Samsung Rugby Smart review: Tough INC.
Tough INC.
A solid 5MP shooter
The Samsung Rugby Smart comes with a 5MP camera and an LED flash. It captures photos at a maximum resolution of 2560 x 1920 pixels.
Its interface looks pretty familiar with two shortcut bars on each side of the viewfinder. On the right you get the still camera / camcorder switch, virtual shutter key and the gallery shortcut (which is a thumbnail of the last photo taken).
On the left, you get the front/back camera switch and the flash control. You can replace those two and add two more (for a total of four) shortcuts to any option in the Settings menu.
The quality of the photos, taken with the camera is great. Image detail is clean and naturally looking even at pixel level. Colors and white balance are good too. Check out a few samples below.
Video recording could have been better
The video camera interface is identical to the still camera. You get the same customizable panel on the left with four shortcuts.
The camera shoots 720p video at 30fps. Unlike the still camera, you can't use the video-call camera to shoot videos.
The video camera interface
The videos are shot in .MP4 with the nice sounding bitrate of 12Mbps. The videos themselves are with average quality as we noticed a lot of jaggies on diagonal lines. Detail is also far from impressive.
Here is a 720p video sample for you.
And here goes an untouched 720p@30fps video clip for download.
Connectivity is well covered
The Samsung Rugby Smart has quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE support and dual-band 3G with HSPA+ (14.4 Mbps downlink and 5.76Mbps uplink).
Moving on, there's Bluetooth 3.0 for fast local file transfers. Then there's Wi-Fi b/g/n support and a Wi-Fi hotspot option.
The AllShare app allows you to stream content to and from various devices (TV or computer) over DLNA.
The handset also comes with Kies Air preloaded. The app connects to the local Wi-Fi network (or it can create a Wi-Fi hotspot) and gives you a URL to type into your computer's web browser.
From there you can manage just about anything on the phone - from contacts, messages (including composing messages), to browsing images, videos and other files straight in your desktop browser. You can grant or reject access to computers and see who's connected to the phone at any moment.
The cool thing is you can stream music with handy playback controls. It works for videos too.
A solid web browser
The interface of the Android web browser has hardly changed. Its user experience is, as usual, quite good.
The browser supports both double tap and pinch zooming along with the new two-finger tilt zoom. There are niceties such as multiple tabs, text reflow, and find on page and so on. A neat trick is to pinch zoom out beyond the minimum - that opens up the tabs view.
Yet another neat trick is the browser-specific brightness setting. You can, for example, boost the brightness in the browser to comfortably view your web pages but keep the general brightness low to conserve battery.
There's Flash 11 support, which means you can watch YouTube videos right in the browser (videos up to 720p worked smoothly) and play Flash games too.
Reader comments
- kala
- 08 Nov 2013
- NJQ
Is there a way to create a new photo album?
- puddle jumper
- 27 Oct 2012
- 4qw
dont let this crap (milatary grade)fool you. I just bought this phone had it 21 days droped it 1 time on a wooden laminate floor from about waist high and the screen shattered, what a joke. I was told sorry about your luck. So good luck to the rest o...
- Wayne
- 24 Jul 2012
- vmF
Having had the Xperia Active for a few months now, I'm pretty happy with the "rugged" side of it. Use the camera quite a bit though and the recessed camera lens is a pain to keep clean. Have to dismantle the phone every time I take a pictur...