
Specifically considered and release with the Generation Y in mind — symbolised with the Y inscription in both phones, the Samsung Galaxy Y and Galaxy Y Pro — could these two smartphones be the top off BlackBerry and iPhone competitor?
The two phones, designed particularly at the younger Generation Y, will be powered by Android Gingerbread.
However, the phones are not as convincing as one might had hoped.
Part of Samsung’s simplified phone naming strategy, there will be five marked courses of phones.
Ranging from “Y” entry level phones — which stands for “Young” — through to “S” for premium models, each class will have extra markers to indicate specific functionality of that gadget.
Straight forwardly competing with the new scale of BlackBerry Curve’s — Research in Motion’s entry-level smartphone — the two are similar in potential, in that both of them are frankly underpowered.
Both have a 2-megapixel camera, Bluetooth 3.0 and Wi-Fi 802.11n with faster wireless transfer speeds, but a measly 832Mhz processor.
The Galaxy Y Pro also launches with enterprise features, for graduate students ready into the work environment, including Cisco Mobile and WebEx.
Pricing has yet to be announced. Considering the Samsung Galaxy Tab tablet, a require lustre competitor to Apple’s iPad was priced at the equal rate; one can only hope that Samsung does not make the same mistake two times.
To compete with the BlackBerry and the iPhone — the two phones announced at present need to cost less, and subsidies by the carter need to cost the targeted Generation Y user less per month, too.
But whether the Identifying mark power of the Galaxy is powerful enough to rival that of competing BlackBerry and iPhone brands — well, I believe we all know the answer to that.
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