Archive for the ‘Samsung’ Category
Aaron takes a look at the Samsung Acclaim, US Cellular’s first Android device. With an 800 MHz processor, 3.2-inch display, Android 2.1, and a full QWERTY keyboard, it’s a nice mid-range phone.
Ever wonder what it would be like to have cinema quality entertainment in the palm of your hand? Introducing the T-Mobile Samsung Vibrant a Galaxy S phone available now!
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Jon (technobuffalo.com) giving a full review of the Samsung Captivate (Galaxy S) for AT&T.
Quite successful and a cool phone? what you think? ;>
Bringing the Galaxy S family together with the AT&T Captivate, T-Mobile Vibrant, Sprint Epic 4G, Verizon Fascinate and more. Galaxy S, making the smartphone, brilliant!
You may have recently heard about the secret Galaxy S Android desktop syncing software. It sounds like it could be pretty good sync solution. It certainly seems to be more feature-rich than the other sync options, and I especially like the text message archiving/printing features. We took it for a test drive with the Samsung Vibrant, and here’s how it went.
Two popular messaging phones with similar features – a physical keyboard, touchscreen, and a 3MP camera. But there are also a few differences too. The LG Vu Plus has a capacitive touchscreen and the Reality has a resistive touchscreen. How do they stack up against each other? Sydney compares these two messaging phones Phonedog style
In this video mate from Pocketnow test three different CPU platforms for smartphones: the Qualcomm Snapdragon (on the Nexus One), the Samsung Humminbird (on the AT&T Captivate), and the TI OMAP (on the Motorola Droid X). Brian test each device in a variety of tests, including boot up time, internet speed, Google Earth, and YouTube video streaming. We’re trying to determine, in practice, which CPU platform is fastest.
PhoneArena reviews the Samsung Intercept. Thе phone is an important point in the carrier’s relationship with Android. The first three devices (HTC Hero, Samsung Moment and HTC EVO 4G) were all premium devices, perched atop their lineup and representing the best the smartphone world had to offer at the time. The Intercept is different; it’s a decidedly mid-range …
For anyone that’s an avid reader of the site, you know we love smartphone smackdowns. We get especially giddy when we get to compare two flagship devices on the same carrier, so imagine our excitement when the Samsung Captivate for AT&T showed up at our offices. We’ve already unboxed it, and teased this matchup in our screen overview (Super AMOLED vs. Retina Display), now it’s time to get to the fight. We have a 10 round bout on our hands covering: * Call Quality * Battery * Speed * Browser * Screen * Signal Strength * Design * Camera * Text Entry * Operating system
Who are you backing? The Samsung Captivate or the iPhone 4?
This video shows you Windows Phone 7 unboxing and initial setup