A high-end Android smartphones these days support HD displays 720P and so is Samsung Galaxy SIII. 2012 figures to be the year of Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich as Eldar Murtazin says that the Samsung Galaxy SIII device will be running Ice Cream Sandwich.
Unlike the Galaxy Nexus though, the Galaxy S III will likely feature Samsung’s TouchWiz user interface which is both loved and hated by the mobile community. The TouchWiz experience on the Galaxy S II wasn’t terrible and unless Samsung really manages to screw things up, it should work well on the Galaxy S III.
Rumors have been flying around about the Samsung Galaxy S III’s release date and unfortunately, we still don’t have a good release window locked down.
When Eldar Murtazin revealed what he had heard about the Galaxy S III is coming with these specs :
- Quad-core Exynos clocked at 1.5 Ghz or 1.6 Ghz,
- Super AMOLED 720p display,
- Fast connection 4G LTE,
- RAM 2 GB,
- 12 MP Camera
- Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich
And also he stated that the phone was supposedly going to be announced at the MWC with a release coming in April.
Right now, we have a couple of different scenarios in regards to the device’s release date:
- The first rumor the Galaxy S III’s release as being March 18th, in Turkey. Of the three, this is the least credible.
- The second rumor has the Galaxy S III still arriving in April. The source, Eldur Murtazin of course. The guy is fixated on April and who know, maybe he’s right.
- The last whisper has Samsung launching the Galaxy S III somewhere around the Summer Olympics.
A Samsung executive claimed that the company would be tying in a major product launch with its sponsorship of the Games and the Galaxy S III just might be that product.
Let’s assume that the device is going to come in two flavors. HSPA+ for T-Mobile and LTE for the rest of the American carriers. If that’s the case, we can pull in some history to make some guesses.
Let’s assume that the device is going to come in two flavors. HSPA+ for T-Mobile and LTE for the rest of the American carriers. If that’s the case, we can pull in some history to make some guesses.
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