Samsung just pulled a bit of a “Samsung” and completely blew out its Omnia lineup. We just got some face time with the new Omnia II, Omnia Pro, Omnia Lite and the Omnia-inspired Jet, along with the Pixon 12 — which runs the same in-house Samsung OS as the Jet, but packs a 12 megapixel camera. It’s hard not to notice the stunning AMOLED screens on these phones, especially up against the dull-by-comparison Omnia Lite with its petty LCD. Unfortunately, while the build quality is good and the specs are certainly all there, all the phones were fairly slow in regular operation. The Jet and Pixon were passable (and the Jet certainly ought to be, with an 800MHz “application processor”), but we can’t imagine anybody finding any pleasure in the molasses Windows Mobile 6.1 experiences on the Omnia trio. The Jet has a fun little 3D UI “cube” gimmick, which involves the pointless spinning of a cube to access different media apps, but most of what we saw was pretty standard TouchWiz. We did like the speed of Pixon’s camera, which does a Pre-style trick of sending photo processing duties to the background so you can snap another photo with little delay in between — it’s also pretty good at auto focus and color accuracy for a phone, but we won’t be trading in our regular point and shoot in the near term. None of the phones we looked at had network access, so we weren’t able to test out the WebKit browsers, but it sounds like a major win for the Jet and Pixon. Let’s just work on that Omnia responsiveness a bit, yeah Samsung? Perhaps Windows Mobile 6.5 (the Omnia II and Omnia Pro are 6.5-ready) will help.
Although not exactly the best kept secret (we first caught wind last week), Samsung’s Verizon-bound Omnia II / I8000 is now one hundred percent official, along with even more official US confirmations for the Omnia Pro B760 (Louvre) slider, Omnia Pro B7320 candybar, and the Omnia Lite B7300. Specs for the Omnia II are just a little different than what we previously heard: 3.7-inch AMOLED resistive touchscreen with WVGA (480 x 800) resolution, EVDO Rev A, 5 megapixel camera, 720 x 480 at 30fps video recording, 2GB to 16GB internal storage with microSD expansion slot, Bluetooth 2.0, WiFi, AGPS, and TouchWiz 2.0 UI. As for the Lite, we’re looking at HSDPA, WiFi, 3 megapixel camera, AGPS, and just as the name suggests, a good likelihood it’ll be overshadowed by its more feature-rich brother.
Samsung’s busy launching a bunch of handsets across even more timezones right now, and in addition to all the Omnia updates, there’s also the Jet, which is an interesting hybrid: it’s got an 800MHz processor, five megapixel camera, 3.1-inch AMOLED screen, WebKit-based Dolfin browser and a host of media features including DivX support, but it’s running TouchWiz 2.0, so it’s not a proper smartphone. Yeah, it’s weird, but we’re sort of into it — we’ll see what’s it’s like in person.


