The good: The Samsung Focus S has a gorgeous, large
touch screen; a good 8-megapixel camera; a front-facing 1.3-megapixel camera;
and HSPA+ speeds.
The bad: Thin and less than 4 ounces in weight, the phone lacks durability.
The bottom
line: Bolstered by a brilliant
display and strong hardware specs, the Samsung Focus S is arguably the best
Windows Phone ever released.
Samsung Focus S (AT&T)
The Windows Phone OS has arrived on
a number of good handsets, but none of the manufacturers has yet been able to
produce a killer Windows Phone for the U.S. market...until now. The Samsung
Focus S, introduced by AT&T, is a beautiful device: it's thin, it's light
(maybe too light), and it sports a gorgeous 4.3-inch Super AMOLED Plus screen,
a 1.3-megapixel front-facing camera, and a quite good 8-megapixel rear-facing
camera.
Does it sound familiar? It should,
and that's its only catch. The Focus S is essentially the same shell as
AT&T's excellent Samsung Galaxy S II phone, minus the
Android operating system (and a few other internals), and plus a physical
camera button. The recipe does make for a very smooth Windows Phone experience,
if you can push past the mildly creepy sense of déjà vu.
The Samsung Focus S costs a
reasonable $199.99 with a new, two-year service agreement, but at the time of
this review, I saw it on sale online for $99.99, so check around for discounts
before you buy.
Design
Classy, sleek, and open are three words I'd use to describe the Samsung Galaxy S II phones, and the same can be said of the Focus S. The all-black phone has rounded corners and flat sides. As with AT&T's Galaxy S II and slightly larger (and LTE-capable) Skyrocket, the handset has a slightly dimpled back cover and a slight rise where the cover snaps into place at the bottom of the phone. A larger handset, the Focus S measures nearly 5 inches tall by 2.6 inches wide by a svelte 0.3 inch thick. With its slimness and scant 3.9-ounce weight, it feels a little insubstantial, and I'm unconvinced of its ability to sustain casualties from butterfingers' repeated drops.
Classy, sleek, and open are three words I'd use to describe the Samsung Galaxy S II phones, and the same can be said of the Focus S. The all-black phone has rounded corners and flat sides. As with AT&T's Galaxy S II and slightly larger (and LTE-capable) Skyrocket, the handset has a slightly dimpled back cover and a slight rise where the cover snaps into place at the bottom of the phone. A larger handset, the Focus S measures nearly 5 inches tall by 2.6 inches wide by a svelte 0.3 inch thick. With its slimness and scant 3.9-ounce weight, it feels a little insubstantial, and I'm unconvinced of its ability to sustain casualties from butterfingers' repeated drops.
Doing a double take? The
Samsung Focus S is indeed modeled on the Galaxy S II phone for AT&T.
The Focus S has a gorgeous 4.3-inch
Super AMOLED display with a WVGA resolution of 800x480 pixels, and support for
16 million colors. As with other phones with this screen technology, colors are
vivid and stand out from the screen; it may make photos and video look more
saturated on the screen than they are when viewed from your computer, so beware!
Running Windows Phone 7.5 Mango, the Focus S'
interface is simply a single start screen populated with dynamic live tiles,
many of which update with new information (this page is customizable to a
degree--you can determine color and app order, and pin and unpin tiles).
There's a second screen that shows your apps.
Above the display is the
1.3-megapixel camera. Below it are three touch-sensitive buttons that
correspond to the back button, home, and search. Pressing and holding the back
button also lets you switch among tasks. The same motion on the home key
launches voice actions.
Windows Phones tend to have a few
more physical buttons than phones on other platforms. Unfortunately, these
buttons are rather cheap-looking lumps of plastic on the Focus S, and lack the
polish found on the rest of the design. On the left is the volume rocker, and
on the right spine you'll find the power and camera shutter buttons. The
Micro-USB charging port is down below, and up top there's the 3.5mm headset
jack. Flip the phone over to locate the 8-megapixel camera lens and LED flash.
Since this is a Windows phone, all
memory is internal; there's no microSD card slot for expandable memory.
Features
Editors' note: Due to their similarity, much of this section is taken from the review of the Samsung Focus Flash, also for AT&T.
Editors' note: Due to their similarity, much of this section is taken from the review of the Samsung Focus Flash, also for AT&T.