This week we reviewed two Samsung handsets that span the full range of mobile multimedia. The
Highnote is a new music phone for
Sprint and the
Innov8 is a fancy 8-megapixel camera. In North America, it is available as an unlocked model.
Samsung and Sprint
introduced the Highnote at the
CTIA Fall 2008 all summed up show last month. Also called the SPH-M630, the Highnote is a music phone that replaces the
Samsung Upstage and the
LG Muziq. It offers all the usual highlights of a Sprint music phone with an eye-catching slider design and a new menu interface. Call and music performance were satisfying, but the streaming video was patchy at times.
Full Samsung Highnote review

Take your best shot with the Samsung Innov8
(Credit: Samsung)
It's not often that we get our hands on a high-performance camera phone. While plenty of high-resolution shooters land in the laps of our lucky colleagues at
CNET Asia, we've had to settle for unlocked 5-megapixel models like the
Sony Ericsson K850i and the
Samsung SGH-G800. And don't get us started on U.S. wireless carriers; they can't bring themselves to offer anything more power than 3.2-megapixel models, like the
LG Dare. So count us surprised and excited when Samsung graciously decided to send us a review model of their new 8-megapixel camera phone, the Samsung Innov8. Sleek, powerful, and armed with an everything-but-the-kitchen-sink feature set, the Innov8 makes even the high-quality LG Dare look like two tin cans connected by a string. Photo quality is excellent, as we expected, and the editing features rival those on a standalone camera. You still won't find an optical zoom--you'll have to head to Korea to find a camera phone with one of those--and the flash is disappointing, but the Innov8 offers just about everything else. Yet, as powerful as it is, the Innov8's photo quality is only marginally better than those 5-megapixel handsets.
Full Samsung Innov8 review