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Review: Samsung Lily mobile phone

Fashion police called out to deal with Miss Sixty phone

Price: £80 (pay as you go)
Manufacturer: Samsung



Ratings
Overall rating: Overall rating
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Verdict

Good points

  • Small and light
  • Good clear VGA camera
  • 2MB internal memory

Bad points

  • Clunky interface that is hard to navigate
  • Stiff keypad
  • Aesthetically displeasing

Overall For those who like a phone that does the basics and not much more the Samsung Lily is a good choice. However, aesthetics and features do not come anywhere near to the fashion phones of LG or Nokia.


Andrea-Marie Vassou, Computeract!ve 20 Mar 2007

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As the mobile phone has evolved and landed in the hands of young girls and boys across the world, demand has increased for phones bearing fashion features.

The Samsung Lily, a clamshell phone, has been co-developed by fashion designer Miss Sixty and is aimed at fashion-conscious girls, coming with a free bottle of perfume. It is available on Orange pay-as-you-go.

At first glance the phone appears to fit the bill: it’s small and skinny enough to fit into the smallest handbag or jeans pocket and has a nice analogue clock design that pops up on the screen at the front of the phone. However, this is where the pleasing aesthetics end.

The shiny white casing and the purple metallic that surrounds the keypad make the phone look cheaper than designer quality. This could be forgiven if the phone’s features were a little better, but they’re not. The menu interface is graphically simple and is also predominately black, making navigation extremely hard. It is also rather clunky and slow.

Typing out a text message is a hassle ­ the keypad is stiff and the predictive text slow. But access to the web is much better. This is probably the only phone where dialling a number isn’t a pleasant experience: the numbers come out in rainbow colours making it hard to read.

The camera, equipped with a double zoom feature, also takes clear pictures that can be stored on the phone’s 2MB internal memory.

In its defence, there is a nice flower motif on the front of the phone that lights up when the phone rings, although that's just as well, as the ringtones that come with the Samsung Lily are so bad that most users will probably want to keep it on silent anyway.

See also:

Image of the Prada by LG mobile phoneA touch-sensitive mobile phone that’s available now and, no, it’s not the Apple iPhone.  12 Mar 2007
Image of Samsung X830The size of a pack of gum and with a switchblade action, the new music phone from Samsung is nothing if not eye-catching  04 Jan 2007
image: Nokia N73 phoneNokia's latest smartphone focuses on multimedia fun, with a music player and a 3.2megapixel camera  07 Nov 2006

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