Final Thoughts

The Fascinate ultimately leaves me with two completely conflicting final conclusions.

On one hand, the hardware and platform itself is undeniably the best out there - Hummingbird and the SGX 540 make the whole experience incredibly fluid in places where it counts. There's absolutely no doubt about how snappy and smooth Android feels throughout, even on 2.1. The 1 GHz Hummingbird just does an awesome job. Everyone I've let play with the Fascinate says the same thing, it feels fast and fluid. Fire up that default gallery application and compare with a Nexus One and you'll see exactly what I'm talking about.

The screen is also undeniably among the best on the Android platform, given a run for its proverbial money only by the Droid and Droid 2's IPS panels. There's less glare compared to the non-super AMOLED variety we've seen in the Nexus One outside, and it's measurably brighter as well, all thanks to fewer air-glass interfaces and those pesky fresnel reflection coefficients adding up.

There camera is nicely done, including 720P video recording and a suite of customizations for camera control. Oh, and you've also got an LED flash - something the Captivate and Vibrant lack.

Battery life needs work, but it's on par with the original Motorola Droid in every area except call time.

The rest of the experience is a bit more sordid, however. There's that glaringly blatant GPS issue that the entire Galaxy S line never should have shipped with, but what really sticks out in my mind is what Verizon has done to the software side. It's hard to even tell you're on a Google phone given how much Bing there is on the device, and just about everywhere else it's possible is something Verizon branded.

For power users, this admittedly isn't a big deal. Root the thing and change it, install a custom ROM, and be done with it. To some extent, Android is the new Windows Mobile because of just how much you can change and customize, and how both enjoy strong and active ROM cooking communities. For normal users however, this is just this same kind of platform-confusion which led to Windows Mobile's eventual identity crisis and death. Every device came with different software, different carrier customizations, and different experiences. Getting that out of box install light is what makes high end smartphones feel more like smartphones and less like chintzy featurephones.

The rest of the weird, out of place Bing facsimiles of Google apps can thankfully be remedied by a quick trip to the applications marketplace. The unfortunate part is that you'll never really be rid of them since you can't uninstall them without rooting.

Then there are just completely disingenuous things like making the default search engine Bing, and not allowing users to change it or delete preinstalled carrier bookmarks - again without rooting. Android is open, sure, it's a question of just who it's open to.

Ultimately, the Fascinate is up against the HTC Incredible, Motorola Droid 2 and Droid X on Verizon. It's better than the Incredible for sure so let's just kick that out of the running. The Droid 2 has a physical keyboard which the Fascinate does not, so if you need physical keys you have your answer. Which leaves us with the Droid X. Motorola gives you better battery life, a better GPS experience and the freedom to be given Google Maps and Search from the start. Samsung on the other hand gives you a smaller form factor, a faster SoC and a punchier display. If you're on the road a lot, use GPS, and need the most out of each charge, pick the Droid X. If you don't mind Droid 1 battery life and a flaky GPS which will hopefully be fixed quickly, go for the Fascinate.

Wait another 6 - 8 months, and you'll probably have something even better than both of these to choose from.

Speakerphone Volume and Battery Testing
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  • WiredWired - Sunday, October 31, 2010 - link

    My mom just got this phone yesterday (better than her old Storm 1) so I've been doing some research. Click on one the preset bookmarks and let it load completely. Then go to your history. You'll see it listed with a star next to it indicating it's a bookmark. Click the star and BAM, no more bookmark!

    Having said that, yes, TOO MUCH BING. The mail program is too basic as well. It couldn't identify / guess the proper POP / SMTP settings for her Brighthouse email, whereas my Droid Incredible had no problems at all. While the SF may be on better hardware than the DInc, the software needs a lot of attention.

    For example: Her phone came with NFS and Tetris. NOT from the Android store though. The phone was on full dev mode as well as set to allow apps to be installed from unknown sources. Looks like you have those apps on your phone as well. If you still have the phone, could you check to see if it's in dev mode and allows apps from unknown sources?

    Only other comment is that the guys at the store insisted over and over that it had Android 2.2 already on the phone. Kind of a spur of the moment purchase for her, so I didn't do any research in advance. When I got to check it out, it had 2.1. Called the store, they INSISTED that it had been released weeks ago and would hit the phone soon. Checked Android forums and there's no release date. Best guess is that it may be released by the end of the month.

    Sub-par phone interface + the rest = possibly returning the phone before the 30 day return policy is up to get the rumored DInc HD that may or may not be coming out in 3 weeks.
  • bankerdude - Friday, January 28, 2011 - link

    Just purchased the Fascinate from Verizon this week (I know- I'm a late adopter. Had to wait for my contract to be up!) Anyhow, one of the first things the phone did after acticvation was download an OTA update and voila- the button lights now stay on as long as the screen. Really happy with the phone upgrade, coming from a Samsung Omnia running a cooked version of Winmo 6.1. Android is a great interface, even with 2.1!
  • 290008381 - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    Does the Samsung Galaxy S take a SIM card and if so where does it go?

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