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Samsung M8800 Pixon review


There’s no Wi-Fi which is a notable absence and may irritate some people

Samsung isn't a company shy of pushing the camera technology limits. Here comes a rival of the LG KC910 Renoir. We review the Samsung M8800 Pixon to see how it measures up against competitors

Published on Nov 17, 2008

Samsung isn't a company shy of pushing the camera technology limits. Here comes a rival of the LG KC910 Renopir. We review the Samsung M8800 Pixon to see how it measures up against competitors

Right, then. You want an 8-megapixel cameraphone? You can have one. Actually Samsung has two for you to choose from. You could opt for its i8510 (aka INNOV8) or the Pixon. Or you could go over to LG and take a look at its Renior. Or you could take the Sony Ericsson road and opt for its C905.

The key question, though is do you really want an 8 megapixel phone? Well, whatever the innovative features of any handset offering this resolution you do have to bear in mind that you will get higher quality shots from a dedicated digital camera. Megapixel counts alone are not everything when it comes digital photography, don’t ya know?

Anyway, that little public information broadcast out of the way, let’s get on to looking at the Pixon. The full frontal 3.2 inch touch screen is 240 pixels wide and 400 pixels high and is a dream of clarity and sharpness. It responds really nicely to finger taps and dragging too, which isn’t something we can always say for touchscreens.

You get a funny little extending stylus that attaches to the phone by a lanyard. We never found the need to use it, which is fortunate really, since it looks rather silly dangling off the phone and is better left at home.

This is a well specified mobile. There’s no Wi-Fi which is a notable absence and may irritate some people. But there is HSDPA to 7.2Mbps, GPS, an accelerometer, 200MB of built in memory and a microSD card slot for adding more.

Essentially you can think of the Pixon as an updated and upgraded incarnation of the popular Samsung Tocco. The Pixon uses a very similar interface which we liked then and still like now.

Of particular note in this respect is the use of widgets. These are little applets you can drop onto the main screen. You pull them off a sidebar that pops out when you tap an arrow on the left edge of the screen.

There is a widget you can use to quickly set an alarm, one to access the phone’s FM radio, one for managing music, one that takes you quickly to your favourite contacts and plenty more. Some even go online so there is one that gets a weather forecast, and a Google search bar for example. If you get tired of a widget, you can just drag it back onto the sidebar. Simple, but effective.

This is a nice handset to pocket. It is, in fact, the slimmest of the e-megapixelers though by a hair’s breadth so this is not, in itself, a reason to buy. The build is tidy, and there are just three under screen buttons, Call, End and a little round back button. There is a hold button on the left edge which is imperative for disabling the touch screen. And we like the left side mounted switcher key which brings onto screen a grid of 6 shortcuts to often used applications and the main menu.

So, the camera, then. The lens is on the back of the casing and there is a proper lens cover that comes away from the lens with a satisfying click when you start the camera software running.

Camera features include a dual power LED flash that helps out rather more than usual with indoor low light photographs. Shake reduction, face detection and smile detection help you take photos of happy smiling people without any fuzzing or blurring. You can geotag photos thanks to the GPS too.

And then there is Face Link. This lets you tag people in a photo and then, at a later date, search for them by name. Hmmm. You can also sort photos by the time they were taken and their predominant colour. Not sure what need that last option is meant to cater for, to be honest.

What we do like a lot is the panorama assist mode. Samsung had this in the i8510 and it is great to see it back. Basically you choose panorama mode, then take your first shot and sweep the camera slowly through the arc you want in your panorama. It takes the photos it needs to complete the shot automatically. As long as you hold the camera on a steady horizontal plane, the results are pretty good.

One feature we aren’t too sure about is the ‘tilt and flip’ photo viewer. The accelerometer comes into play here, allowing you to slightly tilt the phone in your hand to move through a slideshow. It works, but we aren’t sure what it actually adds over sweeping images with a finger to run through them.

Notwithstanding the point we made at the outset about image quality of a phone vs a dedicated digital camera, what you get here is quite good. On testing the macro mode proved particularly impressive.


We love the easy user interface of the Pixon, and we quit like the widgets too. Shame about the missing Wi-Fi, though.

Samsung Pixon M8800

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Verdict: The absence of Wi-Fi annoys, but there is a lot else here to please including an 8-megapixel snapper

Pros
Lovely easy to grasp user interface
Very responsive screen
Super panorama mode in the camera

Cons
No Wi-Fi
Do you really need 8 megapixels?

Rating:4 out of 5

User manual: Download Samsung Pixon software and user manuals

More info: Samsung website

Available from: Samsung M8800 Pixon at Dial-a-Phone

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Users Comments

Re: Samsung M8800 Pixon review
Posted By usual-suspect 1 January 10, 2009 10:29:56 AM

I've gone from a N95 to this, my first touchscreen. To be honest I'm finding it very frustrating - everything seems to be a bit of a pain. Texting is a nice interface but ultimatly, it takes ages to produce the correct message when comapred to a standard keypad. The camera is excellent but as a video camera I was expecting much better. Perhaps I'm doing something wrong but with the same size setting, the N95 has a better framerate??? It's very inflexible too. Why can't we edit the taskbar? >90% of the population are right-handed. When I'm searching for a name, becauuse the taskbar is on the left, the scribber is over the top of the screen! It's 2009 now and yet the software doesn't work properly with Vista 64. I'm looking to go back to an N96 or the Innov8

Re: Samsung M8800 Pixon review
Posted By jewie404 1 February 6, 2009 02:42:43 AM

Now, I’ve got one recently and was having rather high expectations to use it as my PIM gadget, the ultimate device for all my contacts, notes, schedules and emails. My advice is don’t. Reading on all the specifications, GPS, 8 megapixels autofocus camera and all, it was a phone good on paper for a very good price compared with the others. The plus side is that the camera is so full of functions, you will have heaps of fun toying around with advance features like face detection, smile shots and such. That’s all there is to this phone, a very powerful camera system. GeoTagging of photos, I took 2 weeks to figure it out. Firstly you have to turn on the GeoTagging feature in the camera settings. And by accident I discovered GeoTagging does work. Only after turning on the camera for 3 minutes or so before I noticed the satellite dish icon showed a 2 bar stable status and stayed that way. If the icon is in a transition state, it means the GPS receiver is still trying to log on to the GPS signals. One does really need to hold the phone high, run around a little and try all sorts of holding the phones in all imaginable orientation just to get GPS logged on. If a picture is successfully tagged, you can see the long-lat information via the info functions while browsing photos. Loading the image into Picassa/Google Earth is also another way to know if your pictures had been tagged. When you have successfully tagged pictures (one out of 15 times), it could be quite fun to view them in Google Erath. Bringing GPS features further, using Google Maps, just waiting for GPS to logon while driving is a nightmare. It is especially a big pain in my *** when near critical traffic junctions, the blue dot remained very still on the screen as the Pixon had lost it GPS signal. Which means, Samsung did a very bad job here, on this GPS thingy. They could have done better. What about the organizer? One will orgas with frustration just to make it working. The great Samsung New PC Studio is truly a software written just to corrupt your Outlook. I ended up with 800 over double entries in my contact list (both outlook and in Pixon) and all my calendar schedules were squeezed into one single day after a synch. I had to spend one whole day just to restore all my schedules and contacts manually in my Outlook after the synch. I never want to use this poorly written and untested software ever again. No way could one trust Samsung in this one. Samsung, they did a nice product and that’s about it. Cosmetically appealing, but functionally, very annoying. It’s more of a phone for the camera and that is the only good thing about it. Don’t expect good software skills from Koreans. This product seemed rushed into the market with appealing paper specs to compete with others, but without much sensible functional testing. Use this only as a fashion and camera gadget. Pixon - a partially functioning phone guarantee to drive you mad if you use it for more then a phone (especially GPS).

Re: Samsung M8800 Pixon review
Posted By dandare 1 March 9, 2009 10:21:03 AM

Horrible phone, after two weeks I really hate it. It has some very nice hardware, the sound quality is outstanding, it can use up to 16 GB MiniSD card, the screen is huge but that's all. The software will draw you crazy, nothing really works, Samsung totally ignored any USABILITY rules. The camera is really nice (event it has no close up/macro mode), you can take up to 10 pictures in 3 second with the multi shot mode but it will take you 15 minutes to delete them in the picture browser app - worst picture browser app I saw on any mobile phone. Full of bugs, simply horror. Next, it comes with nice stylus and supports handwriting but the touch screen is not good enough to make it really work - after couple attempts you will never try it again. And that's the motto of this phone, it looks amazing but is not meant to be used. Avoid it.

Re: Samsung M8800 Pixon review
Posted By Ahbell 1 July 12, 2009 09:55:50 AM

May i know [color=red]how to use the flash at the camera, when i am not taking photo??[/color] Pls answer me. Thankyou.
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Samsung M8800 Pixon rear The Samsung M8800 Pixon features an 8-megapixel camera with an LED flash

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