Samsung stormed the CommunicAsia conference in Korea this week, pulling the curtain off the Omnia Pro, the follow-up to its widely popular Samsung Omnia, and showing off a host of new smartphones and devices, including the new Samsung Pixon 12 M8910, its 12-megapixel camera phone wonder.The Omnia Pro smartphone, also known as the Samsung B7610 Louvre, the next-generation Omnia, takes queues from its predecessor but ups the ante with a 3.5-inch WVGA AMOLED (active-matrix, organic light-emitting diode) touchscreen display and a sliding QWERTY keyboard.
Samsung Teases Masses With Omnia Pro
Jun 15th, 2009 - ChannnelWeb
Related topics:
Related stories:
T-Mobile Announces Android-Powered MyTouch
Jun 22nd, 2009 - Wired
T-Mobile has announced the MyTouch, the company’s second Googlephone, and on paper it is smaller, lighter and just plain better. The biggest change between the MyTouch and the original Android handset - the G1 - is the physical QWERTY keyboard.
Samsung announces Jet smartphone with 800MHz processor
Jun 15th, 2009 - CNET
At an event in Manhattan Monday, Samsung unveiled its new Jet smartphone, which features a fast 800MHz processor and Samsung's proprietary OS that includes its Dolphin Web browser.
Samsung Omnia 2 coming to Verizon
Jun 15th, 2009 - CNET
Verizon may not have theiPhone 3G S, but the sequel to Samsung's popular iPhone pretender, the Omnia, will be coming to Verizon later this year, Samsung announced at an event on Monday in Manhattan.
mocoNews - Is T-Mobile USA's Next Android Device Coming From Samsung?
Jun 12th, 2009 - Washington Post
Earlier this month, T-Mobile USA's CTO Cole Brodman told mocoNews that they were on the verge of launching a follow-up device to the T-Mobile G1. The phone, which would operate on Google's Android operating system.
A closer look at iPhone 3G S Cortex-A8 ARM and PowerVR chips
Jun 10th, 2009 - AppleInsider
The iPhone 3G S uses a Samsung processor incorporating an ARM Cortex-A8 processor core and Imagination's PowerVR SGX graphics core to achieve a significant new class of speed while remaining backwardly compatible with existing iPhone apps.


