AT&T’s Samsung A927 Flight shows up before its premiere

Author: admin  //  Category: Samsung, Touch Ul

The QWERTY-enabled Samsung A927 Flight II has made its way to both Samsung’s and AT&T’s websites even it hasn’t been properly announced yet. Apparently, its premiere is just around the corner so we will get a chance to see it in flesh pretty soon.

Heavy texters will be glad to see the Samsung A927 Flight II hardware four-row side-slide QWERTY keyboard. In addition, the newbie also packs a 3-inch touchscreen of WQVGA resolution (240 x 400 pixels).

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Samsung A927 Flight II

Also on board there is a 2-megapixel fixed-focus snapper which is capable of taking videos as well and a standard 3.5mm audio jack ready to accommodate your favorite headphones’ plug. Thanks to the microSD card slot you can expand the inbuilt memory (of 512MB) with up to 16GB.

The phone is said to support AT&T’s Mobile TV service and on top of that you get quick access to some of the most popular social networking services (such as Facebook and Twitter).

Samsung A927 Flight II

The unannounced Samsung A927 Flight II was spotted on both Samsung USA’s (overview and specs sheet) AT&T’s websites, however, there is still no word on the QWERTY-fied phone’s official launch date or price.

Samsung I5800 Galaxy 3 to hit Germany by the end of July

Author: admin  //  Category: Android, Samsung, Touch Ul

The Samsung I5800 Galaxy 3 was announced a good one month ago and apparently it is almost ready to start shipping across Germany. The Android-running phone is said to hit the German market by the end of this very month.

The recently announced Samsung I5800 Galaxy 3 paid us a short visit a little while ago. The device is based on the Android platform (Android OS v2.1 a.k.a. Eclair) and packs a 3.2″ capacitive touchscreen of WQVGA resolution.

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Samsung I5800 Galaxy 3

Also on board there is a 3.2MP autofocus sharpshooter as well as support for Wi-Fi 802.11n, Bluetooth 3.0 and HSDPA. The phone features a GPS receiver and a microSD card slot ready to accommodate cards with up to 32GB of inbuilt memory.

The Galaxy 3 (which is a twin bro of the Galaxy Apollo i5801, which is already available in the UK) is among the few Android-powered smartphones with support for DivX/XviD video right out of the box.

The Samsung I5800 Galaxy 3 is said to start selling in Germany before the end of July for an estimated price of 300 euro.

Samsung Captivate (Galaxy S) coming to AT&T on 18 July

Author: admin  //  Category: Android, Touch Ul

Here’s they come, the Galaxy S phones. AT&T just announced pricing and target availability for their version, the Samsung i897 Captivate, and it will beat the T-Mobile version by a few days and will probably become the first Galaxy S to hit the US.

The Samsung i897 Captivate is going on sale next Sunday, July 18 and it will cost 199.99 US dollars on a two year contract. Looks aside, the Captivate is an exact duplicate of the Samsung I9000 Galaxy S (with AT&T 3G bands of course).

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Samsugn i897 Captivate for AT&T

To summarize the specs, the Android-running Samsung Captivate has a 4″ WVGA SuperAMOLED touchscreen, 1GHz CPU and 5MP camera with 720p video recording.

The T-Mobile Galaxy S phone, the Samsung Vibrant is coming a few days later - July 21, again for 199.99 US dollars. And CDMA carriers are getting a Galaxy S too (like the Sprint Epic 4G which has a hardware QWERTY), though we don’t have the availability dates yet.

Samsung I7500 Galaxy review: A hitchhiker’s guide

Author: admin  //  Category: Samsung

Introduction

Android is set on grabbing the number two spot in the smartphone market by 2012 and the Samsung I7500 Galaxy might be the type of phone to get it there. Perhaps less for the Galaxy at this point, and more for the Samsung, but we’ll see about that.

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Samsung I7500 Galaxy official photos

The I7500 Galaxy is a “Google experience” phone, and has the intrinsic advantage of having the search giant’s infrastructure behind its back. For one, YouTube and Picasa integration sure add value to the 5-megapixel camera.

And as to people who spend their time digging around the Internet for oft hard to find information, we really appreciate the improved search widget. And that thingy is about to get better - Android is a bit like Google’s other projects, a perpetual work in progress that keeps getting new features and polishes the occasional rough edges.

The I7500 Galaxy is the company’s first take on Android but if we put the OS aside, it should be a solid Samsung touchscreen with all the gadgetry we’ve got used to in smartphones. Of course, the Android platform still has a few issues to address and get some annoying limitations out of the way. Let’s see what this here Android by Samsung can do for you and where it might fail.

Key features

  • Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE support
  • 3G with HSDPA 7.2 Mbps and HSUPA 5.76Mbps
  • Android OS v1.5 (codenamed Cupcake) without customizations
  • 3.2″ capacitive AMOLED touchscreen of HVGA resolution
  • Qualcomm MSM72000A 528MHz CPU, 128MB RAM
  • 5 MP autofocus camera with LED flash, geo-tagging, YouTube and Picasa integration
  • Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g and GPS receiver
  • Accelerometer sensor for auto-rotate and turn-to-mute
  • Digital compass for automatic navigation of maps
  • Standard microUSB port for charging and data
  • microSD card slot with microSDHC support
  • 8GB internal storage
  • Stereo Bluetooth (A2DP)
  • 3.5 mm audio jack

Main disadvantages

  • No smart dialing
  • Camera features are a bit outdated
  • No videocalling
  • No multi-touch gestures
  • No Flash support in the web browser (coming soon via the Open Screen Project)
  • No DivX/XviD video support or a third-party application to play that
  • No FM radio
  • No TV-out port
  • No voice dialing
  • Somewhat limited 3rd party software availability
  • No Bluetooth file transfers (not without rooting)
  • No tethering (not without a custom ROM)

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Samsung I7500 Galaxy live shots

Samsung have established a strong presence in the touchscreen market. Their usual weapon of choice is TouchWiz, which brings PocketPCs and feature phones closer together, projecting a consistent brand image.

With the Galaxy, they’re stepping out of their comfort zone - a new OS and a new interface. TouchWiz for Android is yet to come (and in the case of I7500 never is more likely than later).

To make sure it does well, Samsung have equipped the Galaxy to match to specs of the top Android phones available on the market. And it sure needs every bit of ammo if it’s going to challenge the well-entrenched HTC Hero. The I7500 Galaxy can take it on spec for spec and even win a few rounds.

But that’s on paper, and we guess you’re curious to see the real deal. Jump to the next page for this Einstein’s worth of a question: what is the Galaxy made of?

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