Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"As someone who doesn't reside in the USA, I was wondering what would be the best way to get internet for my computer in the US for a couple of weeks? If it were Europe I know I'd look for some prepaid data. Is there anything similar offered by American carriers? A MiFi or a data SIM that I can tether from would work, but I'm trying to maintain a tight budget. Help!"
Why is there not flash in the camera. Everything else is spectacular (especially the GPU), but there's no camera flash. Wonder what low-light pics will be like.
@N900 Low-light pictures should be taken with a DSLR camera. Cell phone cameras will always look bad in bad light, flash or no flash.
@revoltracers To which how many would care? People take pics while in a club or a concert all the time with lame cameraphones, but they have flash, and as long as they can see the other person, it's doesn't matter a bit to them if there's image noise. Facebook is a hilarious testament of this. Furthermore, phones are being equipped with Xenon and Lumi, and if the sensors are big enough, pics in low light will look more than adequate.
@N900 Plus a LED flash makes for a great flashlight in a pinch. Can't overstate how handy this feature has been for me...
@nefnet13 I did the same with my 1st Gen iPhone since there was a free app, I think this screen should be even better for it and I assume there'd be a similar app in the market place.
@N900
Agreed, this just kills it for me. There's too many situations where I want to take a picture and the lighting sucks (and @revoltracers are you mad? I'm supposed to carry around a DSLR for all the situations where I'd usually take my phone out for a picture??).
***PLUS*** I can't tell you how many times I make use of LED flashlight functionality. And no, @juanvaldez, not some silly "light up my screen" app - the hardward LED flash is *WAY* brighter than a LCD display screen will ever be. Really, it hurts my eyes to look at.
@N900
Low light pictures are really good if you look at the Samsung Wave (same camera that is on the Samsung Galaxy S).
@N900
People have to realize their are two categories of phones:
Galaxy S is an international phone that Samsung released itself with no wireless carrier input.
Customized versions of this Galaxy S for T-Mobile, At&t, Sprint and Verizon will each have a unique feature that differentiate one from the other, depending on what the customer (carrier) wants. From rumors and insiders, I've heard some of these phones WILL, WILL have LED flashes.
Unless you purchase the international version of the Galaxy S, dont expect to see all of these features inside your customized carrier focused Samsung Android phones.