Samsung Omnia
The Samsung Omnia is another one of those awaited phones. In a market already flooded with Windows Mobile phones with touchscreens, the Omnia hits the Indian market all ready with the all new Windows Mobile 6.1.
The phone has a very minimalistic design, which is now more or less the norm for all touch screen phones. There are some slight appealing touches in the design, like the grooves around the camera that reflect rainbow colours and the mirror like casing around the touch screen.
There is a common port for interfacing with the computer and the headset, but this is set in the side of the phone. The stylus does not dock into the phone, but you can dangle it from the phone like an ill-attached limb if you want. The stylus is telescopic, and telescopes out almost magically when the cap is opened.
The touch screen does not respond to touch as much as it responds to pressure ' you have to press the screen to get anything done. There are some glaring mistakes ' it is impossible to scroll down the playlist in the 'touch player'. The on-call menu locks itself every three seconds, which means you have to press an action button and a button on the screen just to activate the speaker. The screen mode is eccentric and inconsistent. It switches from portrait to landscape at its own violation, and then misbehaves when you turn the phone to specifically change it. The
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