CNET editors' review
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CNET editors' rating:
stars
Good
Detailed editors' rating
- Reviewed on: 10/18/2005

The postage stamp-size external display is monochrome, but it shows the date, the time, battery life, signal strength, and caller ID (where available). You can't change the backlighting time, however, so the face goes completely black when off. The camera lens sits above the display. You won't find a flash or a self-portrait mirror, but the external screen doubles as a grainy, barely visible viewfinder if you activate the camera with the flip closed. Below the camera-activation key on the right spine is a key with a speaker icon. Holding this button activates the Voice Commands function. With the flip up, pressing the same button once also brings up a list of recently made calls. On the left spine are the volume toggle and the headset jack.
Inside, the Samsung PM-A840 is all black, but the white-backlit keypad buttons are highly readable even in the brightest light. But because the small, raised keys are close together, users with larger hands may have trouble with misdials. On the other hand, the 1.8-inch-diagonal display is so bright and colorful (65,000 colors) that it seems bigger than it actually is. The text also is highly readable, due to a choice of font sizes and colors, a contrast control, and an adjustable backlighting time. The navigation keys are adequately sized, and they're placed and shaped well for sure-fingered manipulation. The five-way toggle doubles as a shortcut to four user-definable functions. You also get two soft keys, Talk and End buttons, a Back key, and a dedicated speakerphone control.
The phone book on the Samsung PM-A840 holds 300 entries with room for multiple phone numbers and an e-mail address. You can also pair contacts with a picture for caller ID--though the image won't show up on the external display--and one of 20 polyphonic ring tones or 9 monophonic tones. Other features include a vibrate mode, voice dialing and commands, a calendar, a world clock, an alarm clock, a to-do list, a memo pad, a calculator, and a countdown timer. You also get text and multimedia messaging and text voice messaging, which lets you leave a voice message without actually ringing the other person's phone. The speakerphone is another thoughtful touch, and you can turn it on before you make a call.
Image quality on the VGA camera in anything but the brightest light can charitably be described as mediocre, and there's no flash to improve matters. You can take pictures in three resolutions--640x480, 320x240, and 180x160--and there are a number of picture-editing options, including three quality settings (Brightness, Orientation, and White Balance), five color-tone choices, and 11 fun frames. Be advised you have to choose fun frames and color tones when you snap your shot; they can't be added afterward. You get a self-timer and a 10X zoom; in an especially nice touch, you can also superimpose another picture of a handwritten message over an existing picture, which Samsung calls a wireless postcard. Uploading pictures took less than a minute, and you can send photos directly to Sprint for printing. The number of pictures you can save to the phone varies by resolution, ranging from 45 at the highest setting to 125 at the lowest. As noted, VGA photos are expectedly awful. A slow shutter produced blurry shots unless we kept stock-still, an effort that resulted in surprisingly crisp snaps but practically devoid of accurate color.
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