Saturday 10 August 2013

Samsung Galaxy S4 Zoom review

With the Galaxy S4 Zoom Samsung further blurs the line between a phone that thinks it's a camera, and a camera that thinks it's a phone. So which is it?

It's on sale now for around £450.
Design
With its relatively heavy body (208g) and chunky dimensions, not least due to the extendible lens that whirs into action as soon as you activate the camera, the S4 Zoom certainly seems more camera than phone. It won't nestle easily in your pocket and it feels a little odd when you lay it on a table -- place it with the lens down and it seems unbalanced, but lay it screen down and the weight makes it feel vulnerable. With smartphones becoming ever more sleek and svelte, the S4 Zoom looks and feels like a clunky, overweight hybrid that can't quite decide what it wants to be.
Samsung

On one side there's a volume rocker and power/sleep button as well as a large shutter button. On the other is a microSD card slot beneath a plastic cover and a tripod socket sealed with a plastic gromet. There's also a 3.5mm headphone jack, microUSB power/sync port and a large covered slot for the battery. On the front there's a single hard home button beneath the screen, flanked by touch-sensitive back and menu buttons.

More pressing, the screen, and it's a decent one by mid-range phone standards (and this is a mid-range phone -- don't be fooled by the S4 in the name). It's a 4.3-inch Super Amoled model that offers a resolution of 960x540 pixels. That boils down to 256ppi, which may be quite a few steps down from the original S4's 441ppi but it still looks beautifully bright and vibrant, if not quite as pin-sharp as the very best. Still, you won't be disappointed with its rendering of hi-res movies, or the small text on busy web pages.
Samsung

Android, software and performance
It's running the very latest 4.2 version of Android Jelly Bean, so it's up-to-the-minute for updates. On top of that is Samsung's TouchWiz interface, which is packed with distinctive-looking icons and widgets. These include Story Album, which lets you create slideshow photo albums for your homepage, and the Samsung Hub, which gives you access to Samsung's online media content including games, music, films and books.

It features some of Samsung's Smart Screen features too, which uses the device's 1.9-megapixel front-facing camera for Smart stay, which switches off the screen when it detects you haven't looked at it for a while, and Smart rotation, which makes sure the screen aligns itself to the orientation of your face, so if you're reading a page of text in portrait mode and decide to lie down on your side, it won't automatically switch to landscape mode.

The dual-core processor is clocked at 1.5GHz and backed by 1.5GB RAM, which seems pretty good on paper but appears surprisingly sluggish in use. Apps open smoothly but at a more leisurely pace than you'll find even on some other dual-core handsets, let alone the quad-core powerhouses. It recorded an AnTuTu performance benchmark reading of 10,872, which puts it behind some dual-core handsets like the Sony Xperia XP and the HTC One mini, but well ahead of others like the Motorola Razr HD.



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