Samsung Saga i770 Review
The Samsung Saga looks like a stylized update for the Samsung BlackJack II, and it is very similar on the outside at least, the Samsung Epix on AT & T. Although it obviously larger than the Epix’s in almost every respect, the Samsung Saga attractive design, thanks to the smooth, dark blue paint and the major controls for the navigation. The Optical mouse on this phone, the Samsung Epix on the dwarfs, and it was much easier to use. We are not yet on the idea of selling a trackpad or pointer on a Windows Mobile phone. We think it is a step away from this Windows Mobile Professional touch-friendly addition to the input. But if we have a phone with an optical mouse, the saga is to choose the best ever had.
The screen on this phone was a bit poor, and seemed a little under our bow to touch, especially when using the stylus. Input occasionally require a firm touch, as the screen could not be responding. The Samsung interface is barely skin deep, in fact some tabs on the standard Today screen, and nothing impressive. When you move beyond this screen, you are in the abyss of the tiny, Windows Mobile is untouchable put icons. We were to break out the stylus more than we wanted was an optical mouse is not enough to manage tasks like scrolling to work, or some of the more sensitive screen.
Calls could sound a little muted, the Samsung Saga, began in the worst cases, our words merge into a digitized buzz. If the reception was great, the quality was better but we could hear some background noise. The saga could have used a much larger battery. We drove it plenty difficult with Wi-Fi and Web browsing, but we felt like it was always on the verge of dying, and it did not seem to load as fast as other phones, especially when they powered to our USB hub. For talk time, Samsung claimed five hours, and we were close to about 4.5 hours with Wi-Fi surfing thrown between calls.
Conference calls on the Samsung Saga was easy enough, only one additional pressing the talk button, but we wonder why this feature does not get their own menu or, better yet, an on-screen button. The speakerphone was adequate, but not too loud. We wish the Samsung Saga’s calling screens took after Samsung’s all-touch phones like the Samsung Behold, as it apparently is not enough information on the screen during calls. Especially not during the conference.

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The Samsung Saga is one of the rare but growing number of Verizon Wireless’ Dual-mode phones. So, it calls can make at home on Verizon’s CDMA network (or roaming on other CDMA carriers), or, if you are abroad, you can still call in any country where there are no CDMA, like most of them . It is really only an impressive feature when you’re a real fan Verizon Wireless, as well as AT & T and T-Mobile cell phones no problems making calls abroad without additional radio mode.
To the IM + instant messaging app, you first need to navigate the VZAppZone, a sort of Verizon Wireless App Store, although would have been torture chamber as apt a description. We were shocked when the Instant Messenger App was to find a $ 35 add-on. Such a thing should be really free. That is, we were quite impressed with the IM + app. It has many preset customers, including AOL, MSN, Yahoo, Gtalk and even MySpace. All these are open at one time in a long buddy list window, and its been good. Of course, for this price, it is better, but if you are a true fan of IM, it will satisfy almost. Throw in Facebook, and we say quite satisfying.
Otherwise, the Samsung saga a solid performer for all messages, as it should be. We liked that when we started to type a name in the field of a message receiver, the saga began digging through our contact lists, offering selections on the same screen. E-mail worked well with our Exchange account. Samsung even offers some extra messaging icons on your Today screen so you know how many messages to expect, but these are hidden in the bottom half of a two-piece, with scrolling.
To round off the great messaging capabilities, the Saga also has a very nice keyboard. Buttons are large and are distributed widely. The texture is good and the individual keys have a nice amount of travel. Typing was a breeze, on the Samsung Saga.

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Windows Mobile has a good job with scheduling and productivity apps, this is certainly one of the strengths of the system. The apps are not much to see, and Samsung has not the calendar or appointment of screens given much an update. Yet there is little that can not be carried out for serious business user. Because the phone uses the touch screen version of Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional, you receive the full Office Mobile treatment, so you can get new Word document from scratch to create new. Thanks to the great keyboard, you might even want to type something on this phone.
Samsung not far to go on the Today screen in Customizing the interface on this phone and one of the applications that suffers from the Media Player. Samsung gives the player a new skin with a cool, beige color scheme. But otherwise the players and management software, the standard Windows Mobile kit are unsympathetic. The phone is well synchronized to our Windows Media Player on the desktop, but we wish that Samsung would be the proprietary USB cable to transfer dump. There is a 2.5mm jack for headphones handle, so you will not be in a position to put your own cans, unless your favorite headphones were made for cell phones.Standard 3.5 mm connectors are always our preference here.

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The Saga Samsung comes with the Opera Mobile browser, that we have to see so many Windows Mobile smartphones like the Samsung Omnia. It is even accelerated scrolling we liked on the Omnia, and it invites pages that look good, almost but not quite, desktop-quality. The browser responds slowly to steal our fingers, as if trudging through thick mud. But when we broke out the pen and began flicking the screen with him, things took much. The browser and the screen responds much faster.
The 2-megapixel camera on the Samsung Saga ran the gamut of lighting problems in our tests. Sometimes would underexposed pictures and loud, at other times completely blown by bright backlighting. The camera had trouble focusing in close-up tests. Overall, a disappointing performance, but not a complete surprise. We are for the day when everything turns around with their phones Samsung Digital Imaging waits.





























