Samsung Galaxy S III US edition review: Blockbuster

Blockbuster

GSMArena team, 20 June 2012.

Connectivity chock-full of new technology

The Samsung Galaxy S III will be available in the United States in LTE and 42Mbps HSDPA flavors. Which one you will choose is entirely based on your carrier preference.

Samsung's latest Android flagship raises the bid with Bluetooth 4.0 with High Speed. Its transfer rate isn't yet official but is expected to top 21Mbps. Wi-Fi Direct is a similar technology, which offers blazing fast speed.

The Wi-Fi support includes a/b/g/n versions, with both 2.4GHz and 5GHz band compatibility.

The Galaxy S III allows you to share all sorts of media via NFC by simply touching the devices back-to-back. Here it is in action.

You can share with other NFC devices as well, but functionality is limited to what is provided by the stock Android Beam. We tested this with the Galaxy Nexus and we had no trouble transferring webpages and contacts from our S III to the Galaxy Nexus.

Samsung have also released their own NFC tags, called TecTiles. A dedicated app from the Google Play Store helps with their setup. Here's how they work.

The AllShare functionality is now split into two: AllShare Play and AllShare Cast. The first is for transferring and sharing data and multimedia files to your notebook or PC. AllShare Cast on the other hand provides streaming content to and from different kind of devices (TV or computer) over DLNA.

Also, for wired connectivity we have the MHL port. By all appearances it is a normal microUSB port and works as one (a charger port as well). But the MHL port enables video output by using a MHL-to-HDMI dongle.

Once you plug the dongle into the phone you also need to plug a charger into the additional microUSB port on the dongle and the Galaxy S III screen will be mirrored on the TV.

The MHL port has yet another feature - it enables USB On-The-Go. You'll need an adapter for that too (there isn't one in the box) but this one is fairly straightforward - you plug it into the Galaxy S III and plug a standard USB cable on the other end.

A desktop-grade Web browser

While the interface of the Android web browser hardly has changed, the Samsung Galaxy S III has the hardware specs to propel it to great heights of user experience. The pretty large, sharp display with great colors makes reading a joy.

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Browsing GSMArena.com on the Samsung Galaxy S II

The browser supports both double tap and pinch zooming along with the two-finger tilt zoom. There are niceties such as multiple tabs, text reflow, find on page and so on. A neat trick is to pinch zoom out beyond the minimum - that opens up the tabs view.

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Page options and settings

The powerful CPU and GPU enable the stock Galaxy S III browser to play 1080p Flash video without a hitch. That was truly impressive stuff considering a lot of netbooks would choke on something like that. You can play touch-optimized Flash without breaking a sweat too.

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1080p YouTube video working in the browser • Playing a Flash game

The Web browser comes with Incognito mode, which enables you to surf the web without the browser keeping track of your history or storing cookies. You can also switch to a more minimalist UI, which currently is in a Lab stage. It disables most of the browser's user interface and gives you a quick five-button layout to access the basics.

Brightness and colors option gives you four different presets to adjust the display according to your preferences. Automatic brightness is an option, too, and works only within the browser.

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Web browser sports incognito mode

Hubs are here to stay

Hubs are not just for Windows Phone 7 - Samsung, at least, seems to think so. They've added a total of 4 Hubs to their new Android superphone.

The Social hub we've seen before - it combines your email accounts with social networking (Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, LinkedIn) and IM accounts (Gtalk, MSN and Yahoo! Messenger) and shows all incoming messages as one list with handy shortcuts to reply, mark as favorite and so on. There's filtering by message source too, to help manage the inflow of incoming updates.

The Music Hub lets you browse music online (with search tools, charts, lists of new releases and so on). You can preview songs (30 seconds each) and buy tracks or whole albums.

The Readers Hub has been replaced with Google's Play Books store. You can subscribe to Internet newspapers, magazines or buy e-books. You can download free book previews. Extensive genre listings will help you discover new titles.

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Meet Google Play Books

Finally, there's the Game Hub, which will quickly become your go to place for finding new games. The titles break down into Social and Premium games and there's a news section too. There's a try-before-you-buy option, so you can check out a game before committing your cash. The nice thing about that Hub is it includes the titles by Gameloft and EA, which are otherwise not available on the Google Play Store.

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The Game Hub is great for mobile gaming fans

Reader comments

  • Anonymous
  • 17 Jul 2021
  • 64i

Too bad you can't think logically. Liberalism has rotted your cognitive brain function.

  • AnonD-414528
  • 08 Jul 2015
  • Nw8

I am using Samsung galaxy slll and my network doesn't come as HSDPA

  • rinku
  • 25 Mar 2015
  • rA%

Can I unlock my S3 SGH I747 and use in India as I am in India for more than 6 months from now & pls suggest a genuine unlocking process