Samsung SGH-T229 (red, T-Mobile)
As shown: $99.99
See manufacturer site for availability
CNET Editors' Review
CNET Editors' Rating
- Reviewed by: Kent German
- Released on:
- Reviewed on:
The good: The Samsung SGH-T229 has satisfying call quality and a decent feature set that includes Bluetooth and a speakerphone.
The bad: The Samsung SGH-T229's displays and keypad are disappointing. Also, its camera does not record videos and photo quality was poor.
The bottom line: The Samsung SGH-T229 has unique design touches and pleasant call quality but it wouldn't be our first choice for a low-end T-Mobile camera phone.
If a U.S. carrier offers a basic camera phone these days, chances are that it's from Samsung. Over the past year, particularly during the autumn of 2007, the manufacturer released a deluge of such models, with more than a few landing at T-Mobile. Now we greet the latest model out of Samsung's reservoir, the SGH-T229. Available with T-Mobile (who else?), the SGH-T229 has a standard feature set and a slightly quirky design. Call quality was decent, but the camera was rather unimpressive. The T229 is $299.99 with service or just $99.99 ... Expand full review
If a U.S. carrier offers a basic camera phone these days, chances are that it's from Samsung. Over the past year, particularly during the autumn of 2007, the manufacturer released a deluge of such models, with more than a few landing at T-Mobile. Now we greet the latest model out of Samsung's reservoir, the SGH-T229. Available with T-Mobile (who else?), the SGH-T229 has a standard feature set and a slightly quirky design. Call quality was decent, but the camera was rather unimpressive. The T229 is $299.99 with service or just $99.99 if you pay full price. While either price is a bargain, we'd prefer the Nokia 3555.
Design
Though the SGH-T229's feature set is hardly unique, its design shows a few unique touches. Its front flap is bright red, while its rear face is basic silver. It's an odd combination in our opinion; we'd prefer that Samsung wrapped the entire handset in red. The external display is set slightly off center, which we've never seen before. We can take or leave such an arrangement. It doesn't hamper the phone's usability but it certainly makes the T229 stand out. We'll leave any strict judgments up to you. The monochrome display is rather small but it shows the date, time, battery life, and signal strength. Photo caller ID isn't supported, but you can use the screen as a view finder for self-portraits. You can change the contrast, but no other options are customizable.
The flip phone T229 makes a slight effort to be thin, but at 3.6 inches tall by 1.9 inches wide by 0.8 inch thick, and 3.3 ounces, it ends up having an average size. The camera lens sits just above the external display. There's no self-portrait mirror, but the display is rather reflective when the backlighting is off. A volume rocker sits on the phone's left spine, while a camera shutter and phone's headset jack/charger port rests on its right spine.
The internal display isn't the best we've seen. It supports just 65,536 colors (160x128 pixels) and it's rather small (1.7 inches) for the phone's size. Graphics weren't sharp and colors were washed out much of the time. We had the most trouble in the menus; though the interface was intuitive, the icons lacked clear definition. You can change the display's brightness, contrast, backlighting time, dialing font size and color, and the menu font style and color. Like the external display, the internal screen has a mirrored border.
The keypad and navigation controls were a mixed bag. The gray color that covers most of the controls doesn't blend well with the phone's red interior and most of the buttons are completely flush. The Clear control and the center column on the numeric keypad are slightly recessed but otherwise the controls lack real definition. The navigation array consists of a square toggle with a central OK button, two soft keys, the Talk and End/power controls, and the aforementioned Clear button. On the upside, the array is quite spacious and the toggle is bright silver. You can program the toggle to give one-touch access to four user-defined functions.
Features
The Samsung T229 has a 1,000-contact phone book with room in each entry for five phone numbers, an e-mail address, and notes. You can save callers to groups and pair them with a photo and one of 15 polyphonic ringtones. Other essentials include a vibrate mode, text and multimedia messaging, an alarm clock, a task list, a notepad, a calculator, a stopwatch, a timer, a unit converter, PC syncing, a world clock, and a tip calculator. You'll also find Bluetooth, a speakerphone, and instant messaging.
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As a senior managing editor for CNET, Kent German heads up the CNET Reviews team in San Francisco. Formerly a cell phone reviewer, he still blogs about wireless news and offers his take on the wireless industry. When not at work, he's planning his next trip to Australia, going for a run, or watching planes land at the airport (yes, really).
User Reviews
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Most recent user reviews
Showing 3 of 9 reviews
"I can't wait to cancel my T-Mobile account." By raedecker
Pros: Uh. The buttons were nicely spaced.
Cons: The screen is kind of small. no video ability, and the pictures are horrible! The contrast on my screen is messed up.. always too light or too dark no matter what. When it gets cold, it freezes the screen and lags. It always says it has water damage.
Summary: All in all, if you're looking for a convenient phone, look somewhere else. I have an old phone with the screen cracked and the buttons missing, and I use that more than this. I went to my cousins first birthday last week, and I can't even tell what ... Expand full review
"screen broke in pieces immediately. horrible pics" By Ruby1112
Pros: strong vibrate ring, lightweight, good signal
Cons: fragile, echoing sound, horrible picture quality
Summary: wouldn't waste the money if it's a phone you would put in your pocket. screen broke in pieces and wasn't able to view the screen for time shortly after purchase.
Specifications
See full specsQuick Specs
- Service provider: T-Mobile
- Cellular technology: GSM
- Talk time: Up to 390 min