Update: We've updated our review to reflect the software update on the Samsung Galaxy S2 to Android 4.0, Ice Cream Sandwich - and to include the changes found in the recent 4.0.4 update as well.
The
Samsung Galaxy S2 - or Samsung Galaxy S II, as it's also known - is the
phone the Korean firm deems the successor to its best smartphone so
far. And with a dual-core 1.2GHz processor, super-slim chassis and
feather-light innards, it's easy to see why.
The dual-core smartphone race is packed, with Samsung's own Galaxy Ace 2, the Huawei Ascend P1, Sony Xperia Go, iPhone 4S and many more handsets all boasting the fast processors, although bigger brother the Samsung Galaxy S3, LG Optimus 4X HD and a growing number of others run with quad-core CPUs.
Coming
in at around £18 a month and £390-odd ($529) SIM-free, the Samsung
Galaxy S2 has dropped in price since its launch and is now an
attractively affordable high-end smartphone.
You can check out our Samsung Galaxy S2 video:
The Samsung Galaxy S2
is almost impossibly thin when you pick it up – dimensions of 125.3 x
66.1 x 8.5mm mean it's one of the thinnest smartphones on the market,
rivalling the likes of the iPhone 4S and Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc, but falling behind the tiny 7.69mm-thick Huawei Ascend P1.
It's
crazy-light too – when we show you what tech is rammed under the hood,
you'll be amazed that it all fits into a handset that weighs only a
shade over 100g (116g, to be precise).
Samsung
clearly traded the premium feel that an all-metal chassis might have
brought for keeping the grams off the Galaxy S2 – pop the battery cover
off and you'll find you're holding a piece of pretty flimsy plastic.
However,
most of the time you won't be removing this, and it fits nicely into
the contoured chassis – the mesh feel on the rear also helps keep your
hand from getting warm during extended holding.
The
other thing you'll notice when you first pick up the Samsung Galaxy S2
is the screen – at 4.3 inches it's hard to miss, and when you turn it on
the Super AMOLED Plus technology hits you square in the eyeballs (once
it's got through the toughened Gorilla Glass).
It's not quite in the same league as the Samsung Galaxy S3;
while some will argue the pixel quality is higher on the S2 thanks to a
different sub-pixel arrangement, it's still markedly lower-res than the
S3.
We called the Samsung Galaxy S "the best phone on the market for media" when we reviewed it,
thanks to its first-gen Super AMOLED screen. Now the Galaxy S2 has
definitely improved on that, with a superbly crisp and vibrant screen -
although again, it's been bested by the S3.
In
the hand, the Galaxy S2 sits much better than we'd have expected, given
the whopping screen on offer, and that's mostly down to its slim depth.
The
front of the phone is pretty sparse, with the home key the only piece
of furniture on offer. This rectangular button flanks two
touch-sensitive buttons – Menu and Back – so there's no room for
contextual search here, although this is called up by long-pressing the
Menu key.
The volume keys are located
on the left-hand side, and the power/lock key is on the opposite flank;
both are easy enough to hit without error, and crucially the travel on
the power key is softer so that it's much easier to hit when you're
juggling it in the palm – compare that to its predecessor, where you
could accidentally drop it trying to shut off the screen.
The
3.5mm headphone jack lives on the top of the phone, bucking the lower
placement on other 4.3-inch screen phones, and the micro USB slot (which
also doubles as an HDMI out port) lives on the bottom.
The
only other element of note is the 8.1MP camera with single LED flash on
the rear – it's slightly raised, but not so much that it disrupts the
Samsung Galaxy S2 when you're placing it on a table, thanks to a rear
lip to help you hold the phone.
We
actually (foolishly, in hindsight) unboxed the phone while bouncing
about on a powerboat on the Thames – and luckily, there was a camera
rolling the whole time. (Note - we're well aware of the stupid spec
mistakes we made while on the boat. Some were down to information given
to us by Samsung that changed, and some due to sheer confusion at being
thrown 10 feet in the air and having our spine crushed.)
Full Spesification's For Samsung Galaxy S II
General | 2G Network | GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 |
3G Network | HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100 | |
SIM | Mini-SIM | |
Announced | 2011, February | |
Status | Available. Released 2011, April | |
Body | Dimensions | 125.3 x 66.1 x 8.5 mm (4.93 x 2.60 x 0.33 in) |
Weight | 116 g (4.09 oz) | |
Display | Type | Super AMOLED Plus capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors |
Size | 480 x 800 pixels, 4.3 inches (~217 ppi pixel density) | |
Multitouch | Yes | |
Protection | Corning Gorilla Glass | |
- TouchWiz UI v4.0 | ||
Sound | Alert types | Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones |
Loudspeaker | Yes | |
3.5mm jack | Yes | |
Memory | Card slot | microSD, up to 32 GB |
Internal | 16/32 GB storage, 1 GB RAM | |
Data | GPRS | Class 12 (4+1/3+2/2+3/1+4 slots), 32 - 48 kbps |
EDGE | Class 12 | |
Speed | HSDPA, 21 Mbps; HSUPA, 5.76 Mbps | |
WLAN | Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, dual-band, DLNA, Wi-Fi Direct, Wi-Fi hotspot | |
Bluetooth | Yes, v3.0+HS | |
NFC | Optional | |
USB | Yes, microUSB v2.0 (MHL), USB On-the-go | |
Camera | Primary | 8 MP, 3264x2448 pixels, autofocus, LED flash, check quality |
Features | Geo-tagging, touch focus, face and smile detection, image stabilization | |
Video | Yes, 1080p@30fps, check quality | |
Secondary | Yes, 2 MP | |
Features | OS | Android OS, v2.3.4 (Gingerbread), v4.0.4 (Ice Cream Sandwich), upgradable to v4.1 (Jelly Bean) |
Chipset | Exynos | |
CPU | Dual-core 1.2 GHz Cortex-A9 | |
GPU | Mali-400MP | |
Sensors | Accelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass | |
Messaging | SMS(threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Mail, IM, RSS | |
Browser | HTML, Adobe Flash | |
Radio | Stereo FM radio with RDS | |
GPS | Yes, with A-GPS support | |
Java | Yes, via Java MIDP emulator | |
Colors | Black, White, Pink | |
- Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic | ||
- TV-out (via MHL A/V link) | ||
- SNS integration | ||
- MP4/DivX/XviD/WMV/H.264/H.263 player | ||
- MP3/WAV/eAAC+/AC3/FLAC player | ||
- Organizer | ||
- Image/video editor | ||
- Document editor (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, PDF) | ||
- Google Search, Maps, Gmail, | ||
YouTube, Calendar, Google Talk, Picasa | ||
- Voice memo/dial/commands | ||
- Predictive text input (Swype) | ||
Battery | Li-Ion 1650 mAh battery | |
Stand-by | Up to 710 h (2G) / Up to 610 h (3G) | |
Talk time | Up to 18 h 20 min (2G) / Up to 8 h 40 min (3G) | |
Misc | SAR US | 0.16 W/kg (head) 0.96 W/kg (body) |
SAR EU | 0.34 W/kg (head) | |
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