Samsung's answer to iPhone mania: Omnia
Samsung Electronics South Korea released on early Monday preview details on the company's new smartphone, before the mania of Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference begins in California.
The Samsung Omnia (SGH-i900) is similar in looks and function to the Samsung Instinct (SPH-M800), but with a few more bells and whistles.

Artist's sketch of the Samsung Omnia (SGH-i900) to be revealed next week at Communicasia.
(Credit: Samsung Electronics)For starters, it sounds like it has a very promising camera. With five megapixels and anti-shake technology, this may be the first camera on a phone that produces pictures you would actual think of printing, not just posting to Facebook. This is an improvement over the 2-megapixel cameras on both the first-generation iPhone and on the Samsung Instinct.
The touch-screen smartphone, which runs on Windows Mobile 6.1 and features Word, Excel, Powerpoint, and Opera 9.5 as its Web browser, will also have Wi-Fi. That's something the Instinct also lacks.
Like the Instinct, the Omnia has visual voice mail, 3G capability, Bluetooth, an FM radio, and GPS functionality. The smartphone, of course, also doubles as a music player and, with 16GB, will be able to hold up to 4,000 songs or 100 minutes of video, according to Samsung.
How it will compare with the new 3G iPhone Apple is rumored to be revealing on Monday remains to be seen.
More details on the smartphone's specs will follow when the Omnia (SGH-i900) is officially unveiled on June 17 at Communicasia, the 2008 Singapore Expo. The Omnia (SGH-i900) will become available in Southeast Asia first and then be launched to other markets over the second half of 2008, according to Samsung.
Candace Lombardi is a journalist who divides her time between the U.S. and the U.K. Whether it's cars, robots, personal gadgets, or industrial machines, she enjoys examining the moving parts that keep our world rotating. Email her at CandaceLombardi@gmail.com. She is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not a current employee of CNET.






Anyone wants to seriously compete with iPhone or Blackberry will have
to look into Linux or Symbian.
Windows Mobile phones are toast.
For LG and Samsung it is a case of too little, too late.
In North America it is Blackberry or iPhone.
Once iPhone is released in Asia, Samsung an LG smart(less) phones will be
treated as second and third tier not worthy of serious competition.
I am a WM developer. It's just a terrible environment to work in. Nonetheless, kudos to Samsung for making a very good attempt.
If you are one of the WM developer, why don't you do more to fix the problems?
Report it to the management and let them know what is wrong with it and how one can fix it?
LOL...
If AT&T sells Omnia they will decrease price of that also in same range.
If AT&T sells Omnia they will decrease price of that also in same range.
http://www.Samsung-Omnia.org really helped me a lot.
-
by abcyesn
March 18, 2009 6:19 PM PDT
- Having been with SE for a few years this was my first Samsung/Touchscreen/WM phone. Luckily, I like researching before I buy and it was a Touch Diamond or Omnia. No regrets on getting the Omnia as there is so much you can do with it. I don't like the Samsung Keyboard but I've got the SPB keyboard and SPB MS now. Much easier and I don't need to use the stylus anymore! Smiley Smiley Smiley
-
Reply to this comment
-
(16 Comments)share your omnia experiences on http://www.Samsung-Omnia.org take care.