By Allen Tsai | Tue Nov 29, 2005 1:47 pm |
Sprint and Samsung today announced the MM-A920 music phone. The MM-A920, with its embedded music player and external music navigation controls, provides access to thousands of songs for instant download and easy access. With an expansion slot that houses up to 512MB of TransFlash memory, the MM-A920 allows music lovers to easily store and transfer their favorite tunes, images and videos.
Harnessing the speed of Sprint's Power Vision EVDO network, the Samsung MM-A920 enables customers to access the latest news, music and entertainment content at broadband-like speeds.New services supported by the MM-A920 include the newly announced Sprint Music Store, which allows users to immediately buy and download complete songs directly to their phone; 30 channels of live and on demand video and audio from Sprint TV and On Demand, a personalized resource guide to news, traffic, weather, sports and entertainment. The Samsung MM-A920 includes numerous powerful features such as: - 1.3 mega-pixel camera/camcorder with a flash and zoom - PictBridge-enabled printing capabilities - Bluetooth wireless technology for hands-free connectivity - Phone-as-modem capabilities The MM-A920 will be available on Dec. 6 in Sprint stores at a retail price of $349. - Samsung MM-A920 Review - Samsung MM-A920 Specs
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Wed Feb 08, 2012 12:31 pm | By
Sprint gained customers last quarter but lost money from subsidizing iPhone sales, as its expensive gamble fell short of expectations.
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Mon Feb 06, 2012 12:09 pm | By
Samsung's ultra-slim Galaxy S3's sleeker design and other rumored features could directly compete with Apple's iPhone 5 when released this spring.
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Fri Feb 03, 2012 11:53 am | By
Apple is widening its patent case against Samsung in Australia, suggesting the lawsuit between the two competitors is going to intensify before any resolution.
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Wed Feb 01, 2012 4:00 pm | By
Samsung will delay the release of the Galaxy S3 smartphone until later this year, banking on the success of current offerings to produce strong sales well into 2012.
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Tue Jan 31, 2012 2:21 pm | By
The European Commission is investigating whether Samsung's use of patents to sue Apple breaks EU antitrust rules, a development that may put the company's expanding cases and other companies' court actions in jeopardy.
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