LG Ally Review

Abbey Smith 05/19/2010 8

 LG-Ally-Review The LG Ally comes in a design that resembles such LG phones as the LG EnV Touch phone. Similar to the EnV Touch, the LG Ally handset has a blocky shape and comes in a rectangular shape. The color scheme of the device is black and silver. The LG Ally has a size of 4.56 inches long by 2.22 inches wide by 0.62 inch thick. The device features ergonomic curves. As a result, the handset feels handy in a palm. The weight of the mobile phone compiles 5.57 ounces.

The Ally’s screen is touch-screen measuring 3.2 inches. It is made of tempered glass. The color support is 262,000 hues. The screen resolution compiles 800 x 480 pixels. So images are vibrant and colors are bright.

At the bottom of the display there are two touch-sensor keys: the Back and Search. Underneath the touch-sensor keys there are 4 physical keys: the End/Power, the Call, the Home, and the menu pop-up keys.

In order to get to the keypad you need to slide the display to the right. If you do this, you will reveal a four-row QWERTY keyboard. There is an accelerometer sensor feature in the mobile phone that helps rotate the screen modes from a landscape mode to a portrait one.

The LG Ally runs Android 2.1 OS. The high-end features of the phone are: Wi-Fi, stereo Bluetooth, A-GPS and Android browser.

As for entertainment there is a video and music player. The video player is supportive to MPEG4, WMV, 3GP, and 3G2 formats. The music player can play in MP3, AAC, AAC+, WMA file formats.
The LG Ally has a 3.2-megapixel camera with five resolutions and three quality settings. The camera featuresare the following: a self-timer, different shot modes including Panorama Shot and Smile Shot, zoom, LED flash, and macro mode.

The LG Ally features a video recorder that takes video clips in three resolutions of 176 x 144 pixels, 320×240 pixels, and 640×480 pixels.

The internal memory of the LG Ally offers 512 MB. If it is not enough there is an option to increase the memory up to 16 GB with the help of a microSD memory card.

The battery life of the LG Ally compiles up to 7.5 hours of talk time and 20.8 days of stand-by mode.


8 Comments »

  1. john smith 06/01/2010 at 12:34 PM -

    Bad Reception

  2. John Doe 07/13/2010 at 8:08 PM -

    John Smith, you lie!

  3. John Smythe 08/26/2010 at 7:09 PM -

    No he doesn’t. The reception is pathetic in fringe areas. I am dropping calls with this phone in rural areas that I have never lost a signal in 15 years with Verizon!

  4. johnny doee 09/07/2010 at 10:19 AM -

    I don’t know what you are talking about. I get great reception! I have found nothing wrong with this phone. If I leave it on for more than 5 days or so it does become quite sluggish (as with all smartphones), but all I have to do is restart the phone and its good to go for another week. 5 stars for this phone!!

  5. God 09/15/2010 at 12:38 AM -

    Great Phone Does All I Need Runs Good No Problems With The Reception Ever So That Is BS

  6. Kenny Cho 09/20/2010 at 12:06 PM -

    WORST RECEPTION EVER! I switched to Verizon and got this phone because I thought I’d get better reception than T-mobile. I regret getting this phone sooooo much!!!

  7. Mungo 10/20/2010 at 8:19 PM -

    there is only 512MB ( ROM) that can’t be increased. adding RAM adds data storage but won’t help programs run faster.

  8. Madz 03/08/2011 at 9:51 PM -

    i love the feel of the phone. wonderful touch to it; all sleek and light. unlike the motorola citrus, which has a trashy plastic feel. i love this phone; my friend has it and i’m getting it when my 2 yr contract is up.

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