الثلاثاء، 17 فبراير 2015

It’s awesome that the Samsung Galaxy Note II will be updated to Lollipop

How often have you heard of an Android device that’s more than two years old get an official update to a major new version of Android? Outside of Google’s Nexus lineup, it’s not something that has ever come to pass – every flagship out there usually gets one or two major updates within 2 years after they go up for sale, after which the device manufacturer moves on to newer devices. And you can’t blame them, considering how many devices they churn out every year.


With the Galaxy Note II though, Samsung might just be about to do what no other manufacturer has done. Samsung Poland recently confirmed that the Note II would be getting an update to Lollipop, and Samsung Finland also says the same on its support site. The Note II launched with Android 4.1.2 out of the box, and since its launch, has been updated to Android 4.2, 4.3 and 4.4. If that wasn’t good support already for an Android device, it looks Samsung isn’t done with its second-generation Galaxy Note flagship yet.


Samsung has often been criticized for being slow with rolling out updates to devices, though what most fail to understand is that for a company with so many phones and tablets and software that has a ton of features, the Korean manufacturer is actually rather fast. With Lollipop, we’re seeing Samsung update a new device every other day, even making these updates widely available in a short span of time instead of keeping them limited to a region or two.


If the Galaxy Note II really is going to get Android 5.0, it would be a very impressive move from Samsung. The Note II has been available for purchase for around two years and five months now, and by the time the update would arrive, it will probably be pushing more than two and a half years of existence on the consumer market.


Even Google doesn’t usually update its Nexus devices after two years – the only advantage the Nexus devices have is that since they get updates faster, they usually get more updates within the same time as a non-Nexus device. But in terms of the period of support, Samsung seems set to create history in the Android ecosystem, and while it might not be at the level of what Apple offers in terms of software updates, it still goes to show that Samsung is doing what no other Android OEM has done yet.


Though we certainly hope they follow Samsung’s example, and that Samsung would show the same support longevity for some of their other phones. We could all do with some solid software support on devices that are an important part of our daily lives, and we have our fingers crossed that this show of love for the Galaxy Note II is not just a one-time thing for the Korean manufacturer.






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Z1′s success could mean Samsung release the Z2 sooner than you expect

The Z1 isn’t Samsung’s most popular phone by some distance, but that’s because Samsung intends to have it that way. The phone was launched a month back in the Indian market, where it did well despite having more competition than comfort would allow for Samsung. To put that into perspective, Samsung sold more than 100,000 units of the phone in less than a month in the price-sensitive Indian market, and another 20,000 in Bangladesh, where the phone was launched only in the first week of February.


According to sources, the company, encouraged by the success that the Z1 saw, might already be working on a successor to the device. It’ll most likely be known as the Z2, and from what we hear, it’ll have slightly higher-end specifications, including a higher-resolution screen (presumably a 960 x 540 pixel panel), and more.


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$56 billion cash pile will be used to fund growth for Samsung Electronics

According to the Korean juggernaut’s investor relations head Samsung Electronics will make use of its $56 billion cash pile to fund growth through acquisitions and other investments, this is being done at a time when the company’s shareholders are demanding for dividends to be even bigger. Even though the company saw a decline in profit last year, that too for the first time in three years, investors were happy about the 40 percent dividend boost as well as Samsung’s first share buyback since 2007.


The head of investor relations at Samsung, Robert Yi, said that the company’s shareholders should not expect the same this year as Samsung is fully focused on growth. Speaking to Reuters Yi said that while dividends and other forms of returns are responsibilities that the company has for shareholders, it will make efforts to meet them, “but our primary objective is growth and that is what we are communicating to our shareholders.”


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