Samsung Epic 4G’s Froyo update now available, no need to wait for OTA

Samsung apparently decided it’s made Epic 4G owners wait long enough and beat Sprint’s planned OTA release schedule to the punch by a few hours, posting the EB13 build that will update their phones to Froyo on its support website. Click the source link for a .exe to run from a connected PC and upgrade over USB (for rooted and unrooted devices alike, running any earlier software build) or select the Mac link for an update.zip file that can be run directly from the phone’s SD card (stock devices running the most recent DI18 build only.) You’ll be restoring the device to a blank slate with the former so make sure you’ve backed up any important SMS’s beforehand. So far impressions from early upgraders on XDA-Developers suggest a noticeable performance boost, but other forum posts indicate some pesky bugs like Time Without Service battery drain are still hanging around, peep the full release notes after the break.

Continue reading Samsung Epic 4G’s Froyo update now available, no need to wait for OTA

Samsung Epic 4G’s Froyo update now available, no need to wait for OTA originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Feb 2011 22:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung’s Super AMOLED Plus displays dispense of maligned PenTile pixel configuration

As crisp and vibrant as AMOLED and Super AMOLED smartphone displays are, they roll off the assembly lines with a pretty big design compromise: most of the components in the marketplace right now make use of a little visual trickery called PenTile whereby green subpixels occur with greater frequency than red and blue. Meanwhile, traditional displays (CRT, LCD, plasma, you name it) typically use one red, one green, and one blue subpixel per pixel, and the end result is that AMOLEDs tend to be a little grainier by comparison at a given resolution. OLED-Info points out that Sammy’s new Super AMOLED Plus displays appear to have solved the PenTile problem, instead using something called Real-Stripe — effectively meaning honest-to-goodness RGB pixels, which explains the company’s claim back at CES of a 50 percent boost in subpixel count. Interestingly, Real-Stripe requires more space per pixel, which could be why the Galaxy S II and Infuse 4G are 4.3 and 4.5 inches, respectively, a pretty healthy hike from the 4-inch mark they’d settled on with last year’s original Galaxy S models. ‘Course, none of this puts us close to the 7 or 10 inches we’d need to make a tablet work — but we know they’re cranking on that already.

Samsung’s Super AMOLED Plus displays dispense of maligned PenTile pixel configuration originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Feb 2011 15:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Galaxy S 4G will actually cost $200, unfortunately

Here’s a quick heads-up, if you had your heart set on Samsung’s Galaxy S 4G: T-Mobile says it’ll actually cost $199.99 after a $50 mail-in rebate. That means you’re paying $250 out the door for an HSPA+ capable Vibrant, not counting taxes and related fees. T-Mobile says the original $150 price was a mistake on its part, and while you’re welcome to bring as many false advertising lawsuits as you’d like, we doubt you’ll get very far.

Samsung Galaxy S 4G will actually cost $200, unfortunately originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 19 Feb 2011 20:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung wants to sell 10 million 3D TVs this year, LG plans on 5 million

Here’s one way to solve a chicken-and-egg dilemma: crank out 15 million chickens. That’s seem to be the plan for Samsung and LG, anyway — Samsung plans to sell 10 million 3D TVs this year, up five times from the two million it sold last year, while LG plans to sell some 5 million. Now, it’s unclear whether this increase in sales will come as a result of consumer demand for 3D or simply because almost all new TVs will be 3D-capable, but we’re hoping that pesky 3D content problem will get a lot better once more people can actually view it — assuming anyone actually wants to wear the glasses, that is.

Samsung wants to sell 10 million 3D TVs this year, LG plans on 5 million originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 19 Feb 2011 01:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Epic 4G officially signed up for Froyo starting February 21st

Weary Epic 4G owners, wonder no more about your phone’s long-overdue update to Android 2.2, because the rumors were true: it’s nearly here. Sprint has thrown up a support page detailing the build EB13 upgrade that will kick off on February 21st, saying that all customers “should” have it by the 25th through a phased over-the-air rollout. Besides the usual Android 2.2 goodies, the update promises “GPS enhancements,” which is something that pretty much every Galaxy S owner around the world is always on the lookout for with every new firmware version. Of course, we’ll believe this all when it actually starts happening — but it’s a good sign.

Samsung Epic 4G officially signed up for Froyo starting February 21st originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Feb 2011 14:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung’s Galaxy S II to have a Tegra 2 version?

Just as we lay to rest the ghost of a phantom Tegra 2 chip inside the LG Revolution, here comes the specter of another unconfirmed appearance for NVIDIA’s dual-core application processor, this time inside Samsung’s Galaxy S II. If you’ll recall, we were initially informed by Samsung’s PR crew that their new Android flagship would run on NVIDIA’s hardware, however a subsequent correction informed us that the processor inside would in fact be Samsung’s own Exynos. Now, it turns out, both might be true. AnandTech have come across some benchmark results showing a GT-i9103 with Tegra 2 listed as its grunt provider, while Pocket-lint and others have noted that Samsung’s own spec sheet for the Galaxy S II states that the dual-core Exynos “may not be applicable in some regions.” The likeliest scenario here is that Samsung hasn’t yet reached sufficient volumes with its own processor production and will rely on NVIDIA’s Tegra 2 for handsets outside its critical markets — much in the same vein as it replaced Super AMOLED with Super Clear LCD screens in Russia and some other territories. Don’t fret too much, though, performance disparities between the two aren’t likely to be overly significant.

Samsung’s Galaxy S II to have a Tegra 2 version? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Feb 2011 17:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung’s Tango Stealth robo-vacuum is a quiet intruder

Samsung's Tango Stealth robo-vacuum is a quiet intruder

Special forces can leave no trace and make no sound, but Samsung‘s Tango Stealth vacuum does them one better: not only is it quiet but it picks up the traces others have left. It’s the latest in a long line of robo-vacs from the company and it’s the quietest, making just 50db of noise while dutifully looking for targets of opportunity on your hardwood. It’ll start shipping in Korea soon at a price of 750,000 Won — about $670. Special faces do cost more than normal ones.

Samsung’s Tango Stealth robo-vacuum is a quiet intruder originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Feb 2011 20:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gallery: Tablets Dominate Mobile World Congress

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Mobile World Congress 2011


It’s shaping up to be the Year of Too Many Tablets.

Like this year’s CES, the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona was all about the tablets. Android tablets ruled the show, for the most part, but the BlackBerry PlayBook and HP’s hot webOS-based TouchPad also made appearances.

But mixed into the tablet hype was the usual blend of weird products, mindless marketing, blue sky and gushing fountains and — of course — booth babes. Go grab yourself a café cortado or a cool glass of horchata and enjoy our picks of MWC 2011.

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Photos: Charlie Sorrel


Confirmed: Samsung will launch an 11.6-inch 9 Series laptop

We had a feeling the 11.6-inch version of Samsung’s 9 Series laptop was the real deal when it popped up on Provantange’s site yesterday, and the company just confirmed for us that it does in fact have a smaller model waiting in the wings. Sadly, our Samsung contact wouldn’t confirm anything on the pricing front, but he did tell us that it will be available with a Core i3 processor. We didn’t get any information on that rather interesting listed USB 3.0 port, either. Sure, we’ve still got a few question marks here, but hey, at least we know it’s real.

Confirmed: Samsung will launch an 11.6-inch 9 Series laptop originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Feb 2011 14:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motorola Xoom vs. Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 vs. LG G-Slate — battle of the Tegra 2 Honeycomb tablets

Hello, Moto — no wait, Samsung… or is it LG? Three of the world’s biggest smartphone makers have leapt at the opportunity to serve up Google’s brand new Honeycomb build of Android, however their selection of menu items looks to be somewhat lacking in diversity. Motorola’s Xoom matches Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 10.1 in both screen size and resolution (1280 x 800), while LG’s Optimus Pad / G-Slate offers only marginally smaller measurements with an 8.9-inch display spanning 1280 x 768. More than that, all three tablets run the bone-stock Honeycomb UI and are built around NVIDIA’s 1GHz Tegra 2 system-on-chip, leaving little room for differentiation on the basis of user experience or internal performance (LG would have you believe its 3D camcorder is a big advantage for its slate, but we’re not so sure). Most choices between the three, then, will come to things like brand loyalty, ergonomics and pure, basic aesthetic appeal. To help you judge the latter of those three points, we’ve prepared an exhaustive barrage of side-by-side photos below — we expect you to view every last one of ’em… at least twice.

Motorola Xoom vs. Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 vs. LG G-Slate — battle of the Tegra 2 Honeycomb tablets originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Feb 2011 12:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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