while I fumbled at first, that's mostly due to having the Nokia Symbian interface memorized past the point of muscle memory.
The keypad is a little bit too stiff to reliably do one handed dialing, which is the primary minus on the phone. On the plus side, it has a surprisingly effective photo editing application built into the phone. You can crop, resize, color balance, and remove red-eye without downloading the photos back to a PC to open them up in Photoshop. While I consider this to be a "feature that isn't one", I know several people who can't seem to go a day without uploading some photo to an online photo sharing service, or Twitter. It's also small enough that it doesn't feel like a brick in the pocket, and it is capable of taking QVGA video; you'll definitely want the expansion card to store video of any length on it/
The phone's data communications are lackluster, but to be fair, most mobile devices fall down in this area. Certainly, this phone is aimed at the iPhone from Apple, but with a more conventional user interface. For its intended purpose, it shines, though it won't lure me from my Nokia N95.
Both Rushikesh Maharaul & Martin Fortus are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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