Samsung GALAXY S I9000 Review

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Introduction and Design
If you are interested in purchasing this device, please check our partners from Clove.co.uk

This is a global GSM phone. It can be used with
AT&T's 1900MHz 3G band, and with T-Mobile USA without 3G.

Variants of the Samsung Galaxy S I9000 have been announced by all four major U.S. carriers and will be released as the Captivate by AT&T, Vibrant by T-Mobile USA, Fascinate by Verizon and Epic 4G by Sprint.



Update: You can now read our Galaxy S II review!

Introduction:

Samsung must have been pretty confident in the GALAXY S's virtues to designate it for a simultaneous launch in 110 countries. Therefore it's not surprising that the South Korean manufacturer has a wow factor built-in from the start. The Samsung GALAXY S comes with a huge 4” Super AMOLED display, significantly larger than the only other such screen on the market – the 3.3” one of the Samsung Wave. This gorgeous window to the phone's soul is hinged to another novelty from Samsung – the 1GHz Hummingbird heart of the device. It is Samsung's answer to the Snapdragon cores found in the current cream-of-the-crop handsets. 

Working in tandem with the newest edition of the TouchWiz UI, these unique features of the Samsung GALAXY S should ring in what the company names Smart Life into your existence – a sophisticated companion from dusk till dawn. Will the phone live up to the hype, or will it be just another victim of stretched marketing imagination? Now the only smart thing left to do on our part, is to review the GALAXY S where the rubber meets the road...

Box content:
  • Samsung GALAXY S handset
  • Li-Ion battery 1500mAh
  • Headset with microphone
  • User manual
  • Get to know booklet
  • Travel adapter
  • microUSB cable
  • Screen protector



Design:

The Samsung GALAXY S I9000 is a typical rectangular representative of the big touchscreen phone designs these days. The screen is recessed just a tad below the rim of the casing, which protects it from direct contact with hard surfaces when placed face-down. As can be expected from a 4” display, it occupies most of the frontal space, but room is spared above and below it for the earpiece and navigational buttons. 



You can compare the Samsung Galaxy S I9000 with many other phones using our Size Visualization Tool.

There are three keys right below it – touch home, physical menu and touch back. Long pressing the context menu key fires up the smart search function, so we actually have all four standard Android keys present. The other front elements are above the screen - the earpiece slit, a front facing VGA cam, and the dot sensors for proximity and ambient light. The Samsung branding is visible right above the screen, as well as on the lower section of the battery cover.


The back hosts the 5MP camera lens in the upper left corner, and the speaker grill on the right. Below them is the ubiquitous “with Google” branding, which hints this is a full-featured Android device, with the whole set of Google services preinstalled. The dotted back cover makes one think the phone has measles rather than bring the alleged carbon fiber-esque look, but that's our take.


On the upper left side is the volume rocker, which is a whole piece with a decent travel click, and on the right is the power/lock key. It is welcome that Samsung has provided a physical lock key to the GALAXY S. You can't accidentally dial on a capacitive screen in your pocket, but it's the quick pressing of the lock key before you slip it in, that completely takes the worries out. 


Another nice idea from Samsung is the sliding lid over the microUSB port at the top of the Samsung GALAXY S – prevents dirt and lint from clogging the port. The same can be found on the Samsung Wave, and takes another worry out of the equation. The top also houses the 3.5mm audio jack, which can serve as an S-video port for TV-out, if you get the additional cable. It would have been nice to have an HDMI-out port, so sound can travel to your TV as well as picture, but obviously Samsung hasdecided to leave the GALAXY S out of the multimedia battles. The only other element worth noting is the microscopic mic hole at the bottom of the device and that's all there is on the outside. Pretty simple and streamlined exterior..


The handset's design is not amazingly inventive, but rather practical and comfortable for holding thanks to a hump at the very bottom of its back cover. We wouldn't actually consider the device too big since it is also very thin with its 0.39” (9.9mm). This commendable achievement is due to the technology behind the 480x800 pixels WVGA Super AMOLED screen. Samsung has disposed of the air layer between the touch sensitive panel and the display, and has placed the touch sensor directly over it – almost like coating, considering it is 0.000040” (0.001 mm) thick. This surely helped to keep matters nice and svelte in the Samsung GALAXY S I9000, despite its powerhouse status. It also sports true black color, wider viewing angles and is very usable in direct sunlight thanks to the lack of air pocket in the Super AMOLED technology. What we didn't like in this display was how you can easily see almost every single pixel in it. We are not sure if it's the low ppi count or the particular technology involved, but it surely has a negative effect on image clarity and even usability, as it makes small texts pretty hard to read.


The only gripe we have with the design is the plasticky build, unlike the nice aluminum one, found in the Samsung Wave. We would have preferred more upscale materials or accents, but, oh well, as long as the phone is sturdy as it appears, we will sit tight and wait for the Vanity Fair moment to pass.

Moreover, an all-plastic casing around a thin display brings in a welcome reduction in weight. The Samsung GALAXY S I9000 is one of the lightest handsets with a 4” screen money can buy - it weighs what the smaller Wave does with its 4.16 oz (118 g). Compare that to the HTC EVO 4G's 6.00 oz (170 g), or even to the same screen size Xperia X10 at 4.76 oz (135 g), and you will catch our drift. Keep 'em Super AMOLEDs coming, Samsung, humanity will be eternally grateful.

Samsung GALAXY S 360 Degrees View:





Interface:

Samsung's TouchWiz overlay of Android 2.1 on the GALAXY S is there mostly for the better. Android's notification bar at the top lets you toggle Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, ringer and vibration on/off, and we caught ourselves constantly using it for that, instead of the usual options. The omnipresent dock at the screen bottom is populated with four icons. They are labeled Phone, Contacts, Messaging and Applications, and are docked wherever you navigate in the home or menu screens – done before, but helpful nonetheless. The Applications icon becomes Home when you enter the apps menu, and vice versa – it is the only icon on the dock you can't replace with shortcuts of your choosing in edit mode.

The Samsung GALAXY S I9000 offers up to seven home screens, which can be populated with widgets, launch icons and folders by tap and hold on an empty space. Unfortunately they don't act as a carousel, so you have to swipe six times to get from the first to the last home screen, or use the small dots up the screen for that. If you dive into the menus, or enter an application, and keep hitting the back key, you will be returned to the home screen you were at before entering. Pressing the physical home button, on the other hand, always takes you to the default first homescreen. 

You don't even have to type to perform a search from the home screen - Google Voice Search has come a long way. Just tap the mike icon and thanks to the powerful CPU, we were entering our home page a few seconds after we mumbled “PhoneArena” to the phone. Out of the other Android widgets, we can see some added value in the Power control (lets you switch on/off radios and adjust brightness) and Picture frame (populates home screens with pics of your choosing) widgets.

The selection of widgets that can be added to the home screens is similar to the one in the Samsung Wave. Samsung's widgets are for the most part helpful, though repetitive. The company decided to show us there are many ways to skin a cat - if you want to be always in touch with the weather (AccuWeather clock), the stock market (Y! Finance clock), another timezone (Dual clock), or your busy schedule (the Calendar clock). The more, the merrier, we would say, and leave it at that. 

Those can actually be combined into one widget called the Daily Briefing, which populates the current weather, stock quotes, AP breaking news, and your calendar events, on one home screen. Another fairly useful widget is Feeds and Updates - it satiates your thirst for social interaction on Facebook, Twitter and MySpace right from a home screen. We let the phone take us to the Samsung Apps store to download more widgets, but the choice was appalling for the total of two more. Nevertheless we obtained Robert Parker's wine guide for the sense of superiority it will bring come our usual gourmet dinners in assorted French restaurants.



We mentioned the Applications icon in the dock that turns to Home when in the applications menu panes - it actually brings up the main menu. It is designed again in pages, like the home screens. Someone obviously got the memo that people were bored with the stock infinite grid layout, and decided that swiping from one screen full of icons to another will bring more joy to the Android experience. We are seeing such arrangements more and more, the last time was in the Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 mini. 


In edit mode the application shortcuts can be rearranged in the current page, sent to different ones, or to the dock. The actual applications can also be completely disposed of by tapping on the minus sign in the upper right of their icons, instead of uninstalling from settings, neat. All said, navigating TouchWiz 3.0, as we find it in the Samsung GALAXY S I9000, is an incremental improvement over the stock Android experience, tailored well to the huge screen of the device.

Phonebook and Organizer:

Of the other customizations Samsung has made to the default Android interface, the most notable are in the Phonebook and Calendar. Entering the Phone screen defaults to your call log tab. There are also keypad, favorites, and contacts tabs to choose from at the top. Tap Contacts, and you are taken to the respective screen, where history of your communication activities can be accessed with tabs at the top as well - including all calls and messages exchange, as well as social network updates.

The Android 2.1 (Éclair) phonebook groups your phone, SIM and Google contacts in one searchable list. Samsung's own Social Hub idea adds the contacts from your social networks, and the corporate buddies to the mix for one very long phonebook. A variety of contacts' details is visible and editable on the huge screen at once. 

There are more niceties brought by Éclair – for example tapping on a contact's picture (or lack thereof) evokes a small strip called Quick Contacts. Lined on it are all the usual actions done to a contact – call, videocall, text, lookup details, email, even locate on Google Maps, and that works in every screen where contacts are used, as in the email client, for example.



We’d be remiss if we didn’t mention Samsung’s touted Social Hub, which basically pulls in all your SNS (Social Network Services), email and IM accounts, so you can create a message and shoot it out with whatever you choose. It is actually much more than that, it spreads throughout the interface. Contacts, for example, also show their Google Talk IM status with a colored dot against their names, similar to the UX user interface of the Sony Ericsson Xperia line. The Activities tab in the contacts screen shows an aggregate view of all your communications history, regardless of the source and means of that communication. These communication stories are visible also in the history tab of each contact, but are restricted to your interactions with this contact only. You can even enter the media tab from a single contact view, and it will show you the latest albums they have uploaded on Facebook, for example. That's how deep the Social Hub goes. There are good videos on Samsung's website explaining what it does in detail, so we won't dwell upon it here, it is Samsung's response to the likes of Timescape and Sense UI.


We did appreciate the simplicity of the Calendar, which is touted by Samsung as “integrated” (what else should a calendar be anyway), since it also aggregates events from your Facebook or corporate Outlook/Exchange schedules. Views are separated by day, week, or month (the default tab), or you can view a list of your recent and future appointments spanning a few of each on one screen. Reminders are set easy, and you can choose if the phone is to mark the event only on the handset, or sync it to the cloud with Google Calendar as well. Pushing events works quick, so adding that party to Google Calendar or Facebook saves it to the phone instantaneously as well.


The alarm function can be found under the Clock icon in the apps menu, and also includes World clock, stopwatch and timer for all those hard boiled eggs in the morning. It's neat you can control every aspect of its sounding, and even snooze duration and repetition. One of the phone's accessories is a dock, and it can be used as a regular alarm clock tucked in neatly on your nightstand. There is the so-called Smart Alarm, which rings up with soothing nature sounds before the main one. Night owls like us are certainly appreciative of any options to wake up in a prolonged and gentle manner.





Messaging:

Texting and email tools on the Samsung GALAXY S are a bit of a mixed bag. There is Google's Mail app, which works as advertised, with search, labels and all. There is also the Samsung email client for other general web-based email services like Hotmail or Yahoo, and for your corporate Exchange accounts. The phone's own email app has the cool features of TouchWiz 3.0, such as the combined inbox, where all your set email accounts pour in their messages, differentiated with color coding.


The devil is in the details, though, and we were surprised to have trouble finding settings for message sizes, and the amount to download. If not on a more prominent place, these are usually buried in the incoming server settings, but in the GALAXY S are nowhere to be seen, even for such a popular service like Gmail. We tried both default IMAP, and manually set up POP3 access, no go, messages keep coming in an undisclosed size and you have to manually fetch every single attachment, pretty annoying. This leaves an otherwise good feature, such as the ability to search in both email applications, a bit underutilized, as it will only be searching through the text of very recent messages, if you find yourself offline and need an attachment.


The Messaging application is pretty powerful when you need to shoot group texts, or attach multimedia and memos for an MMS. TouchWiz uses the default messaging application underneath, which starts showing the symbols counter when there are ten left from the first message, like on other Android phones. It's smart, but we'd rather have the counter from the start. We downloaded the Road SMS app off Samsung Apps, which shows the road in front of you through the phone's camera while you are texting, and that one had a counter, so no biggie. Messages get into text balloons for a nice cartoonish conversation much like... the iPhone, but this is, of course, a good thing. There are other similarities in the Samsung GALAXY S I9000 to the iPhone's apps or interface, which we will mention later.

In both the Messaging and Email apps you can use pinch to zoom while reading a message and it enlarges the text and/or pictures inside for easier viewing. Swiping right or left on a conversation thread in the main Messaging screen lets you call, or message the contact, and that feat also works on the contacts in the phonebook. 


You can't review messaging without mentioning the on-screen keyboard, which feels comfy to the thumbs on the large screen. In landscape mode typing is a breeze, since the keyboard layout is exactly like the iPhone's, which, again, is not a bad thing. The only two different keys are on the bottom row, added thanks to the larger screen of the GALAXY S I9000. There is a separate dot key, and a settings key. The latter lets you choose languages, or one of the other three keyboard types. The 3x4 keypad works only in portrait mode for one-handed driving...eh... typing, and there are two types of handwriting boxes, if you are so inclined. The keyboard also lets you change key sets by swiping - all in all, no complains about the keyboard.

The company has also preinstalled the Swype text input style, which we will not review here, as it's all over the Internets recently. Suffice it to say it is surprisingly accurate even with bulky fingers, and extremely useful for long emails once you develop the knack for it, but comes only in English flavor for now.





Browser and Connectivity:

The Samsung GALAXY S cannot complain about connectivity options – quad-band 2G, and tri-band 3G are all on board.. Wi-Fi of the a/b/g/n variants, and Bluetooth 3.0 round up the top-notch radios found in the device. The handset can be used as a mobile access point, and tether 3G speeds around, or stream files to DLNA enabled devices like TVs of the Samsung AllShare variety. There is, of course, A-GPS with Google Maps as well, but for a good offline navigation you'll have to shell out some cash.

We paired up the Samsung GALAXY S I9000 with the Samsung Wave to send a 30 seconds 44MB high def video over Bluetooth 3.0. It took the devices a minute to start the transfer, and ten in total to finish it, so don’t leave home sans cable if you will be transferring large video files from the internal memory. We tried sending the file back to the GALAXY S with the same just under 10 min result. Both devices were on the same Wi-Fi g network that BT 3.0 should be using for fast transfers, so either we weren’t doing something right, or those theoretical speeds of 24Mbits actually bite the dust in real life. We mainly browsed through Wi-Fi, which seemed to be pretty gentle on the battery.


The default browser worked wonders on the huge capacitive screen. Multitouch feels well for precision zooming, but you can also double-tap for crude enlargement. The WebKit based browser is minimalistic, which we always like – just a thin green line at the top notifies of page loading status, and it loads, scrolls, and reflows text quickly. Hit the context menu, though, and a plethora of options for window management, bookmarking and downloads show up. Great experience, which will probably get even better when Froyo comes up for the Samsung GALAXY S, and brings along the full Flash 10.1 experience. Until then we have to rely on the default YouTube client, which carries its duties with pride.





Camera and Multimedia:

When it comes to pictures and video, the Samsung GALAXY S I9000 has a decent 5MP shooter that does high definition video to boot. Samsung has taken the unpleasant decision to leave any type of flash out of the phone and we can't help but think why would you do that on a flagship Android phone with a 4” screen that does 720p video – we need you, LED light. The manufacturer's design choices reconfirmed for us that the camera capabilities haven't been its top priority with the GALAXY S, as it is also lacking a dedicated shutter key. Taking pics is instead executed by tapping directly on the virtual shutter button. It's fine, once you get the gist of it. Otherwise the camera interface is the same found on the recent Samsung high-end devices, and offers an abundance of preset modes. The closest thing to the missing macro mode, however, is a setting to snap text close ups.


Outdoor pictures have very accurately represented colors, but are a bit noisy and lacking detail the farther you go from the center of the frame.  Indoor shots turned out to be average, with natural colors but no fine detail. In addition, since there's no flash, things get pretty ugly once the light becomes dangerous low. The videos shot outside are nice and crisp, but also quite jumpy with fast moving objects, or when you scan the horizon moving the phone quickly. There is a nice counter of how many MB you are wasting with this exact video during the shoot, as there was in the Samsung Wave. You can also max out the brightness of the screen with one tap right from the camera interface to help framing when sunny.

All in all, videos are on par with the other high def phone cameras out there and the mike turned out very sensitive, capturing clear sound for the video playback.

Samsung Galaxy S sample video 1 at 1280x720 pixels resolution.
Samsung Galaxy S sample video 2 at 1280x720 pixels resolution.








The multimedia files get organized in the Gallery, which offers some 3D effects, batch view by date/time, and grid view. It automatically indexes the pictures and video on the card and in the phone. The gallery syncs with Picasa upon launch, assigning different icons to the pics depending on their source. The Picasa images are just thumbs and you have to download them for a full view. Images can be rotated and cropped right in the gallery, uploaded on Google's Picasa, or sent via email, MMS or Bluetooth. The Samsung AllShare function is also here, if you happen to have a DLNA capable TV to watch the pics or videos from the phone on the big screen. Videos can also be uploaded straight from the gallery, to Google's YouTube. And the Samsung GALAXY S I9000 will play whatever you throw at it. We maxed out at 1280x720, also in DivX/Xvid format, and it didn't lag for a second. It also supports subtitles similar to the Wave.



The phone ships with 8GB or 16GB internal memory, of which 2GB are reserved for applications, which is somewhat generous compared to what other Android phones are offering. Android 2.2 will come with the ability to install apps on the memory card, and the Samsung GALAXY S I9000 has a slot for that as well. The option for additional space you might find useful with all this high definition the phone is capable of creating and reproducing. 

As far as the other element of the multimedia trinity, the music player is pretty darn good. The tabs on the top allow sifting through your collection by artist, album and playlists, or display all at once. Landscape mode brings along some eye candy like CD cover flow-esque or an alphabetical wheel, to pick your music poison. Sharing the song via email or Bluetooth is done from the context menu while playing. The current song keeps going in the background when the screen is locked, and you can even pull down the notification area then to display the controls, not a bad idea.



Software:

Despite Samsung's homemade 1GHz Hummingbird, which beats all kinds of synthetic benchmarks, you sometimes have to wait 3-4 seconds after tapping to enter some applications, including Messaging and Contacts, if they haven’t been residing in the memory lately.

The Samsung GALAXY S I9000 comes with a good selection of preinstalled applications, and none of them is a trial version. Aldiko eBook, AllShare, Daily Briefing, Memo, Mini Diary, Social Hub, Write and Go, Voice Dialer, Google Voice Search, Layar, Sketch Memo, Desk Home and Car Home, ThinkFree Office and Write and Go are the notable ones. Some of those apps are notpresent on all versions, but more on that below..


On top of our list here is ThinkFree, which lets you work with Microsoft Office. It is not only a viewer, but the full-featured version, it activates on each handset with its own serial and even updated itself on first use. We tried it with Word, Excel, PPT and PDF files, the last format you can only view. It might turn out useful for editing on the go, and even gives you 1GB of free cloud storage online upon registration. The app also includes a file browser, although the GALAXY S offers the My Files one out of the box. There are other Office alternatives in Android Market, but we wouldn’t sniff at free.


The other nice application is Write and Go, which lets you jot down something, and quickly update Facebook, MySpace or Twitter with your musings, or text and email them. Samsung seems to be fond of it, as they put it on the default home screen for quick status updates. The color scheme here suspiciously resembles the iPhone's ubiquitous yellow and brown Notes app. The same goes for the Memo application, which is a simple corkboard with yellow post-it notes, but at least you can choose from different background colors for the notes, and there are numerous possibilities to share the memo. 


Some Samsung GALAXY S I9000 units seem to have additional applications that our 8GB review version was deprived of. There is actually a counter on the Samsung Apps icon in the menu that shows you how many new apps or widgets are there for your phone, that you still haven't downloaded, nice touch. Missing in action with us were the Desk and Car home screens, optimized for their respective docking duties in the car, or on the night stand. Another one we had to do without is the Sketch Memo, which saves your quick index finger scribbles as post-its. The one we might miss most, though, is the Image and Video editing app for basic picture transformations and movie making. We thought they might be available in Samsung Apps, but our UK version couldn't find those anywhere.



Performance:

We already mentioned that the Samsung GALAXY S I9000 is not as snappy as we would like considering the 1GHz heartbeat, and the 512MB of memory. This is actually occurring only when it gets hogged down by intensive work in the background, and is probably due to Android having the last six applications used lingering underneath. Messaging is particularly slow to appear on first start, but even Phone sometimes takes a few seconds before it goes beyond the initial black screen. The upgrade to Froyo should speed things up, although we cannot call the phone sluggish by any means. Also, it froze a few times on us, but what phone doesn't, especially if you put a strain on its multitasking abilities like we do while reviewing.

The Samsung team mumbled something at the CTIA presentation about the graphics processor able to do 90 mil. triangles per second. While this is three times ahead of competition we'll save judgment on that since raw power is less important than real life performance. Maybe when we get 3D games done specifically for the Samsung's new Hummingbird instructions, and the Android 2.2 update gets out, we can come back and test the claim. For now it doesn't seem a lot faster than the best out there. Actually Asphalt 5 appeared on Samsung Apps stating that it is tailored specifically for the GALAXY S. We played, we liked the view, there was absolutely not a hint of lag, so they might be correct about the 3D capabilities of the platform.

As a phone the Samsung GALAXY S I9000 is decent –  fine voices in the earpiece on our side, albeit a bit muffled, but there was some static noise at the receiving end, plus some echo. The loudspeaker is not actually loud, even at the max volume, but the audio output is good. The supplied headset produces an incredibly deep and crisp sound, isolating the ambient noise. Basses don't sound hollow, and the 5.1 channel surround button accentuates the voice of the singer, very satisfying experience.

The 1500mAh battery is rated for 6 and a half hours of talk time in 3G mode, and 24 days of standby, which is on the long side for a giant screen multitasker. We were thinking that the assorted collection of live wallpapers would be draining the battery more than usual, but even with them on we got a full day out of the handset. Four hours of constant browsing over Wi-Fi, and exploring the handset with the screen constantly on, plus about 20 minutes of talk during that time were enough to half the battery charge. There are many reports now that people are charging the handset every other day, but they admit that is with very short browsing sessions and not much talk, i.e. the phone mostly with the screen off. Overall, unscientific observations confirm a good more than 24 hours out of a charge, which is very good for a phone of this screen size.  Again, the transition to Android 2.2 is expected to additionally improve these results.


Conclusion:

We'd be hard pressed not to acknowledge Samsung's recent efforts in the smartphone market. It even introduced its own mobile OS recently, but for this particular handset, Samsung is counting on Android, which certainly seems like the right thing to do. Samsung is also keeping the innovation going on hardware level, where the Samsung GALAXY S I9000 benefits from a giant Super AMOLED screen  and a 1GHz Hummingbird CPU.  All in all, we think the Samsung GALAXY S is a really cool phone, with just a few quirks, the biggest of which is the lack of camera flash. We certainly hope that the phone won't suffer from lack of support and the company would provide timely updates to Android 2.2 and the versions the will follow. There is a lot to like in the Samsung GALAXY S I9000, and once you start using such a huge and vibrant display on the thin and light handset, it is hard to go back to anything humbler.




If you are interested in purchasing this device, please check our partners from
Clove.co.uk



Pros

  • 4” Super AMOLED screen
  • High-definition video with 30fps
  • Plays DivX/Xvid video in big resolutions
  • Preinstalled documents editor

Cons

  • Start time is on the slow side with some applications
  • No flash leads to poor low light performance
  • Plastic look and feel

PhoneArena Rating:

8.5

User Rating:

8.8
46 Reviews

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