Thu Jun 12, 2008 4:22PM EDT
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The Voyager, the Vu, the Glyde—all have tried to knock the iPhone off its touchscreen throne, and they've all fallen well short. But while the new Samsung Instinct still isn't an iPhone killer, it comes closer than I expected—and in a few areas, it beats the iPhone at its own game.
Looks-wise, the Instinct gets off to a strong start. Measuring 4.6 by 2.2 by 0.5 inches and weighing in at about 4.5 ounces, the Instinct is a little taller, narrower, and lighter than the original iPhone—indeed, it felt quite a bit lighter in my pocket than the iPhone ever did.
The Instinct's touchscreen looks reasonably sharp, although its graphics are slightly duller than what you'll find on the iPhone. Also, the Instinct's 3.25-inch display is a little narrower than the iPhone's 3.5-inch display, which makes browsing the Web a little more cramped than it should be.
Just beneath the Instinct's screen are touch-sensitive Back, Home, and Call buttons, while a volume rocker and microSD slot (good for 8GB of additional memory) sits on the left spine, with camera and voice-command buttons along the right side. Atop the phone is a standard 3.5mm headphone jack and a power/sleep button.
As I've written before, the Instinct's display is protected by a plastic coating, versus glass for the iPhone; the plastic makes for a lighter phone, but it could also lead to scratch marks down the line. I don't see any marks on my review unit yet, but then again, it's only been a week.
The Instinct's main touch interface has four tabs: Favorites, Main, Fun, and Web. Tapping the Main tab brings you to the phone's core applications (e-mail, navigation, settings, etc.), while Fun calls up multimedia (music, videos, camera), and Web includes ... well, the Web browser, plus widgets for news, weather, sports, and the like.
As you touch the various tabs, little icon-based boxes slide back and forth, gathering smoothly into a grid—it's one of the little touches that makes browsing the Instinct's menus an iPhone-esque experience.
Indeed, the Instinct's touch UI felt much more responsive than other non-iPhone touchscreen handsets I've tried (some of which have been so sluggish that they're practically unusable). My taps registered almost immediately in most cases, and I liked how you can flick lists up and down, which gives you a roulette wheel-type effect, again akin to the iPhone's UI.
That said, the Instinct's touch interface has its limits. As responsive as it is, the Instinct's UI still feels sluggish compared to the iPhone's, while the physics of the Instinct's roulette-wheel effects—while not bad—aren't completely there yet. Navigation is relatively intuitive, but not effortless; my non-techie pals, who had no trouble with the iPhone, wandered into occasional thickets with the Instinct.Â
OK, let's talk messaging. The Instinct does both SMS and picture messaging, and setting up most Web e-mail accounts (including AOL & AIM Mail, Hotmail, Yahoo! Mail, and Gmail) is a snap. The phone has limited Exchange support—you'll need either Outlook Web Access or a desktop redirector—and you can also set up POP or IMAP accounts manually.
Composing messages on the Instinct's virtual keypad was, well, a so-so experience. Unlike the iPhone, the Instinct lets you enter text in either portrait or landscape mode—nice, except in the portrait mode, letters in the keypad are arranged in alphabetical order rather than in QWERTY style. You also have the option of tracing letters with your fingertip, although (as I've mentioned before) my handwriting is so bad that I quickly went back to tapping.
The Instinct boasts tactile feedback as you type, a feature missing in the iPhone; that said, the Instinct's error-correction method (a critical feature when typing on virtual keypads) forces you to stop and go back to fix mistakes, while the iPhone's suggestion bubble (which you tap only if you don’t want to replace your typing) lets you keep tapping away.
Moving on ... the Instinct comes with GPS and turn-by-turn directions powered by TeleNav, which makes for a pretty slick experience. Meanwhile, the 2MP camera takes decent, if not awe-inspiring images (about on a par with the iPhone), but the Instinct also records video clips—still a (sore) missing iPhone feature. Once you're done shooting, you can send photos and clips via e-mail or MMS, or you can upload them to MySpace.
The Instinct really shines with it comes to music and video. The phone takes full advantage of its access to Sprint's 3G EV-DO network, delivering streaming video from Sprint TV, downloadable songs via Sprint Music (which has been redesigned for the Instinct), and a couple dozen streaming radio stations (some of which require subscriptions).
Not bad, especially compared to the iPhone, which lacks access to AT&T's own video service and—for now, at least—won't let you buy and download songs from iTunes over AT&T's HSDPA network.
Music on the Instinct sounded relatively sharp to my ears, while streaming video looked blocky and a bit jerky—par for the course over a standard 3G cellular connection (as opposed to the sharp images from MediaFlo mobile TV).
Web browsing on the Instinct isn't quite so impressive, however. The browser works well enough with mobile-optimized pages, but (as I've written before) slows to a crawl with full-HTML pages. You can scroll by tapping and dragging Web pages, but there's no "pinching" on the Instinct's non-multitouch display, so you must tap a virtual button to zoom in or out. In other words, while the Instinct's Web browser is certainly above par, it can't hold a candle to the iPhone's.
The Instinct lacks Wi-Fi but boasts stereo Bluetooth support (still missing on the iPhone), and it also comes with an impressive arsenal of accessories in the box, including a wired stereo headset, a USB cable, a carrying case—and an extra battery, plus an external battery charger. Nice.
Samsung promises nearly six hours of talk time from the Instinct—probably a little high, although I've had my review unit still had a good charge after I left it on for a few days. In any case, you'll have the spare battery to tide you over.
Price-wise, the Instinct is on par with the iPhone: $199 with a two-year contract. And then there's service—Sprint requires that Instinct users sign up for a $70/month (ouch) plan that includes unlimited data and 450 minutes.
So, Instinct or iPhone? Not having seen the iPhone 3G in the flesh yet, I'm loath to make a call one way or the other.
But I have to say, the Instinct is the first U.S. touchscreen phone to make a serious run at the iPhone—and if you're a streaming video and music junkie (or stuck in a contract with Sprint, for that matter), it might be your best bet for now.
That said, Apple's upcoming App Store promises to add a universe of features to the iPhone, while the Instinct's closed platform leaves its users with whatever applications Sprint may (or may not) decide to sell. And if you're a Web browsing addict like me, there really is no substitute for the iPhone's top-notch mobile browser.
I'd love to cover more of the Instinct's features, but as you can see, I've already written a novel here. Have questions about specific Instinct features? Leave a comment and I'll get back to you.
Update: After this post was first published, Sprint announced that it was dropping the Instinct's price tag to $129.Â
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Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
crystalrvt- Avoid Sprint if you can!!! They are the worst! I was nearly in a lawsuit with them- fraud, lying, inept customer service reps! Avoid them like the plague. As for the Instinct... it's ok, not an iPhone killer, the graphics are pretty dull compared to the iPhone and it feels cheap and clunky, like they rushed to get the thing out asap without spending time on design. The interface isn't user friendly either.
The Instinct is an awesome phone. Both of my boys have iPhones and it didn't do anything for me. I got the Instinct on the launch day and it was ready to use right out the box. No installations necessary. The touch is better than the iPhone. The Instinct is user friendly with women who have any type of nails length. The music interface works like the iPhone.
Hello, If I sync my contacts (outlook) to my Instinct will it place the contacts in a separate file than my contacts for my everday telelphone numbers?
Thanks for the review. Where do you get this $79.99/mo charge from? We've called Sprint and visited a Sprint store and they say the lowest pricing plan available is $129.99/mo with 1500 minutes. We'd love the $79.99 plan but no one has told us of it. We do have two phones sharing minutes; is that the catch? Also, does either the iPhone or the Instinct allow you to open attachments in e-mail 9Word, pics, Excel, etc.)?
I am a Sprint Customer and have no idea where you got the idea the Instinct was 199.00. It costs $449.00 and the plan to go with it is 99.00/month !!
The Sprint Family Plan that goes with the instinct is 129.00/month, but if one of your other phones is a Rumor than you can't use this plan. We activated two Instincts yesterday and one is now not working, somehow Sprint's servers deactivated it.
Cannot open PDF files. Not a business oriented phone. Strictly entertainment use only with limited BUSINESS use.Unlike the iphone which has a good enough balance for work and entertainment use.
don't make the mistake. iphone is by far superior. trust that waiting the 2 weeks is well worth it. apple rocks!
I really wish the pros werent always followed with cons then followed by praises of the iphone. Look, I realize its fun and "neat" to use an iphone. Hooray apple. But until the reviewer can open his eyes to a device that has practical uses other than that of a coffee shop junkie posting how much he paid for his iphone, how about writing a review for the phone at hand and not a botchy comparison that didnt hit key points for consumers.
The Phone costs 129.99 with new contract, and the side button is a speech to commmand button and you can say for example coffee, and coffee shops around you with pop up and then it will give you directions to whichever one you choose, Apple and ATT cant even get close to that technology with the iPhone
If you get a Instinct from Sprint make sure you ask them abou the towers in your area. I have to take mine back because Sprint's technical support informed me that the towers in my area provide less than dial up speed on Sprint's network. Take about 10-15 minutes just to load a web page. The phone is nice but the service is trash. Thisa is what I should have expected from Sprint.
The Instinct after $220 instant savings and $100 rebate is $129. (anyone working for Sprint sales or their press releases/website can verify). As for plans the simply everything plans are $79.99 for limited minutes or 99.99 for unlimited everything. These are less costly when you incorporate data access than the ATT/Apple offering. So far customer support has been on par or better than my previous carriers. (and no I am not a Sprint or Samsung shill or employee)
Does the instinct come with a carrying case? If not, is there one available to purchase from Sprint?
SMITHJ_33. YOU ARE RIGHT!! Because apparently, Apple can do no wrong, see..... Everything they do is just great.... GO PC!!!!! GO SPRINT!!!
I LOVE my instinct!!!! It rocks! The data on it IS SUPER FAST!!!!! Go buy one!
i have the instinct, i bought it the day it came out, and as an apple computer user, i love the instinct. i can't speak against the iphone cause i never used it. but as far as the instinct go...i love it...especially , you can't really beat a 229.00 and 100.00 rebate, making the phone REALLY 129.00....the features are awesome...i love having 2 batteries also, there is no such thing as saying "my phone went dead" anymore....and yes, it does come with a carrying case...and you can also buy one with the clip....for ONCE sprint did something RIGHT~
do you have to get an internet plan with the instinct. or is it like the Touch from apple where you can get internet for free. also, im on a family plan with my entire family but i want the instinct. how much will i have to pay. Also, is there a way i can upload music to it?
Not true, I have the Instinct and I paid only $129, also I have the new $99.99 unlimited plan. I was with AT&T for 6yrs, really bad service when I had a problem. If the iphone was available with other net works I would buy it but AT&T is the devil!!! so I got the next best thing and I am very happy!!!!!
cant believe nobody has posted the fact that this phone is the first on the cdma evdo rev a network (4g). thats why its data is so fast.
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46 Posted by comonoyeaha on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:28PM EDT Report Abuse
My question is whether you can add MP3's or "n3p's" as Michael Scott would say, to the phone, or can you only play songs from the Sprint store?