Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. Reviews

Samsung Juke SCH-u470 Review

Add as a preferred source on Google
Samsung Juke SCH-u470
“...music connoisseurs should just pony up another $100 and get a better music phone.”
Pros
  • Great price; clean design; pick up and play
Cons
  • Throwaway camera; below-average speakers

“Why you can trust Digital Trends – We have a 20-year history of testing, reviewing, and rating products, services and apps to help you make a sound buying decision. Find out more about how we test and score products.“

Summary

Today it’s rare to find a phone that doesn’t want to check your email, do GPS and run Facebook. Aside from phone calls, the Samsung Juke really only does one thing: play music. Streamlining makes the Juke cheap, compact and lightweight. Unfortunately, despite having a singular purpose, the Juke’s music quality pales compared to more expensive cell phones.

Recommended Videos

Verizon’s Samsung Juke is available for $129.99 USD with a 2-year commitment. Verizon offers a $50 online discount, dropping it to $80 – a fair price for the phone. It falls under Verizon’s standard plans. The Juke has 2 GB internal memory, which should be plenty for its low-resolution photos and a decent music collection.

Features and Design

The Samsung Juke is fairly thick at about an inch, and is made up of two parts. The bottom half is a crystal-like keypad along with standard buttons like the power key and send, including a camera key. The buttons themselves are almost flat, but the ridges between them are just wide enough to feel the indentation. They are small – no thumb pressing here.

The top half is a thin vertical screen, about ¾ of an inch across and an inch and a half tall. Below the screen is a radial dial, smooth, yet ridged, not unlike a vinyl record. From a practical standpoint, it’s close cousins with the iPod dial.

Samsung has kept the details simple. The model we tested was a metallic blue with shiny silver trim (It is also available in red and black). There are only a couple of switches on the side: on the left, volume control buttons, and on the right, a key lock switch and a well hidden external wire connector. On the back is a small camera lens. When closed, the thick device only shows its vertical screen and radial dial control. Use your thumb to push the screen to the right, clockwise, and the top half with jut out like a switchblade.

Setup and Use

The Samsung Juke comes with a USB connector, wall plug and earphones, which is basically all you need to get the most out of the device. It is a music phone.

The music is available by just hitting the center of the radial dial (which is the equivalent of the OK button). It asks if you want to listen to music, get music through the V-Cast direct download service or sync it to a music library on the computer.

Verizon’s V-Cast multimedia software is required to sync, and it only works on Windows XP or Vista-enabled PCs – no Macs here. It was a fairly small 20 MB, available online at http://www.vzam.net/vcastmusic/. V-Cast will grab all your music and make it available in its iTunes-like library browser. Plug the Juke in and, using a drag-and-drop method, move any songs, playlists or albums to the device. They transfer quickly, as in about one second each song. The battery will also charge via the USB.

Samsung Juke
Image Courtesy of Samsung

Testing Cont’d

The Juke music setup is solid. Go into Music mode and the phone asks you to switch the top half down, essentially turning the Juke into a thick iPod shuffle. Hold it horizontally. With the radial dial (now on the right) you can control the music, skipping, playing and pausing songs. The now horizontal screen displays the current list of music. It’s a basic, what looks to be 16-color display, but it gets the job done.

The phone speakers are pretty good, at least for solo use – look to another music phone, like, say, the MOTORAZR2 V8 for strong sounds. On the other hand, the included headphones are as good as any pair of iPod earphones.

There’s not much else to the Juke. The camera is easy to use, but requires the phone be fully extended – imaging taking a picture with a long, tall camera. The vertical design of the actual display makes for odd pictures. There is no flash.

The camera is surprisingly supple. Press the camera button, push the first bar up and turn the phone on its side. Now using the vertical screen as a viewfinder and the horizontal touchscreen as a button, the Venus actually feels like a real camera. The pictures are solid, too, especially considering we’re getting the now-standard 2 Megapixel resolution and no flash.

Conclusion

Samsung should be commended for creating an affordable, sole purpose phone. The problem is that the sound quality is weak. Discounts make the price comparable to an iPod Shuffle, but music connoisseurs should just pony up another $100 and get a better music phone.

Pros:

• Great price
• Clean design
• Pick up and play

Cons: 

• Throwaway camera
• Below-average speakers

Damon Brown
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Damon Brown gets pop culture. The Northwestern grad covers music, sex and technology for Playboy, XXL, New York Post and Inc…
Pixi wants to replace your boring text messages with AR characters that react to you
iMessage users can now send fun AI characters like a cat or robot to their friends.
pixi-ar-app-imessage

Forget stickers and GIFs, a new app called Pixi Garden wants you to send interactive augmented reality characters through iMessage instead.

Pixi Platforms launched the messaging native app today, letting you create and send a "pixi" — an intelligent AR character that comes alive through your friend's phone camera and reacts to whatever is actually happening around them.

Read more
AI vision is getting too hungry, and this method puts it on a diet
KAIST researchers say Upsample Anything sharpens compressed visual data while cutting GPU memory demands by up to 16 times.
Car, Transportation, Vehicle

KAIST researchers have developed an AI vision method built for a problem phone makers can’t ignore forever. Upsample Anything rebuilds high-resolution visual features from compressed image data, aiming to make on-device AI sharper without demanding a much bigger memory budget.

Phones already lean on compression to keep camera-based intelligence moving quickly. The tradeoff is that small objects, thin edges, and subtle defects can get stripped away before a vision system has enough detail to work with.

Read more
Google Photos’ AI image editor expands to more regions, but only for Android users
Edit with Ask Photos, which lets you make edits by describing what you want, is now available for Android users in Germany, the UK, France, Spain, and Italy.
Featured image for Google Photos conversational edit ability.

Google introduced an AI-powered editing feature in Google Photos called "Edit with Ask Photos" last year, allowing users to make photo adjustments using natural language prompts. It initially debuted in a handful of countries, but Google is now expanding support to five new markets.

From four countries to nine

Read more