Full Samsung Behold II Review

November - 19 - 2009 - Thursday ADD COMMENTS

T-Mobile’s tablet gets an Android update, but is Samsung’s TouchWIZ interface a good match for Android? Find out in our Samsung Behold II review.

Look and Feel – Good

T-Mobile’s new Samsung Behold II doesn’t look exactly like the Samsung Moment, but it has a similar feel, thanks to the hard plastics and the overall bulky feel. It uses a display that is slightly smaller than the screen on the HTC Droid Eris, though that phone is more tightly packed and smaller in every dimension. We like that Samsung went for hardware buttons on the Behold II, instead of the touch sensitive controls on the Samsung Moment, and we love the OLED display on both of Samsung’s Android phones. OLED is definitely the future of mobile devices, and the screen may not pack all the pixels of the high resolution Motorola Droid, but colors pop off the screen and blacks show up deep and rich.

We’ve reviewed plenty of devices running Samsung’s TouchWIZ interface (to check out a few of these, click here) but it has never been among the best interfaces out there. This becomes especially evident on the Samsung Behold II. In a nutshell, TouchWIZ offers a drawer filled with desktop shortcuts and widgets, as well as a shortcut bar along the bottom. The irony is that Android was already using a similar design to better effect. Android has a pull out drawer at the bottom of the phone, now on the side with the Samsung Behold II, and you can drag icons to the desktop from there, or add widgets, smart folders and shortcuts as you see fit. It worked nicely because widgets weren’t allowed to overlap like with TouchWIZ, and there were some powerful and highly customizable ideas for what you could add.

So, TouchWIZ adds nothing productive to Android. It slows down the interface noticeably and it even makes some existing features worse. Many of the redesigned apps and features on the phone, like the dialer, the calendar and the music player, look and function even worse on this Android phone than they do on our T-Mobile G1, the first Android device released more than a year ago.

Calling and Contacts – Very Good

Calls on the Samsung Behold II sounded pretty good. Voices sounded better on our end than on the receiving end of calls, but on both sides, our conversations came through clearly. Our callers reported occasionally distant voices and a slight, digital fuzziness, but nothing too serious. Battery life was pretty good, too. We got almost 6 hours of talking time out of a single call, which is just shy of estimates. Reception on the phone was also pretty good, hovering around 3 bars of service as we tested in the Dallas and Seattle metro areas.

When it came to calling features and contacts, we ran into some trouble on the Samsung Behold II. Contacts synchronized nicely from our Gmail and corporate Exchange address books, but none of our contacts’ photos came through, and when we added some folks to the Speed Dial screen, even their name was left off, rendering the concept useless. The phone also crashed when we tried to add a few names, including our own contact card, which would be handy to check voicemail on our other numbers.

The Samsung Behold II comes with voice dialing, but even once you’ve given the phone spoken instructions, you have to click on the correct choice, which reduces the benefit of this normally handsfree option. The phone gets visual voicemail support, which is a great feature. Conference calling worked well, but could have been more intuitive. We like to simply dial and press send to add a second call, but the Behold II had us digging through menus. Swapping and splitting calls was no problem.

Social Networking – Good

While many new smartphones are adding more social networking integration and easy status update features, the Samsung Behold II doesn’t even come with social networking apps preloaded for Facebook, MySpace or Twitter. You can download the first two from the Android Market, but Android options for Twitter are still unimpressive without help from the manufacturers. HTC, for instance, includes a nice twitter app with their Sprint Hero and Verizon Droid Eris phones. The phone claims to be able to send pictures directly to your social sites, but when we tried to upload to Flickr, they never ended up in our photostream.

The messaging app on the phone is competent and looks pretty good. Text messages and MMS messages are presented in a threaded style, so you can read them as a conversation, like instant messaging. Pictures are presented inline with the messages, and these can be expanded with a click. For instant messaging, the Samsung Behold II gets the basic Google Talk clients and another IM client for AOL, MSN and Yahoo. These all worked well in our tests.

Multimedia – Good

Unfortunately, the Samsung Behold II didn’t perform as we hoped when it comes to multimedia. Samsung’s tweaked music player didn’t even match the basic Android music player we’ve seen before. Some of our song information came through muddled, especially if special accent marks or characters were involved, in which case our text was replaced with Korean letters. Album artwork also got lost along the way. The Music Player also starts playing a song, seemingly at random, as soon as it starts up without asking.

Video playback performance was even more disappointing, which is a shame because Samsung just announced the first Android device with DiVX support, the European Galaxy Spica. Unlike that phone, the Samsung Behold II was hardly capable of playing any of our videos. It couldn’t resize larger files to play on the phone’s screen, and some videos that play perfectly on other Android phones played without sound, or with jagged edges on moving characters.

Business – Mediocre

Though it comes with Microsoft Exchange support, the Samsung Behold II makes a mediocre business device, and most corporate users should avoid this phone. The e-mail inbox looked horrible. Instead of presenting separate subfolders and categories, you get all your e-mails as a hierarchical list. But the e-mail handling was buggy and didn’t work properly. No matter how many times we requested to see more messages, the Behold II never delivered anything more, and some subfolders it could never populate in the first place. Calendar and contacts sync came through okay, but e-mail was mostly a lost cause. If you rely on Gmail for messages, the Behold II doesn’t come with any document viewing software, so you can’t even view Office documents, let alone perform simple editing tasks.

Camera – Good

The Samsung Behold II actually has one of the better cameras we’ve seen on an Android phone. The camera is easily the Behold II’s best feature. Image quality was pretty good, with some accurate colors and nice details, especially in the fairly close-up ‘macro’ mode. The sensor had a serious problem with red colors, like most small cameraphone sensors, and red flowers could blow up and lose all sense of detail. But for the most part we were happy with images from the Behold II. The camera did a nice job with face detection, and the onboard panorama stitching created some sweeping views of our backyard. Check out our image samples below:

  • Red Flower
  • Green Leaves
  • Palm Fibers
  • Palm Fronds
  • Self Portrait, Outdoors
  • Thermometer Close Up
  • Panorama
  • eBay Shot
  • eBay Macro Shot
  • Self Portrait, Flash Only
  • Traveling – Very Good

    The Samsung Behold II comes with TeleNav for turn-by-turn navigation, and the GPS mapping app worked very well in our tests. The phone had no trouble finding us quickly for a first fix and following us on our route through the Dallas suburbs. On a trip to Seattle, the phone followed our progress from the airport through downtown, and it didn’t get lost in the dense cloud cover and tall buildings overhead. The maps responded smoothly and reloaded quickly as we lost our way. The point of interest database was also robust, and it had local recommendations that were satisfying and accurate. No complaints here, TeleNav comes through again.

    Staying Informed – Very Good

    The Web browser on the Samsung Behold II is the standard Android browser, which is a good thing, as the Android browser does a fine job rendering our favorite pages. Navigating those sites is also a breeze, though we wish the phone had multi-touch gesture support, like the HTC Android phones we’ve used. Google Reader works very well on the Android browser, and our favorite news sites, like CNN and the New York Times, looked perfect, just like their desktop counterparts. The biggest problem we had was with the Wi-Fi performance. The phone didn’t bother to report a Wi-Fi connection in the menu bar up top, even when Wi-Fi was on and apparently connected to our WLAN. The Behold II was never able to connect with our home network, and even when it seemed to be connected to an open Wi-Fi network, it usually defaulted to T-Mobile’s 3G network for Web browsing. Because we never left a T-Mobile 3G coverage area, and you can’t turn off the 3G network on this device, we were left unsure if Wi-Fi was functioning properly at all.

    Price and availability

    The Samsung Behold II is available from T-Mobile for $230 with a contract agreement.

    [via infoSync]

     

    T-Mobile USA has made it official: its next Android-powered smartphone will debut in just a few days.

    The Samsung Behold II will be this carrier’s first device with a large AM-OLED display, and the first Android phone with the TouchWiz user interface.

    Samsung Behold IIIt is going to go on sale next Wednesday, Nov. 18. It will sell for $230 with a two-year service agreement, making it one of the more expensive models running Google’s mobile operating system.

    An Overview of the Samsung Behold II
    T-Mobile’s latest Android-based smartphone will have a tablet shape, and include a 3.2-inch touchscreen. As mentioned earlier, this will be an AM-OLED display, a type that uses less power and offers better colors at wider viewing angles.

    It will debut with Android 1.5, and will use  Samsung’s proprietary TouchWiz user interface in place of the standard one. This provides one-touch access to commonly-used features and applications, plus widgets located in a slide out tray.

    As an Android-powered smartphone, the Behold II will give users access to Google’s mobile services, including Google Maps, Gmail, and Google Talk as well as thousands of applications and games available for download from the Android Market.

    This Samsung model is going to support personal email and corporate e-mail with Exchange ActiveSync, as well as instant messaging, and text, picture, and video messaging.

    It will give users access to T-Mobile’s 3G network, as well as Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth 2.1. It will also include a 5 megapixel camera with auto-focus, flash, five shooting modes and video capabilities.

    This smartphone will be bundled with a 2 GB microSD storage card, and user will have the option to upgrade this to 16 GB or 32 GB of storage by buying new memory cards.

    “The combination of 3G speeds, its high-resolution touch-screen, and access to loads of entertainment features is sure to make the Behold II into a holiday hit,” said Wendy Piñero-DePencier, vice president, brand and calendar marketing, T-Mobile USA.

    [via Brighthand.com]

     

    What an iPhone Really is

    Have you seen an iPhone commercial lately? They’re remarkable, because they aren’t iPhone commercials anymore–they’re App Store commercials. They’re fetching, arresting, compelling because suddenly the Star Trek future (”…Need to know the closest place to buy fresh garlic? There’s an app for that…”) seems real. Like all those flying cars we were promised 40 years ago, this is one promise of the future made good.

    This is a longer way of saying that the iPhone is really just a bully handheld computer. And this is a good thing, because as you probably know, no one’s particularly happy with the device qua phone.  (Apple tifosi will debate this, but that’s an argument for another time.) At last count, Apple claims that there are something over 80,000 applications for it.

    Right now the iPhone runs what’s been programmed specifically for it.  Apple wins because you have to buy iPhone apps through their online store. Developers win because they get a first-rate storefront to hawk their wares and a rock-solid OS to build on. Consumers win because they get what they want easily—and in many cases, quite inexpensively. Investors win because it’s a sticky product that attracts and retains users better than the back of my couch attracts dust bunnies.

    If it ain’t broke…

    But what if you could come up with an OS that anyone could write for, tinker with, re-assemble, re-package, and re-shell? What if you made it free? What would that market it created look like?

    We’re about to see. Enter the Droid. Specifically, Android, an ‘open source’ operating system shepherded, but not controlled by, Google. It is powerful, fast, and free to handset makers.   That’s right—they don’t pay licensing fees to install it on their phones. And its open source nature means that adopters, should they decide, can customize it. This can range from simple re-skinning (making the user interface, or UI, look different) to really getting into its guts and playing around.

    As I write, SamsungMotorolaHTC and Acer are all Android handset makers. You can buy a first-generation North American market Android device through T-Mobile now (the MyTouch 3G or the G1), or wait a little bit and pick up at least two through Verizon, and at least one through Sprint.

    Everybody Wins…

    The value proposition to the consumer is unreal. This is nothing less than a nascent Windows-of-the-smartphone world.    As a software developer, presently you have the choice of developing code for Blackberrys, iPhones, as well as Windows Mobile devices. This is not to forget any code that you might want to develop for Nokia smart handsets. Or, you could write one basic set of code for Android—an OS that almost every major smartphone maker is beginning to load on its phones. Where’s the bigger, easier market? There are only so many hours in the day, what are you going to code for? As a user, you will have access to a tidal wave of available apps. Android is the rising tide; everybody wins.

    …Except for Apple

    I’m a shareholder and pleased as punch with AAPL stock, but the iPhone’s undisputed reign is questionable in the near-term and severely undermined in the mid-term. See here http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9139026/Android_to…… to see how the bell tolls for thee, iPhone.

    Android isn’t Google, but who cares?

    Android isn’t owned or operated by Google, but the consumer perception will be that it is, in the same way that users once upon a time conflated “the internet” with “AOL”. That perception is going to sell handsets, and, more important, hook users into Android applications. Once they’re hooked, switching costs are high. (Ask anyone who owns an app-laden iPhone user if she’ll ever go back. I challenge you to find a significant number.)

    A Growing Ecosystem versus a Walled Garden

    An open-source OS represents an ecosystem; closed OSes represent a pale facsimile of same.  Not every ecosystem is successful. But the interlocking and self-interested software developers, wireless providers, handset makers, and consumer parties who will profit from it being so, are all there.

    And you know that cool new Kindle competitor from Barnes and Noble?  It runs Android, too.

    [via The Motley Fool]

     


    On Sunday, T-Mobile continued its commitment to the Open Handset Alliance and introduced its fourth Google Android device, the Samsung Behold II.

    The Behold II is scheduled to launch later this year, though a specific release date and pricing were not announced at this time. It’s the first Android smartphone by Samsung to be released in the United States and joins the carrier’s other Google devices, which include T-Mobile G1, the T-Mobile MyTouch 3G, and the upcoming Motorola Cliq.

    Just like HTC and Motorola, Samsung has put its own spin on the Android operating system by using its next-generation TouchWiz interface, which allows you customized three different home screens with various widgets and shortcuts. In addition, the Behold II features a “cube menu” that provides access to six multimedia features: music, photos, videos, the Web, YouTube, and Amazon MP3. You can interact with all of these features through the smartphone’s 3.2-inch AMOLED touch screen.

    Other highlights of the Samsung Behold II include Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.1, GPS, a 5-megapixel camera, and up 16GB expandable memory via the microSD slot. Samsung stated that the smartphone follows on the success of its Samsung Behold and takes it to the next level with the addition of Android, bringing support for Google services and Exchange ActiveSync.

    While a specific availability date wasn’t released, T-Mobile said the Behold II will arrive in time for the holidays. The carrier’s other upcoming Android smartphone, the Motorola Cliq, will be in stores starting November 2 for $199.99 with a two-year contract.

    by Bonnie Cha

    [via cnet]


    T-Mobile introduces Android-powered Samsung Behold II


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