Introduction
The Samsung Exhibit II 4G is aimed primarily at commitment-challenged
consumers. Being one of the quickest product sequels we’ve seen in a
while, the device is marketed mostly as a Pay as you go phone, which
offers you the full Android functionality at the affordable price of
$200 with no contract required.
Being only the fourth largest wireless provider in the United States, T-Mobile has always positioned itself as the budget alternative to its significantly larger competitors. This year, the magenta colored provider has become even more aggressive in its pricing by offering all-you-can-eat monthly plans, which require no contract.
Being only the fourth largest wireless provider in the United States, T-Mobile has always positioned itself as the budget alternative to its significantly larger competitors. This year, the magenta colored provider has become even more aggressive in its pricing by offering all-you-can-eat monthly plans, which require no contract.
In case the device looks somewhat familiar to you, you’ve probably guessed it right. The Exhibit II 4G is essentially the U.S. version of the Samsung Galaxy W. In order to fit its attractive price tag however, some of its hardware has been replaced with less capable options. The CPU of the Exhibit II is a 1GHz Snapdragon, compared to the 1.4 GHz Scorpion core of the Galaxy W. Its camera unit on the other hand, comes straight from 2008 with its 3.2MP resolution and VGA video recording.
As always, we will follow with the full breakdown of the Samsung Exhibit II 4G by going over its key features and main disadvantages.
Key Features
- Quad-band GSM and dual-band 3G support
- 14.4 Mbps HSDPA; 5.76 Mbps HSUPA
- 1GHz Snapdragon CPU; Adreno 205 GPU; Qualcomm MSM 8255 chipset
- 512MB RAM; 1GB ROM; microSD card support (up to 32GB)
- 3.7” LCD display with WVGA (800 x 480 pixels) resolution; 252ppi pixel density
- Front-facing VGA camera for video calls
- Android 2.3.5 Gingerbread with TouchWiz 4.0 launcher
- Rich video format support out of the box
- Wi-Fi calling enabled
- Accelerometer, proximity and ambient light sensors
Main disadvantages
- Design is a bit dull
- 3.2MP camera with lowly VGA video recording; no dedicated key
- All plastic construction
- High amount of preloaded apps from T-Mobile
- No memory card enclosed
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