Wednesday, December 31, 2008

LG KC910 Renoir review: Portrait of a high-flyer


Gsmarena have posted their review of the LG KC910 Renoir. Here are the key features, main disadvantages and final impression.

Key features:
Quad-band GSM, HSDPA 2100 MHz
3" 256K-color touchscreen TFT display (240 x 400 pixels)
8 megapixel autofocus camera, xenon flash (geo-tagging, face tracking, blink detection, touch focus, manual focus)
Video recording in AVI format, VGA@30fps, QVGA@120fps, time-lapse QVGA videos
Bluetooth 2.0 with A2DP
Wi-Fi
GPS receiver with A-GPS support
TV-out
100MB internal memory
Hot-swappable microSD card slot (ships with 8GB card)
Accelerometer for auto screen rotate
DivX/XviD video playback
Dolby Mobile music enhancement
FM radio with RDS
Office document viewer
Multi-tasking with a real task manager
Handwriting recognition
Excellent touch optimized image gallery
Direct video uploads to YouTube

Main disadvantages:
Xenon flash is inadequately powered and causes the camera to underexpose
Fullscreen camera viewfinder doesn't show the entire frame
No Smart dialing
QWERTY keyboard not available in Java apps
No video streaming over Wi-Fi (such as the mobile YouTube)
No voice-guided GPS navigation
Stylus as dongle only, no stylus compartment

The LG KC910 Renoir is without a doubt an impressive package. It's got a nice user interface with rich feature set such as the capable task manager and well developed multi-tasking, excellent touch optimized gallery, DivX/XviD video support plus direct YouTube uploads, as well as auto screen rotation and a landscape QWERTY keyboard.

Surely, the Renoir rich features such as Wi-Fi and GPS are a bit limited by the feature phone interface, but if you are after a more expandable platform such as Symbian S60, the Samsung INNOV8 is your only cameraphone option right now and although similarly priced, it would mean you'd have to ditch the touchscreen functionality.

We are pleased with the LG Renoir camera features and performance too with the small exception of the image oversharpening it applies and the feeble xenon flash that's not only underpowered but also throws the camera automatic exposure and white balance over board.

The LG handset has its other quirks too - lack of video streaming over Wi-Fi (you can enjoy YouTube only over the cellular network), silly 300KB limitation of incoming emails, no QWERTY keyboard in the Java apps and no free games.

Choosing between the LG Renoir and its direct competitor - Samsung Pixon - is a tough call since both are similarly priced. While the Pixon lacks Wi-Fi, it adds to the equation 0.2 inches of screen estate, more advanced widgets system, a snappier interface, WVGA video recording and a true quad-band support.

So in the end, it's the consumer that makes the final decision - choosing between such close competitors is always a matter of personal evaluation and there's no one-size-fits-all answer.

Happy holidays to you all!

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