Samsung trademarks BRITECELL, possibly for Galaxy S7
According to the South Korean tech site Digital Times (via PhoneArena), two variants of the Samsung Galaxy S7 are slated to be released sometime in February 2016.
Samsung’s device actually handles itself spectacularly in the latest comparison, with an extremely smooth performance and an amazingly fast boot-up time.
Samsung may be the world’s largest smartphone manufacturer, but this hasn’t always worked in its favor. The report noted that the Exynos chipset will continue the trend in current phones released by Samsung.
Connectivity options on the smartphone include 4G LTE (with support for Indian LTE bands), Bluetooth, GPS, Glonass, Micro-USB, 3G, GPRS/ EDGE, and Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n. But the small On5 handset is using Samsung’s Exynos 3475 quad-core 1.3 GHz Cortex-A7 processor, while the phablet received the 1.2GHz quad-core Snapdragon 410 processor.
Although we don’t have a concrete release timeframe for the
Theoretically, LTE Cat. 12 speeds imply 600 Mb/s for downloads and 100Mb/s for uploads. Such is still something that remains to be seen.
With Google unveiling a couple of devices (Nexus 5X and Nexus 6P), could something offer something similar or better?
Conflicting rumors have surfaced for the Galaxy S7 camera recently.
Low-light sensor technology seems to be the next thing for smart phone cameras.
Photos with higher pixel count will of course render better resolution on photos, particularly when they are cropped. While the new listing doesn’t tell us much, it does contradict a previous set of benchmarks in one important area.
Samsung Pay is Samsung’s alternative to Apple and Android Pay, and just like them it uses NFC (Near Field Communication) and Magnetic Secure Transmission (MST) to to make mobile payments more accessible to merchants and consumers.
The new Samsung Galaxy S7 and Galaxy Note 6 are expected to throw a few weight and the minor increase in screen size of the Note.