Samsung Galaxy Tab costs €730 from Vodafone.de, €300 if bought with a two-year data plan

You can kind of tell we’re growing ever closer to the Galaxy Tab’s promised November 1 retail launch as prices for this slate just keep coming out of the woodwork, looking ever more solid with each passing day. Vodafone Germany is the latest to reveal the wallet damage Samsung’s 7-inch Android tablet will demand, with a €730 ($1,017) levy for the 16GB version sans contract, or a €300 ($418) cost for those willing to commit to a two-year data plan at €35 a month. We’d advise against taking those direct currency conversions to heart, but the Tab’s pricing here is €30 more than the 32GB iPad WiFi + 3G, making us scratch our heads as to how Samsung believes it’ll manage to convince anyone to buy its smaller, less capacious alternative.

Samsung Galaxy Tab costs €730 from Vodafone.de, €300 if bought with a two-year data plan originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Oct 2010 07:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Galaxy Tab up for pre-order at Carphone Warehouse for £530

We continue that elusive hunt for an official Galaxy Tab price with the most reliable (though still not authoritative) number yet: £530 ($850) from the Carphone Warehouse. Already announced as one of the first retailers to offer the device in the UK on that November 1 launch date, the Warehouse outfit has now set its price for the 16GB Tab at exactly the level of the 3G-equipped iPad. Coincidence? We think not. This is highly likely to be Samsung’s final pre-subsidy pricing, leaving it up to network operators to tempt us with some aggressive discounts. We can only hope.

[Thanks, Middy]

Samsung Galaxy Tab up for pre-order at Carphone Warehouse for £530 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Oct 2010 08:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Galaxy Tab redesigned for KDDI, hitting Japan in late February as SMT-i9100

Japan’s KDDI is in the midst of its biannual hardware refresh and in among its new roster of phones is a familiar 7-inch slate device we’re more familiar with as the Galaxy Tab. Samsung has stripped all branding (and 3G, boo!) from the SMT-i9100, while refashioning its exterior a little and letting KDDI throw in a bit of custom au-branded software aboard. Beyond the cosmetic changes, which include the capacitive buttons being aligned for landscape (rather than portrait) utilization, you’re mostly looking at the same machine as the rest of the world, with a 1024 x 600 resolution, 512MB of RAM, MicroSD expandability, and a built-in webcam. The internal storage is quite a bit more frugal at 4GB, but you will get a handy docking cradle as a consolation prize, plus a mobile router that’ll turn this into something very similar to Verizon’s iPad plus MiFi offering in the US. All that said, KDDI won’t have the i9100 on sale until February, by which time the Android tablet market could be somewhat better populated.

Continue reading Samsung Galaxy Tab redesigned for KDDI, hitting Japan in late February as SMT-i9100

Samsung Galaxy Tab redesigned for KDDI, hitting Japan in late February as SMT-i9100 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Oct 2010 06:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Galaxy Tab stars in leaked slide, T-Mobile version to cost $399?

If what we’re looking at is really and truly a legitimate T-Mobile slide, then we’ve got practically the last part of the Galaxy Tab puzzle — that ever-elusive price point — as it states the slate will charm your wallet out of $399. That’d be a bit of a disappointment if true, as that’s the most we were told to expect and twice the Galaxy S’s price despite lacking telephone functionality. Still, it’s the first legitimately impressive Android tablet, and being on the bleeding edge isn’t cheap. We just wonder if Sammy can truly sell ten million on two-year contracts — or worse, going head to head at an unsubsidized $649 with the iPad 3G. Say it ain’t so, Sammy.

Samsung Galaxy Tab stars in leaked slide, T-Mobile version to cost $399? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 09 Oct 2010 23:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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News publishers looking to the Galaxy Tab and BlackBerry PlayBook for refuge as well

In case you were worried that it was just Apple love that got major news outlets on the iPad so quickly, you should know that the general sense of desperation (or is it their never ending sense of adventure?) pervading the likes of the The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and USA Today has them building apps for the Galaxy Tab as well. The news comes courtesy of The Wall Street Journal, and has yet to be announced officially by the parties involved — though we have a hard time doubting any of it. It makes sense, of course: the big cost is producing content for a tablet form factor, not building the reader app, and the Galaxy Tab naturally won’t be the last of its Android kind. The WSJ and The Financial Times are also apparently some possible gets for RIM’s PlayBook, though less is known about those deals. On the Tab, The New York Times is supposed to be pre-loaded with some carrier’s versions of the device, and its app will be free until January of next year when The Times starts charging for its website.

News publishers looking to the Galaxy Tab and BlackBerry PlayBook for refuge as well originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 13:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Galaxy S sales surpass five million, world domination plans still on track

Believe it or not, Samsung is only now getting around to introducing its Galaxy S handset to the fine isle of Japan. Its announcement of a late October availability for the home of CEATEC was also accompanied by the little note that the rest of the world has already bought up five million units of its multivariate Galaxy S phone family. More than two million of those sales have been notched up in the US and over one million can be found in Samsung’s home field of South Korea. Or could be found if they actually had working GPS units. Zing!

[Thanks, Matt]

Samsung Galaxy S sales surpass five million, world domination plans still on track originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Oct 2010 05:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung’s Galaxy Tab will come with Gorilla Glass screen

It might not share the Galaxy S’ vibrant Super AMOLED display, but there is one way in which the Galaxy Tab’s visage is identical to its elder smartphone sibling: both are protected by Gorilla Glass. Corning has just dropped a quickie press release to announce that Samsung’s upcoming 7-inch tablet will benefit from its scratch- and impact-resistant alkali-aluminosilicate goodness. Guess now Samsung’s ad advising us to stuff this slate into our pants pockets makes a lot more sense.

[Thanks, Olivier]

Continue reading Samsung’s Galaxy Tab will come with Gorilla Glass screen

Samsung’s Galaxy Tab will come with Gorilla Glass screen originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Oct 2010 04:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Galaxy Tab on sale in UK on November 1, will be available from all major carriers

Need some hot new hardware to offset the onset of another miserly winter? Samsung wants the Galaxy Tab to be the thing that keeps you warm and fuzzy over the holidays and has just announced a November 1 launch date for its tablet in the United Kingdom. All major carriers are signed up to offer the Android 2.2 device and usual suspect Carphone Warehouse will also be dishing it out if you have the cash to snap one up. How much cash, you ask? That’s the one important piece of information that Samsung is still leaving to hang in the air, proffering only the contention that it “will be available on a range of attractive price packages.” Never mind, we’ll just let our imaginations do the accounting.

Continue reading Samsung Galaxy Tab on sale in UK on November 1, will be available from all major carriers

Samsung Galaxy Tab on sale in UK on November 1, will be available from all major carriers originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 01 Oct 2010 07:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NFL ‘currently talking’ with Verizon to distribute programming on tablets

Ah, so now we understand Verizon’s intentions to hastily roll out LTE service to NFL cities. The NFL, which has sided with Sprint over the years when it comes to cellular distribution of content, is apparently in even deeper talks with newfound partner Big Red in order to get its prized content into even more hands. As the idea of watching NFL games on-the-go because more and more sensible, the league is apparently mulling the decision to distribute games (and potentially more) on the next big thing. You know, tablets. Brian Rolapp, the NFL’s senior vice president of media strategy, recently said the following: “The NFL will be on a tablet. It’s a question of what shape or form. We are currently talking to Verizon about it.” VZW declined to comment on the rumblings, but it’s really not a shocker — the carrier’s doing everything it can to get a live LTE network here in the States, and inking a deal with America’s most popular sporting league would obviously bring in boatloads of revenue. The real question is this: what tablet is the NFL eying, and if it’s not the Samsung Galaxy Tab, what’s Verizon’s second tablet going to be? Inquiring minds would love to know.

NFL ‘currently talking’ with Verizon to distribute programming on tablets originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 30 Sep 2010 20:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BlackBerry PlayBook vs. iPad vs. Galaxy Tab vs. Streak: the tale of the tape

What a day — yesterday, that is. Research in Motion finally announced its long-awaited BlackBerry tablet, the 7-inch PlayBook (thankfully not named the BlackPad). While there’s still quite a few missing details, and nary an unit in site for us to try first-hand, we’ve still got a sampling of specs for this little guy to go tête-à-tête on the quantitative field of proverbial battle, at least as it can be seen so far (that early 2011 release date is still a ways off). Looks very promising so far, lined up against Apple’s iPad, Samsung’s Galaxy Tab, and the Dell Streak, but our known unknowns — i.e. price, app support, and overall feel of using the QNX-built operating system — are what will really make or break the slate. Until that time, enjoy our number-crunching below:



BlackBerry
PlayBook


Apple
iPad


Samsung
Galaxy Tab


Dell
Streak
Screen size7 inches9.7 inches7 inches5 inches
Resolution1024 x 6001024 x 7681024 x 600800 x 480
Pixel density (approx.)170133170187
PlatformBB Tablet OSiOS 3.2.2 (4.2 in November)Android 2.2Android 1.6 (2.1 / 2.2 in future)
Adobe Flash support10.1Not Supported10.1Not supported
Processor1GHz dual-core Cortex A91GHz Apple A4 (ARMv7)1GHz Cortex A81GHz Snapdragon
GraphicsUnknownPowerVR SGX 535PowerVR SGX 540Adreno 200
RAM1GB256MB512MB512MB
Internal Storage16GB / 32GB (unconfirmed)16GB / 32GB / 64GB16GB / 32GB512MB
ExpansionUnknownNonemicroSDmicroSD
Connectivity802.11 a/b/g/n, Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR802.11 a/b/g/n, Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 3.0802.11 b/g, Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR
Cellular data3G and 4G promised for future3G optional (AT&T)3G (all carriers)3G (AT&T)
GPSNone3G models onlyYesYes
Camera3MP front,
5MP rear
None

1.3MP front,
3MP rear

VGA front,
5MP rear
Weight0.9 lbs1.5 – 1.6 lbs

0.84 lbs

0.49 lbs

BlackBerry PlayBook vs. iPad vs. Galaxy Tab vs. Streak: the tale of the tape originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Sep 2010 12:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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