subject: Samsung Galaxy Ace [print this page] The powerful and slim Samsung Galaxy Ace is packed with features that may take quite a long time to you to make the journey to grips with. However, once you do you will feel as though you have one of those on-board computers with you at all times. It really is all-singing and all-dancing. First thing you may see about Samsung's Galaxy Ace could be the slim and tough casing. It also offers a good bit of weight to it because of its size.
Under the tough exterior and not so full bodied slender chassis lies a smartphone with more than merely a means to get in touch a telephone call with your family and friends. The swipe attribute is the one that really works. That could be until it is got by you out in the rain. Usually do not get the front screen wet because the sensitivity has a tendency to malfunction. The display on this is wonderful because we have a three-and-a-half inch screen that is just dandy when you want to see those videos you have taken and also perfect for seeing those YouTube videos.
If you actually need to get to grips with all that is good in the Samsung Galaxy Ace then look towards its operating system and the apps. The operating system could be the Android 2.2 and it works such as a dream. The Android apps that are available are simply too huge to say. The look of the phone is good and it is well shaped with a position in the high end of the Samsung range of smartphones. It has a great feature in the Google Maps icon; a pristine working it to be run by GPS and accuracy which will really impress. Just recently we travelled from London to Bristol and I was a passenger sitting in the front seat navigating. My sister, who was driving asked if the M4 motorway could be avoided by us as the journey by the A roads is much more scenic. The driving is enough to send even the more alert drivers in to a slumber and I joyfully agreed since the M4 is one of those motorways which have a sound barrier on both sides for several miles.
I had my Samsung Galaxy Ace and we found that each time we passed through a picturesque little market town in the Thames Valley we were spending endlessly long spells on the A4 before attaining the next town. My sister would say, "Surely we have to take Swindon by now?" At that time I would assess the Samsung Galaxy Ace's Google Map feature and it displayed our exact position on the map.