Showing posts with label Galaxy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Galaxy. Show all posts

Monday, 24 October 2011

Samsung Galaxy tab 7.7 tablet and Galaxy Note announced at IFA

Samsung has announced an update to its existing 7-inch Galaxy tab as well as an entirely new device called the Galaxy Note at IFA last week.


Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7


The galaxy Tab 7.7 comes with 7.7-inch SuperAMOLED display with a resolution of  1280 x 800 pixels. The tablet run Android 3.2 on a dual core 1.4Ghz processor, 1GB RAM and will come in 16/32/64GB storage (expandable via MicroSD slot). The device is just 8mm thin and weighs around 335g. It has a 3.2MP camera on the back and a front 2MP camera. The specs are almost exactly the same as we reported earlier


Samsung Galaxy Note


The galaxy Note on the other hand has a 5-inch super AMOLED display with a resolution of 1280 x 800 pixels and comes with an S-pen – a stylus, for input. Hardware specifications are the same as Galaxy Tab 7.7, though the Note  runs Android 2.3 and sports a 8MP camera on the rear that records videos in 1080p resolution. It also comes with a barometer, optional NFC support, TV-out, can be used as phone and will be the first device to come preloaded with Samsung’s own chat client called Samsung ChatON.


Both devices are expected to be available in the beginning of next year.


 

Saturday, 25 June 2011

List of Samsung Galaxy Tab Best Competitors – Galaxy Tab Opponents

Since its unveiling last year, the Samsung Galaxy Tab effortlessly attains popularity among Tablet PC fans.

The Galaxy Tab boasts attractive features that make it one of the popular choices in the tablet PC market. Such features include:

• Android OS – avail the advantages of the Android OS and access to great number of of apps in the Android Market.

• Cameras – equipped with high resolution rear camera and a front camera that is perfect for video chat

• 3G and WiFi – utilize of available connection of either 3G or WiFi

• SMS and Voice – can be turned into a mobile phone

• Form Factor – compact and portable.

The Samsung Galaxy Tab

Here is a list of Samsung Galaxy Tab competitors.

iPad
iPad is undeniably still the most popular Tablet PC these days (See Ipad Competitors List 2011 | iPad Alternatives). Its success made other manufacturers ride in the competition. When it comes to competition against the Samsung Galaxy Tab, iPad takes a big lead when it comes to market share. Although the Samsung Galaxy Tab has access to the Android Market, the Apple App Store offers array of great apps that Samsung Galaxy Tab owners can’t avail.

The iPad
On the other hand, the Galaxy Tab is a popular choice over the iPad among others as it addresses iPad’s lack of cameras. Other iPad disadvantages include no tethering support, doesn’t support the Flash format and no SMS and voice call capabilities to name some.
IPad might address some of these lapses though on their next iPad version – the iPad 2.

Motorola Xoom
Motorola Xoom was unveiled during this year’s Consumer Electronics Show and won the Best Gadget Award during this event. The Xoom seem one of the promising Tablet PCs available.

Motorola Xoom
The Xoom is a good choice among Android OS fans. It is the first device equipped with the latest Android version – the Android 3.0 Honeycomb. Users can enjoy the latest features Android 3.0 offers.
The Xoom not just comes with the latest operating system but also boasts hardware features. It is equipped with dual core processor that promises a vast of computing power. It has a large 10.1 inch touch screen display.
The Xoom offers support to 4G upgrade from its default 3G connectivity should the user see fit. Additionally, it comes with the latest version of Adobe Flash – Flash 10.1

Posted February 18, 2011 at 3:03 pm
 

Samsung Galaxy SII

Samsung Galaxy SIISamsung Galaxy SII ThumbPublish date: 15 June 2011 by Michael JoubertTweet

Give the Galaxy SII, Samsung’s latest Android flagship, to anyone to play with and they’ll come back with one of two responses – either “My, it’s thin!” or “My, the screen’s big!” These two design concepts are part and parcel to the SII smartphone’s appeal, but importantly it's backed up by some very solid performance. 

Huge screen

4.27” is really a lot of screen real-estate, so much so that it makes the original Galaxy S’ 4” look rather ordinary. Just like its fore-runner, this Super AMOLED Plus capacitive touch-screen is also made of Gorilla Glass, with Samsung unfortunately deciding not to up the pixel count – it remains 480 x 800, a standard kept by many of today’s mid-to high range smartphones.

This massive screen will find love from users who do a lot of web surfing, offering one of the best browsing experiences this side of switching over to a tablet, while also remaining king for capturing and playback of photos and video. 4.3” is big but not unique to the smartphone market, with HTC crossing the barrier a few years back with the HD2, while its new Sensation also rocks 4.3”, but with a better resolution of 540 x 960 pixels. 

Thin body

At 8.5 mm the SII is also one of the thinnest devices currently on market, although marginally so. Sony Ericsson’s excellent Xperia arc runs it close with 8.7 mm, and while the iPhone 4’s 9.3 mm is not far off, when lining up the two devices next to each other the differences are minute.

But while the iPhone 4 feels like a solid device, we were under the impression that if one does not handle the SII with care it might just snap in two. A touch of more metal, especially on the back cover, could have done a lot to not only spruce up the design but also toughen it up a bit. Fact is though, even if you carry a lot of junk in your trunk, the SII might still be able to slip in the back of your favourite pair of jeans.

Speedy processor

The Galaxy SII’s looks are backed up by very solid performance emanating from the dual-core 1.2 GHz ARM Cortex-A9 processor, helped along with a full scoop of 1 GB of RAM. This allows video-playback that is smooth, while also making scrolling through images a breeze. A side to side comparison with the original Galaxy S, running through the same set of photos, proved the SII superior, swiping through photos without hitting a glitch.

Running the Smartbench 2011 benchmark application the SII scored a very good 3990 on the Productivity Index and 2210 on the Gaming Index. In comparison the Galaxy S scored 797 and 1852 respectively, while LG’s 1 GHz Optimus Black notched up 788 and 1771.

Also onboard

Samsung provides 16 GB of onboard storage while also including a microSD slot to expand on this (unlike the iPhone 4 and Google Nexus S). Although the SII ticks all the boxes to what a modern smartphone should provide, including Bluetooth 3.0, Wi-Fi 802.11n, GPS and DLNA, it does not include a mini HDMI out to view your pictures or videos on HD televisions as the arc or Nokia N8.

Speaking of which, the SII does not let the side down on the multimedia front, taking decent quality eight megapixel pictures and even upping the ante on the HD video front thanks to full HD 1080p video recording instead of the more common 720p. Viewing images and video on the 4.27” screen is very satisfying, while sharing images are also made easier thanks to the “send via” option replacing the “slideshow” link when viewing images.

Zooming in and out of both pictures and webpages are also made easier with Samsung not just employing the regular, but somewhat haphazard, pinch-to-zoom, but now also a tilt-to-zoom feature. It’s fairly simple - put your thumbs on the screen and simply tilt the screen backwards or forwards. While not a game-changer, it’s definitely a nice to have.Bigger than yours - the Samsung Galaxy SII next to the original S on the right 
Android and TouchWiz

Running Android Gingerbread 2.3.2 the SII is definitely one of the more up-to-date Android devices in SA (the Nexus S is one step better with 2.3.4), offering a better typing experience (yes Swipe is still there), easier cutting and pasting as well as better battery management.

Where Samsung drops the ball though is with their TouchWiz interface. Although the SII runs the latest incarnation (TouchWiz 4.0) we simply did not receive that much of an improved experience from it. While HTC’s new Sense UI at least organises your apps nicely, allowing for a favourites and downloaded tab, Samsung still lobs all your apps together under one menu. And why they opt to have the far left screen as your main home screen, instead of for example the third screen where you have the option to quickly move left or right to other screens, only they will know. This was the reason why we discovered the very handy LauncherPro app, since the Galaxy S did the same.

While we’re not altogether the biggest fans of proprietary UI (partly the reason why the skin free Google Nexus S is so appealing), they can add to the Android experience, but unfortunately TouchWiz 4.0 does not bring much to the party.

Maybe Samsung’s software engineers were kept busy developing Kies Air, Samsung’s content management system that now allows you to upload or download music, photos and videos via a browser without the phone having to be connected to your PC (only on the same router). It’s a long way off from Apple’s amazing iCloud service scheduled for release with iOS 5, but a step in the right direction nonetheless.

We also enjoyed a smart little scheduling feature we noticed. We received an SMS along the line of “See you later today”. “Today” was hyperlinked and when clicking it, it opened a calendar to immediately schedule the appointment.

Conclusion

The three million customers who placed pre-orders for the Samsung Galaxy SII certainly won’t be disappointed. It is one of the best smartphones currently available thanks to not only a wafer-thin design (8.5 mm), but also a 4.27” touch-screen that can easily be mistaken for a serving platter, all supported by one of the fastest dual-core processors in circulation.

While the TouchWiz user interface might lag behind the hardware, it’s far from a reason to dismiss the SII. This phone will be a top-seller and already booked a place under 2011’s top 10 smartphones.

It will retail for between R6699 and R6999 when it hits the South African shelves in July. 1.2 GHz dual-core processor, 4.27" screen, 8.5 mm body - enough said.TouchWiz 4.0 does not bring too much to the table, no mini HDMI out, speakerphone a bit soft. Posted by Saajid S on 18-06-2011 @ 10:30 PM

Technically, you are incorrect about the lack of HDMI Out on this phone. The phone comes equipped with an MHL (Mobile High Definition video Link) Port.
"The MHL standard specifies a 5pin port that can output HD video up to 1080p/60 and 192 kHz 7.1 channel audio to HDTVs. And that’s only one of its fancy features."

you can go to this link for more information:
www.blog.gsmarena.com/the-mhl-port-explained-it-makes-the-galaxy-s-ii-even-cooler-and-more-high-tech/

should reduce cons


Friday, 10 June 2011

Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9 preview: First look

By losing an inch of screen diagonal and reducing the weight to something you might actually be able to hold longer than 5 minutes, the Galaxy Tab 8.9 hopes to convert more people to the tablet cause. Those who found the 7? Galaxy Tab too limiting and the 10.1? slates too heavy to take anywhere other than your couch will certainly appreciate the effort.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 and Tab 8.9 Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 and Tab 8.9 Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 and Tab 8.9 Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 and Tab 8.9
The Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9 official photos

This could be the next evolutionary step in Android tablets. An ultra-slim slate with powerful hardware, lower weight than we expected and an impressive screen created by the world?s number-two-soon-to-be-number-one manufacturer. It definitely looks like a winner on paper (and not the Charlie Sheen kind, mind you). General: GSM 850/900/1800/1900 MHz, UMTS 850/900/1900/2100 MHz, HSDPA 21 Mbps, HSUPA 5.76 MbpsForm factor: TabletDimensions: 230.9 x 157.8 x 8.6 mm, 470 gDisplay: 8.9" 16M-color WXGA (1280 x 800 pixels) IPS TFT capacitive touchscreenCPU: Dual-core 1GHz ARM Cortex-A9 proccessor, ULP GeForce GPU, Tegra 2 chipsetRAM: 1GBOS: Android 3.1 HoneycombMemory: 16/32/64 GB storageCamera: 3.15 megapixel auto-focus camera with 720p video recording; LED flash, 2 megapixel front facing camera, video-calls Connectivity: Wi-Fi a/b/g/n, Wi-Fi hotspot, Bluetooth 3.0+HS, standard microUSB port,GPS receiver with A-GPS, 3.5mm audio jack, FM radio, HDMI TV-out (through an adapter), USB host (adapter required)Misc: TouchWiz customization, telephony, DivX/XviD codec support, built-in accelerometer, multi-touch input, proximity sensor, gyroscope sensor, Swype text input

Android tablets may have been off to a slow start, but no one can deny that they?ve been improving at an amazing rate. Only a few months after the release of Honeycomb we already have at least a dozen intriguing tablets, including the Transformer with its detachable multi-functional keyboard, the Acer ICONIA Tab A500 with its competitive price and the XOOM with its hopefully-soon-to be-enabled LTE connectivity.

Yet the not quite polished Android 3.0 OS has been holding all those tablets back. Lagging, lack of support for all the features (like the USB host or microSD card) and low number of optimized apps used to be the deal-breakers.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9 Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9 Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9
The Galaxy Tab 8.9 3G at ours

Well, Google has already addressed most of the performance issues with the 3.1 update and developers have been hard at work on delivering those apps so iOS might finally get itself some proper competition.

Good timing for the Galaxy Tab 8.9 then, which may as well see its prospects soar.

Thursday, 9 June 2011

Samsung Galaxy S i9001 Plus preview: First look

It?s a Galaxy S facelift with just enough of a speed boost to make it 2011 ready. It has a 1.4 GHz Snapdragon processor and the latest version of Android: 2.3.3 Gingerbread. The Samsung I9001 Galaxy S Plus is heading to Russia under the name of Galaxy S 2011 Edition but will probably reach other markets too.


Samsung I9000 Galaxy S Plus official shots

It makes sense to play this card once again, with probably enough people willing to go for a flagship without busting the piggy bank. And the Galaxy S Plus is a flagship through and through, make no mistake. It?s just not this year?s flagship.

This one met a couple of dual core predators and lived to tell the story. It may?ve been a near death experience alright but the Samsung I9001 Galaxy S Plus has nothing to be ashamed of.

General: GSM 850/900/1800/1900 MHz, UMTS 900/1900/2100 MHz, HSDPA 14.4 Mbps, HSUPA 5.76 MbpsForm factor: Touchscreen bar phoneDimensions: 122.4 x 64.2 x 9.9 mm, 119 gDisplay: 4.0" 16M-color WVGA (480 x 800 pixels) SuperAMOLED capacitive touchscreen, Gorilla GlassCPU: 1.4 GHz Scorpion processor, Qualcomm MSM8255T SnapdragonGPU: Adreno 205 GPURAM: 512 MBOS: Android 2.3.3 (Gingerbread)Memory: 8 GB storage, microSD card slot (up to 32 GB)Camera: 5 megapixel auto-focus camera with face and smile detection, touch focus; HD (720p) video recording at 30fps, front-facing VGA camera, video callsConnectivity: Wi-Fi b/g/n, Wi-Fi hotspot, Bluetooth 3.0+HS, standard microUSB port,GPS receiver with A-GPS, 3.5mm audio jack, FM radio, TV outMisc: TouchWiz 3.0 UI, DivX/XviD codec support, built-in accelerometer, multi-touch input, proximity sensor, Swype text input

Samsung Galaxy S Plus Preview Samsung Galaxy S Plus Preview Samsung Galaxy S Plus Preview Samsung Galaxy S Plus Preview
Samsung I9000 Galaxy S Plus live shots

An overclocked single-core chipset doesn?t hold a candle to dual core CPUs but the Galaxy S Plus will be held to a different standard. It was out of its depth in our latest shootout but ? as far as we?re concerned ? it did well where it matters.

By the way, we should note that we have on our hands a pre-release unit clocked at 1.2 GHz ? the market-ready units will have 1.4 GHz clock rates enabled. Even at the lower speed though, the new Galaxy S Plus outperformed the year-old original in most tasks we tested. The speed boost is there ? now, let?s see how much of an upgrade we can expect elsewhere.

Monday, 30 May 2011

Samsung Galaxy S II announced in India, will hit shelves by June 9

The much awaited Samsung Galaxy S II has finally got a launch date in India. According to Samsung India, the phone will be on sale starting June 9. However, thanks to a special deal with Vodafone India, their customers will be able to get their hands on the Galaxy S II from June 3.

Now for the big question and that is what will be the cost of this monster of a device. The Galaxy S II will set you back by Rs. 32,890 (US$723), which shouldn't come as a big surprise considering the spec sheet of this phone.

Vodafone customers will be able to pre-book the device from tomorrow by paying Rs. 1,000.

You can read our full review of the Galaxy S II here.

Source

Friday, 27 May 2011

Samsung Galaxy S LCD GT-I9003 Review

Page 1 - Introduction Page 2 - Design and Build Page 3 - Operating System and Interface Page 4 - Multimedia Walkthrough Page 5 - GPS and Layar, Battery Life Page 6 - Pricing and Verdict next

Samsung Galaxy S GT-I9003 is branded for India as Galaxy S LCD 4GB but elsewhere it is available as Galaxy SL (16GB version). Personally, I would call it a toned down substitute of Galaxy S I9000. It indeed was surprising to see this version out so late and almost a year after the launch of Galaxy S I9000 handset. Had the handset arrived alongside or at least three months after the GT-I9000 launch, it would have made more sense and would have sold more.

Samsung has introduced this new Galaxy S LCD 4GB loaded with Android 2.2.1 Froyo by default. Despite clear technical differences between this handset and the Galaxy S I9000, people can't help but compare both devices. Throughout the review, I would be referring it as GT-I9003 and the Galaxy S as GT-I9000, just to avoid confusion.

Currently, there's a dearth of Galaxy S I9000 handsets and the shortage of Super AMOLED displays has been cited as the main reason behind this. Obviously, Samsung has moved on to the new Super AMOLED Plus technology that is better and has been used in upcoming handset - Samsung Galaxy S II GT-I9100.

GT-I9003


In the absence of GT-I9000, you'd certainly like to know about an Android device that looks almost the same and is packed with a few new goodies in it. Before you get to know how Galaxy S LCD performs, take a look at the differences between both the phones.

Differentials

 Android 2.1 Eclair (now with 2.2)

From the above table, it is clear that Galaxy S LCD would stay behind a bit in terms of graphic and processing performance. Both smartphones have processors running at the clock speed of 1GHz but due to different manufacturing design differences, there could be a marginal variation in their performance. The TI OMAP 3630 CPU is the same which has been used in the Motorola Droid X.

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Page 1 - Introduction Page 2 - Design and Build Page 3 - Operating System and Interface Page 4 - Multimedia Walkthrough Page 5 - GPS and Layar, Battery Life Page 6 - Pricing and Verdict next

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