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Monday, April 25, 2011

LG Optimus C (Cricket Wireless)

With the Optimus C ($129.99 after $50 mail-in rebate), LG has now managed to bring its budget-priced Optimus line to the top seven wireless carriers in the U.S. This is great news for everyone. On other carriers, the Optimus phones stand out as high-quality, budget-priced Android smartphones, which is already enough to recommend them. But on Cricket Wireless, the LG Optimus C is the cell phone to get; that it's also a fantastic value just makes it even better. It is an easy Editors' Choice for smartphones on Cricket.
Design and Call Quality
Physically, the LG Optimus C is identical to MetroPCS's LG Optimus M ($149, 4 stars). It is made mostly of silver and chrome that really pop. It measures 4.6 by 2.2 by .6 inches (HWD) and weighs a slightly heavy 5.4 ounces. This is the same weight as the Optimus M, but still nearly an ounce heavier than some other Optimus phones. The screen is a 3.2-inch, 320-by-480 pixel capacitive touch screen, which may not be on par with high-end Android devices, but still looks sharp and clear. The on-screen Swype QWERTY keyboard is a bit cramped for typing, but you get used to it quickly and it isn't a deal breaker. There are four physical function keys below the screen that light up whenever the phone is touched.

The LG Optimus C is a tri-band (850/1700/1900 MHz) EVDO Rev. A device with 802.11b/g Wi-Fi. It connected to my WPA2-encrypted Wi-Fi network without a problem. Reception was decent, but I was roaming on MetroPCS's network here in NYC, so I'm not willing to draw a conclusion about native Cricket coverage. Call quality was decent overall. Voices sounded nice and clear in the earpiece, with a slightly hollow quality. On the other end, calls made with the phone were a touch muffled with some background hiss, but still audible. Some background noise came through as well, though I was still able to hear voices above it. Calls sounded very good through an Aliph Jawbone Icon Bluetooth headset ($99, 4 stars) and voice dialing worked well without training. The speakerphone was also just loud enough to use outdoors. Battery life was average at 5 hours and 49 minutes of talk time.
Cricket's monthly plan for the Optimus C costs $55 for unlimited voice, data, and texting, which is a pretty terrific value for the price.

Specifications

Service Provider
Cricket
Operating System
Android OS
Screen Size
3.2 inches
Screen Details
320-by-480, 262K-color TFT LCD capacitive touch screen
Camera
Yes
Network
CDMA
Bands
850, 1900, 1700
High-Speed Data
1xRTT, EVDO Rev A
Processor Speed
600 MHz
Apps, Camera, Multimedia, and Conclusion
The Optimus C runs on a 600 MHz Qualcomm MSM7627, ARM11 processor. It runs Android 2.2, "Froyo," which gives it a significant performance boost and expanded feature set over devices still running earlier versions of the OS. There are five customizable home screens you can swipe between, which default to displaying Facebook status updates, text messages, and weather. Though I found all of these quite useful, they are easy to change. LG added one visible feature to Android, the ability to arrange your apps into folders.
Luckily, Cricket leaves the Optimus C mostly free of bloatware. The browser worked well, though the phone's CPU is too slow to support Flash. LG includes official Facebook and Twitter apps, and Google Search is preloaded and set to default on the phone's home screen. You also have access to the Android Market, which is home to more than 100,000 downloadable apps; these should all work well, given the phone's standard resolution and Android 2.2 build.
A microSD card slot is located underneath the battery cover, and the phone comes preloaded with a 2GB card; my 32GB SanDisk card worked fine as well. There's also about 170MB of free internal memory. The music player is stock Android. It was quick and responsive, and displayed album art when it available. Sound quality was excellent over both a pair of wired 3.5mm headphones, as well as Altec Lansing Backbeat Bluetooth headphones ($99.99-$129.99, 3.5 stars). Video playback was also solid, and videos played smoothly in full screen, with stereo audio via wired headphones and Bluetooth.
The 3.2-megapixel camera has auto-focus but no LED flash. Photos taken were mostly good, with average detail and fairly balanced lighting. Photos taken indoors didn't look as good as those taken outside, but were still usable. Shutter speeds were average, though the auto-focus added a slight delay. Videos record at 640-by-480-pixels and 18 frames per second in good lighting, and they looked pretty decent. Overall, you wouldn't want to replace a good digital camera with the Optimus C, but it'll do in a pinch.

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