Samsung Galaxy J7 Prime evaluate: Premium appears to be like excellent battery life

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Samsung's Galaxy J7 Prime is a J-sequence phone trapped inside an A-sequence phone's body. There is not any other approach of putting it. A J-collection phone -- before the Galaxy J7 Prime came along -- was synonymous with all-plastic build, mediocre specs and affordable pricing. The Galaxy J7 Prime has none of these and but it's a J-collection phone.

On a regular day, the Galaxy J7 Prime would pass of as Samsung's A-series phone. You understand, with all that metal and all that jazz, it is really hard to inform the difference. However, that's exactly what has happened. Samsung has lastly decided to give its J-sequence -- which, for the document, is doing a superb job within the Indian market -- a much-wanted premium treatment. Whether or not, the move would set money counters ticking for Samsung is yet to be seen. After all, it is all the time a chance to up the premium quotient and price tag of a phone -- out of the blue -- that consumers generally expect to be sensible and more affordable.

Also Read: Galaxy J5, J7 Prime fast review: Samsung's J-sequence finally gets the premium remedy

Clearly, the J-series is doing well, and Samsung is ready to take the plunge. To recall, it's also doing something comparable with its A-sequence phones now. It has began building them with all the more premium materials -- glass and metal -- bringing them closer to its S-collection line-up. The lines between Samsung's high-end S-range, its mid-stage A-vary and its affordable J-vary are blurring by the day. Call it indicators of fixing times.
Design and build high quality
The Galaxy J7 Prime boasts of an all-metal unibody design -- prime and bottom ends being plastic with brushed metal finish to accommodate the antennas -- with curved 2.5D glass on the front. In typical Samsung fashion, the phone comes with a front-mounted bodily residence button that doubles as a fingerprint scanner. The house button is flanked by touch-primarily based capacitive buttons which are non-backlit. The design is generic at best. You know, most smartphones at under Rs 20,000 tend to look the same these days. In Samsung's defence, the South Korean company's phone doesn't look like it's making an attempt to repeat somebody else. It's, however, a very unique Samsung design only that such a design (and build) was beforehand reserved for its higher mid-vary and high-tier phones. The Galaxy J7 Prime Cover Prime clearly changes many notions.