Samsung Moment (Sprint) – a new gadget of Samsung is offering many productive capabilities and functionalities, which are useful, to contribute to the professional life of today and tomorrow.
This latest series has a translucent screen with a roomy keyboard, and few other remarkable features as well as calling quality are really great. The counter elements are, the Samsung Moment's touch interface and controls were a little sluggish. The camera lacks editing features, call volume could be louder, and speakerphone quality was just average.
This latest gadget has a QWERTY facility enabling a comfortable usability, and lends a circular type of Sprint's offerings, and offering the talk time up to 5 hours and 30 minutes. In case you haven't observed, the Google Android dam has broken. For almost a year, HTC was the only manufacturer to offer handsets with the operating system, but in the past month, Motorola and Samsung almost fell over each other to offer Android smartphones of their own.
Motorola with its weapon – Moto Cliq was in the ring, at the same time Samsung upping its sleeves, came there and leaped into the playing field by hoisting its arsenal – the Samsung Moment in the air. O my God, what will happen now!
Intriguingly, this Moment series offers everything you'd expect from an Android phone while adding Sprint-specific media services. Other features are plentiful, and the sturdy design and comfortable physical keyboard offer a nice contrast to Sprint's other Android phone, the HTC Hero.
The platform Android still has its eccentricities, camera-editing options are nonexistent, and we had a few performance complaints, but at USD 179 with service, the Moment, popularly known as – the M900, is cheaper than T-Mobile's Android options.
Of course, this latest series with its rounded ends and prominent display it looks a lot like the Samsung Rogue. Yet, a closer look will show that the Moment is larger than its siblings and its color scheme and soft touch material on its battery cover put it more in line with the Hero.
The outcome is a rather unremarkable design, particularly when compared with its Android counterparts, but the smooth lines give the Moment a minimalist appeal.