LG KF700

By Joseph Hanlon on 04/07/2008

More LG reviews , RRP: AU$699.00

The good:

  • Responsive touchscreen
  • Finger-friendly menu
  • Excellent Web browser and HSDPA
  • Good battery life

The bad:

  • Average camera
  • No stylus holding slot
  • Display could be wider

The bottomline:

LG has slipped many high-end features into the KF700, but priced it as a mid-range handset. The touchscreen is great, and Web browsing is fantastic.

Editors' rating:

7.1/10

Users' rating:

7/10

If "I" and "phone" are two syllables that you never want to hear connected in conversation ever again, then you've come to the right place. The KF700 is yet another touchscreen, but it has a few tricks up its sleeve to keep just about everyone happy, namely what LG calls "touch, tap and spin".

Design
It may be completely redundant to say, but people love touchscreens. Phones with touch-sensitive menus have captured the imagination of the ever-growing mobile buying market, even though it's often agreed that touchscreens are less than ideal for text input, which is an important and necessary element of a mobile phone. To circumvent this issue, LG has included three methods of input in the KF700; touch via the touchscreen, tap via the numeric keypad, and spin, referring to the spinning toggle on the underside of the handset.

If you're unfamiliar with the KF700, it's quite easy to get a basic idea of what it looks like and how it feels to hold. Picture LG's popular touchscreen Viewty, shrink its width a few millimetres then add to its girth and you've pretty much got the attractive KF700 in mind. With measurements of 102x51x14.5mm, the KF700 is about an average size for a slider phone handset, though smaller than most touchscreen handsets we've come across lately.

Features
Even though the KF700 lives below LG's flagship models, the Secret and Viewty, it still comes with a raft of useful features. It's a tri-band GSM (900/1,800/1,900MHz) handset that is HSDPA capable on the 2,100MHz UMTS frequency. It also features the same touchscreen optimised Web browser we saw (and loved) in the Viewty, taking advantage of the fast HSDPA downloads.

As a media player, the KF700 supports a decent selection of music file formats including MP3, AAC, AAC+ and MP4. On the back of the handset is a 3.2-megapixel camera and an LED flash which lay almost flush with the battery cover. The front of the handset features a VGA quality camera for video calling located above the 3-inch display.

Performance
For the most part the touchscreen is fantastic. Most menu items are large and finger-friendly, and after calibrating the screen we managed to navigate most functions with our fingers. The KF700 is bundled with a stylus, but like the Viewty, there's no slot to store it in which leaves it dangling from the side by a lanyard strap. We predict most people purchasing the KF700 will leave the stylus shrink-wrapped in the box.

As with the Viewty, the KF700 is a mean Web browsing machine. Using the touchscreen to pan and scroll across sites is a godsend and you can see why people make such a fuss about the iPhone's Safari browser. The only thing that would improve this experience is a slightly larger, particularly wider, display. This is overcome somewhat by allowing pages to be viewed in landscape mode.

During our tests, battery life has been impressive for a handset sporting 3G network support and a large, bright screen. From a full charge with moderate usage of all features, we managed between four to five days for each cycle.

Overall
This certainly is a difficult time for any of the handset manufacturers to be tossing touchscreens into the market. Trying to catch the attention of an iPhone hungry market can't be easy, but LG's "touch, tap and spin" approach will appeal to anyone wanting the ease of a touchscreen and the accurate mechanical input.

The KF700 does a little bit of everything and does most of it well. The media playback is adequate, the camera is OK and its connectivity options are good, though it lacks extras like Wi-Fi and GPS. The stand out is its Web browser, and coupled with the responsive touchscreen, it's pretty much worth the price of admission alone.

Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!

angela
13/07/2008, 08:56 PM

rating
4
/10

i just got this phone just over a week ago and i really dony like it, sometimes the touch screen is over responsive, sometimes it doesnt recognise or respond to touch, there is no 'enter' key, when on a call on speaker phone it mutes itself and will not unmute no matter what you do. i really dislike this phone, coming from the lg viewty, all i wanted was the viewty with a keypad but this is shocking. not for me. has anyone else had a problem with this phone?

Report offensive comment

ray99
06/07/2008, 05:23 PM

rating
10
/10

now this looks good i want one of these.

Pros: it is a next g phone all good!

Cons: none so far but if there is one i get one when my con runs out i will let u no.

Report offensive comment

  • Leave a comment

All fields marked with * are required

What do you think

Rate this product:

Need help? Read our guidelines for what each number rating represents.

Your e-mail will not be displayed

You must read and type the 6 chars within 0..9 and A..F

You must read and type the 6 chars.

  • Google adds Android app for Flickr photos

  • Star Tech: Matt Welsh

  • Nokia 6210 Navigator

  • Freshtel plans Aussie mobile VoIP

  • HTC Dream spy shots

  • Photoshop.com on Windows Mobile devices

  • Tethering coming soon to iPhone 3G?

  • Android Developer Challenge winners focus on location

  • iiNet to offer mobile phone services?

More articles »

Find the right mobile phone

Brand
  • Multiple options can be selected

    The Explain Series

    • Nokia 6210 Navigator

      Nokia 6210 Navigator

      While the 6210 is solidly built and features fast performance, the lack of a lifetime subscription to turn-by-turn navigation robs the Navigator of what should make it unique in the market.

    • Motorola RAZR2 V9 Ferrari Special Edition

      Motorola RAZR2 V9 Ferrari Special Edition

      There's nothing technically wrong with RAZR2 V9 Ferrari Special Edition but if you want to Ferrari-fie your phone there are cheaper and better ways of doing it. For free.

    • Nokia N85

      Nokia N85

      It's hard to knock a phone that has all the current popular technologies, but it would have still been great for Nokia to consider new technologies for this latest N-Series range, particularly a media sharing networking protocol.

    • LG KF390

      LG KF390

      Take out the Next G reception and you end up with a low quality handset at a mid-range price point. Still, it's great to see another blue tick phone for our friends in the bush to consider.

    • Nokia E66

      Nokia E66

      While we like the E71 better, the E66 is a great smartphone with class leading features. If you want the functionality of a business phone without the bulk of a PDA form factor, the E66 is the phone you've been looking for.

    More reviews »

    Membership benefits

    Win prizes and other promotion benefits

    Win prizes and other promotion benefits

    As a CNET.com.au member, you're eligible to enter and win any prizes on our site. Sign up for a free CNET.com.au membership now!