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Smartphone with digital camera / digital player / FM radio / GPS receiver - WCDMA (UMTS) / GSM - modern black More product details

1641 reviews
November, 2009
The Samsung Omnia features a spacious touch screen with customizable Home screen, haptic feedback, and accelerometer. The Windows Mobile smartphone also offers Wi-Fi, GPS, Bluetooth, and EV-DO Rev. A support, as well as a 5-megapixel camera and robust ...
You're still limited to the preloaded widgets. The onscreen keyboard is a bit cramped, and the Omnia can be sluggish
Though slightly more expensive, Verizon customers looking for a touch-screen smartphone will get a better user experience and faster performance from the Samsung Omnia than the RIM BlackBerry Storm.
Samsung Omnia Editors' note: Portions of the Design and Features section were taken from our original review of the unlocked Samsung Omnia, since both models share a number of similarities. Back in late September 2008, we reviewed the unlocked...
The Samsung Omnia features a nice touch screen and customizable interface that makes the Windows Mobile smartphone easier to use. It also has a 5-megapixel camera and a boatload of other multimedia features.
You can't add additional widgets to the TouchWiz interface, and there are some nagging design quirks. The unlocked version does not offer U.S. 3G support, and it's expensive.
While there are some design quirks, and we're still waiting for a U.S. release, the Samsung Omnia promises to be a solid alternative to the Apple iPhone.
The Samsung Omnia features a nice touch screen and customizable interface that makes the Windows Mobile smartphone easier to use. It also has a 5-megapixel camera and a boatload of other multimedia features
You can't add additional widgets to the TouchWiz interface, and there are some nagging design quirks. The unlocked version does not offer U.S. 3G support, and it's expensive
Like the HTC Touch Diamond (right), the Samsung Omnia features a unique touch-screen user interface.
Photo gallery: Samsung Omnia Along with the RIM BlackBerry Bold and Sony Ericsson Xperia X1, the Samsung Omnia is one of the most requested and sought after smartphones of 2008. It's not so much the Omnia's touch screen that's drawing attention...
Samsung have been playing on the minds of their fans for a while now. With the ‘Show OMNIA' making it out with all the tall promises of a ‘Triple Mode' that could support 3G W-CDMA, Wi-fi and WiBro, there will surely not be a shortfall of takers for ...
Samsung recently launched its new app store, and the company now initiates a developer contest for the Samsung Omnia 2 with up to a total of $330,000 in prize money.
The top two winners will receive $100,000 each in prize money. Following the launch of the Samsung Application Store in selected countries in September, the contest aims to drive interest among developers and attract new applications to strengthen the ...
OMNIA means "everything" in Latin, and given its feature list, it's fair to assume that this means that it can do everything that one could expect from a modern smartphone. The question is: how good is it at what it does. In this review, we will try ...
Though it has been on the market in Europe and Asia for months, the Samsung Omnia debuted in the United States on Verizon's 3G network only a couple of days before Thanksgiving 2008. Available for $249 (with a two-year contract), the sophisticated ...
Gorgeous QVGA screen Excellent battery life
Interface can be slow No standard 3.5mm headphone jack
Despite a few kinks relating to the interface and a few omissions in the design, the Samsung Omnia is a high-quality handset that delivers a generous array of features
The Omnia comes loaded with Windows Media Player and Samsung's own TouchPlayer, a touch-based player that supports album art and background music mode. The Omnia's other applications include a podcast organizer; VZ Navigator, a GPS app; TVOut...
Check out our Samsung Omnia review to find out if this Windows Mobile touchscreen phone will be competition for Verizon Wireless' other all-touch smartphones.
Good Opera Web browser with cool 'upshifted' navigation. Fine camera with auto focus and loads of pixels.
TouchWIZ experience disappoints when running atop Windows Mobile. Confusing redundancies in the interface.
The Samsung Omnia: Hardware Design - Mediocre The Samsung Omnia is deceptively simple to look at. Interface Design - Mediocre Unfortunately, Samsung's user interface was confusing and inconsistent on the Samsung Omnia. Calling - Good Calls on our...
A fine-looking phone with a truly staggering feature set.
A fine-looking phone with a truly staggering feature set.
Our touch-screen calibration caused problems and affected the overall user experience.
Simply one of the most powerful smartphones on the market
Samsung has released a version of its Windows Mobile powered Omnia smartphone for Verizon Wireless, the SCH-i910. We give you a video look at the updates and changes from the original in this mini-review.
Today Samsung launched the SCH-i910 Omnia for Verizon Wireless. In general we like the updates and added features, making the i910 Omnia for Verizon even better than the original - a device we liked very much. Verizon is offering the Omnia for...
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