Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Senin, 30 Januari 2012

SPESIFIKASI SAMSUNG i730 CDMA

Modes : CDMA 850 / CDMA 1900
Weight : 6.44 oz (183 g)
Dimensions : 4.49" x 2.28" x 0.97" (114 x 58 x 25 mm)
Form Factor Slide
Stub / Extendable Antenna
Battery Life Talk: 2.20 hours (132 minutes)
Standby: 130 hours (5.4 days)
Battery Type LiIon 1000 mAh
Display Type: LCD (Color TFT/TFD)
Colors: 65,536 (16-bit)
Size: 240 x 320 pixels
Platform / OS Windows Mobile for Pocket PCs version: 2003 2nd Edition / 520 MHz Intel Bulverde processor
Memory 128 MB (built-in, flash shared memory)
plus 64 MB RAM memory
Phone Book Capacity shared memory
Accessibility 
Digital TTY/TDD
Polyphonic Ringtones Yes
Ringer Profiles Yes
Vibrate
ConnectivityBluetooth Supported Profiles: HSP, HFP, OPP version 1.1
Infrared (IR) can control home entertainment equipment
PC Sync ActiveSync , SDIO , USB
Wi-Fi 802.11b standard
Contacts 
Multiple Numbers per Name Yes
Voice Dialing speaker-independent (VoiceSignal)
Customization , Custom Graphics, Custom Ringtones
Data & Network 
Packet Data Technology: 1xEV-DO r0
WAP / Web Browser Browser Software: Internet Explorer
plus Picsel browser and file viewer
Input 
Key Lock Switch Yes
Side Keys up/down, voice memo keys on left, plus key lock, screen dim switch / voice control key on right
Text Keyboard Layout: QWERTY sliding
Touch Screen Yes
Memory 
Memory Card Slot Card Type: SD / MMC, supports SDIO

Messaging 
Email Client Protocols Supported: POP3, IMAP4, SMTP
Pocket Outlook / supports attachments with Picsel file viewer
Text Messaging 2-Way: Yes
Music
Music Player Yes, Stereo Speakers Yes
Photo & Video, Streaming Video Yes
Productivity 
Alarm Yes, Calculator Yes, Calendar Yes
Integrated PDA Yes, To-Do List Yes
Voice Memo Yes, Software
Games Yes, Voice, Headset Jack (2.5 mm) Yes
Speaker Phone Yes


SPESIFIKASI
Samsung's first PDA phone with EV-DO high-speed data, first with a QWERTY mini-keyboard, and first with built-in wi-fi. This Windows Mobile Pocket PC phone also sports a 520 MHz processor, 128 MB of memory, and an SDIO card slot. Other features include Bluetooth, infrared, 3D stereo speakers, and speaker-independent voice dialing.
The Samsung SCH-i730 Pocket PC Phone (along with the recently-released Sprint PCS PPC-6700) is the smallest full-featured Pocket PC Phone on the market today. The follow-up to the popular and stylish Samsung i700, the i730 boasts a 520Mhz processor, 192MB of onboard memory, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and the latest high-speed wireless EV-DO transceiver. All of this is packed into the small i730, which weighs 6.4oz and measures 4.53" x 2.28" x 0.94".

Slide-to-hide designs have dominated Windows Mobile Pocket PC Phones for the last year or so, and the Samsung i730 does not break from this trend. Simply slide the front of the unit up and a thumb keyboard built into the rear portion of the unit is exposed. The Audiovox XV6600, another slide-to-hide Pocket PC Phone, is considerably larger than the i730.

The shell of the i730 is black and silver plastic. The layout of the device is industry standard with four hardware shortcut buttons and talk/end buttons on the face, power, volume and record buttons on the left-hand side, and an SD slot and voice command button on the right-hand side. The top of the unit houses the IR port, which is a long-range port, and a status indicator light. The antenna of the i730 is a bit unusual, actually featuring a collapsible antenna used on many standard cell phones.
The i730 isn’t as small or light as many Windows Mobile Smartphones, but it’s certainly a step in the right direction. The i730 was clearly designed to be as “phone like” as possible. The unit is comfortable to hold and to use as a handset, far more than the Audiovox VX6600 Pocket PC phone also sold by Verizon Wireless. Though it is a touch on the heavy side, the i730 is generally a pleasure to hold.
The sliding action of the i730 is smooth, but springy. Once you give the face of the unit a nudge up or down, it does most of the work for you, either opening or closing the rest of the way. The unit feels solid and sturdy, though it could use some rubberized grips along its sides.
 
The Screen Because the shell of the unit is smaller than other Pocket PC Phones, the screen of the i730 is smallest ever. Measured from side to side, the screen is a diminutive 1.75 inches; from top to bottom only 2.25 inches. Since the size of the display sets the device’s minimum size from top to bottom and right to left, this small display is the primary factor allowing the unit to be so small.
While VGA screens are all the rage, the i730 uses QVGA screen technology. Obviously the quality of the QVGA screen is nowhere near that of VGA, but because the screen fits the standard number of pixels in a smaller area, the sharpness of images and text is better than you might expect from a non-VGA display.
On the left-hand side of the device, the slider that powers-on the i730 doubles as a lock switch. When the slider is in its locked position, the touch features of the screen are disabled. The Samsung i730 can be easily pocketed without having to worry about inadvertently opening applications or dialing numbers.



Wireless: Three’s A Charm (Sort of) Like the iPAQ h6300 Series Pocket PC Phones, the Samsung i730 has three wireless connectivity options: Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and EVDO CDMA2000. Whether connecting to another device, a home or office network, or to the Internet while in a local park, the i730 has connectivity options for any situation.
The i730 employs Bluetooth 1.2, which was designed to play nice with onboard Wi-Fi. With Bluetooth, the i730 can connect to other Bluetooth-enabled devices like keyboards or wireless headsets. Unfortunately, the Bluetooth software on the i730 has limited functionality which does not include Dial-Up Networking (DUN) support. Therefore, the i730 cannot be used as a wireless modem to connect a laptop computer to the Internet over the Verizon wireless network. Bummer.
Sadly, the functionality limitations don’t end with the onboard Bluetooth. The integrated 802.11b Wi-Fi, while fully functional in itself, cannot be used when the phone function of the i730 is active. So, if you’re connected to a Wi-Fi network in your home or office, you cannot send or receive phone calls, and vice versa. Once the Wi-Fi functionality is turned off, the phone comes back online automatically.



Make the Call
Frankly, we were quite surprised by the call quality of the i730. While no Pocket PC Phone we’ve used has what you would call “bad” call performance, no claims can be made that they’ve been top notch. And, while the i730 doesn’t offer the best mobile phone experience we’ve ever had, it certainly offers the best PDA phone experience to date. The i730 is a CDMA-based phone, meaning that it can only operate on the largely American-centric CDMA wireless networks (Sprint PCS, Verizon, etc.). In our testing we had strong signal strength and no dropped calls. 




SoftwareIn addition to the standard Windows Mobile 2003 SE fare, The Samsung i730 comes with a generous offering of third-party software applications.
Perhaps the most useful mobile application is Wireless Sync, software that, in concert with a required desktop server application, provides always-on push e-mail in a fast, easy way. It’s called Wireless Sync because it seamlessly synchronizes your wireless organizer to your desktop PC. Once you’re synced-up, you’ll automatically get all of your new e-mail contacts, task lists, calendars and more delivered right to your phone.”
After signing up for the service, you select whether you’d like corporate settings (Microsoft Exchange, Lotus, etc.), standard POP/IMAP, or both. Next, you enter your account information: server address, username, etc. The “Wireless Sync Client” syncing software is then downloaded to your PC.
You can choose to either download your e-mail on command or automatically, so called “push e-mail.” When push is enabled, new email is delivered to your inbox without your having to request it. This process, in our experience, took about five to ten minutes from the time an e-mail was sent to the time it was pushed to the i730. A pop up message appears alerting you to the new message, and the e-mail is dumped into the i730’s inbox.
Another useful application is Remote Control, a built-in IR remote software title. With Remote Control, you can use your i730 as a fully-functional universal remote compatible with TVs, stereos, DVD player and more.
The primary menu, shown to the left, lets you select the product you want to control, and the customizeable "buttons" screens allow you to set up the soft remote for each device the way that works best.
The IR port of the i730 give the Pocket PC a range that's effective across the room. 
Picsel Browser is an interesting piece of software with document reading, web browsing and file manager functionality.
Other software includes Launcher, a standard application launching program, Sprite Backup for backing up the i730 data to flash memory storage cards, VoiceSignal, a voice recognition dialing application, and more

0 komentar:

Posting Komentar