The Smart Phones You Should Avoid

This is amazing, I couldn't believe I read about this on the Internet where millions of people access information, but it's all for our(consumer) good, if they don't do it this way, who could have known the "Do Not" and "Dos" of the electronic market, more especially the smart phones one out of the gadgets that dominate the electronic market today.

Well, I like it, the way it was promptly said.

 Sony Xperia Ion (AT&T), July 2012
(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)
Half a year ago, there was nothing we would have loved more than getting the Sony Xperia Ion in our hands. Oh, how times have changed. Despite the generous $99 price tag for an Android smartphone of such promise, Sony's comeback is the thing of cautionary tales. The 12-megapixel camera and high-def video reek of dashed hopes and underdelivered promises, and the slower processor holds back the otherwise stylish 4G LTE phone. Read the full review.
ZTE Score M (MetroPCS), March 2012
(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)
MetroPCS has some of the slowest data speeds around, which automatically makes its phones less appealing than other networks' options. Add to that the fact that ZTE's phones are usually lower-end models designed specifically to be affordable when sold at retail price with prepaid carriers like Metro. So add a cheaper screen and more sluggish processor to slow data speeds and there's little reason to pursue this Android handset. Read the full review.
  
Pantech Swift (AT&T), June 2012
(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)
It looks like the perfect little messaging phone, but the Pantech Swift does nobody any favors with its unresponsive screen, tired processor, and wonky e-mail app. Read the full review.
Samsung Brightside (Verizon), March 2012
(Credit: Verizon Wireless)
It looks like the perfect little messaging phone, but the Pantech Swift does nobody any favors with its unresponsive screen, tired processor, and wonky e-mail app. Read the full review.
Pantech Hotshot (Verizon), October 2011
(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)
There's nothing wrong with being a feature phone -- as long as it's not trying to be a smartphone. Although the Hotshot makes decent calls, its laggy processor and unresponsive touch screen proved to be too frustrating. Rather than creating a mediocre hybrid of smartphone and feature phone, it's best to make a solid product of just one or the other. Read the full review.
The massage was clear, Buying any of this products should be reconsidered. 
Compiled by Jessica Dolcourt reviews smartphones and cell phones, covers handset news, and pens the monthly column Smartphones Unlocked. She started at CNET in 2006, where she spent four years reviewing mobile and desktop software before taking on devices.
I would like to know what you think about these smart phones, perhaps you already have one or you may be thinking of getting one.

Comments