Samsung Starts Rolling Ice Cream sandwich(android OS) in its tablets
Samsung Starts Rolling Ice Cream sandwich(android OS) in its tablets
Samsung has finally starts introducing the new Ice Cream Sandwich
(android 4.0) in their tablets, Recently Samsung has released a bunch
of tablets having Android 4.0 (ice cream sandwich) in it. The company
has earlier mention that the their tablets will have ICS in July/August
2012
, So it’s a good news for Samsung fans that they are fulfilling there promises which they have made with there fans. The mobile industry is looking forward to the new Google nexus tablet,
which will definitely reform their Experiences. But we’re not talking
about ‘Jelly Bean’ unfortunately; we’re still discussing Ice Cream
Sandwich i.e. Android 4.0 out here. As reported, the entire list of tablets that will receive Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich are:
GT-P6210 Galaxy Tab Plus 7.0 Wi-Fi
GT-P6200 Galaxy Tab Plus 7.0 Wi-Fi + 3G
GT-P6810 Galaxy Tab 7.7 Wi-Fi
GT-P6800 Galaxy Tab 7.7 Wi-Fi + 3G
GT-P7310 Galaxy Tab 8.9 Wi-Fi
GT-P7300 Galaxy Tab 8.9 Wi-Fi + 3G
GT-P7510 Galaxy Tab 10.1 Wi-Fi
GT-P7500 Galaxy Tab 10.1 Wi-Fi + 3G
Samsung is going to be the most
popular tablet producing company in the world, soon, and it already gain
it’s position in India, Pakistan and other South Asian Countries,
and they’ve been at it for a while.
Some of the popular ones to hit the market are of course, the P1000
followed by the Galaxy Tab 620 and then of course, the the latest Galaxy
Tab 2 310.
The latest Samsung Galaxy
Tab 2 310 came with ICS, but the ones before it would be getting the
update soon. The Galaxy Tab 2 310 features a 7-inch wide WSVGA PLS TFT
display with a resolution of 600x1024pixels. The device also sports a
3MP rear camera with a VGA type front camera. Equipped with 1GB RAM and a
1 GHz dual-core processor the Galaxy Tab 2 is light, weighing
345g and it is highly portable. The Galaxy Tab 2 310 sells for around
Rs. 19,900, which makes it a very attractive option for those looking
for a 3G capable ICS tablet.
CS is quite a departure from
Gingerbread and you’ll notice that the layout for certain functions have
been moved around a bit. If you’ve seen a Honeycomb tablet, then you’ll
feel a bit more at home, else it’ll take some getting used to. ICS is
hardware accelerated, so everything feels smooth and fluid. Google now
uses OpenGL ES to render everything from the built-in apps, to the
animations and homescreens. Even the stock browser is GPU accelerated,
which makes it really quick and responsive.
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