Samsung has always enjoyed dabbling with the rugged crowd: be it the original Xcover or the Beam
range, it's enjoyed offering up more robust phones. The Samsung Galaxy
Xcover 2 brings with it a whole new gamut of features and functionality
and really shows straight away that it's not a phone to be messed with.
Let's
get the key features that make it such a tough Mother Hubbard on the
table now, shall we? Well firstly it's IP67 certified, which means you
can submerge it for up to 1 metre for 30 minutes before it will start to
go a bit wrong.
In
reality it means you can pop it in with the nightly washing up to get
it all nice and clean after a day's hard extreme rambling, or whatever
it is you fancy doing. You can also chuck it in sand or drop it from a
height of two metres before worrying about smashes - plus it has a neat
screw-in battery cover on the back that means it won't all fall apart
should you do so.
But under all the tough exterior beats the heart
of a decent smartphone - and it's hard to explain how glad we were not
to be looking at another Samsung Galaxy S3 clone, since this is all decked out in a plastic/rubber hybrid that makes it super easy to grip no matter what the conditions.
It's
hefty alright, with a 12mm (0.47 inches) thick chassis and a weight
that tips the scales at nearly 150g (0.33lbs) - but you're glad of all
that when you're holding it, because it gives the impression of
impregnability that we assume you're after.
The dual-core 1GHz
processor, the 4-inch screen with WVGA resolution and the 1GB of RAM all
combine to make an impressive phone - it's basically an upgraded Samsung Galaxy S2 with a really protective shell whacked on the outside.
There's
also a killer feature that we love to see: the camera shutter button on
the side. This can even be fired underwater, so if you're taking a
short snorkelling excursion over some quite picturesque fish, then you
may snap away with the Samsung Galaxy Xcover 2 at 5MP resolution.
The
LED flash also doubles up as a torch - sure, that's nothing new, but on
the new Xcover 2 you can set it so that the torch fires when you hold
the Volume-Up key in sleep mode. It's a useful feature, but hard to use
without accidentally waking the screen at times.
Samsung
was also keen to point out to us that the phone was upgraded with
GLONASS technology to make tracking you more efficient than ever before.
This is pretty important to the outdoorsy types, as being able to
locate yourself, even on an offline map, is something that makes you
feel a lot safer.
The only worry we have is over the battery size:
it's only 1700mAh and while the screen is smaller than others on the
market, it still needs a bit of power behind it. Given the increased
dimensions, we'd have liked to see a thicker phone and a larger battery
instead.
Media-wise
the Samsung Xcover 2 is pretty well stocked, if you're prepared to
invest. While it only has 4GB of onboard storage, you can add in another
32GB through the microSD slot (make sure you shut everything up before
dunking the phone underwater, alright?) and the screen was bright and
vivid enough to imagine it would be great for watching videos.
You
can't do that underwater though, since the headphone jack is under a
cover too - you'll need some submerged Bluetooth headphones if you're
that way inclined. Maybe you don't want to go diving and work on a
building site though - in which case you'll be fine.
Early verdict
The Samsung Galaxy Xcover 2 is one of the better phones we saw at MWC 2013,
simply because it was a different proposition to the rest of the
identikit Samsung Galaxy family. We didn't get to dunk it underwater,
which is still a favourite test of all mobile phone reviewers, but we're
pretty confident it can stand the heat. Also literally.
It looks
to not be a super-expensive handset either, which is a real plus for
those thinking of picking it up, as the spec level belies a mid-range
phone. We're expecting this to land any month now on shop shelves, and
if you're in the market for a tough, attractive next-gen smartphone, the
Samsung Galaxy Xcover 2 could certainly be worth checking out.
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