Samsung F480 Tocco - Two weeks of touching
Submitted by craiga on Sun, 07/20/2008 - 17:21.
So I've spent a couple of weeks with my shiny new toy, the Samsumg F480 Tocco, so it's time to write a little review of it. I have to say that I'm very pleased with it, and would gladly recommend it to, well, anyone. The touchscreen interface might be a little too alien for some, but for anyone reasonably mobile-savvy it should present no issues at all.
Of course, it's going to end up getting compared to the iPhone a lot. It looks just like it to the untrained eye. It's actually slightly smaller than the iPhone, and the iPhone users who've seen it have commented that it's a much better size. Oh, and it comes with an optional faux-leather flip-front which is very effective and looks pretty good, too.
Widgets
So onto the phone itself. The first thing you notice is the widgets screen, which is the primary focus of the website blurb. You can customise your touchscreen! Why you'd want to, I'll leave as an exercise to the reader, but there it is. Now, I'm a minimalist so the only widget I have constantly open is the clock. If a clock were included in the main screen, I wouldn't use any. However, if you regularly switch profiles or use the phone as a full time MP3 player, you would do well to open up the relevent widget and place it suitably.
The widget interface is friendly enough, with the vibrate motor giving a satisfying 'boing' feel to the opening and closing widget bar. Dragging widgets about can get a little fiddly for fine tuning position (I'm a bit obsessive about things lining up). Still, it certainly wows people, and I love the way message alerts appear with a little pop so they're nice and noticable.
Buttons and Controls
There are a number of buttons around the device to manipulate hardware functions. The most used will be the one on the top, which is the Hold switch. It works really well, being slightly recessed to prevent accidental pressing but responds quickly when you need it. Locking and unlocking the phone is simplicity itself, which may not sound like much, but after fighting with 'menu-*' all this time it's a breath of fresh air.
Down one side are the volume buttons. These allow you to set both sound volume and vibrate strength on the widget screen, call volume on calls, and a myriad other things. It also doubles up as zoom, scroll, and all sorts depending on context. At the other side is the familiar camera button. This is a 2 stage press affair for autofocus/shutter release. It works better than any other camera release button on a phone I've ever used, and I've had a K800i. Really nice, solid feel.
Finally, there are the front panel buttons. The left and right buttons are just the call/hangup buttons (the hangup doubling as a power button). The right hand button is also the global cancel button, taking you back a whole step when pressed, right up to the widget screen. Finally, the shortcut button in the middle has a variety of uses. When on the widget screen, it allows you to pop up five 'shortcut' items, including messaging, the main menu, web browser and camera. This really doesn't give any advantage of just going to the menu the normal way because they are all top level items anyway, so I don't really understand that one.
The other thing it does is unlock the touchscreen for in-call features. This includes popping up a keypad for DTMF tones, putting calls on hold, switching between calls and looking up items in the phonebook. Not sure why they didn't just use the existing hold button for that, either, really. Still, a big button right in the middle is hard to miss. Probably just a usability thing.
Touchscreen UI
The touchscreen UI tries to emulate the functional usability of the iPhone by providing big, friendly areas for fat fingered phone users like me. It's a nice, solid interface that doesn't suffer the spurious pressing and fannying about of previous Samsung touch-sensitive devices. The reassuring confirmation of a slight buzz from the haptic response system also makes it a more usable and all-round friendly UI.
Most of the UI works incredibly well. Scrolling is handled well, things don't tend to trigger at the wrong time. The ability to navigate by icons or words is simple as the menus and controls of all the various applications are well laid out an sane.
Except for anything in the settings menu. I don't know what happened there, but they've really gone to pot. The only reliable way to scroll through the settings is to use the volume rocker as a scroll button. Click and drag scrolling just doesn't work reliably on those screens. Maybe a firmware update later will fix that, because the same scrolling works perfectly on the folder or message browsing view.
The virtual keypad is a work of genius. There is no virtual QWERTY keypad like the iPhone, but there is a context sensitive T9 compatible phone keypad that provides just the right controls for the situation. Again, the haptic response makes entering text that much easier, and the buttons are large and reliable. I make no more or less typos on this device than on any phone with a real keypad.
Call Handling
What is there to say about call handling? Well, it handles calls. The sound quality is excellent, the reliability is good. It all works, really. It is a little bit of a pain to have to unlock the screen and press the keypad button to get to the DTMF tones when phoning call centres, but it works well and doesn't mess about.
One thing I did note is that multiple-call handling is excellent. Having handled 3 simultaneous calls on it, I never once had the usual panic of not being sure exactly which call is active, or which any particular control would operate on. This is helped by the screen being able to show three or four call details, and allowing you to simply press your finger on the call to be manipulated.
Data Handling
The blurb claims that this phone delivers up to 7.2Mb/s on a suitable 3G connection. I don't know about that, but I got 386Kb/s out of it at home which means it's actually suitable as a short-term broadband replacement should my connection fail. It seems pretty reliable, being able to get a connection of some sort (be it 3G or GPRS) just about anywhere. It's failed in a couple of places where other people were also having trouble, so I didn't worry about it.
As a side note on data handling, I set up my Nokia 770 and my Macbook to use it as a modem. They both work just fine using it as a high-speed dialup modem. Top stuff.
Messaging
The messaging on this phone is adequate. Works well, no problems. As good as any other phone, really. I have no complaints at all about its SMS and MMS abilities, and the UI is as friendly and sane as the rest of the phone. Good stuff.
On email, though, the phone really shines. There are more options than you can shake a stick at, including selecting how much of each message to get, what to do with it after getting, and full SSL/TLS support. Also, and this is a joy, it allows you to delete messages from the phone, and optionally delete them from the server as well. This means I can just get my phone to grab messages marked as 'New', and then delete them from the device without having them disappear from the server.
Camera
I'll admit to not having used the camera very much. I don't really 'get' camera phones. I have a perfectly good little Canon I can carry about when a tiny camera is required. Anyway, this thing has a 5 megapixel camera with LED flash (ugh!) so I had a quick go.
The controls are well laid out, anyway. It's easy to get to whatever option you want. The button, as I mentioned, is solid and responsive. The autofocus also seems to work really quite well even in low light. My only complaint is that the picture quality is a little too soft. There's obviously too much noise reduction going on, even in well lit photographs. Also, I couldn't find any macro mode, but have successfully focussed down to about 3" so it might not be needed.
Expansion and Java
This phone is as expandable as any 'ordinary' (as opposed to 'smart') device. It can take microSD, although the Orange branded device comes with an 8GB card to start with. It can also accept standard Java midlets. This is been well thought out, as ordinary programs integrate well with this phone even though it has no keypad. This is achieved by a virtual keypad that appears at the bottom of the current Java application. By default it displays a set of cursor keys, a select button and two 'soft' buttons. Press another button, and a simplified alphanumeric keypad appears.
One particular thing that impressed me was integration with Opera Mini (the only Java app I install on all my devices). I loaded it up, loaded a page using the built in controls, and absent mindedly tried to use my finger to drag the scroll bar. And it worked! Impressive stuff. I assume that Opera have put support for touchscreen devices into Opera mini. However it's done, it's impressive to have it work so intuitively.
Summary
As I've already said, I recommend this phone to just about everyone. If you want a phone that has all the features of a modern mobile, with the look and feel of an iPhone, get this. It might take a little getting used to if you've never used Samsung phone before (it's really very different to the Nokia and Sony Ericsson standards).
