warrior Trail Moderator
Posts : 2495 Thanks : 12966 THANKS : 74 Join date : 2013-09-09
| Subject: Samsung Galaxy A3 preview: First look Fri Dec 05, 2014 11:10 am | |
| Samsung Galaxy A3 preview: First look Introduction Until recently Samsung was known for its all-plastic smartphone shells. Pressured to evolve its product design, it came up with the Galaxy Alpha, super slim smartphone with an angular metal frame. But Samsung surely likes to spread its design concepts across the entire portfolio and there we have the Galaxy A3 and its bigger brother, the Galaxy A5. The plastic panels didn't stop millions users worldwide to choose Samsung's phones over the competitors. It's debatable whether that's due to Samsung's almost exclusive Super AMOLED screens, their R&D hardware advancements or their aggressive approach towards adding new features to Android OS. It's a fact nonetheless. And as you can imagine, you can't go wrong with adding metal to their already winning recipe mix. Samsung Galaxy A3 at a glance: General: GSM/GPRS/EDGE/UMTS/HSPA/LTE connectivity; Dimensions: 130.1 x 65.5 x 6.9 mm, 110 g; Display: 4.5" qHD Super AMOLED touchscreen, 245ppi pixel density; Chipset: Snapdragon 410 chipset, quad-core 1.2 GHz Cortex-A53, Adreno 306 GPU, 1.5GB RAM OS: Android 4.4.4 KitKat with TouchWiz; Memory: 16GB storage, microSD card slot (up to 64GB); Camera: 8MP auto-focus camera, LED flash; Video camera: 1080p video recording; Front camera: 5MP front-facing camera; Connectivity: Wi-Fi b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0 (ANT+), NFC, microUSB 2.0 port, GPS/GLONASS receiver, 3.5mm audio jack, digital compass, ambient light sensor, secondary mic for ambient noise cancellation; Battery: 1,900mAh Li-Ion non-removable battery; It's obvious that with a chipset like that, the Galaxy A3 won't top any performance charts. But it doesn't need to. It's a mid-ranger with a proper quad-core chip, an AMOLED screen and an adequate camera. On a positive note, it has a 64-bit processor and a microSD expansion slot, two things the original Galaxy Alpha is short on. Android and its app ecosystem is yet to make proper use of 64-bit processors, but we're sure it's only a matter of time before we see 64-bit optimizations in real life, but the Galaxy A3 will be ready when it's time. |
|