Samsung Galaxy Core

Posted by Admin On Thursday, August 15, 2013 0 comments

Dual-SIM devices are almost exclusively a money-conscious affair and the Samsung Galaxy Core sticks to the playbook. It's just that when you look to optimize you monthly mobile spending by taking advantage of two different contracts, you don't usually want to spend big on a high-end smartphone and look for value-for-money offerings.

Despite its sub-€200 price tag the Samsung Galaxy Core, which also comes in single-SIM flavor, still offers a dual-core CPU, very reasonable 217ppi screen and a 5MP camera, as well as a styling reminiscent of the Galaxy S4 flagship. And it's all squeezed in a 9mm slim body, which while no longer impressive in the higher market tiers is quite the feature with entry level smartphones.

The Android version is charge of the Samsung Galaxy Core is also very respectful - 4.1 Jelly Bean is basically as good as it gets in this price range. It should keep things nicely smooth thanks to its Project Butter Optimizations and it's easily more functional than Windows Phone 8, which is the main Android rival in the lower market segments.

The spec sheet is often louder than words so check it out.

Key Features :

Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE; quad-band 3G with HSPA; optional Dual-SIM with dual stand-by and 3G on both SIMs
4.3" 16M-color WVGA TFT capacitive touchscreen; 217ppi
Android OS v4.1.2 Jelly Bean with TouchWiz UI
Dual-core 1.2GHz Cortex-A5 CPU, Adreno 203 GPU
1GB of RAM
5 MP autofocus camera with LED flash, 480p video recording @ 30fps
VGA front-facing camera
Wi-Fi b/g/n, hotspot
GPS with A-GPS
8GB of built-in storage
microSD card slot
microUSB 2.0 port
Bluetooth v3.0
Stereo FM radio with RDS
Standard 3.5 mm audio jack
Accelerometer and proximity sensor
1,800mAh battery; user replaceable

Main Disadvantage :

No HD video recording
No NFC
No ambient light sensor
Feeble chipset

Of course the dual-SIM smartphone market is no longer the wasteland it was a couple of years ago, so the Samsung Galaxy Core will face some stiff competition. Devices like the HTC Desire 600 or Sony's Xperia M are ready to take advantage of any chinks in the Galaxy Core armor and when you read the fine print you realize there are quite a few those.

The CPU core count and clock speed are quite nicely sounding, but its Cortex-A5 nature certainly puts a big question mark over the performance. And while we have seen some pretty good 5MP snappers from Samsung this particular one fails quite miserably on the video front.

Then again it's not about setting benchmark or pixel density records in these parts of the market. What matters here is that least corners are cut and the smartphone performance is well balanced.

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