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Archive for the ‘LG’ Category

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Proving that it is easy to be environmentally friendly and save money, Sprint (NYSE: S) and LG Electronics MobileComm U.S.A., Inc. (LG Mobile Phones) today announced the upcoming availability of LG Remarq(TM), which meets Sprint eco-criteria and is the latest addition to Sprint’s growing portfolio of eco-friendly devices. Sprint is the recognized wireless industry leader in delivering to consumers and business eco-friendly devices and recycling programs.
LG Remarq will be available on May 9 in all Sprint retail channels including http://www.sprint.com for FREE with a new two-year service agreement and after a $19.99 instant rebate and $50 mail-in rebate (taxes and surcharges excluded). Customers can pre-register for LG Remarq beginning today at http://www.sprint.com/remarq.

Sprint ranked highest among all U.S. telecom companies and #15 overall on Newsweek’s Green Rankings, with a series of new environmental initiatives and green innovations. Sprint also scored highest among U.S. based wireless companies on the Carbon Disclosure Project’s (CDP) 2009 Global 500 Report on carbon disclosure.

“LG Remarq gives the eco-minded consumer a way to stay connected with the people who matter most at an incredible price,” said Kevin Packingham, Sprint senior vice president-Product Development. “Sprint continues to lead the U.S. wireless industry with our commitment to environmental initiatives and products.”

LG Remarq is a chic messaging whiz with a full sliding QWERTY keyboard featuring a 1.3 MP camera, MP3 player with microSD card slot (supports up to 16GB), Stereo Bluetooth(R) wireless technology and instant messaging. Customers can stay connected to their friends and post their latest pics with easy access to Facebook(R) and Photobucket(R).

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LG is now expanding its chocolate series Mobile Phone in India. On 25th January,2009 LG India launched new LG BL20 Chocolate series mobile phone in India. LG BL20 is a very stylish slide phone and is now available in Indian market at a competitive price of Rs.13,900.

Features and Specifications of LG BL20 Chocolate Mobile Phone:

  • GSM/GPRS/EDGE 900/1800/1900 MHz
  • UMTS/HSDPA (3.6Mbps) 900/2100 MHz
  • 2.4-inch QVGA display with 262K colors
  • ARM9 processor
  • 256MB Flash memory
  • 128 MB RAM
  • 5 megapixel camera with auto-focus, flash and video recording
  • Bluetooth 2.1
  • FM radio
  • MicroSD card expansion, up to 16GB
  • USB 2.0
  • Proprietary OS with SMS and MMS 1.2, Email (SMTP, POP3, IMAP4), WAP 2.0/HTML/XHTML web browser
  • 106.9 x 50.8 x 12.3 mm and 115 grams
  • Widget Hotkeys
  • CMOS Camera
  • Text Scan tool
  • Game Trials like Abracadaball Demo, Brain Challenge Vol2 Demo, Dimond Twister Demo, Ferrari GT Demo, Midnight Pool 2 Demo and Prince of Persia Demo etc.
  • Prebuilt Applications like Google Maps, NDTV Active, NewsHunt, DataWallet and JustCricket etc

“Celebrating the huge success of LG Chocolate, we’re all set to offer a treat to mobile lovers yet again with the launch of all time favorites – Chocolate LG BL40 and LG BL20. With their stunning, luxurious designs and state-of-the art technology features, the new Chocolate is bound to attract everyone’s attention at the very first glance which makes it the next generation choice. We are certain that the new models once again will strike the chord with consumers and will be a huge hit. The launch further reinforces LG’s commitment to provide innovative & stylish design products,” said Mr. Sudhin Mathur, Business Head, Mobile Communications, LG Electronics India Pvt. Ltd.
Price in India:

LG BL20 Mobile is available in India at a price of Rs.13,900

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LG Viewty Smart (known as Viewty 2) is now official and very similar to the current LG flagman – the Arena. S-Class UI, 8 megapixel camera, Wi-Fi, GPS awaits you in the 12mm only thin body.

The LG GC900 Viewty II (Smart) is a 4-inch touchscreen handset with an 8-megapixel camera capable of capturing 720 x 480 video as well as geotagging pictures using a built-in A-GPS receiver.

Major Features Of LG GC900 Viewty II Smart:

  • Quadband GSM
  • 7.2 Mbps HSDPA
  • 1.4 Mbps HSUPA connectivity
  • 3” full WVGA (800 x 480 px) touchscreen display
  • S class 3D interface
  • microSDHC support, up to 32GB
  • Built-in Wi-Fi
  • A-GPS
  • Accelerometer

Camera Features Of LG GC900 Viewty II Smart:

  • 8 megapixel camera with Xenon Flash
  • Manual and auto focus
  • Image stabilizer
  • Face tracking
  • Burst mode
  • High speed video recording
  • ISO1600
  • Geo tagging
  • DivX playback
  • XVID playback

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LG Viewty Smart GC900

The LG Viewty Smart GC900 packs an 8-megapixel camera into a slim package, but, like most camera phones, it can’t overcome its tiny lens and CCD, so its photos are a mixed bag. Its interface is equally two-sided, offering a quick phone dialling pad but a nightmarishly slow soft keyboard that requires a steady hand and nerves of steel to type a coherent message.

You can pick up the Viewty Smart from free on a £35-per-month contract or for £320 on pay as you go, both with O2.

Noisy as a herd of elephants
The Viewty Smart rocks an 8-megapixel camera, but it’s plasticky proof that megapixels aren’t everything. Like all camera phones, you shouldn’t expect to see the same quality pics that you would get from even a cheap compact camera with the same number of megapixels — the tiny lens and small CCD just can’t produce a great image, especially in low light.

Despite the camera’s 8-megapixel resolution, its photos aren’t a match for a dedicated compact snapper

We took a range of photos in bright and dim light to test the Viewty Smart’s photographic chops, and the results were a mixed bag. We appreciated the fairly accurate colour reproduction, good contrast and exposure levels, and true skin tones, but darker areas of the image were streaked with bands of coloured noise. The camera’s LED photo light does a good job of illuminating large areas, but is very harsh against closer objects.

We tested both of the Viewty Smart’s automatic modes — ‘auto’ and ‘intelligent shot’ (IS) — but we didn’t find an appreciable difference in the quality of the photos. One feature of IS that we particularly like is the ability to choose what to focus on by touching the screen. But it takes more than a tap — you have to hold the screen until the focus box goes green, then the photo fires off when you remove your finger. It’s more fun that using the shutter button, although our finger blocked the part of the image that we were most interested in, which could be an issue when waiting for someone to smile, for example.

There is, however, smile-detection capability, and the Viewty Smart had no trouble detecting our gleaming gnashers. Irritatingly, though, whatever setting we chose, everything got reset to default once we exited the camera. The camera’s user interface is clean-looking and pleasant to use, but that doesn’t mean we want to tap through the same options every time we turn it on.

The camera interface is attractive and pleasant to use

A camera phone is perfect for capturing unexpected events and spontaneous pub shenanigans, when shutter lag can be a real pain. But, with the Viewty Smart, the 2-second lag using the auto mode in bright light, and 3-second lag in low light, will definitely put a damper on your paparazzi dreams.

Editing in the slow lane
Once you’ve taken your snaps, there are heaps of image-editing options. One of the quirkiest is ‘fog drawing’, which lets you create a grey haze over your image by blowing into the microphone, and then wiping away areas with your fingertip to reveal parts of the image underneath. It’s like a cheesy iPhone app, without being nearly as fun or elegant. Like many of the editing options we tried, it’s sluggish to use. Long delays between our eager taps, and the phone’s languid response, left us frustrated.

LG Viewty Smart GC900

Syncing killed the video star
The Viewty Smart also shoots video, and includes slow-motion and fast-motion options. The video quality didn’t impress us, though. It looks blocky and compressed even though the Viewty Smart’s screen is bright and clear.

We had no trouble transferring video to our YouTube account using the built-in uploader, but syncing to our PC over USB was a different story — and one with an unhappy ending. LG’s PC Suite III is confusing to use, due to poorly-translated messages, and it’s inflexible, too — it wouldn’t let us define where we wanted videos to be put on our PC, for example.

We could only sync our media in one direction at a time, and we had to change our settings to go the other way. Our test videos made it onto the phone with no trouble, but the files didn’t get converted automatically, so we ended up with an MP4 file on the phone that we couldn’t watch. But we were happy to see that the Viewty Smart supports the DivX and Xvid file formats, which are popular among downloaders.

LG Viewty Smart GC900

The Viewty Smart also has Dolby Mobile, a set of digital audio-processing features that aims to make your phone’s audio output sound less like a distant nest of hornets. Dolby says the feature adds ‘surround sound’ and ‘spaciousness’ when you’re using headphones. But there’s no standard headphone jack on this mid-range phone, so you’ll have to use the included headphone adaptor to get the most out of it.

Troublesome typing times
The Viewty Smart features LG’s S-Class user interface. This phone wisely does away with the pointless spinning cube, with its own dedicated button, that we saw on the LG Arena KM900. Instead, there’s just one long button across the bottom that kicks you out onto the home screen. From there, you can swipe your finger across the display to access the four home screens and their shortcuts for things like your favourite contacts. You can also tap the menu icon to see all of the options laid out in rows, iPhone-style.

The user interface isn’t as fast as the iPhone’s, but it’s quick enough to avoid being frustrating. One gigantic exception is the on-screen keyboard, which is far too slow. When you only have a soft keypad to make a call or write a text, any delay between tapping the letter and it appearing on the screen can be frustrating and lead to errors galore.

As we found with the Arena, there’s a slight delay between pressing the keys and the letters appearing, both with the alphanumeric keypad in portrait orientation, and the Qwerty keypad in landscape mode. Also, any keys that we tapped during the lag didn’t register, so we frequently missed letters out, rendering our messages nonsensical. The T9 predictive text didn’t help us when we hit a nearby letter accidentally, unlike with the HTC Magic, and we didn’t find an easy way to reject its over-complicated suggestions.

We found typing on the Viewty Smart irritating, and had to turn off the predictive text and rely on standard tapping. We wouldn’t recommend the Viewty Smart to experienced texters with lightning-fast thumbs.

Smooth surfing but slow zoom
The Viewty Smart’s Web browser does a good job of rendering complex Web pages like those of our favourite site, CNET UK. Although the 76mm (3-inch) screen feels slightly smaller than the display of some other phones because of its big bezel, tiny text is still readable thanks to the WVGA (480×800-pixel) resolution.

The Viewty Smart has multitouch zoom capability, so you can zoom into a page by pinching your fingers together, but we found it sluggish. There’s a delay of about a second between the pinch and the response. As a result, we couldn’t see our zooming in real-time, making it hard to be accurate.

LG Viewty Smart GC900

Conclusion
Despite its 8 megapixels, the LG Viewty Smart GC900 won’t be replacing your compact camera anytime soon. Photo positives like good colour reproduction and a pleasant camera user interface are outweighed by shutter lag and noisy dark areas, and the video didn’t impress us much either. Making calls is painless thanks to a snappy dialling pad, but we struggled to send text messages and emails because of the unresponsive on-screen keyboard and poor predictive text.

Touchscreens have evolved a great deal since the much-loved LG Viewty KU990 — look at the Samsung Tocco Lite, for example, which manages to make a resistive touchscreen feel fun, and is free on a £12-per-month contract — so the Viewty Smart has plenty of competition. It’s not without its strengths, but we can’t help feeling it languishes in the land of mediocrity.

Edited by Charles Kloet

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I am a huge fan of LG products especially mobile phones. Since a few days back I am looking for a new mobile phone and while on hunt I came across an ultra cool gadget which has been recently added in the family of LG and is named LG KF757 Secret. It is a handset which has an excellent blend of looks and features. The device supports 2G network and works on frequencies of GSM 900/ 1800/ 1900 MHz. With dimensions of 4.05 x 2.00 x 0.46 inches, handset is compact and light and can be carried anywhere.

LG KF757 Secret

The touch screen TFT is 2.4 inches in size and produces a resolution of 240 x 320 pixels and consist of features like Accelerometer sensor for auto- rotate, scratch resistant surface, touch navigation facility etc. The LG KF757 Secret has an integrated 5 MP camera which produces a resolution of 2592 x 1944 pixels and has features like Face detection, auto focus, digital zoom etc. It also has a additional camera which can be used for the purpose of video calling. In 100 MB of internal memory which is expandable up to 4 GB with the help of microSD (transflash) card, you can store plenty of things in this ultimate device like 1000 phone book entries, record of 40 dialled, received and missed calls. For smooth in and out flow of data between compatible devices, one can use technologies like Bluetooth, GPRS, EDGE, 3G and USB whereas for access to Internet you can use Wi-Fi and WAP browser.

To keep you entertained 24×7 the device is jam packed with cool multimedia features like Stereo FM radio with RDS, camera which can be used for both clicking and recording images, 6 preloaded games which are motion based etc. Once you get bored of playing them you can download more as per your interests. What’s more? This remarkable handset is being offered in variety of colours including black, ruby violet and titan gold. The battery of LG KF757 Secret delivers a talk time of 3.8 hours and standby time of 259 hours. So, I have made my choice, when will you?

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The 8-megapixel shooter from LG has been doing its world tour for a while now, but with China’s homebrewn 3G network, the KC910’s 3G support would be pretty useless in the country.  Enter KC910E, a Renoir specially built for the Chinese market sans 3G, with only 2.5G or EDGE support.  Other than this major difference, the KC910E’s spec sheet is similar to that of its original with its high-end 8-megapixel camera with Xenon flash, a 3-inch touchscreen display, WiFi, Bluetooth, aGPS, and microSD expansion.

The LG KC910E is available in China for 3200 Yen (approx. $470).

(more…)

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The dual-SIM LG-KS660 handset is going to be available in Europe and China soon. You will be answer all your calls from both your SIMs but unfortunately there’s no 3G and WiFi support for it.

But let’s not think about what the phone doesn’t have and stick to what this phone has to offer. The LG-KS660 will feature:

  • Tri-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE (900/1800/1900 MHz)
  • 3-inch WQVGA (240×400) TFT touch-screen display with feedback
  • 5 megapixel camera with autofocus, flash, and video recording (720×480)
  • microSDHC memory card slot
  • Integrated accelerometer
  • TV Out
  • USB 2.0 connectivity

So are we going to see it arrive in other markets too? Any price hints?

via Akihabaranews

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lg-watch-phone-new-pic_w300-450-x-331

This one is for those of you who are fans of the comic Dick Tracy and have dreamed of the day where society would be able to communicate with each other using wrist communicators. Thanks to LG it looks like 2009 will be the year when we are all closer to that dream.

Now this is not a Bluetooth-enabled wrist watch from LG that works with your cell phone, rather it is proper wrist watch-sized mobile phone. And to think it was only a few decades ago that the mobile phone was the size of a brick. Now thanks to modern semiconductor tech, phones can now fit on your wrist, just like any digital watch.

The LG Wrist Phone is expected to be released this August in the UK and will be exclusive to European carrier Orange for a limited time. Of course, as is standard with all cutting edge tech, the price tag is rather steep for the LG Wrist Phone at £1,000. No word currently on when this phone will hit North America.

Read more at T3, found via Ubergizmo

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LG Viewty Smart First Look 0

1 June 2009 – LG sold 7 million Viewty handsets, so they probably have an idea of how many Viewty Smarts they want to shift, as it steps in as a direct replacement of that handset. We got our hands on the new camera phone at the UK launch, a pre-production sample, still awaiting some final software tweaks before hitting the shelves.

The idea, LG told us, was to supply a direct replacement without asking customers to part with more money for a more expensive contract to get the phone. In that way the Viewty Smart could be seen as something as a compromise: a handset that doesn’t break hardware boundaries, but in these hard financial times, won’t break the bank either.

The result is a device that pulls together some of LG’s recent successes, such as their new S-Class interface seen in the KM900 Arena and GD900 Crystal, and paired with the sort of camera specs seen in last year’s KC910 Renoir: an 8-megapixel sensor and a whole collection of digital wizardry that you’d find on a compact camera, as well as some that you wouldn’t.

The device itself is slim and light, measuring 108.9 x 56.1 x 12.4mm and weighing 102g. The front is dominated by the 3-inch 480 x 800-pixel (WVGA) widescreen display. Beneath the display is a single bar which gives you your calling buttons and the home key.

Scattered around the body you’ll find a good collection of controls, down the right you have a dedicated shutter button and volume controls, as well as a flap for connection to headphones, charging and TV out. On the right you have the slot for the microSD card, so you can expand the 1.5GB of internal memory, potentially up to 32GB. There is also an additional shortcut key on the left.

It’s a great size and weight of device, it sits well in the hand and is comfortable to use. The S-Class interface feels as thought it fits well into the Viewty Smart: the intuitive scrolling menus make it easy to navigate. The touchscreen didn’t seem quite as responsive as the Arena and neither did the accelerometer. As these seem to be the things that are last to be ironed out in final software updates, we’d expect them to be resolved when the retail version arrives.

  • LG Viewty Smart First Look 1
  • LG Viewty Smart First Look 2
  • LG Viewty Smart First Look 3

LG are insistent that they need to differentiate between devices and maintain a clear device focus. In this case it is imaging, although you’ll find pretty much the same entertainment elements found on the Arena, including the Dolby Mobile and DivX/Xvid offerings, but the absence of a standard 3.5mm jack will potentially annoy those that want to use their own headphones. LG said that it is likely to be a dongle offering in the box, so you could always swap out the supplied headphones with your own, and accept that you’ll have yards of spare cable.

But looking in the other direction, the Viewty Smart does offer a blistering array of photo features. That said, some of the features are only there for your amusement and lend themselves to sharing, but don’t really transfer into the world of mainstream photography. For example you can blow into the mic to fog up the image, to then wipe clean a section of your photo with your finger. Fun, but the novelty will probably wear off pretty quickly. There is the usual array of frames and “beauty shot” and so on, so if you are looking for a bit of photo fun then it should fit the bill.

In terms of real world specs, LG are boasting a max ISO of 1600. This move is partly presented as a compromise for not having a Xenon flash, the claim being that the increased ISO range will let you capture images indoors without the need for a flash that would have bulked the phone out a bit more (and possibly impacted on the price). True, to a certain extent, but we’ll have to look at how well it handles the image noise under such conditions in a full review at a later date.

Instead you have an LED “flash”, which in our tests gave reasonable short-range illumination. The location of the LED does mean it is prone to being covered with a finger or reflecting off your hands if you don’t grip the phone just so, and LEDs do tend to blow the colour out of everything. But again we’ll have to give this a full test at a later date.

Touch focusing is a neat a practical feature that we did get to test, making it easy to focus on what you want, rather than just leaving the phone to decide for you. General focusing did seem a little sluggish, perhaps leaning towards that touch focusing as a more positive and useful way to get the shot you want. You’ll also find face detection and smile shot as we’ve seen in previous camera phones from LG.

  • LG Viewty Smart First Look 5
  • LG Viewty Smart First Look 6
  • LG Viewty Smart First Look 7

On the video front you get the ability to record up to DVD quality, with 720 x 480 being the maximum resolution (at 30fps). Whilst being an average resolution for a phone camera, we’re starting to see the emergence of HD, for example in the Samsung i8910, so why isn’t it here? We suspect LG are saving it for that 12-megapixel phone that they have been promising for some time.

First Impressions

Overall first impressions are pretty good. Packing in the essential specs of Wi-Fi, HSDPA, GPS, Bluetooth, the Viewty Smart is a verifiable data fiend, perhaps only restrained by that operating system, which, whilst glossy and easy to use, perhaps lacks the expandability you’d find in a Symbian S60 handset.

  • LG Viewty Smart First Look 4

The myriad of image customisation and editing features won’t impress everyone and with LG pushing this as an imaging phone rather than an out-and-out entertainment device, if you don’t find yourself getting carried away with photos on your phone, then the Arena might be a better option.

As to the actual performance of the camera, we’ll be giving the phone a full review in the not to distant future, to really see how it performs.

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LG GD900 Crystal 0

.1 July 2009 – Do you need an excuse to do something fancy? Let’s take the GD900 from LG. It has a transparent keypad that slides out, adding to what is a full-touch device. Is this just LG showing off, or is this a phone you actually want to live with?

Ignoring the slider to begin with, you have a svelte handset, measuring 105 x 52.5 x 13.5mm and weighing 126g. It nestles well into the hand, with soft edges and a pretty solid feel throughout, if a little plasticy.

Three touch controls sit across the bottom of the screen, to accept and reject calls, as well as access the multitasking screen, or deploy the 3D interface of the S-Class user interface. The top sees a lock button, with a small but responsive volume control lying on the right-hand side. The camera button sits on the slider element, also on the right.

The screen is a 3-inch 480 x 800px display, as we saw on the Viewty Smart and Arena, which does suffer in bright condtions, being almost impossible to see.

The touch response is good, and as in both those previous models, the S-Class interface is a pleasure to use and runs slick enough. As previously, we found that disabling the haptic responses and touch noises tended to make it that bit sharper.

The S-Class interface in this form is easy enough to use only through touch: it works on both the new Viewty and Arena without a keypad and the same is true here. The experience is very close to both those models, with a few little quirks.

Of course the biggest quirk, from which the phone draws its name, is the Crystal keypad. The construction is actually similar to any other slider, but in this case the working area of the keypad is translucent. Standard 12-key digits illuminate in white and it all looks pretty cool. Press the numbers and off you go: it works just like a normal keypad, with T9 entry and so on.

But this isn’t just a slide-out number keypad, it is so much more. The first thing it does is provide a shortcut scratchpad. There are a few preprogrammed shortcuts assigned by default, like “M” for music, “S” for email or a triangle for messaging. These can be customised to a certain extent, with a selection of shapes to choose from for other applications.

It works, but thanks to the customisation options on the S-Class interface, you can pretty much access anything with a few taps anyway.

But there are a few extra treats tucked away in the form of shortcuts. For example you can swipe through the 3D home page and tap to select the one you want. Again, it’s recreating what you can do on the screen, but it does at least stop it getting all smeary.

But when you’ve got a snazzy touchpad, why not go the whole hog? So it also recognises letters, so you can scribble text messages, although it is pretty slow compared to text entry on a Windows Mobile device, for example. Letter recognition is good, but you need to tap various on-screen buttons for caps, numbers and so on, so it is a little laborious compared to both the on-screen option or the normal T9 keypad option.

  • LG GD900 Crystal 7
  • LG GD900 Crystal 8
  • LG GD900 Crystal 9

In web browsing it is a little more useful, because you can manipulate the page you are on without having your fingers all over it. You can do the normal two-finger zooming, which is slick and fast, whilst a long press takes you to a mouse pointer so you can click on those tricky hyperlinks. It does take a while to get into things as it isn’t always obvious what will and won’t work, which is also the biggest drawback of this arrangement.

For example, if you’ve selected scribble letter entry, then this applies across all functions, on both the screen and the keypad. So if you then enter the browser, go to “enter address” where it suggests websites you’ve visited from your history, you can’t press one, because it thinks you are scribbling text. Little things like this mean you do occasionally find yourself doing something completely random (although you can just disable letter writing at a single press, so it isn’t a huge issue).

You can also use the keypad to pause or change volume in the music player, although we found it didn’t always comprehend when we were trying to change volume and when we were trying to scroll the list of tracks.

So yes, the transparent keypad is something of a novelty, but isn’t just about looking pretty. The transparent sections are well mounted on a metal sliding frame, so it all feels good quality too. The rear of the transparent section unclips to give you access to the phone’s innards, the SIM slot and battery (neatly finished to look like the rest of the phone’s rear). The slider also supports the shutter button and reveals the external microSD card slot, and the camera.

The camera is relatively high-spec at 8-megapixals, featuring an LED flash and portrait mirror for those who like taking pictures of themselves, although there is a forward-facing camera too. The design means you have to have the slide open to use the main camera. The keypad can be used to adjust sliders by drawing a circular motion, for example to zoom in (although it’s digital zoom, so try to avoid using it).

What you don’t get is the full range of camera controls that you get on the Viewty Smart (nor the Schneider Kreuznach lens either), but it is autofocus. Video is also supported at a maximum resolution of 720 x 480px at 30fps.

Still image results are reasonable, but we did find noise creeping in where you wouldn’t expect it. Colours are relatively well represented, but high-contrast scenes do lead to a fair amount of fringing. It isn’t as good as the Viewty Smart due to the lower quality lens, but as a camera phone it isn’t too bad.

Video results too are pretty good, responding quickly to changing light conditions. That higher resolution beats some competitors hands down, so your YouTube videos will better than many. A YouTube uploader option is provided through the handset, but we prefer the web version.

Like LG’s latest range of handsets, the GD900 doesn’t scrimp on the connectivity front either, except for the missing GPS. It packs in HSDPA for the full internet browsing experience, as well as Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. The handset also boasts DivX support.

  • LG GD900 Crystal 4
  • LG GD900 Crystal 5
  • LG GD900 Crystal 6

Unfortunately there is no 3.5mm headphone socket either, so you’ll have to make do with the bundled Micro-USB headset, although this is a dongle type arrangement, so you could swap in your own headphones. That said, those provided aren’t too bad. The box also contains a nice silky case for your phone, if that’s what you are into.

Battery life is reasonable but not great. As a full touch device and well-connected data junkie, you’ll probably find yourself charging it every evening.

  • LG GD900 Crystal 1
  • LG GD900 Crystal 2
  • LG GD900 Crystal 3

Verdict

First of all the GD900 strikes you are a bit gimmicky, but that isn’t really fair. The keypad does open up some interesting options for data input.

The result is a hybrid handset and hybrids often suffer by not falling into one camp or another. The range of input options can leave you pressing the screen here and the keypad there, which does get a little disharmonious.

But the Crystal is certainly a distinctive phone and the S-Class user interface is pleasant to use (with the normal concerns about the lack of support for all the extra apps you might want to install).

Something of an odd ball, but it stands out from the crowd.

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