Yesterday marked the first day of IFA 2011 – one of the biggest international trade shows – and Samsung was the first major company out of the blocks. The South Korean giant released a number of new products, with a trio of Bada 2.0-powered smartphones leading the line.
With all the accolades Samsung has won for its Android-based Galaxy S product line, it’s easy to forget that the company also makes plenty other other smartphones, with a couple of different operating systems.
Bada is an OS of Samsung’s own design, offering unique features and apps, and mixing it with TouchWiz – a feature we’ve come to know and respect on Android-based smartphones.
While it would be easy to think of Bada as an entry-level alternative to high-end smartphones, Samsung actually offers handsets at every level of the market. The new Samsung Wave 3 tops the lineup, packing in a 4-inch Super AMOLED touchscreen.
There’s also a 1.4GHz processor and HSPA+ connectivity, along with a suave 9.9mm brushed aluminium body and 5-megapixel camera, allowing the Wave 3 to compete with devices like the Galaxy S II.
Sitting lower down the range, Samsung also introduced the Wave M, packing in a 3.65-inch touchscreen, 832MHz processor and 5-megapixel camera. If money’s an issue, you can opt for the new 3.2-inch Wave Y, which gets the same processor as the Wave M, but makes do with a 2-megapixel snapper.
This blog post was written by The Gadget Show.
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