The slim handset features a 3.2-inch metallic blue touch screen with a slide-out four-row QWERTY keyboard. Consumers can use one-touch shortcuts for texting and vibration response to touch. It provides onboard mobile instant messaging with AOL and AIM, Windows Live Messenger and Yahoo! Messenger. An integrated 3.0-megapixel digital camera has digital zoom and multi-shot and can share live or recorded video during a call. Bluetooth wireless technology supports headsets and handsfree devices, streaming music, dial-up networking and file transfers. The Impression offers AT&T’s popular services, such as AT&T Navigator for turn-by-turn voice directions and maps with fast traffic re-routing, AT&T Mobile Music for over-the-air music downloads and CV for streaming video clips.
Features
- Quad band GSM connectivity
- Dual band HSDPA connectivity (850/1900 MHz)
- GPS
- Bluetooth 2.0 with A2DP
- 3.2 MP camera
- 190 MB of internal memory
- MicroSD card support
- Talk time: up to 3 hours
- Standby time: up to 250 hours
- 4.48 x 2.28 x 0.61 inches
- 5.3 ounces
Review By Samsungimpression
The Samsung Impression has a slide to expose the full QWERT keyboard on the side. This makes it a very well put together phone. This will make you much more efficient at emailing, texting and even editing documents. When you’re done with the keyboard, you just slide it back in. That means the phone is as big as it needs to be for whatever you’re doing. It makes it quick and easy for people that need to type from their phone.
Review By Brighthand
The Impression has a fairly common design for a smartphone: a slider with a 3.2-inch touchscreen and a landscape-oriented keyboard.
It’s the AMOLED (active-matrix organic light-emitting diode) screen that sets it apart from the competition. OLED displays take advantage of the fact that some organic compounds glow when an electrical current is applied to them. This means there is no need of a backlight, as the individual pixels provide their own light. This allows OLED screens to be thinner and lighter than standard LEDs. Colors also tend to be more vivid.
Review By Slashgear
The Impression seems to be suffering from an identity crisis. It has many of the features that make smart phones desirable, such as the full QWERT keyboard, GPS, and a touchscreen display. However, in the recent transition to feature phones, the main target consumer seems to be, well I don’t know. The Impression is priced the same as the iPhone 8GB, and it seems that whoever would buy the Impression for it’s features would be better off just making the jump to the iPhone and the smart phone category as a whole. The full QWERTY keyboard and AMOLED display don’t make enough of a difference in the day to day use of the device to make a stark differentiation between the Impression and the iPhone.
Review By Samsungimpression
Coming into the battery life of Samsung Impression, this is the place where some users might get disappointment. The talk time of this mobile is only about 3 hours and the standby time is about 250 hours which equals to about more than 10 days. Now this is what makes this product lose its value. The battery life is way down underperforming as compared to the other mobiles and will need greater amount of charging everyday. So for those who are willing to go for a good set with good battery life, I doubt that Samsung Impression is not for you.
No User Responded in " Samsung Impression (A877) Review "