The Samsung I9103 Galaxy R rode in on the
NVIDIA Tegra 2 platform and became the first affordable dual-core
smartphone from the South Korean company. With a bright SC-LCD screen
and brushed metal back, the Galaxy R is just different enough from the
Galaxy S lineup to stand on its own.
Samsung has so many variations of their models that sometimes it's
hard to say when one model stops and another begins. Take the Samsung
I9103 Galaxy R, positioned somewhere between the Galaxy S II flagship
droid and the mid-range Galaxy W.
Not that we're complaining - having more options available is always a
good thing and all dual-core droids from Samsung were only top of the
line so far (S II and its variations, the Galaxy Nexus and the Galaxy
Note phoneblet).
This is where the I9103 Galaxy R steps in in - it offers tangibly
better specs than the Galaxy W, while staying a step below the top dogs
in specs and price. Here's a summary of what you get with the Galaxy R
and some downsides.
Key features
- Quad-band GSM and dual-band 3G support
- 21 Mbps HSDPA and 5.76 Mbps HSUPA support
- 4.2" 16M-color SC-LCD capacitive touchscreen of WVGA (480 x 800 pixel) resolution; Scratch-resistant glass
- Android OS v2.3.3 with TouchWiz 4 launcher
- 1 GHz dual-core Cortex-A9 CPU, ULP GeForce GPU, NVIDIA Tegra 2 chipset, 1GB of RAM
- 5 MP autofocus camera with LED flash, face and smile detection
- 720p HD video recording at 30fps
- Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n support; DLNA and Wi-Fi Direct support
- GPS with A-GPS connectivity; digital compass
- 8GB internal storage, microSD slot
- Accelerometer, gyroscope and proximity sensor
- Standard 3.5 mm audio jack
- microUSB port
- Stereo Bluetooth v3.0
- FM radio with RDS
- Great audio quality
- 1.3MP secondary video-call camera
- Document editor
- File manager comes preinstalled
Main disadvantages
- SC-LCD has poor black levels
- Tegra 2 falls slightly behind Exynos in CPU and GPU performance
- No dedicated camera key
- Non-hot-swappable microSD card
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