Samsung BlackJack Fighting Against Motorola Q Global
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The 2 heavy weight champions, who is the World Smartphone Champ?
At any time, you can learn more about each phone by clicking on the green order now button. The Black Jack Samsung Burgundy from AT&T is Free With $50 rebate - Click here. However you better act fast, this is not an marketing ploy, but it is free instantly with a $50 mail in rebate until April 21/2008. The promotion will change after that date. If you happen to be a couple or a family and want 2 Samsung Black Black Jack phones, and don't really mind not getting the cash rebate but just want a free Samsung phone, please Click here to own 2 Samsung SGH-i617 Blackjack
Please come back and check Part 2 Of this Review Over The Upcoming week
I won't be able to fit the entire review or comparison on this blog entry. Thanks for your patience. The easy thing is if you are familiar with RSS, is you can click on the orange RSS button to the right side bar and subscribe to this Blog Cell Phone Feed and your desktop will update you when a new blog entry is posted, this saves you from having to bookmark this blog right now.
Which Smartphone is the reigning Champ?
Well, are you a corporate user or are you using it for personal contacts. For instance, if you want a skinny sleek design phone, a long battery life without having to bulk up with an extended battery, then you will want to go with the Blackjack Samsung. However, if you are a lawyer, doctor, engineer, CEO, Small business owner, Martial Art teacher and you have a ALPHA personality and perfection plus performance is important to you, than the Motorola Q is the winner. For folks looking for a free phone, you would be better off with the Blackjack Samsung. Initially with a 2 year contract with AT&T, the Motorola Q global is $100 upfront, after you patiently wait for your rebate to come in from AT&T, the price of the phone goes down to $50.
Click here own your World Champ Moto Q Phone
As well, if you are use to using standard chargers, data cables, headphones to listen to your favorite audio books, than you will have no choice but to go with the Motorola Q. Out of the box, the global Moto Q gives you extra software. Know that the Motorola Q is a little bit taller, fatter and mightier than the Samsung black jack. If you are comparing side by side with standard batteries, not extended batteries, both smart phones are about the same thickness. If you will use your Motorola Q as a replacement for your laptop, you will want to have an extra set of extended batteries. With the extended longer battery life, you will also have to tolerate a thicker and heavier phone. I have below average hands. I am a tailor / seamstress. So I don't have sumo fingers or fingers that are like swollen sausages. In some professions and martial arts, it is actually an attractive attribute to have a hand where your fingers look like sausages. In fact, my baqua teacher, I won't mention his name because he is an indoor baqua teacher. What is an indoor baqua teacher? In the olden days, the golden age of martial arts was in then 1930s in China. To be accepted as an indoor student means the teacher will not hold any thing back and considers you a worthy student. Sometimes, you may have to be his or her slave for 3 years and be willing to knock on his studio door for 3 years and walk the circle for 3 years at a rate of 6 hours a day before you will be lucky enough to receive a correction for walking the circle properly. I have seen pictures of my baqua teachers hands and it is very large and each finger looks like a swollen sausage. So, if you are a master in Baqua it is something you must be proud of to have a fingers that are really fat. So, for my teacher, he would be better off with the Motorola Q, because it fits better for someone with a larger hand. If you have a small hand or an average hand and your hand fits in a medium size latex glove, you will love the feeling of the Samsung Blackjack in your hands. Please come back tomorrow for the continuation of this post
Source: Smartphone & Pocket PC Apr/May 2008 Issue























