Typical price: £500
What is it: Touchscreen smart phone with AMOLED display
What we think: Media powerhouse with a stunning screen and huge potential for more, thanks to its powerful Symbian OS
Samsung i8910 HD Review
Reviewed on: 8 June 2009
If we were Nokia, we'd be rather annoyed with Samsung, because, with the i8910 HD, it's achieved what Nokia hasn't yet: a desirable touchscreen phone with the Symbian operating system. The power of Symbian gives the i8910 its brains, but its spectacular AMOLED screen and touchable user interface makes it worth having in your pocket.
But all this loveliness doesn't come cheap. You can pick up the i8910 -- formerly the Samsung Omnia HD -- from free on a £30-per-month, two-year contract with Orange.
HD and seek
The i8910 is billed as the first phone with high-definition-quality video recording, but
that may be overstating the case somewhat. High definition means more than just
good resolution, and, at 24 frames per second, the i8910 doesn't deliver the
frame rate or lack of noise that you'd get from an HD camcorder. In fact,
it's nowhere near, but that doesn't mean that its 720p quality doesn't blow
every other mobile phone out of the water. Although the i8910's video is jerky
and noisy compared to a Blu-ray movie, it would be fantastic for uploading your
high-quality shenanigans to YouTube.
As for the screen, it too doesn't quite live up to its HD promise -- it's only got a 640x360-pixel resolution, or half the number of lines normally considered necessary for HD. But that doesn't keep it from being truly spectacular among its phone peers.
Symbian gets touchy
At first glance, the i8910 looks like it's rocking the same user
interface as the Tocco Ultra,
which we liked a great deal. It has a larger version of the spectacular AMOLED
screen, and the same homescreen with customisable widgets that can show things
like photos of your contacts or a mini media player. But pop the hood and
there's a major difference -- the i8910 sports the Symbian operating system
inside, and that means this is a fully fledged smart phone.

Samsung hasn't joined the gold rush by opening its own app store yet, but you can download new apps from Orange. But, without something like Nokia's new Ovi Store, Symbian is slightly tricky when it comes to installing things, with confusing messages popping up all over the place.
Our i8910 had good applications included, however, so you may not bother downloading anything. For example, there's a search app that searches for anything on the phone, such as contacts, messages and music files. There's also Quickoffice, for editing Word, Excel and PowerPoint files.
The i8910 supports background processes, so you can keep the Web browser window open while you go off and write a text message, for example. But all this multitasking can lead to a very sluggish phone, if you tend to bounce around without closing things down.
We had to spend an annoying few minutes tidying things up, or restarting, when things started to go wrong. We found it easy to see what applications were running from the options menu, but didn't like how things such as the homescreen, which is always running, are shown on the list. If we can't turn it off, we just don't see the point of cluttering things up.
And that's just one example of the ways in which the i8910 still falls short of the usability bar set by the iPhone. There's very restricted multitasking on the iPhone, and it's missing key features like copy and paste, but the i8910's flexibility and power comes at a price. The user interface is more complicated and less intuitive, and performance slowed down when we pushed the phone to its limits.
Tapping and typing
The i8910's glossy black plastic body, trimmed with a chrome edge, and
touchscreen goodness can't help but prompt comparisons with the iPhone. But its
real peer is Nokia's touchscreen phones, such as the N97,
which runs the same powerful Symbian smart-phone operating system.
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