Samsung's a good brand for trying things out. After the mixed reviews to the Galaxy S5 it needed something big, as the Galaxy Alpha and Note 4 both accelerated the design story while keeping up with the high-power internals. But
that doesn't mean the South Korean giant wasn't looking to keep things
fresh in the non-premium market, offering something for those that don't
want to have to sell a car / kidney / house every time they fancy a new
handset. The Galaxy A5 joins the A3 in the new range of more
affordable smartphones, bringing with it a lower spec list while upping
the design message with an all-metal unibody along with a micro SD slot.
The latter part is important, after the Galaxy Alpha (which only had a
4.7-inch screen) decided to go without the memory expansion but keep
the removable battery. It seems Samsung can only ever have one of
these features on board at any one time, with the metal chassis
prohibiting the use of a battery pack that can be swapped out.
Not that this should matter too much,
as the Snapdragon 410 chipset combined with the 720p 5-inch screen
won't be too taxing on the 2300mAh battery – although given this could
be in the same price category as the Sony Xperia Z3 Compact, that's quite a disappointing spec list.The
CPU issue is one that will worry those that know what they're looking
on the spec sheet, as it's nowhere near as powerful as the Snapdragon
800 and 801 chipsets that are being offered for a similar price.
The
2GB of RAM is more than enough to power most games and heavy web pages,
and as such should keep your phone running smoothly for a good few
months. However, you might find that some apps don't perform as well as
on friends' phones as Samsung has curiously skimped on the power here.The
design is half-decent though, with the all metal frame feeling nice in
the hand. The rear still doesn't feel a high-class as the iPhone 6 or HTC One M8,
but then again I'd rather that was saved for the Galaxy S6 – if you can
imagine Samsung fans will finally realise that having a battery pack,
rather than a spare battery, is a much better and simpler idea.It's
not a bad phone to hold though, and like many phones on the market the
advanced screen technology (in this case Samsung's Super AMOLED) helps
offset the lower resolution. It was more like a Full HD display on first
sight, and looked like a superior level of quality compared to the A3.The
camera on the Samsung Galaxy A5 is a pretty high quality affair, and
along with the metal chassis is probably the key selling point on the
mid-range phone from Samsung.At 13MP it's certainly powerful enough for most, but again the Sony Xperia Z3 Compact is offering a 20.7MP effort in the same sort of frame – complete with more camera modes as well.
That
said, the Galaxy A5 does have wide selfie mode, which will appease a
few of those looking to get a phone that's better for the group shots
they want to be in as well.The camera protrudes slightly from the
rear of the phone, sitting alongside the single LED flash and speaker
grille, which doesn't really get in the way when holding the phone but
could have looked nicer if flush with the chassis. Available as:Samsung Galaxy A5 SM-A500F, A500F1, A500FQ, A500FU, A500H, A500HQ, A500K, A500L, A500M, A500S, A500X, A500XZ, A500Y, A500YZ
Network
Technology
GSM / HSPA / LTE
Launch
Announced
2014, October
Status
Available. Released 2014, December
Body
Dimensions
139.3 x 69.7 x 6.7 mm (5.48 x 2.74 x 0.26 in)
Weight
123 g (4.34 oz)
SIM
Nano-SIM
Display
Type
Super AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
Size
5.0 inches (~71.0% screen-to-body ratio)
Resolution
720 x 1280 pixels (~294 ppi pixel density)
Multitouch
Yes
Protection
Corning Gorilla Glass 4
Platform
OS
Android OS, v4.4.4 (KitKat), upgradable to v5.0.2 (Lollipop)
Chipset
Qualcomm MSM8916 Snapdragon 410
CPU
Quad-core 1.2 GHz Cortex-A53
GPU
Adreno 306
Memory
Card slot
, up to 64 GB
Internal
16 GB, 2 GB RAM
Camera
13 MP, 4128 x 3096 pixels, autofocus, LED flash,
Features
Geo-tagging, touch focus, face detection, panorama
Video
1080p@30fps,
Secondary
5 MP
Sound
Alert types
Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
Loudspeaker
Yes
3.5mm jack
Yes
Comms
WLAN
Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, dual-band, hotspot
Bluetooth
v4.0, A2DP, EDR, LE
GPS
Yes, with A-GPS, GLONASS
NFC
Yes (LTE model only)
Radio
FM radio, recording
USB
microUSB v2.0
Features
Sensors
Accelerometer, proximity, compass
Messaging
SMS(threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Mail, IM
Browser
HTML5
Java
No
- ANT+ support - Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic - MP4/WMV/H.264 player - MP3/WAV/WMA/eAAC+/FLAC player - Photo/video editor - Document viewer
The
Samsung Galaxy A5 is a fine phone for the mid range market – albeit a
bit underpowered, coming with a CPU that's only marginally better than
that found in most Android Wear smartwatches. The
design is definitely a step forward and, along with the 13MP camera,
will probably be what tempts customers looking for a new handset when
browsing the shelves of the local phone seller. However, it feels
like this phone should be a little cheaper – perhaps it will appear for
something a little more palatable when the Samsung Galaxy A5 release
date rolls around in a few months – as it's just a metal phone with some
basic internals and Samsung's TouchWiz interface. That's not
necessarily a bad thing, but there's nothing here that really sets the
heart racing. And it doesn't even have the heart rate monitor of the S
range to check it.
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