At A Glance:
Local Distributor: Samart i-mobile (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd
Contact : 03-2612 6222
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Build quality: 7/10
Applications: 7/10
Interface: 8/10
Overall rating: 7.5/10
+ Focuses multimedia features
+ Decent built
- MicroSD does not allow hotswap
- Lack of connectivity options
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The i-Mobile 613 is part of the Camera range of phones sold by Samart. The key feature of this phone would have to be the built-in 3 Megapixel camera with a protective
slide cover on the rear of the phon
In the box (Prototype)
- i-Mobile Hitz 625
- MicroUSB
- Headphones
- Charger
- Charger pin converter
Thai mobile phone manufacturer i-Mobile just handed us the 625, the phone we have on hand is a preview unit.
Design
The i-Mobile 625 has a candybar design, looking rather reminiscent of
Sony Ericsson’s T-series, especially its keys. The phone feels rather
solid and has a nice grasp to it. At 90g, it is lightweight and easy to
carry around. The front of the phone is covered in non-porous material
that doesn’t attract fingerprints.

The device sports a 2-inch TFT screen, with 256K colour at 340x320
pixels. The screen does well and comes up quite clearly with some
pretty icons. However, under sunlight the screen underperforms and is
almost impossible to look at. The left spine has the volume rocker on
the right spine you can see the universal micro-USB and a photo capture
button. The back of the phone comes with a speaker and the
Casio-Hitachi 3 megapixel camera.
The keypad is similar to SE’s penny-keys that are easy to use albeit a
bit small. The separated D-pad and enter key is a nice touch, as both
keys usually clash together. We’ll cover more about texting in the
features section.

Pop open the rear of the phone and the 830 mAh Li-Ion battery lies
there. Along with the 60MB internal memory, the phone has a microSD
slot that supports up to 1GB of memory. The microSD does not support
hot-swapping, due to the battery directly blocking the SD card.


Features
The engineering unit’s OS is proprietary i-Mobile and goes with a 4x3
grid, we liked how the content were all separated into their own menus
instead of being lumped together under one folder with a bunch of
submenus. Another plus for the OS is the ability to go into a scroll
tab menu, which we really liked and feels a lot more intuitive.
The phone also sports a Body Mass Index counter, countdown, stopwatch
and a fitness counter for exercise. The D-pad has shortcuts to various
programs from calendars to messaging.


The device has a music player
and FM radio, has a few EQ options, repeat, playlist and shuffling
options. The 625 has a private data option, which hides your contacts
and SIM messages.
PIM wise, the 101 has a calendar, to do list, world clock, calculator,
unit converter and a currency converter. The home screen comes with
local time and international time of your choosing, which we loved.
Texting here has a whole bunch of options, from T9 to Pinyin options.
For those adept in Thai, will be able to take advantage of the Thai
characters here. The FM radio will be your gateway to music here, and
presets are available.

The motion control here extends to a shake to view, the music player and a dice game which we will explain further in the game section.
The manufacturer claims a whooping 250 hours worth of standby time and 3 hour talk time.

Camera
The 625 has a Casio-Hitachi 3.0 megapixel camera which shoots average
quality shots, and with flash will have trouble defining some of the
finer text within the frame. Macro shots don’t really render accurate
colour and the objects are smudge together.
Another qualm is the long processing time on the device, which we hope
will be gone when the actual unit comes in. The camera does feel
natural when it comes to shooting, a trigger from quick camera button
and the phone immediately enables you to shoot.
The video camera outputs MP4 or 3GP format videos.
Connectivity
The phone is armed with tri-band connectivity
(GSM 900/1800/1900), the 625 also supports GPRS with Bluetooth 1.2 that
supports A2DP and a micro-USB port.
Games
There are two games in the 625, Dice and Puzzle. Dice isn’t really so
much of a game rather a virtual portable dice for your Dungeons and
Dragons sessions on the go. You can roll the dice(s) by shaking the
phone, and then of course pressing the D-pad. Puzzle’s a pretty
straightforward game, moving a single block at any given time until you
can realign all the blocks together.
Verdict
We suspect the i-Mobile to be a mid-range phone with
a mid-range price, however, it’s a somewhat serious dig at the market
from i-Mobile. We liked that the i-Mobile 625 didn’t try too hard to
cram in a large number of features, instead tried focused mainly on
multimedia features. We don’t have pricing yet, but we do expect
nothing more than RM 1,000 for such a device.