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Samsung has recently announced that they will introduce the Samsung Corby S3650, Samsung CorbyPro B5310 and Samsung Galaxy Spica i5700 at CES 2010. As a reminder, the Galaxy Spica i5700 is an Android smartphone that resembles the Galaxy i7500. The phone is powered by an 800MHz processor, a 3.2-inch HVGA touchscreen display, HSDPA, Wi-Fi, A-GPS, lots of Google services, access to popular social networking websites (MySpace, Facebook), a 3.5mm headset jack, DNSe 2.0, a 3.2MP Autofocus camera, and a 180MB of internal memory.
Meanwhile, the Samsung Corby is an affordable
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Forget about the passe lava and plasma lamps – the Spica Speakers ought to be the next big thing. This new type of speakers offer a totally different effect in the form of shape shifting patterns and trippy reflections, doing so while your ears are being treated to musical scores of your choice. Sorta like having a mini Fountains of Bellagio right smack in your room, save for a much cheaper price (without having to fly there and all that).
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Designer Yuki Yamamoto has creatively designed the Spica speaker, which is actually an audio version of the lava lamp that merges audio, light and water to create dazzling effect. This speaker allows you to “watch” your music. Unfortunately, the Spica Speaker is only a concept at the moment. Find out more pictures after the jump.
[DesignBoom]
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A sibling to the Galaxy, the i5700 has been rumored for a while. Now it has been made official by Samsung and dubbed the Galaxy Spica. Samsung’s latest Android-powered handset is just 13.2mm thick and features a 3.5mm jack, an 800MHz core, and built-in DivX support.
According to Samsung, it’s already out in Europe and will be coming to the Middle East and Asia shortly.
The Samsung Galaxy Spica supports the full suite of Google services, like Google Search, Google Maps, Gmail, YouTube, and Google Talk.
[newswire]
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Samsung is going to invade Nokia’s home turf with the Galaxy Spica, the smaller version of the I7500. This model remains more or less the same save for the inclusion of Nordic language support that caters nicely to the people who live in that part of the world. Expect the Samsung Galaxy Spica to retail for $692 when it arrives in that part of the world this coming November, which is like, a couple of days away…
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The almighty FCC has given their nod of approval to the Samsung i5700 Spica, also known as the Galaxy Lite, alongside the R860. The former will function on the 850/1900 GSM and 850/1900 WCDMA bands, which means it will most probably arrive via AT&T should it hit the US, complete with an AMOLED touchscreen display, GPS support, Wi-Fi connectivity and a 3.2-megapixel camera. As for the Samsung R860, this model boasts 1700MHz AWS connectivity and CDMA/EV-DO support.
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Samsung rename its upcoming Galaxy Lite i5700 Android smartphone as the Spica. The Spica, as the codename Galaxy Lite suggests, is a lite version of the Samsung Galaxy i7500. Spica has a smaller 3-inch AMOLED touchscreen display, a 3.2 Megapixel auto focus camera, GPS, and HSDPA support.
Samsung’s Spica is boosted by Qualcomm’s 528MHz processor and runs Android OS.
[cellularmania]
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