Friday, April 19, 2013

Harga Advan Vandroid dan Gambar

harga tablet advan vandroid terbaru, spesifikasi dan fitur tablet advan mirip ipad
Advan Vandroid merupakan salah satu merk lokal yang memproduksi gadget Android berupa tablet PC. Tablet Advan Vandroid merupakan salah satu jenis Gadget yang banyak peminatnya di pasaran, untuk itu pabrikan lokal Advan berinisiatif merilis banyak produk ke pasaran yang sampai saat ini sudah lebih dari 10 tablet diluncurkan dengan harga berfariasi sesuai dengan kebutuhan dan kemampuan konsumen. Berikut kami cantumkan Daftar harga Tablet Advan Vandroid terbaru bulan ini, klik disini.

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Customer Reviews for Samsung Convoy™ 2 Cell Phone

I am not easy on my phones. I accidentally have dropped them (sometimes briefly in water), and surprisingly some have still worked. However, this phone withstood a full wash and dry cycle (on high heat) and was then dropped on a concrete floor while being pulled out of the drier. I have been meaning to write a review. It has been a full year since being WASHED AND DRIED, and the phone is still functional. Wow! Impressive product Samsung! Good signal and straightforward phone for someone that doesn't need the bells and whistles.

I got this phone as a replacement, I broke my other one. I bought this phone 7/2012 it's been to Oregon, Washington. and Canada and I have no complaints, always get at least 2 bars, have not droped a call, so far so good

This phone is great to just make calls. It isn't an android, but works great when calling is all that you want to do! I've dropped it many times (accidently) and it's held up and kept working, no problems! Thanks Samsung!

This is a durable phone that isn't complicated to use. I've used it hiking, backpacking, and other outdoor use and it works fine. Previous phones I've owned were vulnerable to such conditions.

Our company is using this as the techs work phone now and it does a great job the coverage is real good and the

My phone fell out the window when i hit a pothole today at 65mph it bounced off pavement 5 times before it finally came to a stop on the front screen. When i got pulled over and picked it up there were few scrapes on the casing but the screens were without a scratch!! The phone still works grate!! This is a amazing phone and i would get it again in a heart beat. Its always been a good phone i would recommend it to anyone who needs a good durable phone.

I had the Convoy & loved it, so when it was time to get a new phone from Verizon, I got the Convoy2. You dropped the "waterproof" part of the military specs, but kept all the others & that's still a good thing, living at the beach in Florida. This is a high quality basic cell phone built to last. I use my phone for calls, texts, picture texts, taking some pictures, very little email or Facebook or Internet stuff, and it's also my music player. I have a 16G memory card in it, & listen to tunes every day while walking/jogging, & I can share music on the beach with friends with the loud external stereo speakers (there is even a built-in equalizer). If you make a Convoy3 soon, that will be my next phone...unless I finally step-up to a smartphone, and I hope I can get a rugged Samsung smartphone. This is a great little phone! Thanks!

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Samsung Galaxy S III (T-Mobile)

Giant, bold mega-phones are the new smartphone trend, and the impressive Samsung Galaxy S III ($279.99 with contract) is T-Mobile's first offering. With its 4.8-inch HD screen and state-of-the-art sharing and media features, the Galaxy S III makes a great window onto T-Mobile's fast 4G Internet. Its overall performance and quality make the Galaxy S III our new Editors' Choice for touch-screen smartphones on T-Mobile.

All of the new Galaxy S III models look the same, except for the carrier logo on the back panel. Each is available in dark blue or white (AT&T also has a red option coming this summer), and they're some of the biggest phones we've ever handled. At 5.4 by 2.8 by 0.34 inches (HWD) and 4.7 ounces, the GS3 is larger than the HTC One S ($199, 4.5 stars), although it's still noticeably smaller and lighter than the Samsung Galaxy Note phone/tablet hybrid ($299, 3 stars).  That said, this is not a phone for folks with small hands.

I'm not a fan of huge phones. But I've given up on panning them because every time I suggest these handsets are too big, I get pummeled by comments from people who adore them. Huge phones are the thing. I accept it.

The GS3's all-plastic body feels a little less high-end than the anodized gray aluminum of the HTC One S, but the phone is solidly built, and light despite its size. The front of the phone is dominated by the 4.8-inch, 1280-by-720-pixel Super AMOLED HD screen. Yes, it's PenTile, which can sometimes look slightly pixelated. But, no, you probably won't notice. Below the screen, there's a physical Home button, as well as light-up Back and Multitasking buttons that start out invisible, so you have to memorize where they are or change a setting to keep them illuminated. The 8-megapixel camera is on the back panel, which, thanks to its reflective finish (on the blue model), doubles as a pocket mirror. 

The default Automatic Brightness setting makes the screen too dim. Kill it and pump up the brightness and it's fine, even outdoors. 

Unlike the competing HTC One S, the S III has a removable 2100mAh battery. Taking off the back cover also reveals the microSD card slot, which supports cards up to 64GB.

If you're interested in talking on your smartphone, buy the Galaxy S III. Its advanced call quality features make a real difference. Default call quality is good. Volume is on the high end of average, with no distortion from loud inputs, and the speakerphone is loud enough to use outdoors. The microphone does a good job of cancelling background noise. Bluetooth headsets work fine with Samsung's "S-Voice" voice dialing system, and the phone supports T-Mobile's seamless Wi-Fi calling system.

But as with so many things here, call quality gets richer if you burrow down into the GS3's settings screens. A Volume Boost button throws the phone into a super-loud, quasi-speakerphone mode for noisy areas, but that's just the start. There's also an option to set custom call EQ: The phone plays you a sequence of quiet high and low tones and you tell it which ones you can hear, and then it EQ's calls accordingly. This is pretty radical stuff. I prefer my calls sharp, with more high-end, for instance, and the GS3 offers that. This all makes the GS3 the best voice phone on T-Mobile.

For data, the GS3 hits T-Mobile's HSPA+ 42 network, which can sometimes match AT&T's and Verizon's LTE on download speeds. It hits global HSPA+ and Wi-Fi on both the 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands, and Bluetooth 4.0 and NFC are also on board. T-Mobile still blocks Google Wallet, but Samsung found its own uses for NFC, which I'll get to below.

Battery life is a major strength here. We got 10 hours, 47 minutes of talk time, which is impressive, and, since the battery is removable, you can also carry a spare for extra juice, something you can't do with the HTC One S.