Monday, October 5, 2009

LG Viewty review

Viewty. Apart from lending itself to rhyming headlines like ‘what a beauty’ we can’t see that the Viewty name has any relevance to anything at all. But then LG has already gone a bit weird with phones called Chocolate, Shine and Prada, the latter the immediate predecessor to this handset, so why should we be surprised that the next step is a phone whose name is an entirely made up word?

Let’s not get too hung up on the name though, as what we have here is a really exceptional mobile phone – with one annoyance we’ll get to later. The Viewty is a quad-band GSM phone with 3G and HSDPA downloads at up to 3.6Mbps where your operator provides that level of connection. It has a front-facing camera for making video calls. This is one of the new breed of ‘slab’ design mobiles which is almost all touch-screen and no keyboard or number pad.

Yes, you could mention the iPhone at this point as a comparator. There are three keys under the screen – Call, End and Cancel, and a few side buttons, but that’s it. The Viewty isn’t much heavier than your average mobile at 112g, but it is a slightly different format to a standard candybar mobile, being 54.4mm wide. It is 103.5mm tall and 14.8mm thick, and with these dimensions, at first glance you could easily mistake it for a personal video player or, if its back is facing you, for an ultra-thin digital camera.

Actually, in both instances, you’d have a strong case for sticking with that first impression. The screen of the Viewty measures three inches from corner to corner, is 240x400 pixels, and displays 262,000 colours. It can also play DivX video so you could encode downloads into that format and play away. It records video too, up to a massively impressive 120 frames a second, and while playback on the built-in screen doesn’t really show that frame rate off to its fullest benefit, download the video to your PC and go for slow-mode and you can really start to have some fun.

When it comes to stills the camera shoots at 5 megapixels, making the Viewty a top-end mobile for the digital photography fan. The camera is activated simply by pressing the same side button you use to take photos – it is on the right-hand edge. There is a slider on the same edge of the mobile and using this lets you switch between shooting modes (stills and video) and image viewing mode.

So, you hit the button, turn the phone into long format with the ‘snap’ button under your right forefinger, fiddle with the slider with your left forefinger depending on whether you want to shoot stills or vids, and you are away. It takes less than 5 seconds to be ready to snap, so taking quick and candid photos is perfectly feasible.

You can read about the camera and view some example shots on our LG Viewty camera sample page, where we cover the features in more detail, but we do have to make one additional comment here, and it relates to probably the one thing about this phone we don’t like. There's a frame around the camera’s lens which has two nobbles on it so you can get hold of it with a finger and twist it.

Now, this twisting action has a number of different functions. In camera mode it activates the zoom. In stills viewing mode it lets you zoom into a picture. If you are listening to music or looking at any screen with a menu that extends off the bottom of the viewable area, you can use it for scrolling. This might have been a clever sounding idea on paper, LG, but having lived with this phone for several weeks we found it irritating. Read More..

LG Prada KE850 review

Ever since LG gave birth to one of the tastiest phones on the market, the KG800 Chocolate, and followed it up with the marriage of technology and style that is the KE970 Shine, it's become clear that consumers really are hungry for more stylish and innovative handsets.

LG's collaboration with Prada is another step up, and this time the quality extends beyond the phone to its very packaging. The handset arrives in a Prada-emblazoned box, complete with 256MB memory card, Prada leather pouch and Prada cleaning cloth. If you did not know of the LG-Prada relationship before, then after purchasing the phone, you can be in no doubt.

But it's not all labels and accessories. As a fully touch-screen model, LG has introduced a pioneering handset, beating even Apple to the full touch-screen experience. But has LG compromised the phone's features for the accolade?

If you're looking for a super stylish yet smart candybar handset with the usual roster of ‘must-have’ features including a 2-megapixel camera, MP3 player, Bluetooth, FM Radio, great Internet access, video camera as well as extras like a voice recorder, document viewer, an impressive Google Earth-esque world clock and a currency converter then look no further.

The most striking aspect of the Prada handset however, is the all-colour touch-screen keypad. With a large, bright screen measuring 40x65mm, the LG Prada phone is instantly attractive. Minimal styling and the addition of only two buttons on the bottom edge of the handset give hardly anything away about this product's function; it's only when the screen comes to life that the handset takes on the personality of a mobile phone.

The touch screen, though pretty, takes some time to get used to. There's no stylus included in this package and the screen only responds to what it perceives to be a finger. When accessing menu features or dialling out, the touchscreen poses no problems. However, when sending a text message you may find yourself extremely frustrated with a keypad that is not always 100% responsive, or that responds, but with the wrong letter or word.

Another drawback of the super-slick screen is that it does attract fingerprints and grease at a phenomenal rate and, for the sake of not appearing like a tramp on the make, most users will be forced to use their Prada cleaning cloth regularly.

The screen, though bright, does unfortunately drain a great deal of battery power and that's our main gripe with the LG KE850 Prada phone. The handset needed charging every day and when in constant use, even more often. You can save a little power by reducing the brightness of your screen and entering silent mode, but who wants to do that when exclusive Prada themes and ringtones are there to be seen and heard? You wouldn't lug your Prada handbag round in a Tesco carrier, after all!

Power consumption aside, this is a must have for fashionistas everywhere.

Price: Rs 16,500
 
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