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Review: Samsung's stunning slider

Timmah   on 05 March 2006 - 15:19 · 51 comments & 15113 views

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Mobile phones have gripped the planet and shook it furiously by the scruff of its neck for the past ten years or so now. The cellular revolution has taken place and you’ll be hard-stretched to find anyone on the high street that is not in possession of a mobile phone. That said, the benefits are obvious and recent reports detailing how safe mobile phones are suggest there may have been no health risk at all. But does anyone really give any of this serious thought? Before splashing out on the latest clamshell-of-dreams do you question your safety? Nope, you want the 2MP camera and 3G video calls. Features fuel the world’s mobile phone market.

At the moment people also want slide phones. Slide phones are the new black. The Samsung D600 falls under both “slide” and “black” categories – so is it really that cool?


View: Read the full review



Click for a larger imageSitting pretty in the palm of your hand at 4.7cm by 9.6cm, the D600 is an absolute pleasure to hold and use as it’s also light at a mere 103g. Upon powering up you’re presented with Samsung’s trademark fanfare and a greeting message. It’s pretty quick to start up and shut down (at least my unbranded one is), though don’t turn it on in a meeting/lecture/funeral without expecting to catch some attention. You’ll instantly notice the beautifully crisp display (as long as you tear the protective cover off, as I was reluctant to). Samsung have fitted an 18-bit screen with a whopping 240x320 pixel resolution. The main advantage of a slide phone is that because the buttons are hidden the screen can be stretched to rather larger proportions. This means reading text, viewing images and movies as well as playing games causes little strain to the eyes.


Navigation is a breeze via the four-way D-pad and large well designed lower half of the phone. The D600 uses a 3x3 tile system for the main menu, with an optional “Flash” (their word not mine) menu to spice it up a bit if you ever get bored. One thing to note is that the layout and buttons feel like were designed by a masseur. The whole phone sits and operates beautifully, from the smooth yet sturdy slide action to the basic yet functional D-pad. With the phone in your palm, you have two main select/back buttons, a D-pad, accept and reject call buttons and a “C” button, used much in the same way as a Sony Ericsson phone. On the left side is a volume up/down button, and on the right is a camera shutter button, should you want to hold the phone on its side. The phone can be used in the open or closed position, but naturally you’ll need the keypad for sending SMS and dialing numbers. The phone locks automatically when you close the slide too, which means no more calling 999 in your pocket without realising. The device feels very responsive – there’s no delay between menus, or button presses. Some have reported the T9 predictive text engine to be slow and cumbersome, but I haven’t noticed any slowdown whatsoever – and I’ve used it extensively.


It’s not 3G, but the phone has a 2MP camera built in, which can take pictures at resolutions of: 1600x1200, 1125x864, Click for a larger image 800x600, 640x480, 320x240 and 240x180 pixels. Image quality is crisp and flawless on the phone’s screen, though when viewing the pictures on your PC you’ll notice a camera phone was used to take the pictures. By this I mean there’s a few jagged edges here and there, it gets a bit grainy in poor light and can appear slightly out of focus at times. Unfortunately the D600 wasn’t blessed with auto-focus unlike it’s rivals from Sony Ericsson, that said there’s very little time-delay between the exposure and pressing the button. The phone’s camera function comes bundled with extra features that you’ll probably never use, e.g. frames and novelty effects. The flash is useful however, and it can be set to a few different modes including auto and permanent. Unfortunately the camera “forgets” the flash setting each time you exit camera mode, but you can cycle through using the 0 key. Most of the camera’s functions can be altered using the numeric keypad, but it can be a pain if you hit the wrong one. ISO functions are present, which suggests Samsung are serious about the camera on this phone. Sure it’s good, but I don’t know if it warrants ISO settings – not that I’m complaining. You can also alter white balance and metering exposure. My only major problem with the camera is its location on the phone. Unfortunately the 2MP unit isn’t mounted behind the slide, as per D500. The camera is on the back of the phone, but you’ll find your fingers often obscure the lens. This isn’t as big a deal as it sounds, you soon adjust the way you hold the phone accordingly – I’m just a bit concerned at the lack of lens cover.


The video capabilities of this phone are very impressive. In MP4 mode I found the framerate to be very smooth, and loved the way you can pause and resume playback within the same file. Unfortunately MP4 files tend to be quite large, but the phone has 72MB internal shared memory and who could forget the Mini SD slot. That’s right, a Mini SD (or TransFlash as it used to be known) slot is built into the left side of the phone, which means you’ll never run out of memory. The UK package doesn’t include a memory card as standard, though I have heard of international and branded D600s that do indeed come bundled with one. Whilst on the topic of storage, the phone has room for 1000 contacts (with 12 fields) and 200 text messages. There is also 4MB set aside for Java, and the phone comes with 3 pre-installed games. Applications run with no problems whatsoever, in full-screen mode too.

MP3 playback comes bundled with a visualizer, which works quite well but I imagine is an unnecessary drain on battery in your pocket. Just like its rivals, the D600 requires you to use Samsung’s accompanying hands-free-earphones, which don’t live up to audiophile quality. I personally use a separate MP3 player for audio on the go, but the phone handles playback well. There is a slight delay when loading the songs, but I think we’re a few years away from a truly gapless MP3 player phone.


External sound quality is top notch. Ringtones and videos are clear and loud using the phones dual-speaker system, which Samsung claim to be 3D sound. In-call sound quality is shockingly good when utilising the phone’s voice clarity setting. Unfortunately I think this drains the battery excessively, but you’ve the option to leave it on or turn it off. In built ringtones are typically Samsung, with pretty sparkly noises and tacky pop music as standard. You can of course upload and use your own, which is what I’d recommend. Message tones are unfortunately locked to a selection of 10, but they’re not quite as bad as I’d imagined. One thing that did annoy me however, was the exclusion of a vibrate and ring function. You can have one or the other, but not a simultaneous ring and vibrate! Luckily there’s a vibrate then ring option, but it’s still a touch annoying.


Connectivity is provided via Bluetooth, USB and the rather unique TV-Out. I was half hoping for an infra-red panel, as my laptop doesn’t have Bluetooth as standard, but it was not to be. Probably just as well, it’s old and unreliable technology now. EDGE is provided on the D600E, but thus far the technology hasn’t made a dent on the mobile market in the UK. The browser is of the OpenWave variety, and works well. WAP isn’t really my thing, but I’ve had a play and am quite impressed. Email is integrated into the phone’s messages menu, with full support for POP3 inboxes. The TV-Out function works surprisingly well, allowing you to view documents using the Picsel Viewer software (allows you to view MS Office documents) on a big screen. In fact you can do everything, on a big screen! Watch videos, view photos or even play primitive Java games. I found that it put quite a strain on the battery, but that could have been my over-use of the phone in the first few days of having it. It’s a novelty feature, and one I probably won’t use very often, but it certainly sets the D600 apart from its rivals in terms of innovation.


Samsung have provided a copy of their excellent PC Studio software with the phone, which connects in seconds via USB. It’s incredibly easy to install too, I didn’t even need to restart my PC. The software allows you to manage everything on your phone – including files, contacts and SMS. You can also edit movies, sounds and synchronize with MS Outlook. The speed at which the whole program operates is quite impressive, though I imagine connecting via Bluetooth to be a little slower. Another feature I haven’t seen mentioned anywhere is charging via USB. This is incredibly handy as I’m often out and about with only my laptop for company which makes it the perfect solution to a dwindling phone battery.


I won’t lie, the whole phone is a bit of a fingerprint magnet. The glossy screen is actually pretty scratch resistant (no scratches after 4 days) but you’ll find yourself polishing it religiously. I have dropped it, I confess, once. There’s now a very slight mark on the top of the phone, but it’s my own stupid fault and the phone is still working flawlessly. In terms of battery life, I managed to use the whole battery in half a day when I received the phone, but it’s actually pretty good on battery life. A day of average texting, taking pictures and the odd call won’t tax the battery too much and you can usually get about 2 days of pretty heavy use out of it. The phone charges from empty in around 2 hours, but I never let it get too low so an hour or so usually suffices. There's a bundle of extra features too, for example a voice recorder, world time, calendar and to-do list, alarm, a convertor and a timer/stopwatch. What else could you possibly need?


To round up this review, I have to go back to my original point. The public are obsessed with features in today’s mobile phones, and this phone is full of them. It’s as close to a perfect phone I’ve used, and that includes the new Nokia range and Sony Ericsson’s K750i and W800i. If you want an innovative, well designed phone and are not afraid of breaking with tradition and opting for a slide phone – the D600 is for you. Samsung have truly triumphed to avenge the D500’s death with a phone that does everything just that little bit better.


Score: 8/10


Camera Images: Photo 1 | Photo 2 | Photo 3
Camera Videos: Sample


Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 51 additional comments
(2 replies) #1 [DGS] on 05 Mar 2006 - 15:35
I have a friend who has it and always complains about how the battery needs recharging once a day!
#1.1 Timmah on 05 Mar 2006 - 15:37
If i were him I'd either stop using it 24/7 or contact Samsung.
#1.2 theyarecomingforyou on 05 Mar 2006 - 23:16
Or turn off Bluetooth... if I leave my phone near a Bluetooth connection then the battery will drain in a day, whereas it normally lasts about a week.
#2 ollie_webbuk on 05 Mar 2006 - 15:42
Thing about the D600 that is a step back from the D500 is the lack of protection for the camera lense. My Nokia 6680 has that too, mind you, different class of phone.
(1 reply) #3 redmosquito on 05 Mar 2006 - 15:42
am i the only one on mother earth who doesnt like sliders?!

anyways, looks okay but id never buy one.
#3.1 adri1456 on 05 Mar 2006 - 19:38
Nope, I also don't like sliders, primarily because of the small keypad.

I enjoy my Motorola v635's large keys and since I have fat fingers, I need that extra space. Plus, the screen is too small for my taste and there's no protection if you use a belt holster (what I use for all of my phones).
#4 Jack31081 on 05 Mar 2006 - 15:43
a friend of mine had a japanese slide phone like that.

but it was even smaller.

and it was 2 years ago.

hi, my name is jack, and i'll be your 'one-upper' guy for the day
(1 reply) #5 zingysaturn on 05 Mar 2006 - 15:45
Erm... someone might wanna have a look at the camera photos links... It's a lovely snowman, but definately not a phone...
#5.1 plastikaa on 05 Mar 2006 - 15:48
LOL - I think they are the quality of the images taken with the camera, I don't think they're meant to be pictures of the phone.
#6 emel on 05 Mar 2006 - 15:51
This is not a good phone.. only thing good about it that it has flash camera..
#7 ecotrojan on 05 Mar 2006 - 16:04
I bought the D720 on Thursday. Will arrive tomorrow. Symbian phone from Samsung ?
(2 replies) #8 BeLGaRaTh on 05 Mar 2006 - 16:05
Sorry to bash this, but its a terrible phone. The only redeeming features are the 2mp camera and being able to use memory cards, but there again most phones have that feature now.

Bluetooth is unbelievable flaky (sp?) (It looses connection constantly, no way of knowing how much has been transferred or what is remaining), you cant assign your own tunes/tones to SMS, deletion of multiple numbers is impossible (has to be done 1 at a time)

I had mine for an incredible 4hrs a few months ago, before returning it and getting a different phone
#8.1 Timmah on 05 Mar 2006 - 16:54
You gave the phone 4 hours of use? Is that all?!

Bluetooth (which I've used to transfer between a PC and another phone) is solid as a rock and DOES show a percentage remaining for the transfer when sending, but when receiving the transfer takes place in the BACKGROUND so you can still use the phone normally. Nokias do this.

You can mass delete all your contacts, or one by one - why would pressing options, 4 then 1 be too much to do a few times?

I think you're a fool for not giving this phone a real chance, because it's brilliant.
#8.2 BeLGaRaTh on 05 Mar 2006 - 19:01
Oops that should have been 24hrs .. Either way I stand by my decision .. As do a few friends who bought it/got free on contract and sent it back after a short time.
#9 windows95isg8 on 05 Mar 2006 - 16:10
I got this phone, and I think its g8. I love making videos with it
(1 reply) #10 ShadowPHP on 05 Mar 2006 - 16:14
Whats the TV-Out like? Any good function for it?
#10.1 Timmah on 05 Mar 2006 - 16:56
Watching videos full screen, viewing Word/Powerpoint presentations etc via a projector, showing a room full of people your holiday snaps - just a few handy uses.
#11 Varish on 05 Mar 2006 - 16:15
out of topic, but is the font size suppose to be big like that?
(2 replies) #12 Alienized on 05 Mar 2006 - 16:34
i've had this phone and the camera its not as good as sony ericsson k750i and k750i is the mother of all mobile phone cameras also when you connect it to the computer the phone is not recognised as removeable disk, so you will have to open the software that comes with it than click connect where as the other phones its just plugin and of you go ready to use it.
#12.1 ZZOOzzoo on 05 Mar 2006 - 16:38
Mother of all mobile phone cameras? Tell that to Koreans who already have 5MP/7MP camera phones available in the market.
#12.2 Timmah on 05 Mar 2006 - 16:49
You can change the USB function in the phone's settings to USB mass storage.
(1 reply) #13 Devil Fish on 05 Mar 2006 - 16:40
Looks a bit like the Nokia 6280.
#13.1 lloydo on 06 Mar 2006 - 07:22
Yeah this is the handset that's had my interest for the last 6 months.
#14 Croquant on 05 Mar 2006 - 17:02
That's snowman gives me the heebbee jeebbees.
#15 Alienized on 05 Mar 2006 - 17:12
5MP/7MP damn thats a lot, well at least its not aviable in european market that i know, particularly england but would want to see what the quality would be like on that
#16 Beastage on 05 Mar 2006 - 18:36
Isn't there some limit on megapixels and lense size? cause I don't see how those lenses capture a 7mp image...
#17 LiGhTfast on 05 Mar 2006 - 19:19
This is a poor phone imho best suited to teenage girls and people who just want a phone. Smartphones are were the fun is.
(4 replies) #18 tlogank on 05 Mar 2006 - 19:24
I agree with LiGhTfast and others...I too had this phone for about 12 days (took it back within the 15-day trial)...nothing great, definetely not good enough to deserve a write-up review on the front page.
If we want to review phones, let's review like PPC Phones (Treo 700w, xv6700, etc.) that are actually for power user's and have real OS's on them.
Sorry-just not impressed.
#18.1 Timmah on 05 Mar 2006 - 19:40
Sorry Neowin doesn't just cater for the elite few who buy all the top gear.

Some of us have to settle for less, unfortunately.
#18.2 tlogank on 05 Mar 2006 - 19:50
I understand that, BUT-as we see-there are plenty (if not most) here that pay out between $300-$500 for an iPod, so I am sure that many don't have a problem paying $300 for a PPC phone or something. Maybe I am right, maybe I am wrong-either way...you review was fine-I am not bashing that, I just simply stated that I thought better phone's should have reviews as well.
#18.3 Timmah on 05 Mar 2006 - 19:53
Fair enough, you can't please all of the people all of the time.
#18.4 ollie_webbuk on 05 Mar 2006 - 19:56
I agree, we need to review more Symbian phones. (Y)
#19 zivan56 on 05 Mar 2006 - 19:56
The k750i is far superior in terms of overall quality (especially picture). Furthemore, this phone has been on the market for ages; so its not stunning at all...
(1 reply) #20 XanDaMan on 05 Mar 2006 - 20:22
I haven't read the review...and don't intend to for a while at least but...

Does this not fall out of relevance? I mean the phone is seriously old now...
#20.1 imek on 05 Mar 2006 - 22:35
Actually the phone has only been out for a month or two in Australia, so for me it is relevant...
#21 daPhoenix on 05 Mar 2006 - 22:58
Heh, Nokia 7650 had the same "slide open" cover that Samsung 'borrowed' and declared it the best thing next to sex.

7650 came out what.. 4 years ago here?
#22 Achal on 05 Mar 2006 - 23:08
been out for quite some time, i got mine in february 2005, theres a newer one out now

http://www.gsmarena.com/samsung_d800-1355.php

the d800
#23 housegroover on 06 Mar 2006 - 01:18
Mobile phones have gripped the planet and shook it furiously by the scruff of its neck for the past ten years or so now.

can we get to the point? lol
#24 McG on 06 Mar 2006 - 02:28
sweet phone! i just got a razr but if sony continues along this awesome path, in a few years i might buy one of these types!
#25 lulolulito on 06 Mar 2006 - 03:59
my roomate works for t-mobile, in management, he has had this phone for about a month now, no complaints so far
#26 pallavsuri on 06 Mar 2006 - 04:40
COME ON THIS PHONE IS MORE THAN A YEAR OLD NOW. GET SOME NEW REVIEWS. REMOVE THIS. HOW USELESS AND ANTIQUATED. JEEEZ
(1 reply) #27 Joshie on 06 Mar 2006 - 05:56
Eh, I know a few people who care about the health risks. o.O I'm one of them. I'm not a cell phone addict, and I do just fine without one. I can't stand being at everyone's beck and call 24/7. Shut it off? God forbid. Then everyone thinks something's wrong. People get *angry* at you when you shut your phone off.
#27.1 ecotrojan on 06 Mar 2006 - 09:18
Ive got a mobile phone blocker, whenever we go out say cinema or restaurant then I turn it on. Blocks all signals in a 25 metre+ radius.

Cant stand eating or trying to watch a film and text kiddies or loud mouth frogs telling you their business.

Works for me.
#28 King Rilian on 06 Mar 2006 - 15:10
Dude, the D800's are where it's at.
#29 thejohnnyq on 06 Mar 2006 - 16:24
I actual beta tested one of these, and was not completely happy with it. The battery was one issue, another was coverage quality in the states, (i tried it in several different areas, it worked OK).

It was slick.
#30 eminem213486 on 06 Mar 2006 - 18:30
wow tims a hippie
#31 nackchoon on 06 Mar 2006 - 20:52
It is very funny how many of you criticize the phone so much in this thread. However, I would like to express my thoughts about the mobile phone industry of Korean companies from my point of view:
Korea is a country where everyone owns a mobile phone; average amount of time a phone is used until it is replaced? 1 year.

Korean mobile industry market seems to be important enough for Motorola to release their new slider RAZR series: the RAZR Z. RAZR Z was released in Korea just a little ago as a "smart" marketing idea from Motorola, as Korea has a big mobile phone industry. Result? a total failure. Things that may appeal the western culture just may not suit Korea; Samsung is a Korean company. When the Koreans get Samsung's 8 mega-pixel camera phone or phones with integrated banking system or use the phones to pay for public transportation or use it as MP3 players or get a waterproof phone or use different services along with the phone (upload pictures to mini homepages directly synchronized/download music/watch DMB TV services/download videos) Western brandnames are not much of a show.

BTW, for people interested in the Motorola RAZR Z, and want to see some pictures, there are many in a review by a Korean website:
RAZR Z reviewed by a Korean Website
(look through the pics)

Also, I would like to note in response to someone who claimed that the slider is just an ideas borrowed by Samsung to mention it as the best thing next to "sex." I believe you that Nokia may have released a slider phone 4 years ago, but Korean companies is not very interested in marketing in the US or other western countries in comparison to Korea itself. Koreans demand a slider phone, so produce it, then make GSM versions of it and export it. Please, people, before just making a comment criticizing the phone, think about the fact that Korean companies release products in the home country, Korea, and then consider releasing it in foreign countries, making a delay. In fact, the D500 [previous version of the phone very much like the phone spoken of] was first released in Korea as "Blue-black" phone almost 3 years ago but was released to Europe only in the past year.

For all these reasons, I would like to say that people might consider doing research and understand why the phones may be "out of date" before posting a comment

Last edited by nackchoon on 06 Mar 2006 - 20:58

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