Samsung Ativ Odyssey review: Pocket journey
Pocket journey
Windows Phone 8 holds no surprises
The Samsung Ativ Odyssey boots Microsoft's latest Windows Phone 8. Here goes a video demo of the device in action.
A push on the unlock button reveals the lock screen, which displays the current time and date and shows calendar events, emails and missed calls. If you push the volume rocker (either + or -) you can bring the sound switch and music controls on top of the screen.
Swiping the lockscreen up unlocks the device and reveals the live-tile Metro user interface. It's a vertical grid of Live tiles, which can be reordered the way you like. Almost anything can be placed in the grid by tapping and holding down over an app and selecting the Pin to start option.
Windows Phone 8 introduces resizable live tiles, an option also available with the latest WP 7.8 update. When you tap and hold on a tile, you'll get additional resize button to the unpin one. You can witch between quarter, normal and double size. If you select the smallest one though, the tile will be just a static icon (as is in the regular menu).
The homescreen looks exactly the same - there is no wallpaper, you can just choose between dark (black) and light (gray) background colors. Whatever you choose it will be the base color for every system app within the Windows Phone.
Each of the Live tiles display relevant info such as the current date, pending calendar events, missed calls, unread emails and more (third party apps do it too). The Marketplace tile displays the number of updates available, while the Pictures tile is essentially a slideshow of your photos. It's nice to have all that info always available at-a-glance. You can look at them as homescreen widgets of sorts, but that's a bit oversimplifying.
The WP8 offers multi-tasking as promised. It's not true multitasking always; most of the cases things are being done the iOS way. Apps not in the foreground are suspended, but the OS has ways to take over and carry out the task for them. But just like the iOS, if an app requires to run in the background (navigation clients, players, communicators, etc.) it can. The WP offers both kind of multi-tasking and it's up to developers to choose how their apps operate.
The multi-tasking interface is the same as in WP7 - to switch between apps you press and hold the Back key. You'll get thumbnail snapshots of the apps, ordered chronologically left to right.
You can scroll the list horizontally to select an app and a tap will bring you back to your running or suspended app. You can't "kill" any of those apps from here - to exit one you must bring it to front and use the Back key to close it.
Opening the settings menu displays two sets of options: like on the start screen, you can swipe between System and Applications. System covers all the settings you can think of like sounds, color theme, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Accounts, etc. The Application settings let you configure each app you have on the device.
Windows Phone 8 also can be controlled through voice only - you can dictate, have the phone read out the reply, you can initiate searches and so on. Other OS ecosystems are doing it too - Android's got Google Voice, Apple has Siri and there are a number of third party "virtual voice assistants" available. The Windows assistant though is still far behind the competition though.
One of the new features brought by WP8 is the Kids corner. You can select the apps and the types of media content that goes in and password-protect it, so you can safely share your smartphone with your kids without worrying that they will mess up your settings or access inappropriate content. When activated, the Kids corner is accessible by swiping left of the lockscreen. If you ensured it with a password your kids won't be able to return to your standard lock and home screen without that precious password.
Reader comments
- Anonymous
- 09 Apr 2020
- yIB
I have a samsung ativ odyssey i930 And I'm having trouble with downloading apps on it And my wifi is working only I the explorer app
- Anonymous
- 11 Apr 2015
- 4Kw
How do I get my Samsung ativ odyssey windows 8 phone to stop duplicating pictures and using extra memory
- AnonD-102477
- 14 Mar 2013
- wr2
one does not simply buy a windows phone from samsung... lmfao