Well, yes, some would call it a half-hearted effort. Or maybe, Samsung are simply waiting for the dust to settle from Nokia’s grand entry into Windows Phone. Obviously, they didn’t want – or need – a European flagship along the lines of their US-based Focus S with AT&T. With a single Windows-phone handset on the Old Continent, it may’ve made sense to focus on the midrange instead of making another flagship without a fleet. Bottom line, as long as we remember that it’s not an upgrade of the original Omnia 7, the Omnia W is an easy phone to live with, for all its strengths and shortcomings.
Key Features
- 3.7" 16M-color capacitive Super AMOLED touchscreen of WVGA resolution (480 x 800 pixels)
- Gorilla Glass
- Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE support
- Dual-band 3G with HSDPA 14.4 Mbps and HSUPA 5.76Mbps
- Windows Phone 7.5 Mango
- 1.4GHzQualcomm MSM8255Snapdragon CPU, Adreno 205 GPU, 512MB of RAM
- 5 megapixel autofocus camera with LED flash
- 720p video recording @30fps
- 8GB of built-in storage
- Standard 3.5mm audio jack
- Standard microUSB port (charging)
- Wi-Fi b/g/n
- Stereo Bluetooth 2.1
- Mobile Office document viewer/editor
- Social network integration and cloud services
- Built-in GPS receiver, A-GPS
- Stereo FM Radio with RDS
- Comes with a Video call app and other custom Samsung apps
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