Samsung Galaxy Gio S5660 review: Average Gio
Average Gio
Android Froyo and TouchWiz
The Galaxy Gio S5660 is powered by Android 2.2 Froyo and it’s enhanced by the Samsung TouchWiz user interface (or “launcher”, in Android terms). There are four buttons docked at the bottom of the homescreen, which stay there even when you open the app drawer.
The TouchWiz 3.0 user interface comes preinstalled on top of the Android OS
We have a short video demo of the Galaxy Gio interface to get us started:
The customizations start on the homescreen where you have up to seven panes to populate with widgets but you don’t have to use all the screens all the time. If you need less, deleting the extra ones will speed up navigation. You can zoom out with a pinch gesture to the enter edit mode,where you can add, remove and rearrange the homescreen panes as you see fit.
The notification area, one of the Android strong points, is the updated variety we saw on the Galaxy S Giorgio Armani - it has five switches for Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS, sound and rotation-lock.
The notification area and the lockscreen
Pressing the menu button on the homescreen and then selecting add will let you put more content on your homescreen homescreen (a press and hold on the homescreen does the same trick), add/delete homescreen panes or change the wallpaper. Live wallpapers are supported too, though there is only one preinstalled and you will have to get the rest from the market. The contextual menu has shortcuts too for search, notifications and settings.
Homescreen edit mode • Wallpaper menu • The widget list
Typically the main menu consists of side-scrollable panes, much like the homescreen, instead of a vertical scrollable grid (like in the vanilla Android). List view is not available.
The main menu • Edit the homescreen panes with pinch zoon out gesture • standard edit mode
You can edit the menu just like you do the homescreen: pinch to zoom out and you can add new or re-arrange the current menu panes.
The menu has an alternative edit mode, which lets you rearrange and uninstall applications (only those that you have installed and not the preinstalled ones).
An interesting change in the Android 2.2-compatible version of Samsung’s TouchWiz launcher is the built-in task manager. Complete with a homescreen widget that shows the number of currently active apps, it saves you the need to install a task killer.
The task manager • the task widget in the center of the homescreen
Here are some benchmarks of the Galaxy Gio and how it compares to Galaxy Ace:
Quadrant • Neocore • Linpack • BenchmarkPi
Samsung Galaxy Ace benchmarks: Quadrant • Neocore • Linpack • BenchmarkPi
Reader comments
- Anonymous
- 29 Aug 2021
- Nu6
My samsung galaxy goi5660 is not connecting to google account server, why pls?
- Anonymous
- 27 Aug 2016
- fuj
This was my first phone. I got it in July 2011. It was really good, i had it for three years. But compared to the phones of today it doesn't put up much of a fight. It was a good phone for it's time but I wouldn't advise buying this in 2016 (if they ...