• About
  • Contact Us
  • Licensing
  • Press Relations
  • Privacy
  • Submission Policy

Reviewboard Magazine

Samsung Seek Cell Phone Review

0
  • by Review_Crew
  • In Featured Articles
  • — 30 Sep, 2010
Download article to your eReader:
Download PDF
Download ePub
Download mobi


Even though we typically associate the touch-screen interface with smartphones and high-end feature phones, there are midrange devices that offer it as well. Take the Samsung Seek from Sprint, for example. Billed as a simple messaging phone with a social networking bent, the Seek comes with a decent touch-screen display in addition to a slide-out QWERTY keyboard. It also has basic multimedia offerings like a 1.3-megapixel camera and a music player. Aside from that, it’s nothing too advanced, but it does make for a decent middle-of-the-road messaging phone for Sprint customers. The Samsung Seek is available for $79.99 with a new two-year service agreement from Sprint.

Design
The Samsung Seek is a compact little device, measuring 4.1 inches long by 2.1 inches wide by 0.6 inch thick and weighing in at around 3.9 ounces. It has rounded corners, curvy sides, plus a soft touch gray backing. The front is clad in a glossy black plastic, whereas the keyboard color is either blue or pink. The sliding mechanism feels smooth and locks solidly into place.

On the front is a rather small 2.6-inch QVGA touch-screen display. Despite its size however, it looks bright and colorful with 262,000 colors and 240×320-pixel resolution. You can adjust the backlight time, the brightness, and the display’s touch sensitivity. It is a resistive display, which requires a bit more pressure than a capacitive screen, but we experienced very little lag time so it was a decent experience overall.

The touch interface on the Seek is divided into four separate menu areas: Favs, which you can customize with your favorite application shortcuts; Main, which houses basic functions like Messaging and Notes; Fun, which consists of multimedia applications and shortcuts to social network sites like Facebook and Twitter; and Web, which has the browser along with a few popular bookmark links.

Underneath the display are three physical keys: the Back button, the Home button, and the Call button. The Home button leads to the aforementioned Favs menu, while the Call button leads to the phone menu. The phone menu itself is divided into four separate areas – the favorite contacts screen, the contacts list, the recent calls list, and the phone dialer. The dialer offers a roomy virtual keypad with large keys, so we could easily dial a number. The Seek doesn’t offer a virtual keyboard for text messaging, which sits just fine with us, since we would prefer to use the physical keyboard anyway.

Slide the display to your right, and the display will change orientation from portrait to landscape mode. You will also reveal a full four-row QWERTY keyboard, with the numbers highlighted in blue. Even though it looks small, the keyboard is quite roomy, and the keys are raised slightly above the surface so we could text with speed. We like the large spacebar key in the middle along with the arrow navigation keys on the right.

The volume rocker and microSD card slot are on the left spine, and the dedicated camera key, charger jack, and power/lock key are on the right. The 3.5mm headset jack is on the top, and the camera lens is on the back.

Features
The Samsung Seek has a rather small 600-entry phone book, but each entry has room for five numbers, three email addresses, an instant messenger handle, a street address, a web URL, a birthday, a memo, and a photo for caller ID. You can also customize each contact with one of 20 polyphonic ring tones or one of four vibration patterns.

Other phone basics include a vibrate mode, voice dialing, a speakerphone, a calculator, a notepad, a calendar, and a world clock. You also get text and multimedia messaging along with instant messaging support for AOL, Yahoo, and Windows Live. The messaging feature supports threaded conversations, so you’re able to view back-and-forth discussions in a “chat”-style format.

Savvier customers will appreciate the HTML Web browser, GPS, Bluetooth, and e-mail. You can use any of the popular Web mail services like Gmail and Yahoo Mail, as well as your own personal POP3 or IMAP servers. You can even access your work e-mail if your employer uses Outlook Web Access and Microsoft Exchange.

Download article to your eReader:
Download PDF
Download ePub
Download mobi

Share this:

  • Share
  • Facebook
Share

Tags: Cell PhonesamsungSprint

Livestrong 12.9T Treadmill Review

September 30, 2010 | Featured Articles | No Comments

The Livestrong 12.9T Treadmill is one of the brand's flagship models, and the reasons are apparent. Manufacturered by Johnston Health Tech, a company with 30 years of fitness equipment manufacturing under its belt there's a certain sigh of relief that is released when making the choice. The home tre...

[ read more ]

Tag: home-fitness, livestrong, treadmill

2011 Toyota Avalon - Short Take Road Test

September 30, 2010 | Featured Articles | No Comments

On the way to conquering the universe, Toyota put a pill right down Buick’s stack. The languid Avalon, essentially a punched-out Camry with Lexus trappings, may not fascinate the street pilots who devour this magazine, but about 40,000 people are expected to lay down their greenbacks for one this ...

[ read more ]

Tag: toyota

LG Lotus Elite Cell Phone Review

September 30, 2010 | Featured Articles | No Comments

With all the messaging phones out there it’s sometimes hard to differentiate one from the other. Well, the Lotus has never had that problem. Its unique form factor sets it apart while also adding some useful features. The QWERTY keyboard is wide and spacious, as is the main screen; however, beca...

[ read more ]

Tag: cell-phone, lg

  • Previous story Motorola i1 Cell Phone Review
  • Next story HTC Evo 4G Cell Phone Review
  • Follow us on Twitter!

    Follow @review_crew
  • Login

    Sign-Up/Login to Reviewboard
  • Add Link to Facebook

  • Translator

    English flagItalian flagKorean flagChinese (Simplified) flagChinese (Traditional) flagPortuguese flagGerman flagFrench flagSpanish flagJapanese flagArabic flagRussian flagGreek flagDutch flagBulgarian flagCzech flagCroatian flagDanish flagFinnish flagHindi flagPolish flagRomanian flagSwedish flagNorwegian flagCatalan flagFilipino flagHebrew flagIndonesian flagLatvian flagLithuanian flagSerbian flagSlovak flagSlovenian flagUkrainian flagVietnamese flagAlbanian flagEstonian flagGalician flagMaltese flagThai flagTurkish flagHungarian flagBelarus flagIrish flagIcelandic flagMacedonian flagMalay flagPersian flag
  • Categories

    • Audio/Video
    • Cellular Devices
    • Computer Hardware
    • Edibles
    • Fashion
    • Featured
    • Featured Articles
    • Household Products
    • Kitchen Products
    • Movie Reviews
    • Musical Devices
    • PC Games
    • Perfect 10s
    • Rentals
    • Reviews
    • Security Products
    • Small Business
    • Software
    • Sports and Recreation
    • Tools
    • Website Reviews
    • Wii Games
    • Xbox 360 Games
  • Last Month

    • Goldenfrog VyprVPN and Dump Truck Service Offered Through Giganews Review: I'm sure a lot of you have heard of the term "VPN" (Virtual Private Network). Do you know what it is? Some of you may even use a VPN to connect to wor...
    • Evil Dead 2013 (Movie Review): “Evil Dead (2013)” Director: Fede Alvarez Producers: Bruce Campbell, Sam Raimi, etc Writers: Fede Alvarez, Diablo Cody, Rodo Sayagues, Sam Raimi (1...
    • Roger Ebert Dead - End of an Era: We regret to inform you that Legendary Film Critic Roger Ebert passed away today. When I was a kid living in Chicago Siskel and Ebert were the Film Cr...
    • Oz The Great And Powerful (Movie Review): This week, Papa Kenn reviews the prequel to "The Wizard of Oz", the world famous musical that practically everyone knows! Does this new film, OZ THE G...
    • HoverCam T5 Office Scanner Camera Review: hat is a HoverCam T5? It is one of those things that fits nicely in its own category.  It is a camera/scanner but with a twist.  It takes high resolut...
  • Associated Press National Association of Hispanic Journalists
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Licensing
  • Press Relations
  • Privacy
  • Submission Policy

(c)1997-2013 by Random Publishing, Inc. All rights Reserved