Introduction
The Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime has an ambitious name, but behind it is
an ordinary midrange phone. It puts functionality ahead of screen
fidelity, throwing all the pixels they could afford at the front facing
camera instead. As with other Galaxy Grands, dual-SIM is an option, this
one though is the first 64-bit phone in the line.
The Galaxy Grand Prime is headed for developing markets where
affordable phones with large screens with underwhelming pixel density
are in high demand. In this case we're talking a 5" TFT of qHD
resolution (540 x 960px) boiling down to 220ppi. 720p has become common
in the midrange these days, but don't let tech geeks and sales people
overstate how important it is - most laptops and desktop monitors have
half that.
The phone does subscribe to a couple of buzzwords, though neither of
them contains "ppi". The front-facing camera has an 85° wide-angle lens
and shoots 5MP stills and 1080p videos, while the Snapdragon 410 chipset
contains four of ARM's 64-bit enabled Cortex-A53 cores.
Although in most regions the Grand Prime is a dual-SIM package, a
single-SIM version is available too. Several regions can get an
LTE-enabled version of the device as well.
Key features (+)
- Optional Dual SIM version available
- 5" 540 x 960 TFT display with 220ppi
- Android OS v4.4.4 KitKat with TouchWiz UI
- Quad-core 1.2 GHz Cortex-A53 processor, Adreno 306 GPU, 1GB of RAM, Snapdragon 410 chipset
- 8GB built-in storage, microSD card slot
- 8MP camera with LED flash, 1080p video recording
- 5MP front-facing camera, 85° lens, 1080p video recording
- 2,600mAh battery
Main disadvantages (-)
- Screen ppi is entry-level
- On the large side for a 5" device
- No screen protection glass
- No automatic brightness
The screen is the major worry here - qHD is stretched pretty thin on a
5" diagonal. 220ppi is nothing to write home about, but Samsung has
plans on how the Galaxy Grand Prime can compete with the likes of a Moto
G (2014).
First up is a solid camera department, starting with the 5MP/1080p
selfie camera. If you open your gallery and most photos have your face
in them, this one is for you. The 8MP/1080p back camera is also on the
better side of the midrange market.
Next is the new chipset, Snapdragon 410. ARM claims that Cortex-A53
offers a "significantly higher performance" over the A7 used in
Snapdragon 400. Meanwhile the Adreno 306 GPU offers power savings
compared to the 305 in the older chipset. We'll cover both performance
and power usage in detail in a few chapters, but the Grand Prime won't
see a return on the 64-bit chipset unless it's updated to Lollipop
(which has dedicated 64-bit optimizations).
The main competition for the Galaxy Grand Prime does not come from
established players, it's the aggressive pricing of newcomers that is
giving Samsung the headaches. Is the Grand Prime the much needed
painkiller or an also-ran? Hopefully, you'll find your answer in the
next dozen pages or so.
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