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Samsung Omnia Lite B7300 Mid-Level Touch Smartphone Debuted |
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Samsung Omnia Lite B7300 Mid-Level Touch Smartphone Debuted
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By Allen Tsai | Tue Jun 16, 2009 4:41 am |
Samsung today unveiled the Omnia Lite B7300, a mid-level touch screen Windows Mobile smartphone with a 3.0-megapixel camera.
The South Korean company said the Omnia Lite B7300 is designed for multimedia, Internet and business features.Running on Windows Mobile 6.1, users have multi-push email access and can access Microsoft Office Suite to edit and view office documents. Samsung's TouchWiz 2.0 user interface and downloadable online widgets offer a user-friendly 3D multimedia interface. The Omnia Lite comes Opera Browser and HSDPA and Wi-Fi connectivity. Additional features include a built-in 3.0-megapixel camera, high-quality video support and A-GPS location-based tracking.
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Thu Feb 09, 2012 12:41 pm | By
Apple may shift litigation strategies, attacking the process of "copying" rather than products, after losing a critical patent battle to Samsung in Germany, raising questions of the iPad maker's costly and aggressive tactics.
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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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More Phones: Samsung |
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Editorials & Opinion
By Janet Maragioglio
Mobile devices increasingly diagnose and manage disease, putting them under the watchful eye of federal regulators, who could slow the pace of innovation.
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