Samsung S5620 Monte review: Well connected
Well connected
Introduction
Affordable touch phones are all over the place so the Samsung S5620 Monte will have to win the old fashioned way – by giving more and better features. Done deal: with full-suit connectivity, the Monte aims to deliver great touch experience and social networking features plus some distinguishable styling.
The Samsung S5620 Monte has both 3G with HSDPA and Wi-Fi for browsing and data, and a built-in GPS receiver for location services. The Monte has a capable web browser (with Flash support) and a decently sized 3” screen. The GPS can also transform the Monte into a proper SatNav unit thanks to the free NaviExpert app. However, the free license is available for phones sold in the Czech Republic.
For the impatient readers, here’s a rundown of the Samsung S5620 specs – the good and bad of it.
Key features
- Quad-band GSM/EDGE, UMTS 900/2100, HSDPA 3.6 Mbps
- 3" capacitive TFT touchscreen of WQVGA resolution, 256K colors
- TouchWiz 2.0 Plus user interface with multitasking support
- 200 MB onboard storage, hot-swappable microSD card slot (up to 16GB)
- 3 megapixel camera with smile detection, QVGA video @ 15fps
- Secondary video-call camera
- Wi-Fi connectivity (b/g)
- GPS receiver with A-GPS; Free GPS navigation with NAVTEQ maps
- Bluetooth 2.1 with A2DP, USB v.2.0
- microUSB slot (with charging support)
- Standard 3.5 mm audio jack
- DNSe sound enhancements
- Find Music recognition service
- FM radio with RDS
- Office document viewer
- Smart unlock
- Social networking integration with direct file uploads
- Accelerometer for auto screen rotate, turn to mute
Main disadvantages
- Free GPS navigation is for Czech Montes only
- No on-screen QWERTY keyboard
- Flash in browser eats too much RAM, can’t play YouTube videos
- No games preinstalled
- Task manager cannot be used for switching between apps
If you’ve read our preview you’d know the S5620 Monte was orange-on-grey back then. Samsung have obviously changed their mind since and put a tux on the Monte – it’s now grey on black – a bit more conservative.
The preview was written before the Samsung Bada OS came about but now that we’ve played with it too, we can do a better comparison. The Monte is a feature phone and Bada is a smart platform but in the end they both share the TouchWiz DNA. What that means is that the interface of both is pretty similarly – at least graphically.
So, we have the Samsung S5620 Monte back for a proper check-up. See what has changed and what stayed the same in hardware on the next page.
Reader comments
- Anonymous
- 13 May 2021
- 7kg
You can't do it in this...
- Anonymous
- 14 Nov 2015
- fsV
i have forgotten my password and i can use the phone
- swazi boy
- 03 Oct 2015
- fn0
does this phone support whatsApp?