Typical price: £199
What is it: Compact camera with MP3 player and PMP
What we think: Fun and different, but nothing exciting in the performance department
Samsung i7 Review
Reviewed on: 10 August 2007
Features
As well as taking pictures, the i7 functions as a camcorder, MP3
player, portable multimedia player, text viewer, voice recorder and
text tour guide. They're all fairly basic, as you'd expect them to be
crammed into such a small package.
The camcorder records .SDC format movie files which eat more memory than, say, DivX, but you do have a relatively lavish 450MB internal memory to play with.
The MP3 player is seriously devoid of frills. Despite the large screen, there's no space for album artwork, although you can show a slideshow of your pictures while listening. There's repeat and shuffle options and that's about it. Headphones are included.
On our model, the tour guide offers us information on the continent of "Eroupe" [sic]. Guides are gleaned from the download section of samsungcamera.co.uk and are stored on the i7's internal memory. Some slightly stilted translations, and the number of entries crammed into the Asian countries, reveal the origins of the camera. There's no Dublin, New Zealand or South America at all, yet there is detailed information on bus tours in the Korean countryside. The guide also places Edinburgh and Belfast in England.
You can copy text from online tour guides into text files, and then read them with the i7's text viewer. This is the only way to get really complete and up-to-date tour guide information for anywhere outside of Asia. For Europeans, it's not worth investing in the i7 just for the tour guide feature as the selection of entries is too limited, but the 450MB memory is generous enough for text files and is better than most compacts' internal memory.
Performance
Setting aside the gimmicky extras, the
camera packs a 7-megapixel sensor and a 3x optical zoom. If the other
bundled devices are basic, the camera isn't. Pictures are crisp and
detailed, and colour is reproduced comfortably. Skin tones are rendered
particularly well, combining with a face-recognition feature to making
this a strong camera for portraits.
The i7 does include digital image stabilisation, but as usual it's best avoided because higher ISO settings give the camera problems. Noise is present at ISO 400 but is not a major problem. There is, however, a marked nosedive in image quality between ISO 800 and 1600. As a result, photos taken with image stabilisation function at ISO 1600 are horribly gritty.
The biggest performance gripe is speed. The camera is slow to focus and process pictures -- in low light some pictures took a couple of seconds to save. The screen responds to touch quickly, but some animated menu changes slow things down and get annoying after a while. Even more frustrating is the slowest zoom we've encountered for a while.
Conclusion
Depending on your perspective, the Samsung
i7 is either innovative and fun or gimmicky and underwhelming. To find
out which camp you fall into, make sure to try it first, especially as
it isn't cheap. We think the rotating screen makes playing with the
camera enjoyable, and it should impress your friends when you take it
down the pub.
The camera is a solid performer, if a bit slow, while the other features are functional at least. The screen is large and the touchscreen interface intuitive. If convenience and a bit of novelty are what you're looking for, the i7 is worth a look.
Edited by Jason Jenkins
Additional editing by Kate Macefield
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