Samsung F400 review - honest Samsung F400 reviews
When a mobile phone is armed with a power amp c/o Bang & Olufsen, then you know that you’re in for a booming auditory pleasure. This is the focus of Samsung’s SGH-F400---sheer auditory hype. This dual slide multimedia phone boasts B&O technology or ICEpower amplification to be precise.
Slide the display screen downwards and out pops the quality speaker; slide it upwards and out goes the alpha-numeric keypad. One may ask, what more can this mobile phone offer? Well, it has music recognition, advance audio compilation functions and supports multi format audio and video files. The F400 has an FM radio, too. It may not be as good as your home stereo system, but this is darn close. Remember, music sounds better when shared. So give the public something to listen to.
Though there’s more to this mobile phone than just the large audio speaker. This device has HSDPA capability with speeds reaching to 3.6 Mb/s. Not as fast as the Samsung Soul, but such digits are decent enough for one to finish downloading a file from the internet. If you’re planning to see a movie in this particular unit, you’ll probably have a modest time watching the same with its 2.2-inch display (same as that of the Soul.) Going back, the F400 has a built-in 3 megapixel camera and possesses 3G capabilities.
The usuals are still intact. Bluetooth, WAP, GPRS, USB and the ever present personal organizer functions.
Looking at its exterior, the gloss-enveloped mobile phone seems to radiate sophistication, not really the type that people equate to music fanatics or fun. Furthermore, the design oddly resembles that of Nokia’s N95 & N96---more specifically the dual slide - up goes the screen, out goes the keypad, this is the common drill for both handsets. Slide the screen down, you’ll reveal media operations for Nokia’s N95 &96. While with K400, you’ll be treated with B&O power amp. But then again there’s the i450, which has already been released.
Designs are mere designs, what is important is that it will serve its purpose. In this case as a multimedia phone, the K400 dishes out real quality sounds. And from what I’ve heard, Samsung did deliver a booming auditory subjective pleasure. One may like the sound and would like to share the same, however, the public commuters’ reactions tend to say otherwise. The F400 units will be in major markets before the first quarter ends.


