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Topic: Hands On: The Samsung Intercept for Sprint  (Read 1170 times)
Samsung Intercept
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« on: July 24, 2010, 08:34:01 AM »



Sprint's new midrange Android smartphone, the Samsung Intercept, tries to pack a lot of features into a decent-looking case for a reasonable price. Although Samsung has made some odd choices here, phones like this are all about balance, and the Intercept has a decent feature array for something that will cost under $100 after rebate.

I spent a few minutes with a pink Intercept - it also comes in gray - and while it's definitely a big step down from super phones like the HTC EVO 4G, it seems to be a decent midrange device. The phone measures 4.4 inches by 2.2 by 0.6 inches and weighs 4.9 ounces, which is to say it's of pretty average size and weight for a sliding-keyboard smartphone. The pink color gives a bit of jazz and style to what could otherwise have been a really dull design.

The phone's sliding mechanism felt solid, but the keypad felt like it was made of pretty cheap material. The keys were well separated, if a bit mushy.

The 3.5-mm headphone jack is on the left side, which could cause some problems for sticking the thing in your pocket and using it as a music player.

The Intercept runs a relatively stock version of Android 2.1, with a bunch of Sprint apps tacked on. Unlike AT&T's bloatware, Sprint's apps are actually useful; there are exclusive NFL and NASCAR apps, along with Sprint's rich streaming TV lineup. One sour note, though, is the inclusion of the vile WHERE app, which automatically opts you into a monthly fee even for trying it out.

Android 2.1 runs well here on an 800 MHz, ARM11 Samsung S3C6410 processor, the same one in the Samsung Moment for Sprint. Like many midrange Android phones, there's 256 Mbytes of RAM here to run programs in. The phone comes with a 2 Gbytes MicroSD memory card that fits into a convenient slot on the side.

I surfed to some Web sites using the Intercept's browser, and there weren't any real surprises; the phone works as expected, very similar to the earlier Moment (but, in the case of my unit, much girlier.)

Sprint has said that the Intercept will eventually get an upgrade to Android 2.2, but one of the new OS's top features, Adobe Flash, probably won't be available. Flash requires a Cortex-A8 processor, according to Adobe.

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2366188,00.asp
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