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Opening the handset reveals the Samsung SCH-A950's vivid, 2-inch, 262,000-color LCD, which looks about as rich and detailed (but also as difficult to read in direct sunlight) as other internal displays in its class. While the screen itself looks sharp and colorful for photos and streaming videos, the handset still uses Verizon's standard tabbed user interface, which is static and staid compared with the vibrant, animated menus on phones from Sprint and Cingular. Also, we continue to be puzzled as to why folders for your music files and photos are buried within the menu for Verizon's Get It Now Internet service. You can change the backlighting time, the brightness, and the contrast but not the font size.

The Samsung SCH-A950's keypad is a mixed bag. We liked the big, four-way navigational keypad, which is flanked by a pair of soft keys and the Talk and End/power buttons, and we also appreciated the dedicated speakerphone key, which for once lets you activate the speakerphone before you're on a call. But our thumbs had trouble with the thin, beveled buttons on the numeric keypad; while the keys certainly look great, they'd be easier to press if they were bigger and flatter.
Besides the jog dial and the music controls on the front of the Samsung SCH-A950, there's a volume up/down rocker on the right side and a dedicated camera button on the left edge, just above the TransFlash card slot. On the bottom of the SCH-A950 is a port for the USB cable and the AC power cord, which is protected by a thin, easy-to-lose plastic cover that, for some reason, isn't attached to the phone itself.
The Samsung SCH-A950 comes loaded with most of the features you'd expect from a 3G multimedia phone. Starting with the basics, you get a 500-name phone book, with room in each contact for five phone numbers and two e-mail addresses; caller groups; a calendar with week and month views; voice dialing and memos; picture caller ID; a vibrate mode; a speakerphone, which, as we noted, you can turn on before making a call; an alarm clock; text and multimedia messaging; a world clock; a calculator; and a TransFlash memory expansion slot, which is expandable up to 512MB, though you'll have to buy your own card. Although the handset comes with Bluetooth, it supports only wireless headsets; Verizon has (again) disabled Bluetooth file transfers, contact syncing, and the ability to tether the handset to your PC as a modem. What's more, since only music, pictures, and videos can be saved via the TransFlash card, you'll have to buy third-party syncing software if you want to transfer any other files.Since it's an EV-DO-enabled handset, the Samsung SCH-A950 supports Verizon's $15-a-month, 3G V Cast service for streaming video, including clips from ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, MTV, E, ESPN, Fox Sports, and the Weather Channel. The SCH-A950 has the same, solid video player we've seen on other V Cast phones, including the ability to pause and scan forward and backward within a video clip, as well as expanding the video to full-screen mode, a feature still missing from Sprint Power Vision handsets.
The Samsung SCH-A950 also supports the V Cast Music store, which boasts upward of a million songs at $2 a pop (or $1 if purchased on a PC and transferred to the phone via USB). Although expensive, downloading tracks wirelessly is a nice touch. You can save them to the phone itself, but with 25MB, you're better off storing them on your TransFlash card. The onboard music player lets you pause and scan back and forth within a song using the jog dial on the front of the phone; in a nice touch, album art is displayed on both the internal and external displays. There's no equalizer for tweaking the sound of your music, however, and our tunes stuttered for a second or so when we opened or closed the flip. We wish the external jog dial let you scroll through individual tunes; as it stands, you can scroll only through playlists. Also, we're disappointed that you can't save downloaded music files as ring tones.
Want to transfer your own music to the Samsung SCH-A950? Using the included USB cable, you can sync the phone with your tunes using Windows Media Player 10 on your PC (sorry, Mac users), but with one important caveat: Any MP3s in your collection will need to be converted into WMA files--and lose audio quality in the process--before they're transferred to your phone. Verizon has taken a lot of heat for this limitation and rightfully so; however, we should point out that this restriction applies to all Verizon V Cast phones and not the SCH-A950 in particular.