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Tuesday 31 January 2012

Samsung unveils the dual-core I9070 Galaxy S Advance

Yesterday it was reported that a few images and specifications had surfaced of an upcoming Samsung handset named the I9070 Galaxy S Advance. However, there were very few details to go by and the announcement of the upcoming Galaxy S handset was expected to take place during the Mobile World Conference event in Barcelona. Samsung has done one better, and officially announced the upcoming smartphone ahead of the projected date. As expected most of the features remain the same, thus confirming the specification and image rumours that popped up yesterday.
The latest handset from the Galaxy S series
The latest handset from the Galaxy S series


Speaking at the launch of the Galaxy S Advance, President of IT & Mobile Communications Division at Samsung Electronics, JK Shin said, “The GALAXY S Advance adds to the successful track record of the GALAXY smartphone range with a phone that combines power and style with all the versatility of Samsung’s Hub services.”

Here is a look at the highlighted features of the Samsung Galaxy S Advance

  • Android 2.3 Gingerbread with Samsung TouchWiz, Samsung L!ve Panel UX
  • 4.0” WVGA Super AMOLED display with a resolution of 480x800
  • 1 GHz Dual-Core Processor
  • 5 Megapixel rear camera with AF and LED Flash
  • 720p video recording capabilities at 30fps
  • 1.3 Megapixel front facing Camera
  • 8 or 16GB Internal memory
  • MicroSD card support up to 32GB
  • 768MB RAM
  • Samsung Kies 2.0, Samsung Kies air, AllShare
  • HSPA 14.4Mbps  850/900/1900/2100
  • EDGE, GPRS 850/900/1800/1900
  • Bluetooth v3.0, USB 2.0, Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n
  • Dimensions are 123.2 x 63.0 x 9.69mm
  • Weighs 120g
  • 1,500mAh battery

Apart from the above mentioned features, the I9070 Galaxy S Advance features Samsung Hubs and ChatON services. The Music Hub found on this smartphone offers a full music store experience with access to over 11 million tracks and the ability to fully personalize users’ own music catalogues. Samsung states that the handset also features Find My Mobile, a unique lost-phone management system that ensures secure phone data encryption in case of phone loss, and that enables users to trace their lost phone directly via the Web or even delete the device’s data remotely.

This handset will be available from February and will be rolled out in a phased manner starting from Russia followed by a gradual release across CIS, Europe, Africa, Middle East, Southeast and Southwest Asia, Latin America and China. For more information on this smartphone, click here. As of now, no pricing is available on the handset, but as always you'll know as soon as we do.

Android camera showdown: Samsung Galaxy Nexus vs. Samsung Galaxy S II


Cameras
The cameras in our Android phones have certainly gotten better than most would have expected.  The old standard of "it's a cell phone camera, it'll never be as good as a cheap point-and-shoot" is no longer valid.  The hardware is getting better, and the software is improving right alongside it, making the experience of using your phone as a camera enjoyable, and in the right hands, almost professional.  
The big news in Android last year on the camera front was the Samsung Galaxy S II's 8-megapixel rear shooter, and the Samsung Galaxy Nexus' "zero shutter lag" camera.  We decided that these two had to go head to head.  Hit the break to check it out.

The gear

In one corner, we've got the T-Mobile-branded Samsung Galaxy S II, and in the other we have the GSM Samsung Galaxy Nexus.  Now your Galaxy S II may not be T-Mobile branded, and you might be using the Verizon version of the Galaxy Nexus, but the camera hardware and software is the same as these two -- which means it's very good.
The "studio" is my office.  I've got 150 watts of 6500k compact florescent lighting in the overhead fixture, and a 36-inch square light tent was used with a 26 watt 5500k compact flouro lighting from the right, and a 6500k compact flouro lighting from the left.  This is the setup I use with my DSLR to take product pictures, and it's a pretty controlled environment.  For more information about what 5500k and 6500k means, have a look at Wikipedia.  The quick and dirty version is that 5500k lamps look like natural sunlight above or below the tropics, and 6500k lamps resemble the sun in the tropics at noon.  The higher the number, the more blue things look.
The phones were set to automatic everything, and held in my hands while leaning across (and on) a table to keep things steady.  For each phone, five pictures of each test were taken, and the best was chosen.  For the panorama shots, I swiveled in my chair.  Yes, this was as fun as it sounds.
If you're interested in the raw jpeg's that haven't been resized, grab them here.

The scene

Galaxy Nexus  Galaxy S II
Galaxy Nexus on the left, Galaxy S II on the right
Here you can see why we're interested in doing this.  As-is, out of the box, with no effects and everything automatic, you've got two great pictures.  I used items that most would be familiar with for these tests, and the colors, clarity, and focus looks great from both entries.  Even zoomed in (try it) they both look great, and it makes it hard to determine a winner from these shots.  But a bit closer inspection shows that the Galaxy S II does a better job showing the difference in the lighting color temperature, even with the big white area in the background to try to fool it.  Because of that. the Galaxy S II wins this round, but only by a nerd hair.  We're more than happy with either, but we have to have a winner.
Galaxy Nexus = 0
Galaxy S II = 1

With flash

Galaxy Nexus, with flash  Galaxy S II
Galaxy Nexus on the left, Galaxy S II on the right
The best way to ruin a decent picture-taking opportunity is to use your cell phone with its flash.  Superbright LEDs (that's a real model, look it up!) tend to wash everything out, and the software and optics in a cell phone just can't compensate for it very well.  While either one of these pictures would be just fine for sharing on Google+, neither are as good as the ones taken sans flash.  To choose a winner, I looked at how the Galaxy S II knocks the exposure value down to compensate for the bright flash, and makes the image dark.  I'd rather have the small areas of wash-out and a bright picture like the one taken with the Galaxy Nexus than one that's been manipulated to be too dark.  This round goes to the Galaxy Nexus.
Galaxy Nexus = 1
Galaxy S II = 1

Digital zoom

Galaxy Nexus  Galaxy S II
Galaxy Nexus on the left, Galaxy S II on the right
Both the Galaxy Nexus and the Galaxy S II have built-in digital zoom, and like using the flash, digital zooming is a great way to ruin a good picture.  Don't do it unless you have to.  Not heeding my own advice (we had to look) I zoomed in as far as possible with each phone and snapped some pics of the soup can.  While they look OK as a thumbnail, click them to see a bigger version.  Yeah, digital zoom sucks, and it sucks much more on the Galaxy Nexus.  Things look more grainy and washed out when you zoom in, and this is amplified with the Galaxy Nexus.  The Galaxy S II breaks the tie and wins this round.
Galaxy Nexus = 1
Galaxy S II = 2

Zoom detail

Galaxy Nexus  Galaxy S II
Galaxy Nexus on the left, Galaxy S II on the right
What's worse than using the zoom on your Android phone's camera?  Using the zoom then getting really close to grab a close-up.  Neither one of these looks particularly good, but the Galaxy S II is the clear winner.  It's sharper, less grainy and has far less noise.
Galaxy Nexus = 1
Galaxy S II = 3

Panorama

Galaxy Nexus
Galaxy Nexus
Galaxy S II
Galaxy S II
While panorama shots are mostly a gimmick, they are a very cool gimmick and pano-mode is available on both the phone's were testing here.  Taking a panorama of the city or the mountains from 500 yards away is one thing, but we wanted to get up close and make it harder.  There's not a lot of detail in either picture, but there's not really supposed to be -- the file sizes get shrunk and you lose a lot of the picture data during compression.  That's just how the panorama software on both phones works.
This one's really a wash, because when dealing with small objects up-close you see every stitching defect.  Look at the Band-Aid box and the right side of the tent in the picture taken with the Galaxy Nexus, and look at the Sprint Hero box and soup can in the picture taken with the Galaxy S II.  I'm picking a winner on ease-of-use, and the Galaxy Nexus gave me less errors while taking the panorama shots in the tight confines of a light tent.  It gets the nod here, but we're not giving any points to either one.  This one was just a fun throw-away.
Galaxy Nexus = 1
Galaxy S II = 3

Front-facing camera

Galaxy Nexus  Galaxy S II
Galaxy Nexus on the left, Galaxy S II on the right
You shouldn't expect too much from the front facing camera on any Android phone.  they're just there for video chatting and conferencing, not for MySpace quality portraits.  But because video chat is something that's finally caught on, it's an important category.  Both pictures are clear enough, and show as much detail as we should expect from the lower quality sensors, but there's one big difference -- The Galaxy S II corrects the white balance under the bright white lights a bit too much.  That healthy glow you see in the picture on the right isn't very accurate -- I'm a nerd who has no color to my skin in winter.  The Galaxy Nexus shows me in all my pale, geeky glory, so it gets the point here.
Galaxy Nexus = 2
Galaxy S II = 3

Video

Samsung Galaxy Nexus:


Samsung Galaxy S II:

Youtube link for mobile viewing
Both the Galaxy Nexus and the Galaxy S II shoot great video at 1080p.  Both also jitter a lot if you're not holding things steady, but that happens with most phone cameras while shooting in HD mode.  This was another tough one to judge, because both videos look pretty damn good.
In the end, the Galaxy S II is the winner, for two reasons.  One is the same we saw at the beginning; the color is rendered more accurately, and the left side of the can was  more yellow than the right because of the different lamps used.    While the Galaxy Nexus offers digital zoom while shooting in 1080p (and does a fine job), it also takes a bit longer to focus while zooming or moving around.  Since I have to pick a winner, the Galaxy S II get's the point.
Galaxy Nexus = 2
Galaxy S II = 4

Wrapping it up

Winner
Before the comments about "change the settings" or "use a custom white balance" arrive, that's not the point of this showdown.  If you're the type who digs into camera settings and knows just what to adjust based on conditions, this article wasn't for you.  Most users (ourselves included) just want to pull our phone out of our pocket, point it at the subject, and take a good picture.  That being said, let's continue.
The clear winner here is anyone using one of these two great phones.  There's nothing about either that makes it a bad choice, camera performance included.  But when we get down to the brass tacks, the Galaxy S II out performs the Galaxy Nexus in more ways when talking about the camera, as well as the most important test -- point and click.  Go back to the first comparison shots, and the way the Galaxy S II duplicates the light and shadows, and the level of detail it still offers is pretty hard to beat.  If you're buying an Android phone strictly for the camera, go buy the Galaxy S II and you won't be disappointed.

Samsung Adds Galaxy S Advance To The Lineup, Brings Gingerbread, Dual-Core and Super AMOLED

As if Samsung’s portfolio wasn’t big enough already, they’ve now called into action the new kid on the block.  Joining Sammy’s deadly arsenal of successful devices is the new “Galaxy S Advance”.  The Galaxy S Advance appears to be more of the Galaxy Note’s little brother but without all of the heft.
“The GALAXY S Advance adds to the successful track record of the GALAXY smartphone range with a phone that combines power and style with all the versatility of Samsung’s Hub services,” said JK Shin, President of IT & Mobile Communications Division at Samsung Electronics.

The device comes to the table with a 1GHz dual-core CPU under the hood, a 4-inch Super AMOLED display for crisp colors, 16GB of memory and 768 MB of RAM.  In addition, the handset will offer support for HSPA connections in the 14.4 Mbps range and touts a 5 meg rear facing camera and 1.3 meg front facing shooter.  And we already know what you’re going to ask, is ICS on board?  No, sorry.  The device will initially ship with Gingerbread 2.3 along with the usual Samsung apps variety.  We haven’t received word yet on how much the device will initially run price wise but we’re sure it will be revealed soon.  The device will initially see a gradual roll-out beginning with Russia some time next month.  Europe, Africa, Southeast and Southwest Asia, Latin America and China will soon follow suit.  Pretty much everywhere but the United States.  Feel free to scour the official press release below and don’t forget to let us know what you think in the comments as well.    

Press Release:

SEOUL, Korea – January 30, 2012 – Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd, a global leader in digital media and digital convergence technologies, today announced the launch of the Samsung GALAXY S Advance. Designed for those who define themselves by the phone they carry, the GALAXY S Advance strikes a balance of style, power and performance. It will be available in Russia starting from February, and then be gradually rolled out in CIS, Europe, Africa, Middle East, Southeast and Southwest Asia, Latin America and China.
“The GALAXY S Advance adds to the successful track record of the GALAXY smartphone range with a phone that combines power and style with all the versatility of Samsung’s Hub services,” said JK Shin, President of IT & Mobile Communications Division at Samsung Electronics.
Dual Core performance, curved design and Super AMOLED display
Powered by a dual core 1.0 GHz processor and HSPA 14.4 Mbps connectivity, the GALAXY S Advance has been built with power and connectivity in mind, delivering great versatility and a highly responsive user interface for easy multitasking. Application start-ups are faster with virtually no lag time, and the user experience is boosted with smoother screen transitions, faster image processing, and enhanced Web download and browsing performance.
The GALAXY S Advance’s curved glass design enhances handling of the phone and fits the user’s facial form easily and naturally. Its 4.0” Super AMOLED display provides the stunning visuals users have come to expect of Samsung GALAXY smartphones, offering unparalleled color reproduction and ensuring that photos and videos captured with the device’s 5MP camera can be enjoyed with vivid clarity.
The Samsung user experience
Running on Android Gingerbread and featuring Samsung’s TouchWiz user interface, the GALAXY S Advance enables users to stay connected through the Samsung Hubs and ChatON services. Music Hub offers a full music store experience with access to over 11 million tracks and the ability to fully personalize users’ own music catalogues. Readers Hub offers access to over 2.3 million e-books, 3,500 magazine and 200 newspaper titles; while the hugely popular Game Hub offers access to thousands of catalogued games supplemented by gamer news feeds and news.
Samsung’s cross platform communication service, ChatON connects all phone users into a single community using phone numbers instead of usernames and passwords, provides aneasy instant messaging, group chatting and sharing of content in multiple formats—images, video, voice, contacts, calendar—to make messaging simpler and more intuitive than ever.
The GALAXY S Advance also features Find My Mobile, a unique lost-phone management system that ensures secure phone data encryption in case of phone loss, and that enables users to trace their lost phone directly via the Web or even delete the device’s data remotely.
For multimedia content and more detailed information, please visitwww.samsungmobilepress.com
Note to EditorsSamsung GALAXY S Advance product specifications
Network
HSPA  14.4Mbps  850/900/1900/2100EDGE/GPRS  850/900/1800/1900 
Process 
1 GHz Dual-Core Processor
Display
4.0” WVGA(480×800) Super AMOLED display
OS
Android 2.3(Gingerbread)
Camera
Main(Rear) : 5 Megapixel Auto Focus Camera with LED FlashSub(Front) : 1.3 Megapixel Camera
Video
Codec : MPEG4, H.263, H.264, WMV, DivX, VC-1
Recording/ Playback : 720@30fps

Audio
Codec : MP3, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA, AC3Music Player with SoundAlive 3.5mm Ear Jack, Stereo FM Radio with RDS


Value-added Features
Samsung TouchWiz/ Samsung L!ve Panel UX
Samsung Apps
Samsung Kies 2.0/ Samsung Kies air/ AllShare
ChatON(Downloadable via Samsung Apps)Readers Hub(Downloadable via Samsung Apps)Music Hub Game Hub *Service availability differs by region
GoogleTM Mobile Services- Android Market™, Gmail™, YouTube™, Google Maps™, Syncing with Google Calendar™
Polaris Office
Find My Mobile 
A-GPS
Connectivity
Bluetooth® technology v 3.0 High SpeedUSB 2.0Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n
Sensor Proximity, Accelerometer, Geomagnetic, Light, Gyroscope
Memory 8/16GB User memory + 768MB(RAM)microSD (up to 32GB)
Size 123.2 x 63.0 x 9.69 mm, 120g
Battery
Standard battery, Li-ion 1,500mAh
* All functionality, features, specifications and other product information provided in this document including, but not limited to, the benefits, design, pricing, components, performance, availability, and capabilities of the product are subject to change without notice or obligation.
About Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. is a global leader in semiconductor, telecommunication, digital media and digital convergence technologies with 2010 consolidated sales of US$135.8 billion. Employing approximately 190,500 people in 206 offices across 68 countries, the company operates two separate organizations to coordinate its nine independent business units: Digital Media & Communications, comprising Visual Display, Mobile Communications, Telecommunication Systems, Digital Appliances, IT Solutions, and Digital Imaging; and Device Solutions, consisting of Memory, System LSI and LCD. Recognized for its industry-leading performance across a range of economic, environmental and social criteria, Samsung Electronics was named the world’s most sustainable technology company in the 2011 Dow Jones Sustainability Index. For more information, please visit www.samsung.com.

Best Buy Set To Release Galaxy Note Phone February 14th, $249.99 Pricing For Telus And Bell Versions

Canadians are rejoicing today because they are set to receive the awesome Samsung Galaxy Note next month. Best Buy Canada has just confirmed it will unleash the phone to the masses February 14th for a cool $249.99 on a 3-year contract. Considering AT&T is set to release the phone around February 19th in the States, Best Buy’s release date looks to be accurate. Best Buy lists the device will operate with mobile carriers Rogers, Telus and Bell, though pricing information is mysteriously absent for the Rogers version of the phone. No word yet on off-contract pricing, but you can expect it will be around or over the $600 mark. If you’re in Canada and you fancy a Galaxy Note, head on over to your local Best Buy store and pre-order that bad boy today

Samsung Launching Device With Their First Ever Super Bowl Ad



Samsung has big plans for Super Bowl Sunday. They just tweeted that a  device will be launched alongside their first ever Super Bowl ad, stating that “only an ad in America’s biggest game can do it justice.” They also mentioned that it will be one of the longest ads during the event. Taking into account the going rate for average Super Bowl ads, a 60 second spot would cost them $6 million dollars. I think they are pretty pumped about this one. But what will the ad be for exactly? Their follow up tweet specifically mentions the Galaxy Note, but the first is cryptic enough for me to believe they have something else up their sleeves. Maybe, maybe not.
Looks like we have about a week before game time. Until then, start your speculating!

Samsung Wants More Passion From Consumers, Set To Attack With Major Ad Push


Samsung is among the most familiar brands around, that’s a gimme. In addition to being more familiar with the general consumer because of its great electronics and gadgets, it has a bit of a niche following too— considering it has some of the most popular devices in the game. Although it is one of the more popular brands among Android users, its brand is not as popular as a certain giant from Cupertino. That’s why Sammy wants to take the next step in its popularity and have consumers become not just intrigued with Samsung products, but it wants to consumers to become passionate fanatics… or even obsessed with the Samsung brand.
Sammy has made it clear of its intentions too. In a recent interview, marketing executive Younghee Lee stresses it is ready to “change people’s attention” because “people are obsessed with Apple”. Sounds ambitious, doesn’t it? Since Samsung has some of the more popular phones around and also has some clever ads to promote its capabilities recently, I’d say Samsung is off to a great start.
It looks like Sammy is ready to unleash an all-out attack for 2012 too. It is scheduled to air a commercial spot during this weekend’s Super Bowl for starters which will likely promote is uber-cool Galaxy Note phone. Don’t forget— Samsung has a sponsorship for this year’s Olympic games as well, so you can expect the brand to launch a major product… and we think we may know what that major product will likely be too. There’s no better 2-week stage to promote a superior device, don’t you think? This will be in addition to the additional barrage of other existing products.
You’ve already been Samsunged. You all ready to become Samsunged and obsessed?

New TI OMAP 4470 Chip Seen in New Galaxy Nexus? Also Benchmarked?

Back when it was first leaked that Sprint would be sporting a Galaxy Nexus of their own it was suggested that their version of the phone would be running a 1.5GHz processor. Considering the original runs a 1.2 GHz OMAP processor everyone was a little surprised. It caught some to question the fact that Google and Samsung would consider dropping a higher-end Galaxy Nexus on the world. Well if the benchmark folk NenaMark have anything to say about it, then a higher-end Galaxy Nexus we shall have!
The OMAp 4470 processor sports a PowerVR SGX 544 GPU which is an upgrade from the SGX540 GPU running TI’s OMAP 4460 that’s in the Verizon Galaxy Nexus. If you look at the scores above you can see that the 544 GPU does decently better than that of the 540 GPU. The OMAP 4470 processor can run up to 1.8GHz but as you can see from the benchmark it’s underclocked at 1.3GHz.
While the the original Galaxy Nexus missed out on the OMAP 4470, as TI announced back in June of 2011 that it would be shipping in devices during the first half of 2012, it would make sense to see the newer Galaxy Nexus have the newer chip in it. While we will have to wait and see for the actual specs to come it before we will know for sure, it does add some weight to the linked promo we saw earlier. Only time will tell.

New Galaxy Nexus spotted in Benchmark tests

For now we are going to chalk this up as just a rumor or most likely some spoofed information. What we are seeing is apparently some benchmarks ran of the popular NenaMark2 suite. What makes this unique is the device is being listed as the Samsung Galaxy Nexus — only with a new TI OMAP 4470 processor with much, much better graphics and a possible speed of around 1.8 GHz. Interesting indeed. Is Samsung about to pull a Motorola and drop another device so soon?


Now obviously this information can be faked but we’ve seen plenty of benchmark results from NenaMark in the past that have wound up accurate but we’ll still take this with a large grain of salt. Lets break it down though. The current Galaxy Nexus runs at 1.2 GHz on a TI OMAP 4460 with the SGX540 graphics processor. The leak above seems to be running at 1.3 GHz but offers the SGX544 GPU. Something that we know to be coming on the new 1.8 GHz capable TI OMAP 4470 processor.
Back in June TI announced the 1.8 GHz 4470 CPU and stated we would be seeing it hit devices come early 2012, so this could make sense but I’m sure many Galaxy Nexus owners would be extremely upset if their shiny new phones get replaced by something better so quickly. Obviously this could also just be an overclocked Nexus with some information changed in the GPU department so we’ll just have to wait and see. Interesting stuff. Maybe Motorola is rubbing off on Google — which is rubbing off on Samsung and we’ll get a Galaxy Nexus Plus or something.
Device Specifications and Information
Device Info
    Device Name : GALAXY Nexus 4G [Verizon]
    Manufactuer : Samsung
    Carrier : Verizon
    Announced Date : December 14, 2011
    Release Date : December 15, 2011
    Also Known As : Nexus Prime
Display
  • Screen Size : 4.65 Inch
  • Resolution : 1280x720
  • Screen Type : Super AMOLED
Dimension & Weight
  • Height : 5.33 Inch
  • Width : 2.67 Inch
  • Depth : 0.37 Inch
  • Weight : 150 Grams
Battery & Power
    Battery Type:
  • Lithium Ion
  • Battery Capacity : 1850 mAh
  • Talk Time : NA
  • Stand By Time : 150 hours
Software
    Android OS:
  • 4.0.x
    Audio Playback:
  • AAC
  • AAC+
  • AMR
  • MID
  • MP3
  • WAV
  • WMA
    Video Playback:
  • h.264 / AVC
    Messaging:
  • SMS
  • MMS
Hardware
    CPU : OMAP 4460
    CPU Clock Speed : 1200 Mhz
    Core : 2
    Ram : 1000 MB
    Internal Storage : 32 GB
    Front Facing Camera :

Samsung now offering unique personal engraving for Galaxy Note buyers

Samsung is looking to take things up another notch and have introduced personal engraving options for their new and popular new Galaxy Note smartphone. According to Samsung’s official Flickr page, buyers in South Korea can now get personalized custom engraving with their purchased from now until March 31st at select Samsung locations. Nice touch Samsung!


Samsung isn’t the only one offering this unique option and the folks over at Apple have had this same thing for years. Offering custom laser engravings on iPod and iPads for as long as I can remember. Is Samsung taking another play from Apple’s playbook just because they can? Or will Apple start another lawsuit for this too?
A popular option on Apple.com this type of customization hasn’t been seen in the world of Android but Samsung may be looking to change that. Whether this will be available to multiple devices and locations isn’t yet known but for now it’s only available for South Korea and the Galaxy Note. Now you can get the impressive 5.3″ AMOLED display rocking Galaxy Note smartphone with a personal touch or “note” right on the back for your loved ones. Too bad we can’t do this stateside because it would make a great gift for Valentines Day — especially with the AT&T 4G LTE Note launching February 19th.
Device Specifications and Information
Device Info
    Device Name : Galaxy Note
    Manufactuer : Samsung
    Carrier :
    Announced Date : September 01, 2011
    Release Date : TBA
    Also Known As :
Display
  • Screen Size : 5.30 Inch
  • Resolution : 800x1280
  • Screen Type : Super AMOLED
Dimension & Weight
  • Height : 5.78 Inch
  • Width : 3.27 Inch
  • Depth : 0.38 Inch
  • Weight : 178 Grams
Battery & Power
    Battery Type:
  • Lithium Ion
  • Battery Capacity : 2500 mAh
  • Talk Time : NA
  • Stand By Time : 390 hours
Software
    Android OS:
  • 2.3.x
    Audio Playback:
  • AAC
  • AMR
  • MP3
  • WAV
  • WMA
    Video Playback:
  • h.263
  • h.264 / AVC
  • MPEG-4 (MP4)
  • WMV
    Messaging:
  • SMS
  • MMS
Hardware
    CPU :
    CPU Clock Speed : 1400 Mhz
    Core : 2
    Ram : 1024 MB
    Internal Storage : 32.768 GB
    Front Facing Camera :

Galaxy Nexus Franco kernel shows us the need for speed, and great battery life

Recently here at Android Community we’ve been enjoying many different kernels for the Galaxy Nexus and have even featured a few here in the recent past. While many are great and work well today we have what appears to be one of the absolute best at the moment. That is the Franco kernel. More details and impressions after the break.


Now since I love a few different kernel builders like Morfic I’ve decided to add in a few screenshots of the Galaxy Nexus running stock, Morfic’s Trinity kernel, and the latest Franco build for a good comparison. We have a few Quadrant benchmark tests below for those interested although benchmarks aren’t everything. Daily usage performance needs to also be better, and that is exactly what we have with Franco’s latest update that dropped today.
If you’ve been looking for a kernel that will make your Galaxy Nexus scream with performance while giving you exceptional battery life then look no further than Franco. It really is the best we’ve tried thus far and was actually quite impressive. From loading up the browser, launching the gallery and even benchmarks — performance was boosted across the board. We’ll have to update on battery life but so far things are looking good.
Running the Galaxy Nexus completely stock on Verizon with Android 4.0.2 Ice Cream Sandwich we get roughly 1600 in Quadrant — quite low for a 1.2 GHz dual-core device although daily usage suggests otherwise as it performs great. With a good CM9 build and Franco’s latest kernel build #15 with tons of updates and improvements this boosts way up to 2600 and I/O results were increased 5 fold. It’s safe to say that while stock this device is great, but with the addition of this latest kernel build from Franco it simply flies.

Obviously there are a lot of different variables here with settings, overclocking, the ROM you are running and more but all of these tests were on the stock settings right after flashing. Trinity performs great and we’ve been running it for a few days now but the benchmark tests were extremely low. Looking through the changelog and extremely close attention to detail from Franco we can safely say his kernel is as good as it gets — for now.
Check out the screenshots below to see the results from stock, Trinity, and then Franco and see for yourself just how impressive it really is. If you’re the kernel flashing type, running Android 4.0.3 and would like to give it a try check out the XDA Thread here for all the details, changes, and download links.
Device Specifications and Information
Device Info
    Device Name : GALAXY Nexus 4G [Verizon]
    Manufactuer : Samsung
    Carrier : Verizon
    Announced Date : December 14, 2011
    Release Date : December 15, 2011
    Also Known As : Nexus Prime
Display
  • Screen Size : 4.65 Inch
  • Resolution : 1280x720
  • Screen Type : Super AMOLED
Dimension & Weight
  • Height : 5.33 Inch
  • Width : 2.67 Inch
  • Depth : 0.37 Inch
  • Weight : 150 Grams
Battery & Power
    Battery Type:
  • Lithium Ion
  • Battery Capacity : 1850 mAh
  • Talk Time : NA
  • Stand By Time : 150 hours
Software
    Android OS:
  • 4.0.x
    Audio Playback:
  • AAC
  • AAC+
  • AMR
  • MID
  • MP3
  • WAV
  • WMA
    Video Playback:
  • h.264 / AVC
    Messaging:
  • SMS
  • MMS
Hardware
    CPU : OMAP 4460
    CPU Clock Speed : 1200 Mhz
    Core : 2
    Ram : 1000 MB
    Internal Storage : 32 GB
    Front Facing Camera :

Samsung spending millions on Galaxy Note Super Bowl ad

We’re pretty stoked about the Samsung Galaxy Note finally making its way stateside – but not nearly as excited as Samsung themselves. Today the Samsung Mobile US Twitter account teased an upcoming Super Bowl ad, and their wording leaves little doubt that it’s promoting the 5.3-inch smartphone bound for AT&T later in February. Samsung claimed that the ad will be “one of the longest in the game”, which points to at least a 60-second spot and maybe even a 90-second one. Considering that a single 30-second commercial during the Super Bowl runs about 3-4 million dollars, Samsung is poised to spend a heck of a lot of money for a single promotion. They’ve even hired the producer of Dumb & Dumber and There’s Something About Mary to oversee the project.

Of course, big-budget Super Bowl ads are nothing new. Apple’s been running the pricey spots for years, and given their recent influx of cash (the better to pay their lawyers, my dearie) you can bet they’ll be representing. Google made a big push last year during Super Bowl 45, using the airtime to put a more human face on its search service. But since Samsung and Apple are running neck-and-neck as the largest smartphone producers in the world, their ads will shape perception for the spring and summer, at least among US viewers.
On that note, Samsung has already been fighting Apple hard with its collection of iPhone-bashing ads over the last couple of months. The “Next Big Thing” series makes light of Apple’s most devoted fans and their Starbucks-slurping ways, not to mention Apple’s penchant for barely passable hardware updates. Up to now, the commercials have all focused on the Galaxy S II. We might see one or two of these ads during the game as well. That being the case, Samsung better hope that the Galaxy Note is a smash hit – it’s got a lot riding on it.
Device Specifications and Information
Device Info
    Device Name : DROID RAZR
    Manufactuer : Motorola
    Carrier : Verizon
    Announced Date : October 18, 2011
    Release Date : November 03, 2011
    Also Known As :
Display
  • Screen Size : 4.3 Inch
  • Resolution :
  • Screen Type : Super AMOLED Advanced qHD
Dimension & Weight
  • Height : 5.15 Inch
  • Width : 2.71 Inch
  • Depth : 0.27 Inch
  • Weight : 127 Grams
Battery & Power
    Battery Type:
  • Lithium Ion
  • Battery Capacity : 1780 mAh
  • Talk Time : NA
  • Stand By Time : 8.9 hours
Software
    Android OS:
  • 2.3.x
    Audio Playback:
  • AAC
  • AAC+
  • MP3
  • WAV
  • WMA
    Video Playback:
  • MPEG-4 (MP4)
    Messaging:
  • SMS
  • MMS
Hardware
    CPU : OMAP 4430
    CPU Clock Speed : 1200 Mhz
    Core : 2
    Ram : 1000 MB
    Internal Storage : 16.384 GB
    Front Facing Camera :

Samsung’s expanding Galaxy now includes dual-core Galaxy S Advance

You can never have too many phones, right? Samsung sure seems to think so. The latest in its line of Galaxy-branded Android handsets is the Galaxy S Advance, a model that fits in between the first generation Galaxy S and the Galaxy S II as far as features and specifications are concerned. The biggest upgrade over the original is a dual-core 1Ghz processor. For those who can’t get enough of the curvy screens found on the Nexus S and Galaxy Nexus, the new phone includes the slightly concave glass found on the developer phones. HardwareZone got an early look at a Galaxy S Advance (GT-i9070) in the Philippines.


Elsewhere, the phone resembles the original Galaxy S more than anything else: the 4-inch Super AMOLED screen uses an 800×480 resolution, 768MB of RAM should handle Android 2.3 Gingerbread without any major complaints, and the 5MP camera and 1.3MP front-facing cam are par for the course. The Galaxy S Advance offers a generous 16GB of storage space, along with an open MicroSD card slot. Like almost all of Samsung’s Android devices, it will include the current version of the TouchWiz interface and Samsung’s collection of proprietary media apps. An HSPA connection is maxxed out at 14 megabits per second.
The phone is scheduled for a release in Russia in February, followed by a worldwide release just about everywhere except North America. The unlocked Galaxy S Advanced will cost somewhere in the $536 range, though obviously price and value will change based on local currency. Samsung continues to dominate the Android smartphone world, but we can’t help but think that they’re muddying the waters a bit with a staggering array of barely differing models – compare this approach to HTC’s 2012 strategy, focused on fewer devices with a “hero” mentality. Of course it’s hard to argue with Samsung’s sales… strength in numbers, indeed.


Official: Samsung Galaxy Note launches on AT&T February 19th

For those of you who salivated when AT&T announced that Samsung’s gigantic Galaxy Note smartphone would make its way to America, your wait is nearly over. The wireless carrier announced today that it would launch the much-anticipated device on Sunday, February 19th. As expected, the phone will cost $299.99 with a two-year contract or extension – there’s no word on how much the phone will cost without a commitment. Eager customers can pre-order the Galaxy Note starting on February 5th and get it delivered two days early. The Galaxy Note LTE will come in Carbon Blue and Ceramic White color options.

The Galaxy Note has created quite a following since the original model was announced way back in October, at the IFA show in Berlin. The phone’s outstanding feature is a 5.3-inch 1280×800 Super AMOLED display, easily the largest and most high-resolution screen for any phone being sold today. In addition, it packs a Wacom digitizer and old-school stylus (“S-Pen”) for pen-based drawing and input. Samsung has several customized applications to take advantage of the stylus, as well as the S-Pen SDK for developers who want their apps to integrate with the feature as well. If the Galaxy Note is well-received, the S-Pen may make its way to other future devices.
The rest of the Galaxy Note is no slough: underneath that huge screen is a dual-core 1.4Ghz processor, 1GB of RAM, 16GB of storage space and an 8MP camera. To power all that you get an admirably large 2500mAh battery. The Note runs Samsung’s TouchWiz version of Android 2.3 Gingerbread, but an update to Ice Cream Sandwich is already in the works. The major difference between AT&T’s version of the Note and those already released overseas is the new radio, which will take advantage of the carrier’s LTE data network. Rumors of other US Galaxy Note variants, particularly the “Galaxy Journal” on Verizon, have yet to be confirmed.
Device Specifications and Information
Device Info
    Device Name : Galaxy Note
    Manufactuer : Samsung
    Carrier :
    Announced Date : September 01, 2011
    Release Date : TBA
    Also Known As :
Display
  • Screen Size : 5.30 Inch
  • Resolution : 800x1280
  • Screen Type : Super AMOLED
Dimension & Weight
  • Height : 5.78 Inch
  • Width : 3.27 Inch
  • Depth : 0.38 Inch
  • Weight : 178 Grams
Battery & Power
    Battery Type:
  • Lithium Ion
  • Battery Capacity : 2500 mAh
  • Talk Time : NA
  • Stand By Time : 390 hours
Software
    Android OS:
  • 2.3.x
    Audio Playback:
  • AAC
  • AMR
  • MP3
  • WAV
  • WMA
    Video Playback:
  • h.263
  • h.264 / AVC
  • MPEG-4 (MP4)
  • WMV
    Messaging:
  • SMS
  • MMS
Hardware
    CPU :
    CPU Clock Speed : 1400 Mhz
    Core : 2
    Ram : 1024 MB
    Internal Storage : 32.768 GB
    Front Facing Camera :

Samsung Galaxy Note LTE heading to Rogers in February too

The Samsung Galaxy Note has been in the news plenty as of late, and we’ll be seeing more soon with AT&T and now Rogers both getting a 4G LTE version coming next month. While we got our first look at the LTE model back at CES, Rogers official blog RedBoard has just outed they’ll be getting the 5.3″ phone/tablet hybrid too.


As I’m sure you all know, the Galaxy Note rocks a 5.3″ 1280 x 800 resolution AMOLED HD display and now comes complete with a 1.5 GHz dual-core processor and 1GB of RAM. Not to mention the 8 megapixel camera on the rear and the huge 2,500 mAh battery. The international version launched with Samsung’s own 1.4 GHz dual-core but the recent North American version on the AT&T Note and now Rogers both appear to be using a different 1.5 GHz chip — most likely a Qualcomm.
According to the official post at RedBoard Rogers will be getting the Note LTE in February just like AT&T here in the US, although no exact date or time frame was given. Just like Samsung and AT&T, it is nice to see Rogers using our very own picture from Android Community in their on-device news widget (in the picture above). Expect this 5.3″ device and that awesome WACOM-powered S-pen stylus to hit early February up in Canada on more than a few carriers as we’ve also seen reports that TELUS should receive the device around the same time-frame. Stay tuned for more details.