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February 22, 2005

Sanyo MM-7400 Review

With so many camera phones out these days it's hard to choose which one to buy. Well if price is the issue you might want to go back to cord phones. It seems like cell phone prices have been driven through the roof with whoever your service is with. Sprint is no exception yet receintly they have been coming out with some decent phones. This new one from Sanyo is worth looking at. It features a front panel color screen. The camera it uses can be better but for a middle of the road price it'll do fine. For it's size the durability seems to be better than most. It has many of the same features as other Sanyo phones with slight tweaks.

More information, pictures, and specs inside article.

Size Weight Display Memory Ringtones Data Camera
3.64" x 1.97" x 1.13"
4.06 oz
176 x 220 pixels, 16 bit color
2.8MB
AAC / MIDI
1xRTT
VGA with LED flash and video recording

Design

The Sanyo MM -7400 is a clamshell handset with interchangeable faceplates. Two plates come with the phone, we stuck with a stylish red for most of the time (no one else seems to have a red phone, it stuck out nicely). It's a bit thick at 1.13", but still fits nicely in most pockets.

The outsized is ruggedized with rubber (more on this later in the review).

Camera

A VGA camera is onboard the 7400. It has a LED flash and can also record short videos. The flash was like most LED flashes--it worked well only in very short range.

Photos were lower quality than some VGA camera phones we've tested. See the examples at the end of the review to get a feel for the quality. Videos had a nice frame rate, there's also an example of this at the end of the review.

Photos and videos are easily uploaded to Sprint's photo sharing service, the speed was pretty quick.

Calling features

Voice quality was great, but that can vary on your location. We didn't experience any dropped calls, but Sprint service is pretty strong in the area tested.

Voice dialing is a great selling point for the phone, it doesn't need trained. It works well and not having to go through the training process saves on the annoyance factor.

The MM -7400's speakerphone worked well, and gave us no problems. The volume was powerful, and sound clear.

The MM -7400 has Sprint PCS ReadyLink built-in, which is simply Sprint's version of push-to-talk. It works well (there's a dedicated PTT button on the side), but like most push-to-talk services, it drains the battery really fast. For PTT fans, ReadyLink will be a welcome addition. For the rest of us, it's simply a possibility for the future. Because of the battery drain, ReadyLink was left turned off most of the time. To Sanyo's credit, it's easy to turn on and off ReadyLink.

Screen

About average for a 65,000 color LCD. Not amazing like 260,000 color models, but very good. At 176 x 220, it's plenty big. The external screen also sports 65,000 colors (not too common) and works well for framing self-portraits.

It's hard to tell how much battery drain is added by putting on a full color external display, but since it's usually in clock mode it is probably not too large. More than using an OLED, but not nearly as much as ReadyLink.

Other

The MM -7400 works with Sprint PCS Vision's video streaming service. Because Sprint doesn't yet have an EV -DO network, the video doesn't look as good as Verizon VCAST, but it's decent. If you're a news junkie, this is a big plus.

The outside of the phone features a strip of rubber that makes the phone feel very solid (if dropped the rubber should absorb the shock and your phone won't get scratched). It also makes the phone very easy to grip. The only downside is that it's harder to get into and out of pant pockets. Rubber does not play well with cotton and the two create some friction.

[Specs thanks to mobiletracker]

Posted by geekblue at February 22, 2005 12:17 PM

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