Samsung Highlight SGH-T749 - ice blue (T-Mobile)
Manufacturer: Samsung Part number: HIGHLIGHTSGHT749ICETMB
- More product information:
- Editors' review
- User reviews
- Specifications
- Product series
- Accessories
- Manufacturer info
- Bottom Line:
- The Samsung Highlight doesn't offer anything you haven't seen before, but it works quite well as an entry-level touch-screen phone.
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CNET editors' review
Samsung Highlight SGH-T749 - ice blue (T-Mobile) price range: $449.99
- Reviewed by: Kent German
- Reviewed on: 07/15/2009
- Released on: 07/15/2009
The good: The Samsung Highlight has an easy-to-use design with satisfying call quality. It supports T-Mobile's 3G network and a functional feature set with a camera and music player.
The bad: The Samsung Highlight's call volume is low and speakerphone quality is unimpressive. Its memory card slot is located behind the battery.
The bottom line: The Samsung Highlight doesn't offer anything you haven't seen before, but it works quite well as an entry-level touch-screen phone.
When Samsung latches onto a trend, it usually does so with gusto. We saw it happen with both the thin and slider phone crazes, and now we're seeing it again with the touch-screen phone. Since the last half of 2008, the company has produced a wide selection of such handsets for the major carriers. Some, like the Samsung Eternity, Behold, Finesse, and Delve, are squarely midrange, while others, such as the Impression and Omnia, offer a bit more. The latest in the series, the Samsung Highlight SGH-T749 for T-Mobile, falls on the lighter side. Billed as a "touch-screen phone for the masses," the Highlight isn't very original, but it sports an agreeable design, Samsung's TouchWiz interface, and has satisfying performance. The feature set and speakerphone won't wow you, but you do get support for T-Mobile's 3G network, a music player, and a high-quality camera. Overall, it's a decent choice for a starter touch-screen phone, particularly if you can get it at the subsidized price of $149.
Design
The Highlight takes a few design liberties that reflect its entry-level image. It's a bit rounder and sleeker than many of its Samsung touch-screen brethren and it shows a pattern on its rear cover. What's more, it comes in two bright colors: fire (red and orange) and ice (almost a turquoise). We reviewed the latter, but the features are the same on both models. The Samsung Highnote comes in similar colors, but the two handsets have little else in common.
At 4.27 inches tall by 2.11 inches wide by 0.54 inch thick, the Highlight a bit chunkier than some of its counterparts, but we welcome the extra girth. Indeed, it has a comfortable feel in the hand, and it fits easily in a pocket or bag. The phone is rather light (3.7 ounces)--we almost wish it were heavier--but with the exception of the plastic battery cover, the construction feels mostly solid.
The display measures 3 inches, which is just on the edge of what we consider acceptable for a touch screen. However, for what it lacks in size, it makes up in resolution. The display shows 16 million colors (400x240 pixels), which results in bright colors, sharp photos, and vibrant graphics. The icon-based menu interface is simple and easy to use, and we appreciate the support for Samsung TouchWiz interface. It remains a nifty and intuitive feature, even if we still lament the lack of user-created widgets.
At the bottom of the display sit permanent touch controls for the main menu, the Web browser, the phone book, and the phone dialer. The dialer interface features large alphanumeric buttons plus shortcuts for the recent calls list, voice mail, the messaging folder, and the phone book. Vibrating feedback lets you know when you're touching a control. Overall, the display is responsive with no noticeable lag. You can change the brightness, the backlight time, the font type, and the intensity of the vibrating feedback. You also can calibrate the screen if needed.
You can type messages using two methods: a standard alphanumeric keypad or a virtual keyboard. Naturally, we prefer the latter. The individual keys are a bit small, and you'll need to cycle through multiple keyboards for symbols and numbers, but the keyboard is relatively easy to use. We were off and texting with little delay and made few errors. We like that common punctuation is surfaced on the primary keyboard and that you get a shortcut to deactivate T9 predicative text. You'll also find the standard back, return, and shift controls. Thanks to the phone's accelerometer, you can switch from the alphanumeric to the QWERTY keyboard by rotating the phone to the left. The accelerometer also kicks in if you rotate the Highlight to the right, but the QWERTY keyboard will be upside down.
Below the display are the Highlight's sole physical navigation controls. The Talk, End/power, and clear buttons are spacious and easy to press. A large volume rocker sits on the left spine while a camera shutter, display locking switch, and combination headset/charger jack are on the right spine. Unfortunately, Samsung used its proprietary connection on the Highlight. The camera lens sits on the back next to a speaker. There's no self-portrait mirror or flash and the microSD card slot is inconveniently stashed behind the battery.
Features
The Highlight has a generous 2,000-contact phone book with room in each entry for four phone numbers, four e-mail addresses, three instant-messaging handles (AIM, Windows Live, and Yahoo), a URL, a birthday, an anniversary, a nickname, a street address, and notes (the SIM card holds an additional 250 names). You can save callers to groups and you can pair them with a photo and one of 17 (72-chord) polyphonic ringtones.
Other essentials include a vibrate mode, text and multimedia messaging, a calendar, a calculator, a memo pad, a task list, an alarm clock, a world clock, a timer, a stopwatch, a currency and unit converter, and a speakerphone. For more advanced options, you'll find speaker-independent voice dialing and commands, USB mass storage, PC syncing, a file manager, an RSS reader, Web-based POP3 e-mail, instant messaging, a voice memo recorder, GPS support with Telenav Navigator, and full Bluetooth with a stereo profile.

Though the 3-megapixel camera lacks a self-portrait mirror and flash, we were quite impressed with the photo quality. Our shots had a slight milky effect, but colors were relatively bright and there was little image noise. You can takes pictures in four resolutions, from 2,048x1,536 pixels down to 400x240 pixels, and choose from four quality settings. Other editing options include four color effects, three white balance settings, an adjustable brightness, six "scene" settings (night, landscape, action, and so on), and a self-timer. And like the Samsung touch-screen phones before it, the Highlight features three shooting modes (continuous, panorama, and mosaic) and a "smile shot" options that promises to detect when a subject is smiling.

The camcorder shoots clips with sound in two resolutions (320x240 pixels and 176x144 pixels). Camcorder editing features are fewer than on the still camera, though you get a few options like brightness and a self-timer. Clips meant for multimedia messages are capped at about 1 minute, but you can shoot for much longer in the standard mode. For both the still camera and camcorder, the interface is informative and easy to use.
When finished with your shots and clips, you can save them to the phone, send them to a friend in a multimedia message, or transfer them off the phone using Bluetooth, a USB cable, or the memory card. You also can upload them to an online T-Mobile album and view your work in a slideshow. The Highnote even offers the capability to send an audio postcard. Internal memory is capped at 60MB, which is rather low, but the microSD-card slot will accommodate cards up to 16GB.
The music player has a simple, but straightforward interface. Features are limited to playlists, shuffle and repeat modes, and six equalizer settings, but the biggest worry is that T-Mobile still lacks a proper music downloading system. On the other hand, you can load music onto the phone using a memory card. We tried it and encountered no problems. You can send the player to the background while using other functions and select an airplane mode for listening to your tunes while aloft.
The Highlight's full HTML browser is comparable with other Samsung touch-screen phones, which is to say it's a mixed bag. On the upside, the display is responsive and we could scroll around pages in fluid motions. Also it's relatively easy to enter URLs using the virtual keyboard, and save bookmarks, copy images, or copy a URL to a text message. On the downside, we continue to hate the magnifying glass zooming method and the display is just a bit too small for comfortable viewing. Also, it's important to note that the Highlight will default to a WAP version of a Web site when one is available (which is usually the case). There should be an easier way to switch to the full HTML version.
You can personalize the Highlight with a selection of wallpaper and greetings. More customization options and additional ringtones are available for purchase from T-Mobile. The Highlight comes with demo versions of Midnight Pool 2 and Brain Challenge; you'll have to buy the full versions for extended play.
Performance
We tested the quad-band, dual-mode (GSM 850/900/1,800/1,900; UMTS 1,700/2,100) Samsung Highnote in San Francisco using T-Mobile service. Call quality was respectable on several points. The signal remained strong and we encountered no static or interference from other devices. What's more, the audio was clear and voices sounded natural. On the downside, the volume was rather low. We had no trouble hearing under most circumstances, but it was difficult to follow conversations when we were speaking in a noisy place.
Callers said we sounded fine. Most could tell that we were using a cell phone, but a few of our friends had no idea we weren't on a landline. The complaints we heard were few, but they ranged from some wind noise to a slight audio hiss. We also heard traces of the hiss on our end, but it was barely noticeable. Automated calling systems could understand us most of the time.
Speakerphone calls were decent, but not spectacular. Though we appreciate that it takes just once click to activate the speakerphone after you've made a call, the audible hiss we noticed during regular voice calls was more apparent here. The volume on our end was slightly louder, but callers had more trouble hearing us than on normal calls. Also, we had to speak louder if we wanted automated calling systems to understand us.
Even if the Web browser isn't perfect, T-Mobile's 3G network delivers fast data speeds. Mobile sites for CNET, United Airlines, and the Los Angeles Times loaded in about 15 seconds.
Music quality was fine, but don't expect miracles. As with most music phones, our tunes lacked depth when played through the external speaker. Also, the volume isn't very loud. Headphones will provide the best experience.
The Highlight has a rated battery life of 6.5 hours talk time and 18.5 days standby time. It has a tested talk time of 4 hours and 58 minutes. According to FCC radiation tests, the Highlight has a digital SAR of 1.31 watts per kilogram.
User reviews
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Greatest phone i have had yet!
by legoplastic on July 30, 2009
Pros: customizable home screen, solid feel, perfect size, responsive touchscreen, pretty much everything this phone offers!
Cons: Internet, but i don't really use the phone for that. it has other features to keep me preoccupied.
Summary: I absolutely love this phone. Texting is amazing on it, it is quick and responsive and does not lag. The phone has a great feel when you hold it, and ...
Summary: I absolutely love this phone. Texting is amazing on it, it is quick and responsive and does not lag. The phone has a great feel when you hold it, and feels like it was built to be very sturdy. The camera is pretty good, you can change tones from Sepia to Black and White, etc. Phonebook was organized very well. It has a great battery life, and memory expansion up to 8 gigs.
The touchscreen is amazing, and i've used several touchscreen phones, and i have to say the only touchscreens that beat this are the iphone and the HTC Ion. this touchscreen is very responsive, gives vibration feedback, and never lags.
Internet was OK, id prefer a Win.Mo phone for heavy internet use, but i didn't get the phone to browse internet pages 24/7.
The UI is very easy to use, it is simple, but has many features to offer. And call quality is great, i tested it out with my friends and they all were glad i got a phone they can actually hear me with.
Now, this phone is no "iPhone-killer" (gosh i hate that phrase), but it gets the job done very efficiently and in a good manner. i have not gotten frustrated with the phone, and that is very important to me to have a phone that can keep up with you. So if you are in the search for a good, new touchscreen phone, turn your attention to the clever little Samsung Highlight.2 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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I was apprehensive about the phone...but I love it!
by HollyMomma on November 9, 2009
Pros: Great color, the camera quality is good, sound is strong, the ringer is very loud and I can hear it in my purse. Very easy to use and gives you helpful tips on how to use all the functions on the home screen. No data service/package needed.
Cons: Hard to find accessories to protect the phone and the touch screen tool bars can stick a little when trying to navigate through my contact list.
Summary: I spent three weeks agonizing over the right service, the right plan and the phone for me and I finally settled on T-Mobile's Samsung Highlight. The most attrictive part ...
Summary: I spent three weeks agonizing over the right service, the right plan and the phone for me and I finally settled on T-Mobile's Samsung Highlight. The most attrictive part of this phone was that I didn't have to purchase the data package with the phone. With 90% of the other touch screens & qwerty board phones I encountered the data plans was necessary to make the phone work. Its extremely hard to find an attractive adult looking phone that doesn't require a data/media package and this one is it! Since I have other sources to explore the web I didn't necessarily need that added expense on my cell phone bill. I have had the phone a week and have fallen for the light weight of the unit. It comes with many colorfull wallpaper options as well as some fun ring tones. The phone itself is very easy to navigate and I love the touch screen qwerty board. For someone who is not a heavy texter the board is perfect. I have been pleasently surprised by some of the features the phone offers that I wasn't even expecting. For a busy person on the run, who juggles both personal & professional schedules the phone has been a great added feature to keeping all of my pertinent information in one handy place. When I read the reviews from the CNET website concerning this particular phone I found most individuals either loved or hated the phone, there was no real middle ground. Well put me in the column of those that truly enjoy this little powerful phone and all that it can do. For the individual is isn't necessarily a technology guru but would like the ease and attactiveness of a touch screen this device is for you! Also, shop the phone on line & in the stores, I found it as several different venues at different prices and with the holiday's coming there should be some great deals to be had!
1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Unresponsive and quirky touch screen
by scottspinola on August 12, 2009
Pros: Good feature set, comfortable in the hand
Cons: Unresponsive touch screen, cumbersome keyboard, accelerometer does not work with all apps, some text apps only work in portrait mode but the full keyboard only works in landscape mode
Summary: I went to the T-Mobile store very excited about this phone. I am looking for a smart phone but will not buy an iPhone as long as it's locked ...
Summary: I went to the T-Mobile store very excited about this phone. I am looking for a smart phone but will not buy an iPhone as long as it's locked into AT&T and I really don't want to buy the Google MyTouch phone. Their recent ham-fisted and ill-advised "upgrades" to Gmail make me wonder what the heck they'll do to my phone when I'm not looking. I was seriously hoping to fall in love with the Highlight and everything I read on the web suggested that I would.
Unfortunately I was very disappointed.
The Highlight is a nice looking phone that fits well in my hand (I don't like tiny little phones), but the touch screen interface is horrible. It seems like I had to hold my fingers on the screen an inordinate amount of time for it to register my taps, and I sometimes had to tap several times. Furthermore, some of the links are so small (e.g., the "Configure" tab in the browser) that it took a minor miracle to actually touch them accurately. I also found that swiping up and down to scroll through the widget bar (or whatever its called) on the left more often than not caused the widget to pop off onto the "desktop".
My other complaint is that the full keyboard is only available in landscape mode, but not all the applications that use it go to landscape mode, which means constantly flipping the phone from portrait mode for reading to landscape mode for typing. This is very annoying and something that should have been a pretty obvious deficiency for any tester who actually used the application. One more bit of evidence to support my belief that software and electronics companies create products that they don't actually use themselves. If they did use this phone, they would surely not have designed the keyboard the way they did.
I really don't want to buy a Google phone, but this Samsung does not make that an easy decision. I cannot see spending $180 and extending my contract by two years on a phone that irritated me within the first ten minutes of use.
Back to the drawing board Samsung.1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Best touchscreen ever!!!!!!!
by athomas5301 on August 1, 2009
Pros: This phone has it all, fast internet, easy texting, long battery life, compact size.
Cons: When on the internet maneuvering thru the diffrent pages sometimes you have to touch the link you want more than once.
Summary: I would definitely recommend this phone over any of the other touchscreens out there. I looked into the G1 and the mytouch and both are useless unless you subscribe to ...
Summary: I would definitely recommend this phone over any of the other touchscreens out there. I looked into the G1 and the mytouch and both are useless unless you subscribe to the data package. If you want a reliable, great phone but arent sure you want to be tied to a contract for data services to make it work. This is the best choice.
1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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best phone ever- i promise!
by nickstud235 on November 9, 2009
Pros: camera, texting, calling, touchscreen, company is great. and much more.
Cons: nothing wrong at all.
Summary: i love everything, there is nothing to hate or dislike. i just wish it had flash and a mirror for the camera. and if it had a 5 mp camera ...
Summary: i love everything, there is nothing to hate or dislike. i just wish it had flash and a mirror for the camera. and if it had a 5 mp camera it would be the very best.
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Samsung Highlight review
by jbrower888 on October 18, 2009
Pros: -visual appearance good
-screen is bright
-battery life is good
-sound is loud
-speakerphone feature very goodCons: -several cons, see summary below
Summary: I made a mistake to get this phone. Looks nice, marketed well, but not for professional use
Cons:
-touch screen is not reliable, have to touch/scroll many times to ...Summary: I made a mistake to get this phone. Looks nice, marketed well, but not for professional use
Cons:
-touch screen is not reliable, have to touch/scroll many times to get it to do what you want
-touch screen surface easily scratched. After trimming my nails, I scratched the screen several times without realizing it. Whatever the surface is, not glass. Way too soft
-no visual call missed indicator. Can't tell from across the room whether you've missed a call. Makes the phone useless for corporate meetings, workouts, driving, other situations where vibration is required but you still need to know
-cannot set calendar as screen background. A bunch of stylish wallpapers is all you get. Makes the phone seem like its target audience is teenage girls -
Returning this annoying phone
by chitownphilly on October 1, 2009
Pros: color, fact that it's a touchscreen, earpiece that came with it
Cons: volume very low even when all the way up, unpredictable touchscreen, it may or may not respond, navigation stinks, custom homepage is a joke
Summary: I was so excited about this phone until I realized that it comes with a lot of very annoying glitches. I customized my web homepage and 3 days later all ...
Summary: I was so excited about this phone until I realized that it comes with a lot of very annoying glitches. I customized my web homepage and 3 days later all my added customizations had dropped off, it may or may not allow you to type in a url, if you navigate to your gmail, for example, the home button disappears and I have not been able to figure out how to navigate away from gmail except to wait 5 minutes until it resets itself, makes strange noises as if you are hitting something with your ear after you've deleted a voicemail, etc. It is just a rinky dink phone that looks good. Very disappointed in Samsung for this bubble gum dumbphone.
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Returned it next day for Gravity 2
by frankel1205 on September 27, 2009
Pros: Nice looking--sleek---great screen and color resolution.
Cons: Very quirky, sensitive touch screen. I basically hated it and returned it within 24 hours, paid a restocking fee, and got the Gravity 2, which I love. The phone had awful sound quality and wouldn't hold a charge.
Summary: They should go back to the drawing board with the Highlight. Couldn't handle the herky-jerky screen and the microscopic spaces for touching. It could use a stylus.
All in ...Summary: They should go back to the drawing board with the Highlight. Couldn't handle the herky-jerky screen and the microscopic spaces for touching. It could use a stylus.
All in all, this phone is bad. -
Terrible if you are using it as a phone, ok otherwise
by kdaboin962 on September 8, 2009
Pros: Fairly easy to use, durable, nice quality camera and the permanent buttons at the bottom of the display are easy to use.
Cons: Very poor phone quality; touch screen is very sensitive; does not support Windows Live Hot Mail, the accelerometer that switches the screen thumps in your ear the whole time you are trying to talk as you move the phone... extremely annoying.
Summary: Bought this phone in order to receive e-mail, turns out it does not work for Hot Mail so know that up front because t-mobile or Samsung do not tell you ...
Summary: Bought this phone in order to receive e-mail, turns out it does not work for Hot Mail so know that up front because t-mobile or Samsung do not tell you this. Phone quality is awful, continuously dropping calls, other party complaining that they can't here what I am saying, but worse thing is the reception. The phone would not allow me to sync music from my pc to the music player as the files were not supported. Contacts are very difficult to navigate through; when you open up the contacts menu and try to search for a contact the screen cuts in half to display the keyboard whereby only displaying 3 names at a time. You then have to try to scroll through the names until you find the contact you are seeking and as you scroll through the 3 names at a time, if you happen to put too much pressure on the screen it begins dialing the wrong contact. You then have to cancel the call and start all over only to have the same thing happen again and again. Much easier to just punch in the number on the key pad and hit send... problem is, who can remember all your contact numbers?
In all I was VERY disappointed with this phone and choose to return mine with 1 day left in my 14 day trial period.
On the positive side, the camera quality was very good. HOWEVER, when you try to view your pictures if you tilt the phone left or right the pictures begin to scroll in that direction, therefore if you want to pass the phone to somebody for them to see a picture, by the time they get the phone in their hands the pictures have scrolled to another.
In all, this phone was not worth the aggravation it caused even if it were free! -
I LOVE this phone!!
by sgtledbetter on August 26, 2009
Pros: Awesome response time, easy to navigate, lots of extras without all the added smartphone things that I didn't need. The battery life is absolutely incredible!! I get about 4 1/2 days on each full charge with texting and phone calls.
Cons: The screen gets dirty really easy, but I plan on getting a screen protector for it.
Summary: We've had a long history of horrible phones from a variety of retailers. I used Cnet to research the phones we were interested in and we decided on the ...
Summary: We've had a long history of horrible phones from a variety of retailers. I used Cnet to research the phones we were interested in and we decided on the highlight for me, and a samsung gravity for my husband. I wanted a little more features than a standard phone, but I didn't want all the excess of a smartphone. This phone is absolutely perfect. I work full time, go to school full time, and have two home businesses... so I'm on the phone alot! The battery on the highlight keeps up and then some! Now, if everyone will hurry up and bring out cuter accessories for it!!
Specifications
- Manufacturer: Samsung
- Part number: HIGHLIGHTSGHT749ICETMB
- Description: The Samsung Highlight is the perfect mix of style and innovation. You get a comfortable-in-the-hand design, a choice of colors and an advanced touch screen with customizable widgets. But this isn't just a touch screen. The Highlight is full of highlights. Like a full web browser, a 3.0 mega-pixel camera and a music player.
General
- Product Type Cellular phone With digital camera / digital player
- Service Provider T-Mobile
- Width 2.1 in
- Depth 0.6 in
- Height 4.3 in
- Weight 3.7 oz
- Body Color Ice
Cellular
- Technology WCDMA (UMTS) / GSM
- Band WCDMA (UMTS) / GSM 850/900/1800/1900
- Phone Design Candy bar
- Antenna Internal
- Vibrating Alert Yes
- Polyphonic Ringer Yes
- Call Timer Yes
- Conference Call Capability Yes
- Voice Recorder Yes
- Caller ID Yes
- Wireless Interface Bluetooth
- Additional Features aGPS
Communicator Features
- User Memory 60 MB
Phone Memory
- Phone Book Capacity 2000 names & numbers
- Missed Calls Memory 90
- Dialed Calls Memory 90
- Received Calls Memory 90
Messaging & Data Services
- Short Messaging Service (SMS) Yes
- Messaging Services Yahoo! Messenger, AOL Instant Messenger Service (AIM)
- Mobile Email Yes
- GPRS (General Packet Radio Service) Yes
- EDGE (Enhanced Data Rates For Global Evolution) Yes
- Internet Browser Yes
- HSDPA (High Speed Downlink Packet Access) Yes
- Messaging / Data Features RSS feeds
Ring Tones
- Polyphonic Ring Tone Voice Qty 72
Multimedia Features
- Playback Digital Video Formats 3gp, MPEG-4, WMV (Windows Media Video)
- Downloadable Content Games
Digital Camera
- Camera highlights With a resolution of 3 megapixels, this model will give you better pictures than other phones.
- Sensor Resolution 3 megapixels
- Digital Zoom 3
- Features Multi-shots, Video recording
Organizer
- Alarm Clock Yes
- Calendar Yes
- Reminder Yes
- Calculator Basic
- Conversion Currency
- Additional Timer Functions Stopwatch, Countdown timer
Display
- Type LCD display
- Technology TFT
- Display Resolution 240 x 400 pixels
- Color Support Color
- Color Depth Up to 16.2 million colors
- Display Illumination Color White
- Multi-language Menu Yes
- Features Wallpaper, Screensaver
Digital Player (Recorder)
- Supported Digital Audio Standards AAC, MP3, WMA
Miscellaneous
- Included Accessories Headset
- Cables Included USB cable
Power
- Type Power adapter
Battery
- Technology - Lithium ion
- Capacity 1200 mAh
- Talk Time 390 min
- Standby Time 450 h
Product series
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Samsung Highlight SGH-T749 - fire (T-Mobile)
Manufacturer: Samsung
Specs: WCDMA (UMTS) / GSM 850/900/1800/1900, 390 min, With digital camera / digital player, 3.7 oz
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Samsung Highlight SGH-T749 - ice blue (T-Mobile)
Manufacturer: Samsung
Specs: WCDMA (UMTS) / GSM 850/900/1800/1900, 390 min, With digital camera / digital player, 3.7 oz
Accessories
- Samsung SBH500 Bluetooth Stereo Headphones (black) (32674689)42.50 - 60.66
- Samsung WEP200 Bluetooth Headset (black) (31995314)22.37 - 41.94
- Samsung WEP870 (33769487)39.95 - 49.99
- Jabra BT8010 Stereo/Mono Bluetooth Headset (32327768)13.97
- Motorola S9 Bluetooth Active Headphones (red) (32363768)37.99 - 130.42
- Samsung pouch for cellular phone (33639000)4.99 - 17.99
Manufacturer info
- Samsung
- Manufacturer profile
- Browse Samsung products on Shopper.com
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- Website: http://www.samsungusa.com/
- Address:
105 Challenger Road, Ridgefield Park, NJ 07660 - Phone: 1-800-726-7864
- Fax: 1-973-601-6001








