Typical price: £130
What is it: Budget touchscreen phone
What we think: Considering its low price, it's an impressive handset, but its lack of 3G connectivity lets it down
Samsung Tocco Lite Review
Reviewed on: 2 July 2009
The Samsung Tocco Lite aims to take the touchscreen to the streets. Its biggest drawback is its lack of support for 3G, but it's a surprisingly good phone, considering its bargain price. Its resistive touchscreen is vivid and snappy, and it's got some fun widgets to keep things interesting.
The Lite is available from free on a £12-per-month contract with Virgin Media, or from £130 on Virgin Media's pay-as-you-go plan.
Screen everywhere and not a vid to see
The Lite is a pocket-friendly phone that mostly consists of screen. By ditching the keypad, Samsung has managed
to fit a 72mm (3-inch) touchscreen onto a palm-sized pipsqueak.
The screen is bright, with bold colours -- although it's no match for the AMOLED screen of its much more expensive cousin, the Tocco Ultra. It's also a resistive touchscreen, which we usually hate - - you need to exert pressure to make them respond, and they feel rather squishy, so they seem less responsive than capacitive touchscreens. But the Lite impressed us with its responsiveness. We found typing and dialling pleasant and quick, and we didn't feel the need to press hard with a fingernail or stylus. For such an inexpensive phone, the quality of the screen was a very pleasant surprise.
With such a good screen, Web browsing and watching videos should be a pleasure. But the Lite has no 3G or Wi-Fi connectivity, so it's slow to get online or download files. We tried out some YouTube videos and they were a tiny, garbled mess because of the extreme compression required. We also tried getting videos on the phone using the USB connection, but the Lite isn't as easy to sync as other Samsung phones we've tried -- our computer struggled to recognise it. We think your best bet is to invest in a microSD card and load that up with your media instead.

The Lite has a proprietary headphone jack and no adaptor, so we weren't able to test its music player with high-quality headphones. It comes with a pair of very basic, plastic earbuds with a hands-free microphone, and, unfortunately, you'll be stuck with them. But the Lite does support a good range of audio formats, from MP3 to WAV, and it also has an FM radio.
Steady cam
The 3.2-megapixel camera doesn't have a flash or LED photo light, so
it's no surprise that it struggles in low light, producing very noisy photos. We were happy with the snaps taken in good light, however. As long as we used a steady
hand, we were able to capture acceptable close-ups and shots from further away.
Colour and exposure are satisfactory, especially considering this phone's low
price.
The Lite puts a good range of camera settings at your disposal, including a smile-detection and panorama mode. Those modes aren't super-fast, but the smile detection caught our pearly whites perfectly. There's also a photo editor so that you can adjust, crop and add effects to your snaps.
We sometimes found navigating between the different options difficult, because of the obscure menu icons and lack of labels. Also, some features -- like zooming in -- aren't available when you view a photo from the camera. Instead, you have to close the camera and open the photo gallery to get that crucial option, and that's a waste of time.
Once you're happy with your snaps, you can take advantage of the phone's built-in links to Facebook, Picasa, Flickr, Photobucket and Friendster (it's big in Asia) to get them off the phone. Uploads are pretty slow, thanks to the lack of 3G connectivity, but our tests using Facebook worked without a hitch.
Community matters
The Lite also offers quick links to social-networking sites via a
dedicated section in the menu, and widgets that you can drag onto to the home
screens. But they're just links to mobile versions of the Web sites -- not
built-in applications -- so they're not very impressive.
Tell us what you think
Do you own this product? Want to share your experiences with other CNET UK users?
Write your own review of the Samsung Tocco Lite
Can't find the product you're looking for? Want to suggest a product for review?
Special Offers from our Sponsors
Latest Mobile phone Reviews
BlackBerry Storm 2
Clicking touchscreen may be useful for clumsy people, but ditching the Qwerty keyboard has its drawbacks
INQ Mini 3G
Sluggish at times, and not the easiest phone to use, but it offers a great range of features at a low price
BlackBerry Bold 9700
Has everything that makes the BlackBerry format great, but other smart phones offer more innovation
on Mobile Phones
Motorola Milestone: The Droid drops exclusively on eXpansys until 2010
The Motorola Milestone is coming to the UK on 9 December, but it's not landing on a network -- instead, it's selling SIM-free from online shop eXpansys
More:
- Sony Ericsson Aino has touchscreen problems -- but it isn't dead yet
- Tesco iPhone: Exclusive first picture!
- giffgaff Tool hire: Tool up for viral video adventures with the musicle and the gimp
- giffgaff: O2's bonkers-barmy crowdsourced phone network
- Nokia N900 fine-tuned with firmware updates during one-week delay




