Posts tagged Release Date
Meet the new Phablet; The Galaxy Note II
Aug 30th
It’s that time of year again; yes the pre-iPhone madness announcement season has kick started and it is off with a bang. On Wednesday, at the IFA 2012, Samsung unveiled a set of intriguing new products, among which was an Android-based camera and a Windows RT tablet yet the Galaxy Note II hybrid Smartphone takes the cake.
Last year, when the first Galaxy Note arrived, it was welcomed with a lot of praise and appeal, with global sales that rank up to 1 million in only two month, 5 million in 5 months and have surpassed ever since a whooping 10 million. For those of you who thought that the Galaxy Note could not get any bigger, well you were wrong. The second gen phone/mini tablet, whose specs were leaked a few hours early, has jumped from a 5.3 inch screen to a 5.5 inches.
Moving on to what concerns us most; the specs: The new Galaxy Note II is powered by a 1.5 GHz quad-core Exynos processor and runs Android 4.1 Jelly Bean. Either HSPA Plus or LTE connectivity will be supported. Buyers will be able to choose between, 16GB, 32GB and 64GB of storage, with an 8 megapixel rear camera and a 1.9 megapixel front-facing camera.
Samsung is proudly boasting that the Note II’s HD Super AMOLED screen, stating quite boldly that it offers a “perfect viewing experience”. While we still don’t know how valid this actually is, but once we see it we’ll believe it. The S Pen also received a redesign from the company for it is longer and thicker now.
Though Samsung has not set a fixed release date for the device yet, it has confirmed that it will launch in Europe, Asia and the Middle East in October and will arrive in the US by the end of this year.
We could not help but compare between the Galaxy S III and the second generation Galaxy note. In fact, Samsung itself did not shy away from making the comparison. Director of product marketing for Samsung
Mobile US, Ryan Bidan, told the publican in an interview:
The best way to think about the Galaxy Note II is that we took kind of that experience that we created with the Galaxy S III, both in terms of design and software experience, and brought that to the Note platform. So, you’ve kind of got the refinement and evolution of what we did with the original Galaxy Note, along with all of those great sharing features and the power of the Galaxy S III device. So thinking about it along the lines as the Galaxy S III I think is absolutely fair because it does feel and act a lot like that, but now you’ve got the further advantage of having the S Pen and the Note characteristics with that.
However, Bidan was careful to note that the Galaxy S and Note families of devices remain separate:
[Samsung] started it with the original Note, kind of creating that unique category where we took a very powerful smartphone and integrated a lot of great tablet functionality. And if you look at kind of what we did with the S Pen with the Galaxy Note 10.1, kind of extending that paradigm a little bit further to content creation and a bunch of the unique tablet functionality, and now continuing to extend that category even further with the Galaxy Note II, so absolutely look at it as being a very different device than our Galaxy S III.
While we’re curious to find out how far this screen creep will catch on, but as far as we’re concerned, if you’re already at massive, what’s another 0.2 inches. It seems these “phablets” will keep on growing.
While Tech Crunch compared the device to a Chevy Corvette; “not for everyone” and the Galaxy S II to a more practical Chevy Camaro, Engadget’s first impressions were pleased with the new simpler and more cohesive features that are less business and more pleasure. What are your thoughts? Are you sold on the new Note? Let us know.
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The Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 is officially launched!
Aug 6th
Samsung, the tech behemoth, has finally put its final touches on the long-awaited flagship Galaxy Note 10.1 Android tablet and announced its official global availability. According to their press release, it’s scheduled to start immediately in the United States, United Kingdom, Korea and Germany. Other markets are set to have availability “starting August”. The inaugural release includes only the Wi-Fi only and the 3G/HSPA + enabled variants. With the LTE flavor coming late this year.
While the press release was a bit obscure on what they meant with the “starting August” part; are they referring to the four aforesaid countries or the following global availability? We’re tending towards the latter though.
New updates to the Note 10.1 include a stylus slot for its S Pen (we’re not sure why they haven’t included that in the first place) a bump to 2GB of RAM to match that of the Galaxy S III as well as a 1.4 GHz quad-core Exynos processor. The Note 10.1 will come in, just like the Galaxy S III, with 16, 32 or 64 GB. The Note’s 1280×800 screen resolution will by no means break any records, considering both ASUS and Acer have already come out with than than 1080p tablets of their own earlier this year.
The Note 10.1 (8.9mm) is marginally thicker than the original Tab 10.1 (8.6mm) due to the needed S Pen storage slot.
We find it a bit peculiar though, that Samsung was reserved on pricing of the Galaxy Note 10.1 variants. We are guessing though, that the US pricing structure will be announced at least by the end of the August 15th press conference set to be in New York City.
For a full specs chart, check out the table below.
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Specs
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Processor
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1.4 GHz quad-core processor
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OS
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Android 4.0 (ICS)
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RAM size
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2 GB
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Rear Camera
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5 MB
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Front Camera
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2 MB
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Battery
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Li-ion 7,000mAh
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Thickness
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0.35 inches
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Weight
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1.29 pounds
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Display
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10.1 inches
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Resolution
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1280×800
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Touchscreen type
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Dual-digitizer
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Multitouch
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Sensors
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Ambient Light, Gyroscope, Compass / Magnetometer, Accelerometer
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Internal storage size
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16 GB, 32 GB, 64 GB
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External storage
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Rumor has it… Windows8 release date!
Apr 24th

After much speculations about the release date of Windows 8 Release preview (the Release candidate version), Microsoft has finally confirmed that it would be released in the first week of June. During the Windows Developer Days conference in Japan, Steven Sinofsky announced about the Windows 8 Release preview. After that the official Building Windows 8 Twitter account tweeted about it.
We’ve been hearing a lot of deliberation about the launch date of Windows 8 Release preview and finally Steven Sinofsky, president of Microsoft’s Windows Division, spilled the beans during the first day of the Windows Developer Days conference in Japan announcing that it will be launched during the first week of June. The news confirms previous speculation that the Windows 8 release candidate would be called a “Release Preview.”
This new leak was confirmed via Twitter today (Link)
Obviously there was a mix up with the slides during the conference, for they showcased the old Windows logo, sparking readers’ interest and inquiries whether or not they are reverting to the old logo. Microsoft responded , however, with this brief note: “just a miss on the slide. #sorry.”
The new Windows 8 logo, which was designed with the assistance of the third party design company Pentagram, has been a bit polarizing to long time Windows fans since it was first revealed. Microsoft said at the time that they wanted the new logo to look more like a window than previous logo, which resembled a flag flapping in the wind. Sam Moreau, the Principal Director of User Experience for Windows, wrote back in February:
Microsoft and Windows are all about putting technology in people’s hands to empower them to find their own perspectives. And that is what the new logo was meant to be. We did less of a re-design and more to return it to its original meaning and bringing Windows back to its roots – reimagining the Windows logo as just that – a window.
The most prominent changes will be:
- The new OS will be the most significant redesign since Windows 95.
- The trademark Windows “Start” button will no longer appear, replaced by a sliding panel-based menu.
- Powering computers running traditional processors from Intel and AMD, the OS will also run on new tablets and laptops running low-power ARM processors.
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