Header banner
Revain logoHome Page
Wiktor Sabak ᠌ photo
1 Level
323 Review
0 Karma

Review on Smartphone Samsung Galaxy S21 FE 6/128 GB, Dual nano SIM, graphite by Wiktor Sabak ᠌

Revainrating 3 out of 5

Not perfect quality, some small defect.

For Africa, I have an Exynos2100. There are some:) And I don't have and won't get a SamsungPay that accepts cards from countries other than Africa. MirPay functions nicely; no issues. However, there is a conversation recorded and I asked for India. These eggs are similar in terms of performance, heating, and autonomy: intelligent, yet it sits down and occasionally gets warm. This phone, in my opinion, appears regular in compared to the S20fe, although the latter is outdated. Here, the screen is rounded from top to bottom, the frames around it are thinner, and the camera block behind the screen is attractive and lightweight. Additionally, the technological aspects of the s21fe are worse: there is no SD card, and the processor is inferior (to the snap865 that does not overheat in the s20fe). I made the decision that olive green and 8/256 for 50tr are the standard and that beauty will save the planet. He sat on the A series before that. Everything gets worse in terms of hand convenience. Because to the back cover's slope, the Galaxy A50, which had the same dimensions, sat better and was more "parallelepipedic" in the hand. (Normally, only a little s22 from the new Samsungs sits in the hand). I had forgotten how amazing it used to be, but now that I'm used to it. The autonomy front has some encouraging news. Yes, it sits down noticeably quicker, but it won't function the same way if you forget to charge the A50 and live in silence for two days. The phone will pleasantly surprise you by holding out if you activate the battery saving option, which, from the noticeable one, removes AlwaysOnDisplay and 120Hz. length of time required to charge. And I made a small adjustment to my charging situation; previously, there was only a cable by the bed. The laptop now has a wireless charging circle and a wired fast charger that charges devices in half while they are in the "I'll go eat" mode. Overall, this answered the query, so I'm ok. I enter freshwater pools and reservoirs using a phone, per IP68. And I like using my phone to video myself diving under waterfalls in mountains or bouncing bombs in pools in 4k60fps with digital stabilization. IP68: Adds interesting new use cases. Regarding the primary drawback (no SD card, sluggish USB, and Windows isn't friendly with HEIC-HEIV), see "Disadvantages".

Pros
  • screen, speed, camera, water resistance to IP68 standards, light weight, lovely, wireless charging.
Cons
  • Slow USB port and no SD card. The biggest problem for me right now is how difficult it is to arrange items in the pictures. the same as before? When the moment was right, I removed the SD card from the device, attached it to the computer, deleted any extra data, copied what was needed to the device, and then placed the SD card back in. Considering that all images and movies are jpg and mp4, they may all be viewed on any device. as of right now? Now bad. 1. The HEIC (photo) and HEIV (video) formats are reliable. They store more quality while taking up roughly half as much space as jpg and mp4. The heic and heiv formats are chosen in the camera settings since I can't insert a memory card and I want to preserve everything safely. 2. However, Windows 10 does not get along well with these formats. If Windows has rolled up the ate by chance, you can monitor it using standard methods. No, you'll need to google it. 3. If SD is not available, link the phone to the PC. the Camera folder, then. Let there be 1000 objects spread throughout 10 gigabytes. Windows begins to create previews. Due to the phone's USB being closer to 2.0 than 3.2, it does this slowly. After forming a small portion of the previews for approximately a minute, Windows gives up and writes an error, terminating the formation. Throughout, it rejects opening files from this folder on the grounds that "the file is damaged or too large." That is, you won't be able to see the photos from your phone unless you download the Camera folder to your computer. 4. All OK, download it to your computer. 10GB can be downloaded in 15 minutes, 100GB in 2.5 hours, or more. Remember to set aside enough space on your computer for this venture. 5. Downloading is made easier on Windows because you can "work" with photos and videos there. Something was copied across the folders and something was erased. I do not suggest removing every picture from the phone because there won't be anything treacherously lacking to display if it becomes required to exhibit "pictures from the mountains" or "from the sea" from the phone. 6. Next, we copy the Camera folder from the computer to the phone and delete the Camera folder from the phone. 100GB in 2.5 hours, 10GB in 15 minutes. That example, by excluding an SD card and having a USB interface that is incredibly slow, Samsung creates roadblocks. Windows also offers poor HEIC and HEIV format support.