Samsung’s Galaxy SIII Mini is just mutton dressed as lamb
By Gadiola Emanuel - 8:35:00 AM
After
a flurry of leaks and rumours over the past week Samsung have finally
unveiled their latest Android handset: the Galaxy SIII Mini. Sporting a
4 inch Super AMOLED display, it’s hardly a ‘mini’ phone, but compared
to its older brothers – the 4.8 inch Galaxy SIII and the 5.5 inch
Galaxy Note 2 – it’s the smallest of the bunch.
The SIII Mini is obviously aimed at the budget conscious buyer
looking for a new handset, the kind that might find the original Galaxy
SIII a little on the pricey side, but this is far from a mini version
of Samsung’s flagship phone. The mid-range Mini’s internals reflect
this, with hardware more akin to the flagship Android phones from 18
months ago. The problem is, in today’s fast-paced mobile market, 18
months might as well be 18 years.
Considering the Mini is being placed alongside Samsung’s best mobile
hardware to date, it does seem to dilute the quality of the lineup
somewhat. The Mini is a lacklustre device not worthy of the Galaxy SIII
name. The SIII Mini is basically just a re-packaged Galaxy S Advance
with a software upgrade.
Inside you’ll find a dual-core 1GHz processor, 1GB RAM, five
megapixel camera, 8/16 GB memory and an external SD card slot for
expandability. Software wise, the Mini is running the latest Android
4.1 Jelly Bean operating system, wrapped in Samsung’s own TouchWiz
skin. This is about the only feature worth getting excited about, and
even that will be short lived. With hardware as dated as this, it’s
unlikely that Jelly Bean will run smoothly. And as for future OS
updates? You might as well forget it, this hardware will struggle – a
lot.
If you’re currently on the market for a mid-range Android handset,
then in my opinion you’re better off looking elsewhere. Samsung have
made too many compromises this time around, which is disappointing
because their latest line of Galaxy phones really have raised the bar
in recent months. Even compared to the recently released iPhone 5 while
HTC were forced to upgrade their flagship One X just to keep up.
Samsung need to strip their mobile product lines down and
concentrate on a few great devices, rather than dozens of handset
variations that just confuse customers. They should stick with the
previous generation Galaxy SII and use that as a mid-range alternative,
rather than offering up this mutton dressed as lamb they’re calling
the Galaxy SIII Mini.
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