A lot of them hhave been leaving the factory chipped too.
Talk about pixel density . I'm surprised that my old cell phone (2009) could beat Galaxy S3
It has 3.4 inches display with 480x960 res -> 315.6 ppi . Movie looks great on this phone

Galaxy S3 : 306 ppi
Iphone 5 : 326 ppi
(09-28-2012, 03:16 AM)admin89 Wrote: [ -> ]...old cell phone (2009)...
2009 is old? LOL

I've got a mobile phone from 2003. THIS is old ^^
(09-28-2012, 03:19 AM)DefenderX Wrote: [ -> ] (09-28-2012, 03:16 AM)admin89 Wrote: [ -> ]...old cell phone (2009)...
2009 is old? LOL
I've got a mobile phone from 2003. THIS is old ^^
I got one from 2004. I'm beaten here


I do complain though...
The screen display is good but it's hard to convert a movie to that resolution . I can't find a way to make use of that long screen , the video does not fit whole screen
480x960 is the resolution of an iPhone 4, iPhone 4s and iPod touch 4G. Just get a converter for one of those, as any android device can play H.264 too.
I believe 640x960 is iphone 4's resolution , not 480x960 but thanks anyway
Shouldn't it be 960 x 640 then? Width always comes first.
(09-28-2012, 10:21 AM)NaturalViolence Wrote: [ -> ]Shouldn't it be 960 x 640 then? Width always comes first.
Or rather the larger number generally comes first. You can hold the phone in portrait or landscape.
Well the video output and video file should both have a widescreen aspect ratio so that doesn't really matter. It doesn't make sense to encode a video in 2:3 instead of 3:2. It's going to look really weird whether you view it in portrait or landscape.