LG KG920

There is a burst mode, which will shoot up to six images in quick succession, but you have to come down to 640x480-pixel resolution for this to function. As you raise the resolution, the number of images you can shoot in sequence falls, and at 5 megapixels the sequence mode does not function at all.

The bottom line is that a well specified digital camera will offer you more options, a larger screen with which to frame shots and a better lens. And of course many digital cameras shoot more than 5 megapixels these days.

You get a 256MB miniSD card with the KG920 and neither the camera nor MP3 player will work without it, but 256MB is not enough -- our test photos needed up to 2MB per shot at the maximum quality available. If you also want to carry some music for use with the phone's MP3 player, then you should budget for an additional, higher capacity card.

The music player is easy to access via the dedicated music button on the left side of the screen. It supports MP3, AAC and AAC+ file formats and you can use MP3s for ringtones. We managed to drag and drop music files on to the microSD card and play them on the KG920 without any difficulty. You can control the player via the inline remote on the proprietary headset, which also has a 3.5mm jack so you can swap out the headphones and use your own. The player also gives you the option to play files in shuffle and repeat mode.

Among the other features is a Web browser, however this doesn't fit pages well into the screen -- we had to do a lot of horizontal scrolling to read test pages.

Other software includes a calendar, email software, support for Java games, five different alarms and a wide range of unit converters that stretches to US, European and Korean shoes and European, Korean, Japanese, US and UK clothing. Generally speaking, though, this extra software isn't up to much and it is the camera that steals the show.

Performance
As a mobile phone the KG920 performed well, delivering clear calls and not dropping connections. Battery life was not particularly good, though, and we found that to get the phone to last a weekend we had to restrict image shooting. A daily charge is recommended if you want to use the camera to any reasonable extent.

The photos themselves were of pretty good quality. We got some prints made, including some A4 blow-ups, and they look good enough to frame or give to friends or relations, but we found both waiting for the autofocus and saving images was slow.

Overall, though, we don't think the KG 920 is good enough to replace a digital camera completely. It turns out fairly nice quality prints, but if you are a serious or even semi-serious photographer, a well-featured digital camera is still going to offer you greater capability.

 

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