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Samsung T929 (Memoir) picture sampler |
It’s been almost 6 months since I picked
up the Samsung T929 (Memoir), the first
subsidized 8 megapixel cameraphone in
the US, and I’m overdue for a review :)
Over the years, I have tested a
plethora of 5 megapixel devices – the
i-mobile 902, the Nokia N95/N95-3/N95-4,
the Sony Ericsson K850i, the Nokia N82,
the Motorola ZN5 (ZINE), the Nokia N96,
the Nokia N85, the Nokia N79, and more
recently the Nokia N97…
There are now several 8 megapixel
cameraphones available from Samsung
(Pixon, Memoir, INNOV8, Omnia HD), LG
(Renoir, Viewty Smart), Sony Ericsson
(C905, W995), and Nokia (N86 8MP) – not
to mention upcoming 12 megapixel units.
I’m getting a Nokia N86 8MP review unit
soon, but so far I’ve only played with
the Samsung i8510 (INNOV8), the Samsung
i8910 (Omnia HD), and of course the
Memoir.
For over 4 months I used it as my
primary imaging device, and 1000+
pictures later, I have to say that the
Memoir features the best camera I have
ever enjoyed on any phone – and by a
wide margin!
Take a look at the pictures (slide
show), and judge for yourself.
The Memoir is essentially the US
version of the European Samsung M8800
(Pixon), but with a better flash and a
different industrial design. Despite
almost identical camera specs, I think
it performs slightly better than the
Samsung i8910 (Omnia HD) über phone.
The camera features a large (for a
phone) 8 megapixel sensor, fast
(LED-assisted) auto-focus with macro, a
xenon flash (vs. LED on the Pixon,
INNOV8, and Omnia HD), and an
electrically activated lens cover.
There’s also geo-tagging,
panorama-stitching, wide dynamic range,
anti-shake, smile/blink detection,
manual settings (including ISO from 100
to 1600), and video recording (up to
720×480 at 30 fps) – what a handful :)
Startup time is fast, the 2-stage
shutter button & other controls
provide excellent tactile feedback, and
the touch-based interface is responsive,
intuitive, and well designed – the
resulting user experience is top-notch,
and the phone looks and feels like a
dedicated point-and-shoot camera.
Picture quality is absolutely
phenomenal for this class of device.
Low-light performance is particularly
impressive – noise only becomes a
problem in extremely dark shots. Color
balance and exposure appear to be
generally well handled, and the level of
detail is truly remarkable in the right
conditions.
But it’s not all perfect. The lens
appears to limit picture quality
somewhat (this is where the Carl Zeiss
optics on Nokia devices pay off).
Despite the built-in accelerometer,
there’s (strangely) no auto-rotation
when taking pictures. The resistive
touch screen washes out in direct
sunlight. There’s also no way to send
the original pictures via MMS or email
(the default messaging client downsizes
them), and the only upload service
available is the T-Mobile gallery…
The Memoir supports USB 2.0
mass-storage, but while working properly
on PCs, the micro-SD card fails to mount
on Macs via the USB data cable. The
solution is to use a dedicated card
reader, but each time the memory card is
removed, the camera resets to storing
pictures on the phone until instructed
otherwise.
Before I leave the camera behind and
focus (haha, pun!) on the phone some
more, here is a sample video.
The Memoir is not a smartphone, but a
T-Mobile branded/locked cameraphone
running TouchWiz, a reasonably decent
touch-based interface. It’s extremely
attractive with a somewhat retro vibe,
thanks to tasteful (real) stainless
steel and (faux) leather accents. Build
quality is superb – it looks and feels
like a premium device.
Pluses:
- Premium look & feel
- Nice, bright screen indoors
- Decent touch-based interface
- Awesome 8 megapixel camera with
auto-focus, macro, xenon flash, and lens
cover
- 3G (T-Mobile compatible) and GPS
- Decent virtual keyboard
- Accelerometer and haptic feedback
- Good battery life
- Bluetooth ObEx (file transfer/sync),
and A2DP (stereo audio)
- USB 2.0 mass storage support
(somewhat buggy)
- Easily accessible micro-SD slot
- USB data cable and 1 GB micro-SD card
supplied with device
- Operable without SIM inserted
- Easily unlocked
Minuses:
- Resistive touch screen (no
multitouch)
- Screen washes out in direct sunlight
- No WiFi
- No auto-rotation when taking pictures
- No multitasking other than music (and
camera pauses music player)
- Poor music player (plays tracks in
the wrong order)
- No gapless music playback
- Poor HTML web browser (always proxied
when using T-Mobile SIM, regardless of
APN/WAP settings)
- Crippled default messaging client
(uses MMS for emails and SMS for IMs)
- No configurable POP3/IMAP/IM client
- Crippled Java support (impossible to
install unsigned applications without
hacking)
- No iSync support (but vCard support)
- No Bluetooth DUN (tethering)
- Proprietary audio/USB/power connector
- Hidden APN/WAP settings
When it comes to messaging and Java,
T-Mobile crippled the Memoir just like
it crippled the ZINE. Unlike the ZINE,
there’s no unbranded version of the
Memoir on the market, so an unbranded
firmware flashing solution is unlikely
to emerge.
At least, there’s a solution to access
the hidden APN/WAP settings, and to
install unsigned Java applications. I’m
running twibble (Twitter client),
mujMail (email client that sends
full-size original pictures to Flickr
using data), Google Maps, Gmail, and
Opera Mini. My device is unlocked :)
I like the Memoir – I’m definitely
impressed with the camera, and I’ve
managed to work around most of the
limitations imposed by T-Mobile. But
ultimately, it’s difficult to recommend
this phone, considering the limitations
out of the box, and the price point
($199 with a 2-year contract).
For more information, visit tnkgrl.wordpress.com/2009/07/20/samsung-
t929-memoir-camera/
88 photos | 685 views
items are from between 26 Feb 2009 & 24 Mar 2009.