Samsung Galaxy 3

Not to be confused with Samsung Galaxy S III.
Samsung Galaxy 3
Manufacturer Samsung
Series Galaxy
Compatible networks HSDPA (3G) 900/2100, Quad band GSM / GPRS / EDGE GSM 850, GSM 900, GSM 1800, GSM 1900
Predecessor Samsung i5700
Successor Samsung Galaxy Ace (GT-S5830)
Form factor Slate
Dimensions 113.5 x 55 x 12.9 mm
Weight 109 g [1]
Operating system Android 2.1 (Eclair)
Upgradeable To Android 2.2 (Froyo)
CPU Samsung S5P6422 667 MHz
GPU FIMG 3DSE
Memory 256 MB RAM
Storage 512 MB (170 MB user-accessible)
Removable storage MicroSD support for up to 32 GB
Battery

Li-Ion 1500 mAh.

Stand-by:
Up to 620 h (2G)
Up to 510 h (3G)
Talk time:
Up to 15 h 30 min (2G)
Up to 7 h 15 min (3G)
Data inputs Touch Screen (capacitive)
Display WQVGA TFT LCD, 3.2 in (82 mm) diagonal. 240 x 400 px, 16M colors
Rear camera 3 Mpix (official spec), autofocus.
Video: recording in 3GP (MPEG+AMR-nb); MP4, 3GP playback
Sound MP3, AMR, AAC, AAC+, e-AAC+, WMA, WAV, OGG, MID
Connectivity USB 2.0, Bluetooth 3.0, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, GPS
References [2]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Samsung GT-I5800 Galaxy 3.

The Samsung Galaxy 3, also known as the Samsung Galaxy Apollo, Galaxy Mini in Italy,[3] or Samsung Galaxy 580 in Hong Kong, is a smartphone manufactured by Samsung that runs the open source Android operating system. Announced and released by Samsung in July 2010,[4] the Galaxy 3 succeeds the Galaxy Spica.

Being a budget, mid-range smartphone that was designed for the mass market,[5] the Galaxy 3 had several compromises over the Galaxy S in terms of hardware.

The Galaxy Apollo is a variant of the Galaxy 3 that is also known as the GT-I5800.[6] This was also released as carrier-exclusive sub-variants by Orange (i5801) in the UK, Optimus (i5801) in Portugal and by Telus Mobility (i5800L / Samsung Apollo) in Canada.[2] Compared to the normal Apollo/I5800, the carrier-exclusive models include a different front design, which has touch sensitive buttons instead of physical keys, a more rounded home button, and a slightly different back.

The Samsung Galaxy 3 won bronze of the CNET Asia Reader's Choice Award for Best Entry-Level Smartphone in 2010.[7][8]

Features

The Galaxy 3 is a 3.5G smartphone, offering quad-band GSM and announced with two-band HSDPA (900/2100) at 3.6 Mbit/s. The phone features a 3.2 inch TFT LCD capacitive touchscreen, with a 3.2-megapixel autofocus camera. FM radio RDS chip. Powered by a Samsung 667 MHz processor running on top of 256 MB of RAM and the display resolution is 240 x 400 with 16 million colors, the phone runs on Android 2.1 Eclair and TouchWiz 3.0. Known for its social network integration capabilities and multimedia features, the Galaxy 3 is also preloaded with Google Mobile Apps and Layar to provide augmented reality features.[9]

Firmware upgrade

Screenshot from Android 2.2 on i5800

An update to Android 2.2 (Froyo) has been released by Samsung in some regions. Near the start of 2011, the upgrade was stated as in progress,[10] scheduled for release by late-January 2011 in Singapore, which has been indefinitely delayed, and April 2011 for Europe.

The update to Android 2.2 (Froyo) was released on 13 April 2011 for Indian users via Samsung Kies.[11] On 13 May 2011, the updated Quick Guides for the UK and Cyprus, relating to a Froyo version of the device, were published to the Samsung web site[12] indicating an imminent release of the firmware update. Months later in the second half of 2011, the Froyo update was officially released in Greece and the UK through Kies.

Unofficials

Unofficially, members at XDA Developers have ported :

Although it had few bugs, users heartily welcomed them and use them on their devices.

Currently, a port for Jelly Bean - Android version v4.1.1 is being worked on. As of 18 September 2012, Jelly Bean port has been a huge success since only the camera is not working in that port.[13] Another team of developers is working towards creating a new kernel. It is based on the latest linux kernel v3.4. On completing this project, developers will be freed from using Samsung's kernel source, which lacks required drivers making earlier ports highly complex. This will also ensure that any future Android version can be made to run on this device.[14]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.