The Samsung Infuse 4G feels a bit like a phone with an identity crisis. It costs the same as the Epic 4G Touch, but is excluded from the Galaxy line. It's got a 4G right in the name, but it doesn't boast 4G speeds.
And
at 4.5" it's also large enough to feel almost like a tablet - albeit
one rocking the stale Froyo Android OS. But is it a good phone?
The
first thing anyone will notice about the Samsung Infuse is its
gargantuan 4.5" Super AMOLED display. Samsung is no stranger to large
displays; its flagship Galaxy S2 rocks a 4.3" screen, and the Samsung Galaxy Note is actually, legitimately, a tablet-phone crossover poised to launch stateside in early 2012.
But
no matter how its predecessors feel, the Samsung Infuse's large screen
and small borders make it feel bigger than it actually is.
Those
with small thumbs might want to look elsewhere, or else risk having to
hold the phone in two hands. For others, the extra screen real estate
will feel comfortable.
This
is at least in part due to the phone's thickness and weight - at only
131g (less than .30 pounds) and 8.8mm at its thickest the Samsung Infuse
is thinner and just about as light as the Samsung Epic 4G Touch. The
frame chassis feels a bit cheap, with slippery angular plastic. It has a
grippy back, which also serves as, quite possibly, the world's thinnest
battery cover, and can easily be pulled off. This gives you easy access
to the battery, SIM, and the interchangeable microSD - which is hidden
(not to mention upside down) beneath the SIM card.
You
don't have to remove the SIM card, just the 1760mAh battery, to access
the microSD - if you can find it. You'll likely want to replace it as
the onboard microSD it comes with is an inadequate 2GB. The internal
memory sits at 16GB, but it's easy to imagine filling if you want to
watch a few movies on that posh screen.
There's also the usual
features - a 3.5mm headphone slot on top, speakerphone on the back,
Micro-USB on the bottom. That Micro-USB doubles as a high-definition
video output as well, but you'll need to use an (included) optical
dongle. We'd
have loved to see a notification light somewhere on the Infuse, but
besides that and a cheapish feel, build quality is just good enough to
be adequate. The Infuse 4G can be yours for $199 with a two-year
contract from AT&T.
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