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Thursday 19 July 2012

Samsung GALAXY SIII Review In 2012

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It's can be truly said that Samsung GALAXY S3 inspired by Nature. The S3 from Samsung takes the fundamental hardware components that makes a phone great and paired it with the latest Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) operating system and enhanced it to make this without doubt the new sought after phone. This is what u say when you look at the Samsung Galaxy S3, it goes beyond smart & fulfills your needs by thinking as you think & acting as you act.The Android operating system gives you the power and flexibility. It's have standard feature such as GPS navigation with Google Maps, Gmail, text messaging, phone functionality, video calling and web browsing are all features which are present and should not be overlooked. However the S3 goes beyond the basics to offer something more. It's have Quad-core processing power mean there will be no lackluster performance from the S2. And it also have 4.8" Super AMOLED capactive touch screen, 8 megapixel camera, up to 64GB
memory and much more.


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Amazing Screen

The Samsung Galaxy S3 is 4.8" Super AMOLED 1280x720 HD touchscreen.The display is just so impressive as described. it’s a dream gaming device or simply a phone that you wont mind using for watching movies or photos back on. State of the art technology gives a crisp, bright and immersive experience. New technology means that the backlight on the screen wont turn off until you have finished using the device.

Connectivity

Browse the web, stream media or share content through one of the devices many wireless connectivity options. WiFi (802.11b/g/n), 3G, Bluetooth (version 4) are just the start. NFC, S Beam and AllShare Cast make the wireless world more of reality. Maybe we should mention here, that wireless charging is an option on the Galaxy S3!!

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Best Photo

The 8-megapixel camera on the Galaxy S III snaps amazing photos. Most were clear and sharp, even when viewed back on my TV or my television set using an HDMI adapter. I love Samsung’s camera options, too. You can tap and hold icons to drag and organize the different features within the camera app to suit your liking. So, if you want the “effects” feature on the main camera screen, you can replace the auto-focus or any other option with it.

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Social Network

Samsung’s trying to take NFC mainstream with the Galaxy S III. The company has decided to sell special stickers called “TecTiles.” The stickers will be available in T-Mobile stores in packs of five for $14.99. I was able to program each sticker easily using Samsung’s TecTiles application. All I had to do was open the app, tap the phone to a TecTile and then choose what I wanted that TecTile to do. Each can be programmed to change a phone’s settings, make a call, send a text message, show a contact, check-in on Facebook or FourSquare, post a Tweet, launch the camera or more. I left one on my kitchen wall and tapped it when I came home to automatically activate and connect to my home Wi-Fi network, but I was also thinking about how fun it would be to leave a sticker under the table at one of my favorite restaurants so that I could quickly tap it and check-in each time I visited. I’ve been pretty bummed with the number of NFC smartphones that can’t really use NFC for much other than Android Beam for media sharing, so it’s refreshing to see Samsung push it further. Other companies, such as Sony, offer similar solutions.

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S Beam

Built on top of Android Beam for Ice Cream Sandwich, the Samsung-only S Beam wields NFC and Wi-Fi Direct to "beam" larger-file photos, videos, and documents -- that's in addition to Android Beam's capability of sharing URLs, maps, and contact information. Behind the scenes, NFC initiates the handshake, and the Wi-Fi Direct protocol takes over for larger files. The combination isn't groundbreaking, perhaps, but Samsung deserves credit for packing it up in one seamless action. As with Beam, you won't have to do more than press the backs of the phones together, confirm the beam, and pull the phones apart. The larger the file, the longer it usually takes for the transfer magic to happen.

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S Voice

And then there's S Voice. Samsung's answer to Apple's Siri, S Voice is a personal assistant that plumps up Android's built-in Voice Actions into the more personal format that Apple popularized with Siri. Vlingo powers S Voice on the listening and interpretation front (Siri uses Nuance), and draws answers from databases like Wolfram Alpha. You launch S Voice by double-pressing the home button, and can wake up S Voice in between commands by saying, "Hello, Galaxy" (this is optional and drains the battery faster).

sdfsSamsung GALAXY S III Features

  • Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich)
  • Quad-core processor
  • 4.8 inch HD Super AMOLED (1280x720) display
  • 16/32/64GB memory variants
  • MicroSD card slot that supports up to 64GB memory cards
  • 50GB Dropbox cloud storage
  • 3G (HSPA 21Mbps)
  • 8 megapixel auto focus camera with flash & zero shutter lag
  • Front facing 1.9 megapixel camera, with zero shutter lag
  • HD video recording @30 frames per second
  • 2100mAh battery
  • 8.6mm thick
  • 133g in weight
  • S Beam – share content with other Galaxy S III devices
  • Pop up play –Watch video whilst doing other things
  • S Voice – Intelligently communicate with the phone
  • Smart stay – No more tapping the screen to keep the backlight on
  • Smart call – The Galaxy S III initiates the call so you do not have to
  • Smart alert – Leave less time before responding to missed calls or messages
  • AllShare Play – Share content with the big screen and control from the Galaxy
Source:epgallery

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