Samsung Galaxy J7 Prime Review


Product Description

Samsung Galaxy J7 Prime has a metal body and a 5.5-inch 2.5D glass display that comes with 1920x1080 pixels resolution and Gorilla Glass 4. It is powered by a 1.6 GHz octa-core processor, which is paired with 3GB RAM and 32GB internal storage. An expandable storage slot is there for a micro SD card of up-to 256 GB capacity. The smartphone runs on Android 6.0 Marshmallow operating system and also offers a fingerprint scanner, which is integrated into the home button. The Galaxy J7 Prime has a 3300 mAh battery and comes with S Bike mode. To activate S Bike mode, all you have to do is attach an NFC tag, which comes bundled with the phone, with your bike (like on the petrol tank). Just before getting on your bike, the user just needs to tap the phone with the NFC tag that will turn on the S Bike mode. Once activated, callers will hear a message that the person is riding and they can leave messages. Moreover, It has also comes equipped with S Power planning and S Secure features. The S Power planning mode extends battery life and the S Secure feature allow users to hide and lock applications, secure WiFi and create a separate Secure folder for images and applications

Product Specification
  • Dual-SIM, Dual Standby capability, microSIM
  • 5.5-inch Super AMOLED touchscreen of 720p resolution and 268ppi
  • Exynos 7870 ; octa-core 1.6 GHz Cortex-A53; Mali-T830 GPU
  • 2GB of RAM, 16GB of inbuilt storage, microSD slot (up to 128GB)
  • 13MP main camera with f/1.9 lens, LED flash, 1080p@30fps video recording
  • 5MP front camera with LED flash, f/2.0 lens, 1080p@30fps video recording
  • Android 6.0.1 Marshmallow with TouchWiz
  • LTE Cat.4, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n; Bluetooth v4.0; NFC, GPS, GLONASS, microUSB 2.0 port
  • 3,300 mAh removable battery
  • Plastic back, metal frame

Product Review

Samsung's J-lineup may be following the Galaxy S and A-series from a respectful distance - but is in perfect lockstep in terms of upgrades. The latest iteration of TouchWiz manages to remain feature-rich, while also reasonably light on resources. It comes in two variants - one powered by an Exynos 7870 chipset and the other having a Snapdragon 617 do the math. They both sport eight Cortex-A53 cores running at 1.6GHz, but while the Exynos has them all running at 1.6GHz, the Snapdragon has one cluster of 4 running at that frequency and another one ticking at 1GHz. The GPU is either an Adreno 405 for the Snapdragon variant or a Mali-T830 MP2 for the Exynos one. RAM for both is 2GB. So, Samsung have a new meal on the menu but it's the good old recipe. In fairness, the Galaxy J7 (2016) isn't one of the chef's best, so anyone can understand why it doesn't feature on the specials and why it isn't especially creative with the ingredients. Semma Deal !!!

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