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"Price aside, a huge advancement in mobile phones..." on by mdmatthew
Pros: scroll wheel navigation and large clear screen
Cons: should not have a camera
Summary: I don't think, given the other reviews, that I could write a review without mentioning the price, but I don't think that price is as relevant a pro or con in electronics as people on this site would have you believe. Certainly the phone is expensive, but that does not automatically make it bad any more than something being cheap makes it good. That said, anyone who has ever held a job has some understanding that prices are not arbitrarily fixed. If the Serene costs $1,275, it likely costs significantly more to produce than less expensive phones. Just as an Aston Martin costs more to produce than Chevy Cobalt. Whether one car is better than the other is largely dependent on the needs of the consumer. Such is the case with the Serene.
I have owned mine for nearly two months and have found it to be the best mobile phone I've ever used. To me, the best feature is the scroll wheel. Many people to whom I have shown the Serene comment that it must be difficult to use because the buttons are arranged in a circle around the scroll wheel. To the contrary, most of what I do on a phone involves navigating in and out of menus and selecting options. The scroll wheel is ideally suited to the vast majority of daily operations on a cell phone.
The other feature I enjoy is the menu design. Any phone could benefit from a menu like this! Prior to the Serene I had a RAZR and before that a T68i, and though I really like both phones, I was always searching for a way to alter the menus to make them more legible. On the RAZR, I had to resort to taking a photograph of a white sheet of paper and using it as a background! The Serene has done away with backgrounds and icons. All the functions occupy their own elegant screen and are accessed by scrolling through menus. The screen is surprisingly large and everything seems crisp and vivid. My favorite visual feature is when dialing a number the number takes up the entire screen.
The rest of the features are, in my opinion, just icing on the cake. The ring tones are perfect little pings and clicks and the servo that opens and closes the phone makes every interaction an experience. Even the feel of the surface coating is pleasant to the touch. Though all these details seem minute and some even gimmicky, they all contribute to the feeling that you are using a very special piece of electronics.
I have decided to give the phone a nine, because after auditioning all the high end phones, even the Vertu, the Serene is the most functional and well considered offering on the market today. The camera is probably my only criticism. I understand the placement in terms of the overall design, but I think that they should have stuck to the "purity" concept and left it out. Cameras in phones have always ranked up there with ring tones in terms of irritating gadgetry as far as I'm concerned, but still not enough to knock it down to an eight.
I don't usually write reviews, but there's not much of substance either pro or con so far and if someone can afford the price, I wanted to offer the best summation I could of how it's worked for me. I hope this helps! -
"Superfluous at best..." on by k-os
Pros: Hmmmm... Build quality? Dock?
Cons: Mostly just the obvious one...
Summary: Initial Disclosure: I DO NOT OWN THIS DEVICE.
If you'd like to stop reading now, feel free...
OK, if you're still with me, let me ask you a rhetorical question about this phone: WHY? If you're a wealthy poser, why wouldn't you get a stupid expensive phone that actually possesses some useful features? Say, a Vertu or a diamond-encrusted RAZR maybe. Because honestly, is there any other reason for this phone to exist? Oh wait - it automatically syncs with your stupid expensive B&O home phone. Perfect! Add in that goofy round keypad layout and you have a real winner!
As for its perceived aesthetic value, beauty is obviously in the eye of the beholder, but I don't get that either. It looks like a folding tape measure or maybe a cigar cutter or something. Garage door remote, perhaps? It looks sort of interesting in the dock, I suppose, but... Is that really a big selling point?
$1200 - $1500 for this phone is just comical. There will certainly be those who will buy it precisely BECAUSE it costs that much. But again, if you're going to drop that kind of scratch - why not get a phone that looks and performs better? -
"I bought one, so I can write serious comments" on by patvg
Pros: design, phonebook synchronisation with home phones
Cons: keypad needs some "getting used to"
Summary: this phone (one year on the market now) was and is a peace of art and way in advance of any other mobile phone (f.e. the soft skin on the phone): its design (you like all those candy bars ? look at the phone in its charger how nice it is...), its technology (the small form factor includes a motor to flip open when incoming call) ; my wife uses it all the time and most of all she likes the fact that the phone book synchronises 2-way with the phonebook of the inhouse wireless DECT phones (also here unique for B&O : using f.e. 4 dect phone and 2 serenes, changing/adding/deleting an entry in one device, updates in ALL other devices (this feature is NOT included in the SAMSUNG model!). For A LOT OF people which are not so techy as most of us, this is just extremely convenient !!! It seems to be trendy for people who never saw/used/bought a B&O products (whatever) to write negative comments (just like saying a Ferrari is a stupid car ...)
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"I'm the sucker that actually bought one" on by sfnyc101
Pros: cool looking, nice feel
Cons: useless as a phone, too small to be a doorstop
Summary: This phone is a disaster. I actually believed that the price would mean the technology would be superior to the razor or anything else. It isn't. First of all, where all other phones get signals, this one doesn't. I mean seriously. Twice a day I get NO SIGNAL where everyone else around gets two to three bars. Every function is triple complicated. To make a call means dialing a number (and if your finger slips even slightly on the little wheel, the number gets jumbled)then you have to confirm three times to make the call. Texting is a nightmare, slow, complicated. There's no speakerphone. The software of the phone is so archaic that it doesn't anticipate anyting. Adding a number is complicated and slow, changing the ring to vibrate is a four step process. Basically, the phone is a mess and a rip off. If you disagree, you'll see mine on ebay in a few days and you can buy it. I'm going back to the plane old razor.
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"The perfect phone!" on by misha9000
Pros: scroll wheel, ring tones
Cons: not many accessories
Summary: That's right. A ten. I went there. Maybe another phone will eventually come out to top this one, but Bang & Olufsen obviously gave more thought to how people would use the phone than how they would market it. Nothing is gimmicky or flashy. Just user friendly. If another phone bests the Serene, I'll post a downgrade, but until then, this one is the best.
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