Introduction
In a fashion, dramatically different that the one from last year, the US version of the Samsung Galaxy S III
has arrived on the market. There is no waiting, measured in months like in the case of the smartpho
-ne's predecessor. This time, Samsung made sure that its flagship will arrive to the most lucrative market
in a timely manner.
has arrived on the market. There is no waiting, measured in months like in the case of the smartpho
-ne's predecessor. This time, Samsung made sure that its flagship will arrive to the most lucrative market
in a timely manner.
The above event however is hardly the most important thing about the newly launched smartphone. It's
the handset's design and, to be more specific, the lack of any changes to it, compared to the I9300
which impresses the most. For the first time ever, Samsung's Android flagship has arrived to the Land of the
Free sans any cosmetic changes for all US carriers - a big deal any way you look at it.
the handset's design and, to be more specific, the lack of any changes to it, compared to the I9300
which impresses the most. For the first time ever, Samsung's Android flagship has arrived to the Land of the
Free sans any cosmetic changes for all US carriers - a big deal any way you look at it.
The visuals of the US Galaxy S III might have remained unchanged, but the smartphone's internals have
gone through a serious makeover. Gone is the Exynos chipset with quad-core CPU and Mali 400 GPU. In
order to play nice with the 4G networks stateside, the Samsung Galaxy S III has received Qua
-lcomm Snapdragon S4 silicon with two Krait CPU cores, clocked at 1.5GHz. In order to ease up the pain over the
lost duo of CPU cores, the Yankee Galaxy S III has twice as much RAM, compared to its global sibling.
gone through a serious makeover. Gone is the Exynos chipset with quad-core CPU and Mali 400 GPU. In
order to play nice with the 4G networks stateside, the Samsung Galaxy S III has received Qua
-lcomm Snapdragon S4 silicon with two Krait CPU cores, clocked at 1.5GHz. In order to ease up the pain over the
lost duo of CPU cores, the Yankee Galaxy S III has twice as much RAM, compared to its global sibling.
Here goes the full list of the US bound Samsung Galaxy S III features:
Key features
- Quad-band GSM and quad-band 3G support (carrier dependent)
- HSDPA and HSUPA support; LTE connectivity (carrier dependent)
- 4.8" 16M-color Super AMOLED capacitive touchscreen of HD (720 x 1280 pixel) resolution; Corning Gorilla Glass 2
- Android OS v4.0.4 with TouchWiz launcher
- 1.5 GHz dual-core Krait CPU, Adreno 225 GPU, Qualcomm MSM8960 Snapdragon chipset, 2GB of RAM
- 8 MP wide-angle lens autofocus camera with LED flash, face, smile and blink detection
- 1080p HD video recording at 30fps
- Dual-band Wi-Fi 802.11 b, g, n
- GPS with A-GPS connectivity; GLONASS support, Digital compass
- 16/32GB internal storage, microSD slot
- Accelerometer, gyroscope and proximity sensor
- Standard 3.5 mm audio jack
- microUSB port with USB host and TV-out (1080p) support, MHL, charging
- Stereo Bluetooth v4.0
- FM radio with RDS
- Great audio quality
- Super slim at only 8.6mm
- 2MP secondary video-call camera
- Full Flash for the web browser
- NFC support
- Document editor
- File manager comes preinstalled
- Extremely rich video and audio codec support
- Impressively large 2100 mAh battery
Main disadvantages
- A body with dubious aesthetics
- No dedicated camera key
- S Voice is hardly as functional as ads might make you believe
As you can see above, the US Galaxy S III ticks every box an Android power user can imagine. The smartphone is simply loaded with talents - both in terms of hardware and software.
For those of you, who are in a hurry to bash the dual-core CPU of the handset, we suggest you wait until after
we walk you through its benchmark scores. Chances are that your fears are unfounded. We have already
put Qualcomm's latest silicon through its paces, and found it to be quite zippy. Besides, 2 gigs of RAM and
LTE or 42Mbps HSDPA connectivity are not exactly a bad tradeoff.
we walk you through its benchmark scores. Chances are that your fears are unfounded. We have already
put Qualcomm's latest silicon through its paces, and found it to be quite zippy. Besides, 2 gigs of RAM and
LTE or 42Mbps HSDPA connectivity are not exactly a bad tradeoff.
Design is entirely a matter a personal taste. We can attest however, that the smartphone will easily grow on you over a serously short period of time.
As you have probably guessed by now, the hype surrounding the US bound Samsung Galaxy S III is huge.
So are the expectations. Continue reading to find out if the handset lives up to both. As always, we'll begin
with an unboxing, followed by a design and build quality inspection.
So are the expectations. Continue reading to find out if the handset lives up to both. As always, we'll begin
with an unboxing, followed by a design and build quality inspection.
Editorial: The Samsung Galaxy S III is available in a number of carrier versions in the US. There's one
for AT&T (SGH-I747), one for T-Mobile (SGH-T999), one for Sprint (SPH-L710), another one for
Verizon (SCH-I535) and another one for U.S. Cellular (SCH-R530). We had the AT&T and the
Sprint versions for testing. You should rest assured that hardware- and software-wise all the carrier versions
are the same so the findings in this product review apply to them all.
for AT&T (SGH-I747), one for T-Mobile (SGH-T999), one for Sprint (SPH-L710), another one for
Verizon (SCH-I535) and another one for U.S. Cellular (SCH-R530). We had the AT&T and the
Sprint versions for testing. You should rest assured that hardware- and software-wise all the carrier versions
are the same so the findings in this product review apply to them all.
via[gsmarena]
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