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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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LG KF390 By Joseph Hanlon, CNET.com.au August 27, 2008 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/reviews/hardware/mobiles_pdas/soa/LG-KF390/0,2000065782,339291633,00.htm
Take out the Next G reception and you end up with a low quality handset at a mid-range price point. Still, it's great to see another blue tick phone for our friends in the bush to consider. Design As with other recent low-end LG handsets, the KF390 offers a few cheap thrills to distract from the otherwise pedestrian design. These come in the form of touch-sensitive menu selection keys located around the centre navigation button and activated when the slider is pushed open. On our test unit (as it will be for all Next G handsets) the left and right selection keys are dedicated to Telstra services, with the buttons below these activating the music player and the task manager. These touch-sensitive keys are a nice touch but were consistently getting in the way as we found ourselves constantly miss-striking them, particularly when using the navigation button. Above these keys the KF390 features a 2-inch screen with a 220x176-pixel resolution. This is a lower res display than we normally see on mobiles — most recent release phones included QVGA displays (240x320) — and it is obvious when you navigate the menus, with its jagged edged graphics, or when you watch streaming video like mobile Foxtel TV. On top of this we found the viewing angle for this display to be terrible. If you turn the phone on its side to view video in landscape mode the picture fades to a negative image on very slight angles off-centre, making it hard to concentrate on the image. Features Aside from this improved reception, the KF390 is decidedly light-on in the features department, especially for a phone at this price point. The KF390 will take photos and video with its 2-megapixel camera and browse the Web at a theoretical maximum of 7.2Mbps on the Next G network, plus fulfil its basic roles as phone and messaging device, but it is important to consider that the KF390 is not a smartphone, unlike Nokia's E66 which can be picked up for about AU$100 more (but not available on the Next G network). The KF390 also features a front-facing VGA resolution camera for video calling and expandable memory up to 8GB via its microSD memory card reader conveniently located on the left-hand side of the phone, which is handy if you plan to have the KF390 pull double duty as your MP3 music player. Performance Data speeds to the handset have been excellent, and combined with the basic but well-performing pre-installed Web browser, we enjoyed a pleasant online experience. Testing Telstra's Next G services has also been good, although the problems with the low quality display mentioned above have ruined our experience of watching streaming media on the KF390. While it probably won't be the selling point for those interested in the KF390, the 2-megapixel camera is a decent performer for a camera without a flash or auto-focus. We took to the Sydney streets on a sunny afternoon and took some colourful photos of the colourful characters about town and were impressed with the results, even if the brighter elements of the images tended to blow out and if it was very difficult to take photos with sharp focus. Overall
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