Inicio/SAMSUNG GALAXY A QUANTUM

SAMSUNG GALAXY A QUANTUM
Rendimiento
Cámara
Autonomía
Pantalla
Almacenamiento
Diseño
El más barato
Desconocido
Características SAMSUNG GALAXY A QUANTUM
TipoOLED/AMOLED
Densidad de pixeles393 ppi
Tamaño6.7 "
RAM8 GB
Capacidad128 GB
Capacidad4500 mAh
Descripción
El Samsung Galaxy A Quantum es un smartphone que combina varias características avanzadas con un rendimiento competente. Equipado con un procesador capaz, el dispositivo maneja las tareas diarias de manera eficiente, respaldado por 8 GB de memoria RAM que aseguran una experiencia fluida al alternar entre aplicaciones.
La capacidad de la cámara es destacable, permitiendo capturar imágenes claras y vívidas, mientras que la autonomía del teléfono es satisfactoria, apoyada por una batería de 4500 mAh que proporciona un uso continuo sin necesidad de cargas frecuentes.
En cuanto al almacenamiento, el Galaxy A Quantum ofrece 128 GB de capacidad, lo que generalmente satisfará las necesidades de almacenamiento de aplicaciones y multimedia para muchos usuarios.
El diseño del dispositivo es funcional, con un enfoque que privilegia la comodidad y la practicidad en su manejo. Aunque no posee la opción de carga inalámbrica, cuenta con tecnología NFC, facilitando las transacciones electrónicas y la conexión con otros dispositivos. Asimismo, está equipado con capacidad 5G, asegurando altas velocidades de conexión a internet, preparando al usuario para la última tecnología en comunicaciones móviles.
Uno de los aspectos que podría mejorarse se encuentra en la pantalla del dispositivo, cuya calidad está por debajo de las expectativas de algunos usuarios, especialmente cuando se compara con otros modelos de rangos similares.
En resumen, el Samsung Galaxy A Quantum representa una opción sólida para aquellos que buscan un teléfono con buen rendimiento general, capacidad de conexión 5G y una cámara confiable, aunque podría no ser la mejor elección para los entusiastas de la visualización de contenido multimedia debido a la calidad de su pantalla.
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Comentarios
Deepika
Many of the users are telling that they have battery issue this is real after the some period of time the battery issue starts in my phone that is galaxy note 10 so I have changed the battery from the service centre it have battery drainage
kasey
battery can not last for 1 year , the other rest good
Chimwangafix
Truly smart but for the battery issue
Darth Caesium
Asking the right questions
Israr
In samsung note 8 , is it possible to install 5000 mah battery?
Anonymous
Yes if you got it in lower price
Anonymous
Great phone still holds strong till today 2024
S9NoteEnjoyer
For what it's worth, I got my note 9 originally during release week USA (August 2018 if I recall right). I am not a reviewer or anything, just a normal consumer. I just so happend to upgrade from my S7E at the literal perfect time. So, I was one of the first "normal" US consumers to get my hands on one. As for how good it is...well, I'm typing this very message on the very same Note9 I just mentioned. Almost eight years later, and this phone is still exactly what I want/need. I will not be upgrading literally for as long as it keeps working like it has been. Incredibly fast and responsive, fast to charge (be aware that it only has QC 2.0, but even with its larger battery than normally found even on new phones in 2024, and only QC 2.0, it still goes from dead to 80% in, like, 30-35 minutes or so. Any charger with newer QC versions is totally fine, they are backwards compatible. Just make sure the charger has at least QC 2.0 or greater, and you can even do a further check by reading the 9V charger output amperage. The Note9 will charge at max speed if the charger can do 9V@1.6A or better. I have verified this using multiple different voltmeters and ammeters, its literally 8.95V-9.05V@1.65A on the dot when fast charging between ~20% to ~80%).
It has an actual physical headphone jack, all of the fancy Bluetooth 5.0 Low Latency + Bluetooth 5.0 LE + Bluetooth 5.0 AptX support technologies, which of course is fully backwards compatible with older Bluetooth accessories. The phone will, by default, automatically enable and use any of the extra Bluetooth technologies, based on what the other device supports. For example, my car Bluetooth receiver supports Bluetooth 5.0, AptX, low latency mode, and LE. My phone therefore automatically outputs in Bluetooth version 5.0, with AptX and low latency enabled automatically. You can manually configure this. To this point, I told my phone to keep everything except for LE (low energy mode). After configuring it once, it remembers forever per each Bluetooth device. If that sounds intimidating, you don't have to do anything. By default, it will configure itself based on whatever you're connecting it to. It can even go a step further and multi output in different Bluetooth versions. The note 9 supports at least two Bluetooth outputs at the same time. Maybe more I can't remember. I've only ever used two. And, to make it even better, you can dual output to both Bluetooth devices at the same time with one phone! It can be any combination of Bluetooth connections. You can have a headset connected for calling while also connected to your car stereo, you can have two car stereos connected to the same phone outputting the same sound, etc. etc. Honestly, being able to connect to multiple separate stereos wirelessly without needing an external repeater is really nice. It's mostly what I use multiconnect for.
The internal audio chip is stellar. 32-bit support is pretty rare, and the note 9 has it. Granted, you also have to have a 32-bit audio file to take advantage of that, but I can attest that my 32-bit Studio mic sounds fantastic when the recording is played using the phone as a player. I'm not kidding when I say that this thing natively supports practically every single audio or video Codec on the planet. Including all of the Apple ones too. It's pretty nifty to be able to change your video Codec to Apple native, so when you send your video to your iPhone buddy, he can play it on his phone! Then you can switch it back to the superior, android video format. The rear camera can even record in 4K at 60 fps!
It has support for 5 GHz or 2 GHz wifi (it can even output a mobile Hotspot in either band! You can set it however you need!). My home internet is very, VERY fast, mostly because I have two computers, one of which is a game server, which I usually run over most weekends. My note 9 has no problem hitting my full 2000 mbps down 2000 mbps up on WiFi, not even on ethernet, like my server and gaming PC are.
My point is, this is still very much a relevant phone even in 2024. I only game on my pc, not my phone, so I can't speak to the ability of it to game. But for what it's worth, the few coffee roguelites I've messed around with on my phone, even the ones with 3D graphics, run perfectly with no issues.
To conclude, I do think that the note 9 is a great phone even in 2024. I am a little bit out of the loop on what the most modern phones can accomplish, I would imagine the biggest difference would be in charging speeds (but, its really only a difference of roughly 15 minutes or so - my Note9 charges fast enough to never make me even think about something marginally faster?)
I'm a little bit out of the phone Loop because I like my note 9 so much, so I would definitely do your homework if there's a feature or gizmo you specifically want. At least to me, this phone is absolutely perfect and I will continue to use it for as long as I possibly can.
Anonymous
*bright