The First Phones: Samsung Focus

The Focus is a launch device on AT&T. It’s a Windows Phone Galaxy S. The Samsung Focus is incredibly thin and very easy to pocket. It’s very lightweight thanks to its all plastic construction. The Focus doesn’t feel like it’ll fall apart, but it doesn’t inspire the same confidence as the LG Optimus 7.

The screen is the best looking out of the three we’ve got here today. The 4-inch Super AMOLED display delivers vibrant colors (a perfect match for WP7’s color based themes) and perfect black levels. Overall brightness leaves much to be desired. We only measured 234 nits at its brightest setting. Medium is more than bright enough for indoor or use at night (thanks to the excellent contrast ratio), but outdoors during the day you need to leave the device on high.

Battery life is absolutely abysmal, thanks to that Super AMOLED display. We measured 4.6 hours on WiFi, 3.75 hours on 3G but a respectable 6.4 hours of talk time (the display is shut off for our talk tests). This translates into a single charge lasting well under a full day’s worth of heavy use, or just under a day of moderate use.

Personally I prefer the 3.8-inch form factor of the LG to the 4.0-inch Focus. Unlike Android, Windows Phone 7 seems better suited for smaller displays thanks to its very simple UI and the fact that everything you need to tap on is already ginormous.

If you want more of a balance between size, screen and battery life you’ll want to look at the final phone in our trio: the HTC Surround.

The First Phones: LG Optimus 7 The First Phones: HTC Surround
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  • soaringrocks - Thursday, October 21, 2010 - link

    I find it amusing that for a 'phone' there is often little to no discussion on call quality, reception, and ability to maintain connection in a difficult environment. We know that all phones are not equal on that score...

    It's like you don't expect people to actually make phone calls.
  • beefnot - Thursday, October 21, 2010 - link

    Making phone calls with your smart phone is just so passe.
  • strikeback03 - Friday, October 22, 2010 - link

    They said they have reviews of the actual phones coming, that is the type of info that would be in a review of the phone, not the OS.
  • thartist - Thursday, October 21, 2010 - link

    sick amount of quality work. the only WP7 review on the web so far as it had to be done.

    Anand, keep that quality work that puts you so above from the rest.
  • softdrinkviking - Thursday, October 21, 2010 - link

    The lack of "change on the fly" micro SD is a deal killer for me.
    It's a shame too, because I really like everything else about this phone.
  • Smilin - Monday, October 25, 2010 - link

    Curious: Why do you need such a feature?
  • softdrinkviking - Friday, November 5, 2010 - link

    whoa, i don't know if anyone else, or even you will get back to reading this but...

    i use SD cards to store music on. i have a situation where i can't always sync with my home pc very often, and i can't always carry around a laptop, so bringing along a handful of different SD cards with a variety of tunes has been important to me.
    what i'd really like is for card-swapping to get more convenient, like in cameras.
  • btdvox - Thursday, October 21, 2010 - link

    In your review you guys say the LG Optimus 7 has a MicroSD slot that we can expand on, yet nowhere else does it say that on the web. Can you verify this? If it does than this phone is a clear winner for me, It's also avail in Canada btw. I'd hope we're just as important as Asia and Europse but I suppose were not haha.
  • softdrinkviking - Friday, October 22, 2010 - link

    the trick is that the microSD card gets treated like part of the built-in memory, and you cannot replace it without completely erasing your phone and starting over.

    so you basically have to choose a single SD card and stick with it, there is no changing on the fly like in android phones.
  • btdvox - Friday, October 22, 2010 - link

    Wasnt really my question but thanks.

    But still unanswered is, I dont think LG Optimus 7 has a microsd slot, Engadget just reviewed it and stated it doesnt have a memory slot. Can you guys confirm this?

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