The Samsung Galaxy S4 mini brings a strong feature set for a midrange phone. incuding android 4.2, a dual-core processor and an 8-megapixel camera. The sprint version has excellent call quality.
The Galaxy S4 Mini has only 8GB of internal storage, and
mediocre front-facing camera quality. Data was slow on Sprint's network. The bottom line reliable specs and availability on four
carriers make the Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini an easy-to-find midtier buy, but you
should also compare the S4 Mini with its substantial competition.
Although smaller and lighter than the S4, with every spec
scaled back, this Mini is no slouch. Its 4.3-inch qHD display, Android 4.2 OS,
8-megapixel camera, and dual-core processor charmed AT&T, Sprint, Verizon,
and US Cellular enough to commit to the smaller S4 sibling. There's a certain
reliability, too, that comes with Samsung's almost cookie-cutter version of
Android, which isn't quite as ornamented with software extras as the Galaxy S4
flagship, but retains a lot of its gestures and even the IR blaster for
controlling your TV.
However, the processor sometimes feels sluggish, internal
storage is limited at 8GB (though you can expand it by another 64GB), and the
front-facing camera takes grainy photos and videos.
Design and build
With its 4.3-inch screen and 4.9-by-2.4-by-0.4-inch
dimensions, the S4 Mini is somewhat misnamed. It's just about the same size as
Apple's iPhone 5S, but with a larger screen. Relative to the S4, however, and
its Galaxy Note 3 kin, the Mini is indeed light (3.8 ounces), slim, and much
easier to carry around in a pocket.
In terms of design, it looks just like a Galaxy S4 writ
small, with the same rounded edges, physical home button, silvery sides, and
slick plastic, patterned backing in either "black mist" or
"marble white." For the record, I reviewed the black version for
Sprint.
Just like the original, this Mini places the volume rocker
on the left spine, the power/lock button on the right, the Micro-USB charging
port on the bottom, and the headset jack and IR blaster up top. A front-facing
camera and sensors live at the top of the display, and the phone's solidly
performing 8-megapixel shooter and LED flash are on the back. You'll need to
remove both the battery cover and the battery to insert a microSD card or SIM
card, so I wouldn't make it a habit to swap either one often.
The screen is a 4.3-inch qHD Super AMOLED affair with a
960x540-pixel resolution and a pixel density of 256ppi. For reference, the HTC
One Mini's 4.3-inch 720p HD screen has a higher pixel density at 340ppi. You
can certainly tell the difference with the two devices laid side by side, but
on its own, the S4 Mini's screen looks bright in automatic mode and colorful,
the way that AMOLEDs do.
Whites look a little yellower on the S4 Mini's display, and
text reads slightly duller and a little fuzzier, and when you zoom in tight you
will notice aliasing on the letter. Overall, though, these details won't impede
daily tasks like watching videos or reading the news.
OS and apps
Samsung's TouchWiz interface for the Galaxy S4 family lies
on top of Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean. What this means for you is an enhanced
notifications shade with even more toggles you can access by swiping down with
two fingers. These include features like Smart Stay, which keeps the lock
screen from engaging so long as your eyes flit back to the display, driving
mode, and NFC, along with system settings toggles.
Samsung's multitude of apps includes S Memo, Group Play (for
creating an ad hoc media-sharing network among select Samsung phones), S Voice,
and the Watch On app for controlling your TV. There are carrier-branded apps as
well, and carrier partner preloads. For instance, the Lookout security app,
TripAdvisor, and Scout.
Google apps and services are here in full force, including
the new Hangouts app. These go along with essentials such as the calculator,
music player, and clock. GPS, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth 4.0 are other staples.
Camera and video
Samsung now equips its premier line with a 13-megapixel
camera module, reserving the 8-megapixel shooter for the midrange set. That's
still pretty impressive, and this camera (with continuous autofocus) is a solid
performer.
Photos are, for the most part, sharp and capture a fair
amount of detail when viewed on the phone's screen, certainly enough to share
with friends through e-mail and social-networking services. Viewed at their
full resolution, they're grainy and soft, lacking crispness and finer details
like contrast and texture. Low-light shots taken in automatic mode will get you
dark, very grainy images, but the phone does have night mode. Overall, though,
I'm pleased with the quality for this category of phone.
The camera app also feels like a complete, fairly intuitive
experience. It offers up onscreen controls for switching between the camera and
video; modes like panorama and HDR; and filters like sepia and red/yellow.
There aren't quite as many tools and shooting modes as on the Galaxy S4, but
the important ones are there and there's plenty to keep you occupied.
1080p HD video capture was also high-quality, capturing
sounds closer to the mic and struggling with picking up subjects' voices that
were farther from the microphone. Images adequately adjusted to lighting
changes and played back smoothly.
Image quality on the front-facing 2-megapixel camera was
pretty poor, exhibiting a lot of digital noise and duller colors. Moderate your
expectations accordingly when it comes to video chats. All sample photos were taken using automatic mode and can be
clicked to enlarge to their full resolution.
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