Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Samsung Galaxy K zoom

Available as:
Samsung Galaxy K zoom with 3G
Samsung Galaxy K zoom SM-C115 with 3G & LTE
Also known as Samsung Galaxy S5 zoom
GENERAL2G NetworkGSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 - all versions
3G NetworkHSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100 - all versions
4G NetworkLTE 800 / 850 / 900 / 1800 / 2100 / 2600 - SM-C115
SIMMicro-SIM
Announced2014, April
StatusComing soon. Exp. release 2014, Q2
BODYDimensions137.5 x 70.8 x 16.6 mm (5.41 x 2.79 x 0.65 in)
Weight200 g (7.05 oz)
DISPLAYTypeSuper AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
Size720 x 1280 pixels, 4.8 inches (~306 ppi pixel density)
MultitouchYes
ProtectionCorning Gorilla Glass 3
SOUNDAlert typesVibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
LoudspeakerYes
3.5mm jackYes
MEMORYCard slotmicroSD, up to 64 GB
Internal8 GB, 2 GB RAM
DATAGPRSYes
EDGEYes
SpeedHSDPA, 42 Mbps, HSUPA, 5.76 Mbps; LTE, Cat4, 50 Mbps UL, 150 Mbps DL
WLANWi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, dual-band, Wi-Fi Direct, DLNA, Wi-Fi hotspot
BluetoothYes, v4.0 with A2DP, LE
NFCYes
USBYes, microUSB v2.0 (MHL), USB On-the-go
CAMERAPrimary20.7 MP, 5248 х 3936 pixels, auto/manual focus, 10x optical zoom (24-240mm), optical image stabilization, Xenon & LED flash
Features1/2.3'' sensor size, geo-tagging, touch focus, face and smile detection, HDR, panorama
VideoYes, 1080p@60fps
SecondaryYes, 2 MP
FEATURESOSAndroid OS, v4.4.2 (KitKat)
ChipsetExynos 5260
CPUQuad-core 1.3 GHz Cortex A7 & dual-core 1.7 GHz Cortex A15
GPUMali-T624
SensorsAccelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass
MessagingSMS(threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Mail, IM, RSS
BrowserHTML5
RadioNo
GPSYes, with A-GPS support and GLONASS
JavaYes, via Java MIDP emulator
ColorsBlack, White, Blue
 - S-Voice natural language commands and dictation
- Dropbox (50 GB cloud storage)
- Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
- TV-out (via MHL A/V link)
- SNS integration
- MP4/DivX/XviD/WMV/H.264/H.263 player
- MP3/WAV/eAAC+/AC3/FLAC player
- Organizer
- Image/video editor
- Document viewer
- Google Search, Maps, Gmail,
YouTube, Calendar, Google Talk, Picasa
- Voice memo/dial/commands
- Predictive text input (Swype)
BATTERY Li-Ion 2430 mAh battery
Stand-by
Talk time
MISCSAR US0.51 W/kg (head)     1.07 W/kg (body)    
SAR EU0.40 W/kg (head)     0.37 W/kg (body) 

Samsung Galaxy S5 Neo leaks again, 5.1-inch display in tow

The Samsung device that goes by the model number SM-G750 has popped up again on an Indian import database site Zauba. We've seen the model number before and speculations suggest it could turn out be the Galaxy S5 Neo. In its previous leak it sported a screen resolution of 720 x 1280 pixels and an 2.3 GHz CPU.
Though the new leak we gather some new information - the screen size is slated as a 5.1" - the same as the Galaxy S5. The SM-G750 is listed as SM-G750A, SM-G750F and SM-G750H - probably regional options for different markets.



Previously it was though the SM-G750 is the Galaxy S5 mini but that goes by the name of SM-G800 and sports a 4.5" display.
Sadly that's all the info we get at this point. Hopefully the Galaxy S5 Neo goes official and we get some solid information soon.

Sunday, April 27, 2014

Huawei Ascend Y530 27Apr 2014


Many budget smartphones look and feel like cheap chunks of plastic, but the Huawei Ascend Y530 manages to buck this trend with its smart, textured rear panel. It has a matt finish which gives plenty of grip and its relatively heavy 145g weight has the advantage of making the phone feel solid and well-made. The back still pops off so you can get to the battery, SIM card slot and microSD card slot, but we only noticed a very small amount of flex in the chassis.
Huawei Ascend Y530

Huawei Ascend Y530 Display

The 4.5in display has a resolution of 854x480, which is around the minimum we'd expect to see from a phone of this size. You'll have to zoom in to read desktop-based websites, but mobile versions looked perfectly clear.
The screen's image quality was good, but not spectacular. The screen's colours were a little drab when we placed it side by side with the Moto G and Alcatel One Touch Idol S, and the Y530's whites had a noticeably blue tinge. This made the screen appear a little dreary and washed out, even on the highest brightness setting. The phone's black levels were much better, with deep, solid black text on web pages.

Huawei Ascend Y530 Android

We were pleased to see the Y530 was running a reasonably up-to-date Android 4.3, but Huawei has chosen to stick with its heavily customised Emotion UI for the phone's main interface. This is one of the biggest departures from stock Android you can find, and the main difference between this and other Android builds is that Emotion UI dispenses with the app tray completely. This means you'll have to fit all your apps and widgets on the seven available homescreens rather than have lesser-used apps tucked away in the app tray. This can make for cluttered homescreens when you have large numbers of apps installed.
Huawei Ascend Y530
Alternatively, you can opt for a Simple home screen style, which transforms the traditional Android interface into big blocky icons with larger text. Choosing this style puts a bigger emphasis on phone settings and features as opposed to third-party apps, with the flashlight, FM radio, calculator and file manager all getting their own icons along with the usual phone, messaging, contacts and camera icons.
This mode may be more suitable to older users who care more about simple phone functions than the latest apps, but it also provides a small workaround for those mourning the loss of the app tray. With the emphasis on features, apps are all grouped together under an Others or Downloaded icon, creating a pseudo-app tray when you tap each one. Sadly, these group icons are fixed to the bottom of the third home screen with no way to move them between screens, so it's not a brilliant fix.

Huawei Ascend Y530 Performance

Thankfully, the Y530 is much less frustrating to use than other Huawei models we've reviewed recently such as the P2 and P6, as it seems to suffer far less from operating system lag, especially when browsing. Using the phone's default browser, the Y530 completed the SunSpider JavaScript benchmarks in 1,427ms, which is on par with other budget phones such as the Motorola Moto G and Acer Liquid E2. You'll want to avoid using other browsers, though, as the Y530 completed the test in a much slower 1,888ms when we re-ran it using the Chrome browser.
Web pages with large numbers of images and embedded media may prove a struggle for the Y530, however, as we found it very jerky and hesitant when panning round the culture pages of the Guardian website. It also took a while to load nested comments sections, but we didn't have to wait long before the phone was back up and running at its usual speed.
Huawei Ascend Y530
The Y530 may also struggle with playing 3D games. In our 3D Mark Ice Storm test, its score of 4,123 is very much at the budget end of the scale. Real Racing 3, which scales its detail levels automatically according to your phone's specifications, may have loaded with low detail levels, but played relatively smoothly with minimal stuttering. Your mileage with other games may vary, but you'll be fine with simple mainstream titles such as Angry Birds.
If you like downloading lots of apps and games, you'll want to take advantage of the Y530's microSD card slot, as the phone only has 2GB of storage available to the user. Luckily, the microSD card reader will support cards up to 32GB, giving you plenty of space for your media files

Huawei Ascend Y530 Camera

The Y530's 5-megapixel camera was better than most budget sensors we've seen, but there are a few trade-offs you'll have to live with if you want well-exposed pictures. In our outdoor shots, it managed to capture plenty of cloud detail in the sky, but the buildings in our test shot looked very dark and murky as a result. Conditions were admittedly quite overcast during testing, but when we compared our photos with shots taken on other phones under the same conditions, the Y530's dingy, muddy colours compared poorly to the Moto G's brighter, more vibrant shots and the detail present in the Alcatel One Touch Idol S's shots. There was also a fair amount of noise present in larger patches of colour.
Huawei Ascend Y530

Huawei Ascend Y530 Battery Life

We weren't particularly impressed with the Y530's battery life either, as its 1,750mAh battery lasted just 7 hours and 8 minutes in our continuous video playback test with the screen set to half brightness. We'd normally expect to see at least nine hours from a modern smartphone, so you may need to charge the Y530 more frequently if you're using it all day.

Huawei Ascend Y530 Conclusion

The Huawei Ascend Y530 is a competent Android handset for £120 SIM free, but with its poor battery life and mediocre camera, it's not quite cheap enough to make it a better buy than the £130 Alcatel One Touch Idol S, which is a more competent and desirable phone all round. 

Details

Part CodeAscend Y530-U00
Review Date27Apr 2014
Price£119
Rating*** stars out of 5

Hardware

Main display size4.5in
Native resolution854x480
CCD effective megapixels5-megapixel
FlashLED
GPSyes
Internal memory4092MB
Memory card supportmicroSD
Memory card included0MB
Operating frequenciesGSM 900/1800/1900, 3G 900/2100
Wireless dataGPRS, EDGE, HSDPA, HSUPA
Size132x67x9.3mm
Weight145g

Features

Operating systemAndroid 4.3
Microsoft Office compatibilityPDF viewer
FM Radioyes
Accessoriesheadphones, data cable, charger
Talk time10 hours
Standby time25 days
SIM-free price£119
Price on contractN/A
SIM-free supplierwww.argos.co.uk
Contract/prepay supplierN/A
Detailswww.huaweidevice.co.uk

Huawei Ascend Y530 27Apr 2014

Many budget smartphones look and feel like cheap chunks of plastic, but the Huawei Ascend Y530 manages to buck this trend with its smart, textured rear panel. It has a matt finish which gives plenty of grip and its relatively heavy 145g weight has the advantage of making the phone feel solid and well-made. The back still pops off so you can get to the battery, SIM card slot and microSD card slot, but we only noticed a very small amount of flex in the chassis.
Huawei Ascend Y530

Huawei Ascend Y530 Display

The 4.5in display has a resolution of 854x480, which is around the minimum we'd expect to see from a phone of this size. You'll have to zoom in to read desktop-based websites, but mobile versions looked perfectly clear.
The screen's image quality was good, but not spectacular. The screen's colours were a little drab when we placed it side by side with the Moto G and Alcatel One Touch Idol S, and the Y530's whites had a noticeably blue tinge. This made the screen appear a little dreary and washed out, even on the highest brightness setting. The phone's black levels were much better, with deep, solid black text on web pages.

Huawei Ascend Y530 Android

We were pleased to see the Y530 was running a reasonably up-to-date Android 4.3, but Huawei has chosen to stick with its heavily customised Emotion UI for the phone's main interface. This is one of the biggest departures from stock Android you can find, and the main difference between this and other Android builds is that Emotion UI dispenses with the app tray completely. This means you'll have to fit all your apps and widgets on the seven available homescreens rather than have lesser-used apps tucked away in the app tray. This can make for cluttered homescreens when you have large numbers of apps installed.
Huawei Ascend Y530
Alternatively, you can opt for a Simple home screen style, which transforms the traditional Android interface into big blocky icons with larger text. Choosing this style puts a bigger emphasis on phone settings and features as opposed to third-party apps, with the flashlight, FM radio, calculator and file manager all getting their own icons along with the usual phone, messaging, contacts and camera icons.
This mode may be more suitable to older users who care more about simple phone functions than the latest apps, but it also provides a small workaround for those mourning the loss of the app tray. With the emphasis on features, apps are all grouped together under an Others or Downloaded icon, creating a pseudo-app tray when you tap each one. Sadly, these group icons are fixed to the bottom of the third home screen with no way to move them between screens, so it's not a brilliant fix.

Huawei Ascend Y530 Performance

Thankfully, the Y530 is much less frustrating to use than other Huawei models we've reviewed recently such as the P2 and P6, as it seems to suffer far less from operating system lag, especially when browsing. Using the phone's default browser, the Y530 completed the SunSpider JavaScript benchmarks in 1,427ms, which is on par with other budget phones such as the Motorola Moto G and Acer Liquid E2. You'll want to avoid using other browsers, though, as the Y530 completed the test in a much slower 1,888ms when we re-ran it using the Chrome browser.
Web pages with large numbers of images and embedded media may prove a struggle for the Y530, however, as we found it very jerky and hesitant when panning round the culture pages of the Guardian website. It also took a while to load nested comments sections, but we didn't have to wait long before the phone was back up and running at its usual speed.
Huawei Ascend Y530
The Y530 may also struggle with playing 3D games. In our 3D Mark Ice Storm test, its score of 4,123 is very much at the budget end of the scale. Real Racing 3, which scales its detail levels automatically according to your phone's specifications, may have loaded with low detail levels, but played relatively smoothly with minimal stuttering. Your mileage with other games may vary, but you'll be fine with simple mainstream titles such as Angry Birds.
If you like downloading lots of apps and games, you'll want to take advantage of the Y530's microSD card slot, as the phone only has 2GB of storage available to the user. Luckily, the microSD card reader will support cards up to 32GB, giving you plenty of space for your media files

Huawei Ascend Y530 Camera

The Y530's 5-megapixel camera was better than most budget sensors we've seen, but there are a few trade-offs you'll have to live with if you want well-exposed pictures. In our outdoor shots, it managed to capture plenty of cloud detail in the sky, but the buildings in our test shot looked very dark and murky as a result. Conditions were admittedly quite overcast during testing, but when we compared our photos with shots taken on other phones under the same conditions, the Y530's dingy, muddy colours compared poorly to the Moto G's brighter, more vibrant shots and the detail present in the Alcatel One Touch Idol S's shots. There was also a fair amount of noise present in larger patches of colour.
Huawei Ascend Y530

Huawei Ascend Y530 Battery Life

We weren't particularly impressed with the Y530's battery life either, as its 1,750mAh battery lasted just 7 hours and 8 minutes in our continuous video playback test with the screen set to half brightness. We'd normally expect to see at least nine hours from a modern smartphone, so you may need to charge the Y530 more frequently if you're using it all day.

Huawei Ascend Y530 Conclusion

The Huawei Ascend Y530 is a competent Android handset for £120 SIM free, but with its poor battery life and mediocre camera, it's not quite cheap enough to make it a better buy than the £130 Alcatel One Touch Idol S, which is a more competent and desirable phone all round. 

Details

Part CodeAscend Y530-U00
Review Date27Apr 2014
Price£119
Rating*** stars out of 5

Hardware

Main display size4.5in
Native resolution854x480
CCD effective megapixels5-megapixel
FlashLED
GPSyes
Internal memory4092MB
Memory card supportmicroSD
Memory card included0MB
Operating frequenciesGSM 900/1800/1900, 3G 900/2100
Wireless dataGPRS, EDGE, HSDPA, HSUPA
Size132x67x9.3mm
Weight145g

Features

Operating systemAndroid 4.3
Microsoft Office compatibilityPDF viewer
FM Radioyes
Accessoriesheadphones, data cable, charger
Talk time10 hours
Standby time25 days

Buying Information

SIM-free price£119
Price on contractN/A
SIM-free supplierwww.argos.co.uk
Contract/prepay supplierN/A
Detailswww.huaweidevice.co.uk

Alcatel One Touch Idol S 27 Apr 2014

Alcatel may not be the most well-known smartphone manufacturer, but as we found out at this year's Mobile World Congress, the company is looking to make a big push into the UK market over the next few years. One of the first models spearheading this drive is the One Touch Idol S, and the phone's impressive specification certainly makes a good first impression. Even better is the price. At £130 SIM-free, this is a credible rival to our budget favourite, the Motorola Moto G.
Alcatel One Touch Idol S
The Idol S is just 7.4mm thick and weighs just 110g, which helps make it a far more desirable piece of kit than most phones this cheap. We weren't disappointed with the phone's build quality, either. It felt just as well made as the tough-feeling Moto G when we held them in each hand. Our review sample had a fairly uninspiring grey soft touch finish on the rear panel, but it's also available in red and cherry colours for an extra splash of personality. There aren’t as many accessories and different cases available for the Idol S as for the Moto G, but we'd happily trade in some customisability for the Idol S's slimmer, lighter chassis.
Alcatel One Touch Idol S

Alcatel One Touch Idol S Display

The phone's 4.7in IPS display certainly has the quality to match the handset's classy chassis, and is a cut above your average budget smartphone screen. With a resolution of 1,280x720 pixels, the screen has a pixel density of 312 pixels-per-inch (PPI), helping text, web pages and app tray icons look perfectly sharp and crisp. The screen has deep blacks and impressive contrast levels, but the screen is slightly cool; whites had a noticeable blueish tinge when we compared the phone side by side with the Moto G. Admittedly, colours in darker shots didn't pop out of the screen quite as much as on the Moto G, but in general use the display still looked vibrant; it's a great screen for the price.
Alcatel One Touch Idol S

Alcatel One Touch Idol S Chipset

The phone's dual-core 1.2GHz MediaTek MT6577 chipset had no problems running Android 4.2.2; the operating system felt snappy and responsive. We noticed a slight amount of hesitation when swiping through homescreens when we first turned the phone on, but once it was up and running, web browsing was smooth, even on complicated web pages with plenty of nested comments. We found the phone's default web browser was smoother when surging the web than Google Chrome. With its default browser, the Idol S completed the SunSpider JavaScript benchmark in 1,265ms, compared to 1,787ms in Chrome.
The Idol S can just about handle 3D graphics, but it may not be able to run the latest 3D games very smoothly or at the highest detail levels. Real Racing 3, which sets its detail levels automatically, loaded up with low detail, but ran reasonably well with only an occasional stutter and slowdown. In the 3D Mark Ice Storm test, the Idol S managed a score of 4,400, which is around average for a budget smartphone.
The phone's battery life was fantastic. The Idol S only has a 2,000mAh battery, which is smaller than the Moto G's pack, but we still saw an impressive 9 hours and 43 minutes in our continuous video playback test with the screen set to half brightness. This is almost thirty minutes longer than the Moto G, and should be enough to get you through the day on a single charge, with some room to spare

Alcatel One Touch Idol S Camera

The Idol S's eight-megapixel camera is another enticing prospect for those that were disappointed with the Moto G's rather average five-megapixel sensor. It's unusual to see a sensor this large on a £130 smartphone, and we were generally pleased with the quality of with our outdoor test shots, taken on an overcast day.
Colours were perhaps a little washed out for our liking, but there was plenty of detail present and there was very little noise, even in wide expanses of sky. Pixels didn't clump together in blurry patches too often either, but the phone did struggle to expose the sky. This is a problem we've seen with many smartphones, though, and it doesn't detract from what is otherwise a good camera for an inexpensive phone. The Idol S can also shoot video in Full HD at 30fps, which is much better than the Moto G's maximum quality of 720p.
Alcatel One Touch Idol S

Alcatel One Touch Idol S Storage

Our only major concern is the Idol S's small amount of storage. It comes with 4GB of internal space, but only 1.96GB is available to the user. This doesn't leave much space for photos or video files, but the phone does have a microSD card slot that can take up to 32GB cards. You'll definitely need to fit a memory card if you intend to install games or carry your music collection around with you. At least Android's storage settings make it easy to switch between onboard and external storage when downloading and installing apps.

Alcatel One Touch Idol S Conclusion

The Alcatel One Touch Idol S is a seriously impressive phone for the price. It's a shame there's not more storage space, but its excellent battery life and smart design make it a joy to use. It's very hard to choose between this handset and the Moto G. The G is very slightly faster and has 8GB of internal storage, but there's no microSD card slot, while the Idol S has stingy internal memory but expandable storage, and is available on a £19-per-month 4G contract from EE. The One Touch Idol S's slimline proportions and 4G connectivity just push the G into second place, though - it's our new budget champion and a Best Buy. 

Details

Part CodeOne Touch 6034R
Review Date25 Apr 2014
Price£130
Rating***** stars out of 5
AwardBudget Buy

Hardware

Main display size4.7in
Native resolution1,280x720
CCD effective megapixels8-megapixel
FlashLED
GPSyes
Internal memory2048MB
Memory card supportmicroSD
Memory card included0MB
Operating frequenciesGSM 850/900/1800/1900, 3G 850/900/2100, LTE 800/900/1800/2600
Wireless dataGPRS, EDGE, HSDPA, LTE
Size133x67x7.4mm
Weight110g

Features

Operating systemAndroid 4.2.2
Microsoft Office compatibilityPDF viewer
FM Radioyes
Accessoriesheadset, charger, data cable
Talk time8.5 hours
Standby time29 days

Buying Information

SIM-free price£130
Price on contract0
Prepay price£99
SIM-free supplierwww.argos.co.uk
Contract/prepay supplierwww.ee.co.uk
Detailswww.alcatelonetouch.com

Samsung Galaxy Young review 27 april

When we first saw the Sasmung Galaxy Young it was among the cheapest Android smartphones we'd seen at just £90. Now you can pick one up for as little as £55 from Tesco Mobile. That makes it very cheap, even by today's standards, but is it worth buying?The Galaxy Young has a very basic spec. The screen has just a measly 320x480 resolution and it only has a single-core 1GHz processor, though it does run Android 4.1 pretty smoothly. Webpages are slow to load and you won't see much at that resolution anyway.For the same money you can get the Huawei Ascend Y300 from Carphone Warehouse. Which has a far crisper and more useful 480x800 display and a dual-core processor. It has a slightly unusual version of Android, but it's easy to get the hang of and it's far better value for money.ORIGINAL REVIEWThe Galaxy Young is one of the cheapest Android phones we've seen. At £90 on O2 prepay, it's not quite as much of a bargain as the ZTE Kis, which is currently £45 on Virgin prepay from Argos, but it's certainly the cheapest phone we've seen SIM-free.
Samsung Galaxy Young
You get a good-looking phone for your money, which feels well made. We like the soft-touch plastic on the rear, which is similar to that of the Galaxy S3 and S4, and the silver sides manage to make the phone look classy rather than tacky. The Young is a compact handset, with a small 3.3in screen, but is a relatively chunky 12mm thick. We liked the extra thickness, as it meant we could keep a firm grip on the handset despite its small width and height.
Samsung Galaxy Young
Like many budget phones, the Young has a 320x480-pixel screen. For Android to look its razor-sharp best we like to see a minimum of 480x800 pixels, and the Galaxy Young's text is slightly on the blurry side. There's also a significant amount of grain, but the screen is certainly usable.
Samsung Galaxy Young
The Young runs Android 4.1 Jelly Bean. We’re used to the latest versions of Android running as smooth as silk, and the operating system runs well on the Galaxy Young - at least on the surface. The app tray comes up quickly and the animation to flick between app trays is smooth, but it's when you open an app that the limitations of the phone's single-core 1GHz processor start to show.In the Chrome web browser, the BBC News website took nine seconds to render, while most dual-core smartphones can render the page in five. Scrolling around pages is far jerkier than we're used to, and there's a second or so delay between tapping in the address box and the keyboard appearing. The Maps app is also especially slow, especially when new tiles are loading, which makes scrolling around a chore.The slow performance is backed up the Sunspider JavaScript benchmark; the phone completed the test in a very slow 3,203ms. The phone's slow speed does give it one particular advantage; good battery life. In our continuous video playback test, we saw nearly nine hours from the Young's 1,300mAh battery.Core phone functions such as messaging are less of a problem. There is a bit of a delay between pressing a key on the on-screen keyboard and the letter appearing, but accurate typing is helped by the keyboard's sensible design; each key is small but spaced far apart from the others, so fat fingers don’t struggle with the screen's low resolution.
Samsung Galaxy Young
We were impressed with the phone's five-megapixel camera, which managed to resolve a surprising amount of detail from its three megapixels in outdoor shots, and compared favourably with the Samsung Galaxy S3's camera, which we tend to use for our reference. However, like the S3, the Galaxy Young struggles with exposure in bright conditions, meaning that the sky is more likely to be a bleached-out white than something with texture and clouds. Photos taken in low light show plenty of noise, but again, are reasonably impressive considering the phone's low price.The phone's slow speed does give it one particular advantage; good battery life. In our continuous video playback test, we saw nearly nine hours from the Young's 1,300mAh battery.It's difficult to rate the Galaxy Young. On the one hand, you won’t find a fully-featured Android 4.1 phone for less SIM-free. On the other, it's slow to the point of frustration at times. We'd recommend picking your carrier in advance, then buying a better handset with a prepay subsidy, such as the great-value Vodafone Smart III. 

Details

Part CodeGT-S6310N
Review Date23 Apr 2014
Price£116
Rating*** stars out of 5

Hardware

Main display size3.3in
Native resolution320x480
CCD effective megapixels3-megapixel
GPSyes
Internal memory1536MB
Memory card supportmicroSD
Memory card included0MB
Operating frequenciesGSM 850/900/1800/1900, 3G 900/2100
Wireless dataHSDPA
Size109x59x12mm
Weight112g

Features

Operating systemAndroid 4.1 (JellyBean)
Microsoft Office compatibilityWord, Excel, PowerPoint
FM Radioyes
Accessoriesheadphones, data cable, charger
Talk time7 hours
Standby time10 days

Buying Information

SIM-free price£116
Price on contract0
Prepay price£90
SIM-free supplierwww.ballicom.co.uk
Contract/prepay supplierwww.o2.co.uk
Detailswww.samsung.co.uk