Samsung Presents: Samsung Galaxy S & Galaxy Tab
Samsung's Galaxy family of devices make modern life truly mobile and brilliant. Read on to discover the many innovative features that put the Galaxy family in a league of
its own.
Hardware
Mobility
The Galaxy family gives you PC-like power on-the-go with:
Extensive connectivity on the 3G network, Wi-Fi® 802.11 b/g/n, and/or Bluetooth® 3.0
Perfectly sized devices to easily accommodate one or two hand typing
Innovative SWYPE® technology for fast text input on the go
Speed
Samsung's 1 GHz Hummingbird processor delivers high-quality image standards with:
Sharp, clear and stunning images and video
Smooth videos and game interaction
Less lag and increased speed running multiple applications
Power
All Galaxy devices run on Google's Android™ OS, which is:
The only mobile operating system made by Google
An open source platform, so 3rd party developers improve the system too
A system that is compatible with Adobe® Flash® Player 10.1 for extra access to photos, videos and games on the Web (devices running Froyo)
HD like video compatible with numerous multimedia formats like DivX, XviD, MPEG4, H.263, H.264 and more
150K+ Apps
Access amazing applications that personalise and improve the Galaxy family each day with:
A market of 150,000+ Android™ apps that’s always growing
Pre-loaded apps uniquely designed for Samsung smartphones and smart media devices
Apps like Google Maps™ Navigation and Google Goggles™ created by the same people who make the operating system
Samsung’s innovative SWYPE input technology
Display
Samsung Galaxy S
Samsung's Super AMOLED™ Screen makes mobile more fun to watch with:
Bright and clear picture
Accurate colour display
Reduced glare with an 180ยบ viewing angle
Thin, light and responsive screen
Up to 7 hours* of battery life while viewing movies
It's everything a high-definition like experience should be, on your phone.
Samsung Galaxy Tab
The new Galaxy Tab sets the stage for rich, cinematic media with:
1024 x 600 resolution for PC-like web-browsing
Bright colours and clear pictures with enhanced TFT technology
Brilliant 7-inch display
Ultra portable, 12-millimeter thin body that actually fits your pocket
Up to 13 hours* of continuous usage time
Camera and Video Chat
The Galaxy Tab is making video chat and photos easy wherever you are with:
Front-facing 1.3 megapixel camera and camcorder for video chat
Programmes for one-on-one video chat over Wi-Fi
Rear-facing 3-megapixel camera and camcorder for high-quality mobile pictures and videos
Software
Media Hub
Samsung's Media Hub app brings all-star entertainment to the Galaxy S smartphones and the Galaxy Tabs. By joining with top studios, Media Hub gives you access to your favourite movies and TV shows. From a library of over hundreds of titles, rent or purchase new release films. or purchase full TV show seasons on the day of their release and most TV episodes the day after they air. Downloads are saved to your account so they're never lost and you can even share content with up to 5 Media Hub-enabled devices per account.
Social Networking
As your social hub, download networking tools and fast access to sites like Facebook®, Twitter™ and MySpace™. Use SWYPE® technology to text with friends and family in a whole new way, and a combined inbox compiles all your work and personal emails, calendar events and more.
SAMSUNG MOBILE
WORLD BIGGEST CELLULAR COMPANY
SAMSUNG CORBY TEXT SERIES
SAMSUNG TOUCH THE LIGHT
SAMSUNG FEEL THE TOUCH

Few companies can be slapped with a billion-dollar fine and forge on undaunted.
That is seemingly the stance – at least publicly – chosen by Samsung Electronics, the South Korean manufacturing giant whose rivalry with Apple in products and words has boiled over in recent weeks.
In August, a federal jury found that Samsung had copied Apple’s designs and technology in developing its smartphones, and the company was ordered to pay $1 billion in fines. Apple asked the court for an order that would remove eight Samsung phone models from store shelves and ban them from the U.S. A decision on that request is pending.
While accountants in Seoul may be wringing their hands, Samsung has put on a buoyant public face in the U.S. as its new phones packed with innovative features continue to gobble more of the domestic market share.
The marketing change is perhaps best reflected in a series of recent ads – timed for the release of Apple’s iPhone 5 last month – that poke fun at customers lined up outside an Apple Store and eagerly anticipating what Samsung considers to be only incremental changes. In the ad, Samsung phone owners, all young and hip, are shown casually lauding features in the new Galaxy S3 model that aren’t available on iPhone 5.
“We’re owning our innovation story,” says Todd Pendleton, chief marketing officer for Samsung Mobile USA, in explaining the ad. “You’re seeing our brand in a way that you haven’t seen it before.”
Its sales data also partly explain the company’s defiant marketing message. Despite the jury verdict and launch of the iPhone 5, sales of Galaxy S3 have been robust. From Sept. 11 to Sept. 17, sales of S3 rose 15 percent from the previous week, according to mobile research firm Localytics. Apple announced the iPhone 5 on Sept. 12.
Samsung declined to confirm the figures, but the company said in September that sales of S3 surpassed 20 million units in the 100 days after its debut in May.
Series of hits
And earlier this month, Samsung reported a record quarterly operating profit of $7.3 billion, nearly doubling last year’s figure, largely on the strength of Galaxy smartphones and tablets and TV sales.
The commercials – part of Samsung’s The Next Big Thing campaign – are a hit, too. One clip was viewed more than 16 million times on YouTube, Pendleton says, adding that the ads were designed to showcase Samsung’s “innovations” and are part of the company’s “coming-out party in North America.”
David Stewart, a marketing professor at Loyola Marymount University, says “comparative advertising” can often be effective in winning over customers who aren’t brand loyal. “Comparing yourself to market leaders suggests ‘We’re here to stay,’” he says. “But they’re not going to influence the hardcore Apple aficionados.”
Samsung’s surge also has had a topsy-turvy impact on the market for Android, Google’s mobile operating system, which is the main competitor to Apple’s iOS.
With chief competitors in the Android market flailing – among them LG, HTC and Motorola – Samsung has consolidated its Android market leadership with timely products sold by all major U.S. carriers at various pricing points. “I love their pricing strategy,” says Ramon Llamas, an analyst at IDC. “You pay (a bit more) for a midtier phone, but you get a few more features.”
In the first half of this year, Samsung’s smartphone share in the U.S. grew to 27 percent from 12.5 percent in the year-ago period, according to research firm IDC. All other Android phone makers’ shares fell during the period. Apple, still the overall leader, was the only other manufacturer whose share grew, 37.3 percent vs. 27 percent in 2011.
Samsung’s position in the Android market could have long-term implications for the company, because Android is the most popular mobile OS in the U.S. Nearly 70 percent of smartphones worldwide ran on Android in the second quarter, up from 46.9 percent a year earlier, according to IDC.
“The market has condensed to two ecosystems,” says Avi Greengart, an analyst at technology research firm Current Analysis. “Samsung is trying to take on Apple and differentiate itself from other Android (makers), and they’re doing extremely well. If you’re looking for an Android device, they want to be the first place you look.”
Operational issues
Daunting operational issues remain for Samsung, not the least of which is the prospect that eight models, including the popular Galaxy S2, will be taken off the market unless the company can win an appeal later this year.
Apple has also asked the court to ban two versions of Galaxy S3, as well as the Galaxy Note and Galaxy Note 10.1 tablet. “Samsung is so successful that they can afford $1 billion in judgment,” Greengart says. “Other competitors would have been wiped out. But in terms of the product ban, that would hurt Samsung.”
Still, Samsung is pushing forward in typical speedy fashion, recently announcing Samsung Note II, which has a 5.5-inch screen, and the 4-inch “mini” S3. “This momentum we have is going to continue. We plan to be very aggressive in the market,” Pendleton says.
That is seemingly the stance – at least publicly – chosen by Samsung Electronics, the South Korean manufacturing giant whose rivalry with Apple in products and words has boiled over in recent weeks.
In August, a federal jury found that Samsung had copied Apple’s designs and technology in developing its smartphones, and the company was ordered to pay $1 billion in fines. Apple asked the court for an order that would remove eight Samsung phone models from store shelves and ban them from the U.S. A decision on that request is pending.
While accountants in Seoul may be wringing their hands, Samsung has put on a buoyant public face in the U.S. as its new phones packed with innovative features continue to gobble more of the domestic market share.
The marketing change is perhaps best reflected in a series of recent ads – timed for the release of Apple’s iPhone 5 last month – that poke fun at customers lined up outside an Apple Store and eagerly anticipating what Samsung considers to be only incremental changes. In the ad, Samsung phone owners, all young and hip, are shown casually lauding features in the new Galaxy S3 model that aren’t available on iPhone 5.
“We’re owning our innovation story,” says Todd Pendleton, chief marketing officer for Samsung Mobile USA, in explaining the ad. “You’re seeing our brand in a way that you haven’t seen it before.”
Its sales data also partly explain the company’s defiant marketing message. Despite the jury verdict and launch of the iPhone 5, sales of Galaxy S3 have been robust. From Sept. 11 to Sept. 17, sales of S3 rose 15 percent from the previous week, according to mobile research firm Localytics. Apple announced the iPhone 5 on Sept. 12.
Samsung declined to confirm the figures, but the company said in September that sales of S3 surpassed 20 million units in the 100 days after its debut in May.
Series of hits
And earlier this month, Samsung reported a record quarterly operating profit of $7.3 billion, nearly doubling last year’s figure, largely on the strength of Galaxy smartphones and tablets and TV sales.
The commercials – part of Samsung’s The Next Big Thing campaign – are a hit, too. One clip was viewed more than 16 million times on YouTube, Pendleton says, adding that the ads were designed to showcase Samsung’s “innovations” and are part of the company’s “coming-out party in North America.”
David Stewart, a marketing professor at Loyola Marymount University, says “comparative advertising” can often be effective in winning over customers who aren’t brand loyal. “Comparing yourself to market leaders suggests ‘We’re here to stay,’” he says. “But they’re not going to influence the hardcore Apple aficionados.”
Samsung’s surge also has had a topsy-turvy impact on the market for Android, Google’s mobile operating system, which is the main competitor to Apple’s iOS.
With chief competitors in the Android market flailing – among them LG, HTC and Motorola – Samsung has consolidated its Android market leadership with timely products sold by all major U.S. carriers at various pricing points. “I love their pricing strategy,” says Ramon Llamas, an analyst at IDC. “You pay (a bit more) for a midtier phone, but you get a few more features.”
In the first half of this year, Samsung’s smartphone share in the U.S. grew to 27 percent from 12.5 percent in the year-ago period, according to research firm IDC. All other Android phone makers’ shares fell during the period. Apple, still the overall leader, was the only other manufacturer whose share grew, 37.3 percent vs. 27 percent in 2011.
Samsung’s position in the Android market could have long-term implications for the company, because Android is the most popular mobile OS in the U.S. Nearly 70 percent of smartphones worldwide ran on Android in the second quarter, up from 46.9 percent a year earlier, according to IDC.
“The market has condensed to two ecosystems,” says Avi Greengart, an analyst at technology research firm Current Analysis. “Samsung is trying to take on Apple and differentiate itself from other Android (makers), and they’re doing extremely well. If you’re looking for an Android device, they want to be the first place you look.”
Operational issues
Daunting operational issues remain for Samsung, not the least of which is the prospect that eight models, including the popular Galaxy S2, will be taken off the market unless the company can win an appeal later this year.
Apple has also asked the court to ban two versions of Galaxy S3, as well as the Galaxy Note and Galaxy Note 10.1 tablet. “Samsung is so successful that they can afford $1 billion in judgment,” Greengart says. “Other competitors would have been wiped out. But in terms of the product ban, that would hurt Samsung.”
Still, Samsung is pushing forward in typical speedy fashion, recently announcing Samsung Note II, which has a 5.5-inch screen, and the 4-inch “mini” S3. “This momentum we have is going to continue. We plan to be very aggressive in the market,” Pendleton says.
samsung is the best cellular company that launches the best smart and young phone series within the affordable range and with the amazing feature.
YOUNG PHONE
samsung young phone are pretty goods and quite reliable and smooth touch screen with help its user a comfortable interferance and smooth operating activities
SMART PHONE
SAMSUNG smart phones are slim and fast processing unit with 1 ghz processor and operates easily with human friendly interference and work with the best gprs activities and other games download
What Makes Smartphones Smart
Mobile technology growth has exploded in leaps and bounds during the last few years. Handsets have become so powerful that we can hardly call them phones anymore. So, what do we call a device that makes calls, plays videos, takes pictures, and more—try Smartphone—a clever gadget that is more than just a phone.
Like a Regular Mobile, but Smarter
Owning a Smart Phone is just like owning a regular phone—if it were a camera, an MP3 player and a portable game console. And that’s just for starters: You can send and receive email, and access the web with ease. There’s a full keyboard for easy typing. And even though some traditional phones offer a few of these features, none have them all in one package—and none function as well or as fast.
A PC in Your Palm
A Smart Phone is like a pocket-sized personal computer. Every Smart Phone has an operating system—such as Google's Android or Microsoft's Windows Mobile—running the show, working double-time to keep your device humming along quickly.
That operating system also enables a Smart Phone to run applications (better known as "apps"), which is yet another key difference from a "regular" mobile phone. There are tens of thousands of apps available, both free and paid, in categories including business, gaming, entertainment, cooking, and just about anything else you can imagine.
Which Smart Phone is Right for You?
What matters most to you—screen size or a full keyboard? Take into account the phone's brightness, your eyesight, and your finger agility, as you determine which phone will fit most seamlessly into your life. If you're looking to shoot video, focus on memory capability. If you take pictures in dark settings, make sure your phone has a flash. And although pixels matter for taking good pictures, a quality lens is even more important. If you want to store large files—like music, pictures, or video—choose a phone with a high memory capacity
What Makes Smartphones Smart
Mobile technology growth has exploded in leaps and bounds during the last few years. Handsets have become so powerful that we can hardly call them phones anymore. So, what do we call a device that makes calls, plays videos, takes pictures, and more—try Smartphone—a clever gadget that is more than just a phone.
Like a Regular Mobile, but Smarter
Owning a Smart Phone is just like owning a regular phone—if it were a camera, an MP3 player and a portable game console. And that’s just for starters: You can send and receive email, and access the web with ease. There’s a full keyboard for easy typing. And even though some traditional phones offer a few of these features, none have them all in one package—and none function as well or as fast.
A PC in Your Palm
A Smart Phone is like a pocket-sized personal computer. Every Smart Phone has an operating system—such as Google's Android or Microsoft's Windows Mobile—running the show, working double-time to keep your device humming along quickly.
That operating system also enables a Smart Phone to run applications (better known as "apps"), which is yet another key difference from a "regular" mobile phone. There are tens of thousands of apps available, both free and paid, in categories including business, gaming, entertainment, cooking, and just about anything else you can imagine.
Which Smart Phone is Right for You?
What matters most to you—screen size or a full keyboard? Take into account the phone's brightness, your eyesight, and your finger agility, as you determine which phone will fit most seamlessly into your life. If you're looking to shoot video, focus on memory capability. If you take pictures in dark settings, make sure your phone has a flash. And although pixels matter for taking good pictures, a quality lens is even more important. If you want to store large files—like music, pictures, or video—choose a phone with a high memory capacity
GALAXY SERIES
SAMSUNG galaxy are the smart phone with the many new feature . They are silm and easy to operate
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