Samsung Galaxy S2 Phone
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Codename | i9100 |
---|---|
Brand | Samsung Galaxy |
Manufacturer | Samsung Electronics |
Slogan | Vivid. Fast. Slim. |
Series | Galaxy S |
Model | i9100 |
Compatible networks | Dual bandCDMA2000/EV-DO Rev. A 800 and 1,900 MHz; WiMAX 2.5 to 2.7 GHz; 802.16e 2.5G (GSM/GPRS/EDGE): 850, 900, 1,800, 1,900 MHz 3GUMTS: 850, 900, 1700 (T-Mobile USA only), 1,900, 2,100 MHz 3.5GHSPA+: 21/42 Mbit/s; HSUPA: 5.76 Mbit/s 4GLTE: 700/1,700 MHz (Rogers in Canada, AT&T and SK Telecom) TD-SCDMA(China Mobile) |
First released | 2 May 2011; 8 years ago |
Units sold | 40.2 million (as of 14 January 2013)[1] |
Predecessor | Samsung Galaxy S |
Successor | Samsung Galaxy S III |
Related | Samsung Galaxy Note Galaxy Ace Galaxy Nexus Infuse 4G |
Type | Smartphone |
Form factor | Slate |
Dimensions | 125.3 mm (4.93 in) H 66.1 mm (2.60 in) W 8.49 mm (0.334 in) D (Standard) 129.8 mm (5.11 in) H 69.6 mm (2.74 in) W 9.7 mm (0.38 in) D (Sprint) |
Mass | 116 g (4.1 oz) (Standard) 130 g (4.6 oz) (Sprint) |
Operating system | Original:Android2.3 'Gingerbread' Current: Android 4.1.2 'Jelly Bean' Unofficial: Android 9.0 'Pie' via LineageOS 16.0 by rINanDO |
System on chip | SamsungExynos 4 Dual 45 nm (GT-I9100, SHW-M250S/K/L) Texas InstrumentsOMAP4430 (GT-I9100G) QualcommSnapdragon S3 APQ8060 (GT-I9210,SGH-T989) Broadcom BC28155 (GT-I9105) Marvell PXA986 |
CPU | 1.2 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex-A9 (GT-I9100, GT-I9105, GT-I9100G, SHW-M250S/K/L) 1.5 GHz dual-core QualcommScorpion (GT-I9210,SGH-T989) |
GPU | ARM Mali-400 MP4 (GT-I9100, SHW-M250S/K/L) PowerVR SGX540 (GT-I9100G) Qualcomm Adreno 220 (GT-I9210) VideoCore IV (GT-I9105) Vivante GC1000 Core |
Memory | 1 GBRAM |
Storage | 16 GB or 32 GB flash memory |
Removable storage | microSD (up to 128 GB SDXC) |
Battery | 1,650 /1,800mAhLi-ion User replaceable |
Data inputs | Multi-touchcapacitive touchscreen, headset controls, Proximity sensor, Ambient light sensor, 3-axis Gyroscope, Magnetometer, Accelerometer, aGPS[2] |
Display |
|
Rear camera | 8 MP
|
Front camera | 2 Megapixel |
Sound | SoundAlive, 16 kHz 64 kbit/s Mono in HD Video Recording |
Connectivity |
|
Other |
|
SAR |
|
Hearing aid compatibility | M3/T3[5] |
The Samsung Galaxy S II is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Androidsmartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics. It has additional software features, expanded hardware, and a redesigned physique compared to its predecessor, the Samsung Galaxy S. The S II was launched with Android 2.3 'Gingerbread', with updates to Android 4.1.2 'Jelly Bean'.
Samsung unveiled the S II on 13 February 2011 at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona.[6] It was one of the slimmest smartphones of the time, mostly 8.49 mm thick, except for two small bulges which take the maximum thickness of the phone to 9.91 mm.[7]The Galaxy S II has a 1.2 GHz dual-core 'Exynos' system on a chip (SoC) processor,[8] 1 GB of RAM, a 10.8 cm (4.3 in) WVGASuper AMOLED Plus screen display and an 8-megapixel camera with flash and 1080p full high definition video recording. It is one of the first devices to offer a Mobile High-definition Link (MHL),[9] which allows up to 1080p uncompressed video output to an MHL enabled TV or to an MHL to HDMI adapter, while charging the device at the same time. USB On-The-Go is supported.[10][11]
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- The Samsung Galaxy S II GT-I9100G was released in late 2011, and is usually sold instead of the original GT-I9100 in certain markets (mostly Asia and some parts of Europe). An overview of the Samsung Galaxy S II GT-I9100G can be seen on Samsung's official website.
- Samsung I9100 Galaxy S II Android smartphone. Announced Feb 2011. Features 4.3″ Super AMOLED Plus display, Exynos 4210 Dual chipset, 8 MP primary camera, 2 MP front camera, 1650 mAh battery, 32.
The user-replaceable battery gives up to ten hours of heavy usage, or two days of lighter usage.[12] According to Samsung, the Galaxy S II is capable of providing 9 hours of talk time on 3G and 18.3 hours on 2G.[12][13]
The Galaxy S II was popular and a huge success both critically and commercially,[14][15] selling 3 million units within its first 55 days on the market.[16] It was succeeded by the Samsung Galaxy S III in May 2012.[17]
- 2Features
- 3Variants
- 3.2Australia
- 3.3Canada
- 3.4China
- 3.6India
- 3.7Japan
- 3.8South Korea
- 3.9United States
- 3.9.2Sprint - Model SPH-D710
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Release[edit]
The Galaxy S II was given worldwide release dates starting from May 2011, by more than 140 vendors in some 120 countries.[18] On May 9, 2011, Samsung announced that they had received pre-orders for 3 million Galaxy S II units globally.[19]
Some time after the device's release, Samsung also released a variation of the phone known as the Galaxy R, which uses a NvidiaTegra 2 chipset.[20][21]
Samsung also reportedly shipped free Galaxy S II's to several developers of the custom Android distribution CyanogenMod (particularly those who had maintained its ports for the Galaxy S with an intent for them to port CyanogenMod 7 to the device.[22]
Features[edit]
Software and services[edit]
The Galaxy S II was launched with Android 2.3 'Gingerbread'. American variants began shipments with the slightly updated version 2.3.5 installed.[23][24] Version 2.3.6 was made globally available on December 12, 2011.[2][25] On March 13, 2012, Samsung began to roll out upgrades to Android 4.0.3 'Ice Cream Sandwich'[26] through their phone management software KIES to users in South Korea, Hungary, Poland and Sweden. Russian users received the update on July 5, 2012, while the rest of Europe received it on August 1, 2012.[27] In February 2013, Samsung began rolling out an update to Android 4.1.2 'Jelly Bean' for the device.[28]
The S II employs the TouchWiz 4.0 user interface, following the same principle as TouchWiz 3.0 found on the Galaxy S, with new improvements, such as hardware acceleration. It also has an optional gesture-based interaction called 'motion' which (among other things) allows users to zoom in and out by placing two fingers on the screen and tilting the device towards and away from themselves to zoom in and out respectively. This gesture function works on both the web browser and the images in gallery[29] used within this device. 'Panning' on TouchWiz 4.0 allows the movement of widgets and icons shortcuts between screens, by allowing the device to be held and moved from side to side to scroll through home screens. This gesture-based management of widgets is a new optional method next to the existing method of holding and swiping between home screens.[30] The Android 4.1 update backports the TouchWiz Nature interface and other features from the Galaxy S III, such as Direct Call, Pop-up Play, Smart Stay, and Easy Mode.[28]
Four new Samsung Hub applications were revealed at the 2011 MWC: Social Hub, which integrates popular social networking services into one place rather than in separate applications, Readers Hub, providing the ability to access, read and download online newspapers, ebooks and magazines from a worldwide selection, Music Hub (in partnership with 7digital,[31]) an application store for downloading and purchasing music tracks on the device, and Game Hub (in partnership with Gameloft,[31]) an application store for downloading and purchasing games. Additional applications include Kies 2.0, Kies Air,[32] AllShare (for DLNA), Voice Recognition, Google Voice Translation,[33]Google Maps with Latitude, Places, Navigation (beta) and Lost Phone Management, Adobe Flash 10.2, QuickOffice application and 'QuickType' by SWYPE.
Before launch, it was announced that Samsung had taken steps to incorporate Enterprise software for business users, which included On Device Encryption, Cisco’s AnyConnect VPN, device management, Cisco WebEx, Juniper,[34] and secure remote device management from Sybase.[35]
The Galaxy S II comes with support for many multimedia file formats and codecs. For audio it supports FLAC, WAV, Vorbis, MP3, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA, AMR-NB, AMR-WB, MID, AC3, XMF. For video formats and codecs it supports MPEG-4, H.264, H.263, DivX HD/XviD, VC-1, 3GP (MPEG-4), WMV (ASF) as well as AVI (DivX)), MKV, FLV and the Sorenson codec. For H.264 playback, the device natively supports 8-bit encodes along with up to 1080p HD video playback.[36][37][38]
Hardware and design[edit]
The Galaxy S II has a 1.2 GHz dual coreARM Cortex-A9 processor that uses Samsung's own 'Exynos 4210' System on a chip (SoC) that was previously code-named 'Orion'. The Exynos branded SoC was the source of much speculation concerning another branded successor to the previous 'Hummingbird' single-core SoC of the Samsung Galaxy S. The Exynos 4 Dual 45 nm (previously Exynos 4210) uses ARM's Mali-400 MP GPU.[39][40] This graphics GPU, supplied by ARM, is a move away from the PowerVR GPU of the Samsung Galaxy S.[41]
The Exynos 4210 supports ARM's SIMD engine (also known as Media Processing Engine, or 'NEON' instructions), and may give a significant performance advantage in critical performance situations such as accelerated decoding for many multimedia codecs and formats (e.g., On2's VP6/7/8 or Real formats).[42][43][44]
The Mali 400 GPU in the Exynos 4210 SOC is one of the only, if not the only GPU powering Android devices, that does not support GL_RGB Framebuffer Objects (FBOs), only GL_RGBA. The newer Galaxy S II (9100G), based on the PowerVR SGX540, does not exhibit the issue.
At the 2011 Game Developers Conference ARM's representatives demonstrated 60 Hz framerate playback in stereoscopic 3D running on the same Mali-400 MP and Exynos SoC. They said that an increased framerate of 70 Hz would be possible through the use of an HDMI 1.4 port.[40]
The Motorola Atrix advertised in June 2011 that it was 'the world's most powerful smartphone'; in August 2011 the UK Advertising Standards Authority ruled that the Atrix was not as powerful as Galaxy S II due to its faster processor.[45]
A newer Samsung Galaxy S II (i9100G) uses a 1.2 GHz dual core TI OMAP 4430 processor with PowerVR SGX540 graphics.[46]
The Galaxy S II has 1 GB of dedicated RAM and 16 GB of internal mass storage. Within the battery compartment there is an external microSD card slot capable of recognizing and utilizing a 64 GB microSDXC card.[47][verification needed]
The Samsung Galaxy S II uses a 108.5-millimetre (4.27 in)[11] WVGA (800 x 480) Super AMOLED Pluscapacitive touchscreen that is covered by Gorilla Glass with an oleophobic fingerprint-resistant coating. The display is an upgrade of its predecessor, and the 'Plus' signifies that the display panel has done away with Pentile matrix to regular RGB matrix display which results in a 50% increase in sub-pixels. This translates to grain reduction and sharper images and text. In addition, Samsung has claimed that Super AMOLED Plus displays are 18% more power efficient than the older Super AMOLED displays.[48] Some phones have display issues, with a few users reporting a 'yellow tint' on the left bottom edge of the display when a neutral grey background is displayed.[49]
The Galaxy S II uses Yamaha audio hardware.[50] The Galaxy S II's predecessor, the original Galaxy S, used Wolfson's WM8994 DAC.[51] User feedback on Internet forums as well as an in-depth review at Clove,[50] have expressed the Yamaha chip's inferior sound quality compared to that of the Wolfson chip featured in the original Galaxy S.
On the back of the device is an 8-megapixel Back-illuminated sensor[52] camera with single-LED flash that can record videos in full high-definition 1080p at 30 frames per second. There is also a fixed focus front-facing 2-megapixel camera for video calling, taking photos as well as general video recording, with a maximum resolution of 640x480 (VGA).
The Galaxy S II is one of the earliest Android devices to natively support NFC Near field communication.[34] This follows on from the Google Nexus S which was the first de facto NFC smartphone device.[53] Reportedly the UK version was supplied without an NFC chip at the beginning of its production run,[54] with an NFC-equipped version released later in 2011.[55]
Samsung has also included a new high-definition connection technology called Mobile High-definition Link (MHL). The main specialty of MHL is that it is optimized for mobile devices by allowing the device's battery to be charged while at the same time playing back multimedia content.[56] For the Galaxy S II, the industry standard micro USB port found on the bottom of the device can be used with an MHL connector for a TV out connection to an external display, such as a high definition television.[57]
The micro USB port on this device also supports USB OTG standard which means the Galaxy S II can act as a 'host' device in the same way as a desktop computer in allowing external USB devices to be plugged in and used.[10] These external USB devices typically include USB flash drives and separately powered external hard drives. A video demonstration on YouTube[58] has shown the OTG function to be readily available with an ordinary micro USB (B-type) OTG adaptor. The same YouTube video goes on to mention a successful test completed on a 2 TB USB external hard drive (requiring own power source) but however reports of failure when trying to connect USB keyboards, tested USB mice and tested USB game pads. Currently the only file-system supported for USB drives within OTG is FAT32.
A 3.5 mm TRRS headset jack is available and is located on the top side of the device. The micro USB connection port is located on the bottom side of the device.
Broadcom BCM4330 combo chip integrates 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.0+HS and FM radio.[59][60] Phones released to the US market lack the FM receiver. BCM4330 supports Wi-Fi Direct that enable devices to communicate directly with one another without having to interact with an access point. Even if the BCM4330 chip supports Bluetooth 4.0, the Galaxy S2 is limited to Bluetooth 3.0 using the last Android version released by Samsung (4.1.2). Bluetooth 4.0 support has been introduced in Android 4.3 versions, however the upgrade to an alternative firmware is required.
Additional accessories available include:
- Dock connector for battery charging and audio-visual output[61]
- MHL cable which makes use of the device's micro USB port for HDMI output[61]
- USB OTG adaptor for use with external USB devices such as USB flash drives.[10]
- Stylus pen for use on the device's capacitive screen.[61] Support for a stylus on the Galaxy S II was a precursor to the Samsung Galaxy Note.
- A number of case manufacturers have released a variety of cases for the Galaxy S II.
- A Samsung branded Bluetooth headset for making phone calls.[62]
- A pair of portable speakers powered by the phone's USB port.[62]
- A vehicle mounting kit for dashboard placement of the phone, allows GPS navigation using the phone.[62]
Variants[edit]
Galaxy S II - Model GT-I9100G[edit]
The Samsung Galaxy S II GT-I9100G was released in late 2011, and is usually sold instead of the original GT-I9100 in certain markets (mostly Asia and some parts of Europe). An overview of the Samsung Galaxy S II GT-I9100G can be seen on Samsung's official website.[63] It features a Texas Instruments OMAP4430 SoC instead of the Exynos 4210 in the GT-I9100. It is visually identical to the GT-I9100, as well as having the same 1.2 GHz processor speed and dual-core ARM Cortex A9 processor technology. However, the SoC is of a different design and the Mali-400 GPU has been replaced by a PowerVR SGX 540 GPU. This difference in the SoC makes this variant incompatible with custom ROMs intended for the I9100, but it has been steadily gaining its own aftermarket support (such as from CyanogenMod[64]) due to the relative ease of development and the openness of the TI OMAP platform.
Australia[edit]
Telstra and Vodafone Australia - Models GT-I9100T[edit]
The Galaxy S II (Model GT-I9100T) sold by Telstra, Vodafone Australia and some certain other carriers outside Australia is virtually identical to the I9100 and is functionally equivalent.
Telstra and Optus - Model GT-I9210T[edit]
In Australia the Galaxy S II 4G (Model GT-I9210T) uses a Qualcomm processor and supports Telstra’s and Optus' 4G networks. However, analog radio and digital media are not supported.
Canada[edit]
Bell Mobility - Models GT-I9100M and SGH-I757M[edit]
Bell's Galaxy S II (Model GT-I9100M) Samsung Galaxy S II is identical to the international version except that its model number is GT I9100M. All custom ROMs running on international versions can be flashed to bell's Galaxy S II also.
Bell's Samsung Galaxy S II HD LTE (Model SGH-I757M) is identical to the cancelled AT&T's Skyrocket HD hence making the device another variant of the South Korean model of the Galaxy S II HD LTE. One difference between the South Korean model and the Bell Mobility model is the lack of a physical home button, instead, four capacitive buttons are used, one of which directly replaces the physical home button. The specification of the device is identical to the South Korean model. However, different frequencies bands are enabled on this device.[65]
Rogers - Models SGH-I727R and SGH-I927[edit]
The Rogers Galaxy S II LTE (Model SGH-I727R) is identical to the AT&T Skyrocket, and features a larger screen 4.52', a bigger battery 1,850 mAh, and a different 1.5 GHz Qualcomm processor.
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Rogers' Galaxy S Glide (Model SGH-I927) is the same phone with the same specs as the AT&T's Captivate Glide, except the carrier logo is on the back instead of behind the front glass panel.
Rogers launched the Samsung Galaxy S II LTE, launching in Fall 2011, soon after its LTE Launch in Toronto.[66]
Note that the Galaxy S II LTE has a different model number: I9210and came out later and only in select markets, including Canada and South Korea.
Telus Mobility - Model SGH-T989D[edit]
Telus Mobility's 4G Galaxy S II X (Model SGH-T989D) has a Qualcomm 1.5 GHz dual core processor, larger 4.52 inch screen and 1,850 mAh battery, is thicker at 9.4 mm and has a different design.[67] There is a chrome band around the edge and the plastic on the back has a leathery feel.[68] Instead of the hardware home button, it has the standard four capacitive buttons. The Qualcomm processor allows for 42 Mbit/s HSPA+ download speeds that the Samsung Exynos processor is not currently capable of. It was released on 28 October 2011.
A subsidiary of Telus, Koodo Mobile, also offers the SGH-T989D.
China[edit]
China - Model GT-I9108(China Mobile), GT-I9100G, SCH-I929[edit]
The Samsung Galaxy S II (Model GT-I9108) was released in late 2011, and it is sold in China by China Mobile. It is identical to the GT-I9100G, featuring the same Texas Instruments OMAP4430 SoC with a 1.2 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex A9 processor and PowerVR SGX 540 graphics processor. However, the GT-I9108 has TD-SCDMA support in place of WCDMA support found in other variants. The GT-I9108 is a regional model and has few available custom ROMs.
The Samsung Galaxy S II (Model SCH-I929) was released in late 2011, and it is sold in China by China Telecom. It is based on the design of Galaxy S II LTE (GT-I9210), but supports CDMA2000 1x EVDO for use with the carrier.
Europe - Model GT-I9100P[edit]
The Samsung Galaxy S II (Model GT-I9100P) was released in late 2011. It has the same hardware as GT-I9100 plus the NFC chip and battery (the battery is specific because it includes the antenna). To keep NFC enabled it is necessary to update the firmware using a P version. Any I9100 firmware can be used, but doing so will disable the NFC hardware.
India[edit]
Model: GT-i9100[edit]
GT-i9100 is a sim-free model released on May 2, 2011. This supports 2G/3G only.
Japan[edit]
KDDI AU - Model: ISW11SC[edit]
The KDDIAu Galaxy S II WiMAX (Model: ISW11SC) was first released on January 20, 2012 in the color Noble Black and was followed by a Ceramics White model on March 24, 2012 and a Shiny Magenta model on July 20, 2012. The ISW11SC currently runs Android 4.0.4 via an OTA update from the original 2.3.6 firmware. The ISW11SC uses the Samsung Exynos 4210 dual-core 1.4 GHz main CPU and a Qualcomm QSC6085 Modem chipset running at 192 MHz. It features 1 GB of RAM and 16 GB of ROM (11 GB available for user data storage) with support for up to 64 GB additional storage via the internal microSD slot. An 1850mAh battery powers the device. The ISW11SC features a Samsung SUPER AMOLED HD 1280x720 screen measuring 4.7 inches. Connectivity includes CDMA 800 MHz/2,100 MHz; 3G EV-DO Rev A; 2.4 GHz / 5 GHz 802.11 a/b/g/n Wi-Fi; Bluetooth 3.0 and an integrated WiMAX modem with speeds up to 40Mbit/s down and 15.4Mbit/s up. Like most Japanese domestic model phones the ISW11SC includes many Japan-specific applications. This phone features NFC functionality which is technically compatible with FeliCa RFID (such as with PASMO and SUICA payment systems) however, the software doesn't support the Japanese 'Osaifu Keitai' mobile wallet and thus the phone cannot be used to make transactions with NFC in Japan.
NTT DoCoMo - Model SC-02C[edit]
NTT DoCoMo introduced a variant of the Galaxy S II (Model SC-02C) on 23 June 2011 as the successor to the DoCoMo Galaxy S (Model SC-02B). The SC-02C includes 1seg terrestrial television support, as well as i-mode software functions specific to DoCoMo handsets, such as i-channel, BeeTV, MelodyCall and DoCoMo map navigation. The SC-02C is powered by the Samsung Exynos 4210 Orion Dual-core 1.2 GHz (S5PC210) processor. The SC-02C uses the Wnn Japanese input system.
South Korea[edit]
All of variants optimized for use with South Korean wireless carriers have Samsung's Korean input system for feature phones, a Dubeolsik-layout virtual keyboard and a T-DMB tuner in place of an FM radio tuner.
KT - Model SHW-M250K[edit]
The KT variant, the Galaxy S II KT (Model SHW-M250K) uses KT's Wi-Fi CM[clarification needed] instead of Android's Wi-Fi CM to connect to Wi-Fi networks. Additional features for KT users are installed by default.
LG U+ - Model SHW-M250L[edit]
Instead of WCDMA and HSPA, LG U+'s variant of the Galaxy S II (Model SHW-M250L) uses EV-DO Rev.B (KPCS 1.8 GHz) to accommodate the network technology deployed by LG U+. The SHW-M250L is slightly thicker (9.4 mm) than SK Telecom and KT variants (8.89 mm). Additional features for LG U+ users are installed by default.
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SK Telecom - Model SHW-M250S[edit]
The SK Telecom variant of the Galaxy S II (Model SHW-M250S) uses the SK-MMS system instead of the OMA-MMS system for multimedia messaging. Additional features for SK Telecom users are installed by default.
United States[edit]
AT&T - Models SGH-I777, SGH-I727 and SGH-I927[edit]
AT&T Mobility began offering its first variant of the Galaxy S II (Model SGH-I777) on 2 October 2011. Prior to its release, AT&T Mobility's first variant of the device was code named 'Attain' by Samsung.
The AT&T Mobility variant maintains the 4.3 inch display of the international version, but features four capacitive buttons.[24] It also includes NFC capability.[69]
AT&T Mobility introduced a second variant of the device called the Galaxy S II Skyrocket (Model SGH-I727) on 6 November 2011. Prior to its release, this second variant was code named 'Skyrocket' by Samsung. This variant is similar to the international Samsung Galaxy S II LTE and is notable for its inclusion of an LTE radio. The inclusion of the LTE radio required changing the device's main processor from the Exynos to the Qualcomm Snapdragon MSM8660 because the Exynos does not support LTE.[70] This version features the same 4.52 inch screen of the Sprint model. This variant supports Near Field Communications (NFC).
AT&T Mobility introduced a third variant called the Captivate Glide (Model SGH-I927) on 20 November 2011. The Captivate Glide differs from the other two AT&T Mobility variants primarily by the inclusion of a slide-out, physical QWERTY keyboard.[71] The Captivate Glide also includes a dual-core, 1 GHz Tegra 2 dual-core processor instead of a 1.2 GHz Exynos processor. The display of this third variant is Super AMOLED instead of Super AMOLED Plus and the display size is reduced to 4 inches.
Sprint - Model SPH-D710[edit]
The Sprint variant (Model SPH-D710) of the Galaxy S II was initially released as the Galaxy S II Epic 4G Touch and was later renamed to the simpler Galaxy S II 4G. Prior to its release, Sprint's variant was codenamed 'Within' by Samsung. The SPH-D710 first became available for Sprint customers on 16 September 2011, making Sprint the first carrier in the United States to offer a variant of the S II.[72] The SPH-D710 is available to Sprint customers in black, titanium grey or white.
The Sprint variant has key differences from the 'International' version of the Galaxy S II. The Sprint variant includes a 2500 MHz WiMax radio. The display of the Sprint variant, at 4.52 inches, is larger than that of the international version.[73] The Sprint variant features four touch-capacitive buttons as opposed to the three-button hardware/capacitive combination found on the international version. Other differences include an LED notification light and a larger, 6.66 Wh battery.
The Sprint variant does not come equipped with NFC capability, unlike the variants offered by T-Mobile US and AT&T Mobility.[74]
The Galaxy S II 4G is a touchscreen-only device, unlike the Epic 4G, which includes a physical QWERTY keyboard.
On 28 March 2013, the Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean (GB27) update was released through the Samsung Kies software As of February 2014, there are no additional confirmed updates for this device.
The device has received 7 updates from Samsung since its original release on 16 September 2011.
Sprint has announced that on 6 November 2015 the Sprint WiMAX network will be decommissioned effectively removing 4G capabilities on the SPH-D710 model. Users will still have access to data service using the 3G network.[75]
Boost Mobile and Virgin Mobile USA[edit]
Sprint subsidiaries Boost Mobile offers a Sprint SPH-D710 variant of the Galaxy S II 4G in both titanium grey or white options. Virgin Mobile offers a variant, model i9210, for their service.
Boost Mobile began the Samsung Galaxy S II 4G on 6 September 2012 for $369.99. Virgin Mobile USA began offering the Galaxy S II 4G on 15 November 2012 for $369.99.
In March 2013, the Boost Mobile and Virgin Mobile variants were also updated along with Sprint's to Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean.
T-Mobile - Model SGH-T989[edit]
T-Mobile USA began taking pre-orders for its variant (Model SGH-T989) of the Galaxy S II on 11 October 2011 and began selling it in stores on 12 October 2011.[76] Prior to its release, T-Mobile's variant of the device was code named 'Hercules' by Samsung.
The T-Mobile variant has important key differences from the 'International' version of the Galaxy S II. The T-Mobile variant uses a 1.5 GHz dual-core Qualcomm APQ8060 (S3) Snapdragon processor, as opposed to the 1.2 GHz dual-core Exynos processor of the International version because the Exynos processor is not compatible with T-Mobile's 42 Mbit/s HSPA+ network. The cellular radio of the T-Mobile supports UMTS bands I (2100 MHz), II (1900 MHz), IV (1700 MHz) and V (850 MHz). The display of the T-Mobile variant, at 4.52 inches, is larger than that of the international version. The T-Mobile variant features four touch-capacitive buttons as opposed to the three-button hardware/capacitive combination found on the international version, this variant of the smartphone uses the powerful Adreno-220 series GPU and supports up to version 4.4.4–based ROMs of the Android OS[77] The T-Mobile variant, like the AT&T variant, supports Near Field Communications (NFC) integrated in the battery, which has 6.85Wh capacity.[69]
As of March 8, 2013, the T-Mobile variant can be updated to Android 4.1.2 'Jelly Bean' using Samsung Kies.[78]
U.S. Cellular - Model SCH-R760[edit]
U.S. Cellular's variant (Model SCH-R760) is equivalent to the Sprint variant, except for one specification; the U.S. Cellular variant does not include a 2500 MHz WiMax radio.
Galaxy S II Plus - Model GT-I9105/P[edit]
The Galaxy S II Plus was announced in CES 2013. The phone has a Broadcom BC28155 SoC with a 1.2 GHz dual-core processor and a VideoCore IV HW GPU instead of the Mali 400MP in the original Galaxy S II. It has 1 GB of RAM but only with 8 GB of internal storage. It uses a hyperglazed plastic body (the same as the Samsung Galaxy S III) and is available in Chic White and Dark Blue. The phone originally ran on Android 4.1.2 'Jelly Bean' with Samsung's TouchWiz Nature UX.[79] An update to Android 4.2.2 is available in some countries. Also released was a I9105P model, which supports NFC.[80]
Reception[edit]
Reviews of the Galaxy S II have been universally positive. It was honored by MWC's Global Mobile Awards as 'SmartPhone Of The Year 2012'Engadget gave the device a 9/10, calling it 'the best Android smartphone yet' and 'possibly the best smartphone, period.'[81]CNET UK gave the device a favorable review of 4.5/5 and described it as 'one of the slimmest, lightest mobiles we've ever had the privilege to hold.'[82]TechRadar gave the device 5/5 stars and describes the device as one that 'set a new bar for smartphones in 2011.'[83]Pocketnow was 'impressed' with the speed of the web browser.[84]SlashGear states that the device 'sets the benchmark for smartphones in general.'[85]GSMArena points out minor drawbacks such as an 'all-plastic body' and the handset having 'no dedicated camera key,' but still calls the handset 'absurdly powerful' and concluding 'we just cannot see beyond the new Samsung flagship if we're to name the ultimate smartphone.'[86]
After slightly over one month since its debut, more than 1 million units of Samsung Galaxy S II were activated in South Korea.[87] Worldwide, 3 million units were sold in 55 days.[88] 85 days after its first release, Samsung declared global shipments of over 5 million for the Galaxy S II[89] and 10 million after 5 months.[90] Partially owing to strong sales of Samsung's Galaxy range of smartphones, Samsung overtook Apple in smartphone sales during Q3 2011, with a total market share of 23.8%, compared to Apple's 14.6%.[91]
Successor[edit]
The successor to the Galaxy S II was the Galaxy S III, unveiled in London on 3 May 2012 and commencing sales on 29 May 2012 with 10 million reported pre-orders.[92][93][94]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^'Samsung Galaxy S smartphones sales hit 100M'. Retrieved 14 January 2013.
- ^ ab'Samsung Announces the GALAXY S II, World's Thinnest Smartphone that Will Let You Experience More with Less'. Samsung.com. 15 February 2011. Archived from the original on 20 August 2012.
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- ^'Samsung I9100 Galaxy S II- Full phone specs'. GSM Arena.
- ^'Sprint Relay Store'. Retrieved 15 December 2011.
- ^'Samsung Galaxy S II gets official at MWC 2011'. Archived from the original on 16 February 2011.
- ^Ionescu, Daniel. (2011-09-14) Article stating measured dimensions. Pcworld.com. Retrieved on 28 November 2011.
- ^'Samsung Exynos 4210'. Samsung Semiconductor. Retrieved 29 September 2011.
- ^'Mobile High-Definition Link (MHL)'. ARMdevices.net. 15 February 2011.
- ^ abc'This is how you plug your USB flash drive into the Samsung Galaxy S II'. GSMArena Blog. 12 May 2011.
- ^ ab'Samsung GALAXY S II Specification'. Samsung.com. Retrieved 21 April 2011.
- ^ abSamsung Galaxy S2 review: Battery life and connectivity. Techradar.com (2011-04-26). Retrieved on 28 November 2011.
- ^Samsung Galaxy S II specs. Phonearena.com. Retrieved on 28 November 2011.
- ^https://www.geeky-gadgets.com/samsung-galaxy-s-ii-hits-the-us-in-august-20-07-2011/
- ^https://www.talkandroid.com/285756-samsung-galaxy-s-series-history/
- ^https://www.gsmarena.com/galaxy_s_ii_breaks_samsungs_records_sells_3_million_in_55_days-news-2846.php
- ^Andrew Hoyle (25 January 2012). 'Samsung Galaxy S3 complete guide'. CNET. Retrieved 19 February 2012.
- ^'Samsung challenges Apple with new smartphone'. AFP. 28 April 2011.
- ^'3m Galaxy S II units are pre-ordered by carriers globally'. Samsung Hub. 9 May 2011.
- ^'Samsung I9103 Galaxy R preview: First look'. GSMArena.com. 30 June 2011. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
- ^'Samsung Galaxy R official – NVIDIA Tegra 2-toting Galaxy S 2 variant'. IntoMobile. 10 August 2011. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
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- ^'Samsung's Galaxy S II receives Android 2.3.6 update'. MSN India. 28 November 2011. Retrieved 21 December 2011.
- ^'Samsung Galaxy SII Ice Cream Sandwich Roll Out Begins'. T3. 13 March 2012. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
- ^'Confirmed: Samsung start Android 4.0.4 updates for Galaxy SII'. SamMobile. 9 July 2012. Retrieved 16 August 2012.; 'Samsung Galaxy S2 I9100 Receives Android 4.0.4, Ice Cream Sandwich Update'. CP Tech & Biz. 1 August 2012. Retrieved 16 August 2012.
- ^ ab'Samsung rolls out Jelly Bean update for Galaxy S II I9100G'. Unwired View.
- ^'Samsung Galaxy S II shows off motion-zoom option in TouchWiz 4.0 (video)'. Engadget. 29 March 2011.
- ^'Samsung Galaxy S2 Touchwiz 4.0 Special Features Demo [Exclusive]'. Android Community. 25 March 2011.
- ^ ab'Samsung Galaxy S2: what you need to know'. TechRadar. 14 February 2011.
- ^Samsung Kies Air Demo (Samsung Galaxy II) on YouTube. Retrieved on 28 November 2011.
- ^Samsung Galaxy SII – Voice Translator Demo on YouTube. Retrieved on 28 November 2011.
- ^ ab'Samsung GALAXY S II Features'. Samsung.com. Retrieved 21 April 2011.
- ^'Big news for Android at Mobile World Congress'. Sybase Enterprise Mobility Blog. 13 February 2011.
- ^'Samsung I9100 Galaxy S II preview: Second encounter – Page 4'. GSMArena.com. 13 April 2011.
- ^Samsung Galaxy S II Preview. YouTube (2011-04-15). Retrieved on 28 November 2011.
- ^'HTC Sensation Review Vs Samsung Galaxy S II: Video playback shootout « Clove Technology's Blog'. Clove. 16 July 2011.
- ^'Mali-400 MP – ARM'. ARM.com. Retrieved 6 August 2011.
- ^ ab'Samsung's Exynos 4210 flexes 3D gaming muscle at GDC 2011 (video)'. Engadget. 3 March 2011.
- ^'Samsung dubs its mobile processors Exynos, dual-core 4210 (formerly Orion) arriving next month'. Engadget. 10 February 2011.
- ^'NEON – ARM'. ARM.com.
- ^'NVIDIA's Tegra 2 Take Two: More Architectural Details and Design Wins'. Anandtech. 5 January 2011.
- ^Texas Instruments OMAP#OMAP 4
- ^UK ASA adjudication: Atrix is not world's most powerful as Samsung S II is more powerful. Asa.org.uk. Retrieved on 28 November 2011.
- ^'TI OMAP-powered Samsung Galaxy S II I9100G pops up quietly'. 11 November 2011.
- ^'Sandisk 64GB micro SDXC cards confirmed working in the SGSII'.
- ^'http://www.oled-info.com/super-amoled-plus'. OLED-Info. Retrieved 4 December 2010.External link in
title=
(help) - ^Galaxy S II display reportedly has yellow spots, we test – GSMArena.com news. Gsmarena.com. Retrieved on 28 November 2011.
- ^ ab'SAMSUNG GALAXY S II – REAL USER REVIEW PART 3: MEDIA'. Clove Technology’s Blog. 17 June 2011.
- ^'Wolfson's innovative ultra low power audio hub selected for Samsung's latest Bada and Android smartphones'. Wolfson Microelectronics. 17 June 2011.
- ^'Silicon Summary in the Samsung Galaxy S II » Recent Teardowns » Chipworks'. Chipworks. 25 July 2010. Archived from the original on 2 October 2011.
- ^'Google unveils first Android NFC phone – but Nexus S is limited to tag reading only for now'. NFC World. 17 June 2011.
- ^'No NFC for UK Samsung Galaxy S2'. Know Your Mobile. 28 April 2011.
- ^'Samsung officially confirms NFC-enabled Galaxy S II'. techradar.com. 12 May 2011.
- ^Mobile High-Definition Link (MHL) on YouTube (2011-02-15). Retrieved on 28 November 2011.
- ^'Watch Samsung Galaxy S II connect to an HDTV through its MHL port [VIDEO]'. GSMArena Blog. 13 May 2011.
- ^Samsung Galaxy S2 USB OTG demo on YouTube. Retrieved on 28 November 2011.
- ^'Broadcom BCM4330 product description'. 14 February 2012.
- ^Broadcom's New Combo Chip Integrates 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.0 + HS and FM to Bring New Multimedia Applications to Smartphones, Tablets and Other Mobile Devices, Broadcom press release
- ^ abc'Des accessoires pour le Samsung Galaxy S2'. Le Journal Du Geek (in French). 17 March 2011.
- ^ abc'Samsung Galaxy S2 Accessories'. Galaxy S2 Accessories. 9 July 2012.
- ^'Samsung Galaxy S II'. Samsung. Retrieved 5 October 2012.
- ^'Samsung Galaxy S II G'.
- ^'SGH-i757M User Manual'(PDF). Samsung. Retrieved 2 June 2012.
- ^'Confirmed: Rogers launching LTE Samsung Galaxy S II, plus LTE network in Toronto goes live September 28th'. MobileSyrup. 30 August 2011.
- ^'4G Samsung Galaxy S II X – Bientôt disponible'. Telus. Retrieved 27 September 2011.
- ^'Video: TELUS Samsung Galaxy S II X quick overview'. MobileSyrup. 22 September 2011.
- ^ ab'Samsung Galaxy S II logs confirm NFC support for AT&T, none for Sprint'. 31 August 2011.
- ^Amar Toor (9 January 2012). 'Samsung Galaxy S II Skyrocket HD coming to AT&T: 1.5GHz dual-core CPU, LTE, 'razor-thin''. Engadget. Retrieved 15 May 2012.
- ^Coming Soon! Samsung Captivate Glide Samsung MobileArchived 18 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Samsung.com. Retrieved on 2013-07-10.
- ^'Sprint First U.S. Carrier to Debut Galaxy S II With Samsung Epic 4G Touch'. Sprint Newsroom. 30 August 2011. Retrieved 1 September 2011.
- ^'Samsung Galaxy S™ II, Epic™ 4G Touch fact sheet – Delivering rich content at blazing fast speeds'. Sprint Newsroom. 30 August 2011. Archived from the original on 7 September 2011. Retrieved 1 September 2011.
- ^'Sprint Epic 4G Touch Lacking NFC Unlike AT&T and T-Mobile Models'. Pocketnow. 3 September 2011.
- ^'Sprint to shutter WiMAX network around Nov. 6, 2015'. Pocketnow. 7 October 2014.
- ^'HTC Amaze, Samsung Galaxy S II: T-Mobile's fastest 4G phones yet'. LA Times. 26 September 2011.
- ^'Samsung Galaxy S II Coming Soon to T-Mobile'. T-Mobile. 30 August 2011. Archived from the original on 30 September 2011. Retrieved 1 September 2011.
- ^'Update your Galaxy S II T-Mobile USA to Android 4.1.2+'. 8 April 2013.
- ^'GSMArena.com Jelly-Bean running Galaxy S II Plus announced'.
- ^'Samsung I9105 Galaxy S II Plus - Full phone specifications'. GSMarena.com. Retrieved 17 December 2013.
- ^Savov, Vlad (28 April 2011). 'Samsung Galaxy S II review'. Engadget.
- ^Westaway, Luke (6 May 2011). 'Samsung Galaxy S 2 review'. CNET UK. Archived from the original on 7 May 2011. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
- ^Beavis, Gareth (26 April 2011). 'Samsung Galaxy S2 Review'. TechRadar. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
- ^'Galaxy S II Web Browser Speed Test (Video)'. Pocketnow.com. 11 May 2011.
- ^Davies, Chris (26 April 2011). 'Samsung Galaxy S II Review'. SlashGear. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
- ^'Samsung i9100 Galaxy S II review: Brightest star – Final words'. GSMArena. 13 May 2011.
- ^'Galaxy S2 sales to consumers top 1 mln in S. Korea'. Antara News. 13 June 2011.
- ^'Galaxy S 2 Set a Record of 3 Million Global Sales in 55 Days'. SamsungTomorrow Flickr. 30 June 2011.
- ^'Samsung Galaxy S2: Sales figures out of this world'. Mobot.net. 8 August 2011.
- ^'Samsung moves ten million Galaxy S II smartphones, pats itself on the back'. Engadget. 25 September 2011.
- ^28 October 2011, Samsung overtakes Apple in smartphone sales, BBC News
- ^Merrett, Andy (1 June 2011). 'Samsung Galaxy S3 to launch in early 2012, 4G tablet coming sooner'. crave cnet 2012. CNET UK. Retrieved 4 August 2011.
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- ^'Samsung S III launch'. Retrieved 16 May 2012.
External links[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Samsung Galaxy S II. |
Preceded by Samsung Galaxy S | Samsung Galaxy S II 2011 | Succeeded by Galaxy S III |
4.3' SUPER AMOLED Plus
See it all clearly and vividly – wherever you are. The Galaxy Note II’s 5.5-inch HD Super AMOLED screen delivers outstanding clarity and a 16:9 screen ratio, so you can enjoy immersive entertainment and all other viewing experiences. Thanks to its innovative design, the Galaxy Note II provides a bigger screen yet its slim body still fits your hand perfectly.
Dual Core Application Processor
Making the impossible possible. The 1.2GHz Dual Core Application Processor is the ultra responsive answer to mobile performance, providing high-speed multitasking, quick web page loading, quick reaction speeds, a smoother UI, lightning fast image editing and high performance gaming. And with its fast encoding/decoding ability, which supports all video playing and shooting, it delivers outstanding computing power and performance.
Slimmer Design
Sometimes you need to note down details without delay. Simply click the S Pen and double-tap the screen, and the Galaxy Note II’s Popup Note feature lets you sketch a map or take down directions, phone numbers and other information conveniently while you’re in the middle of a call. There’s no need to run and grab a pen and paper when you’ve got the S Pen and Popup Note. The split screen functionality allows you to multitask with two applications open simultaneously.
Live Panel
Content is King. Drop the apps and get direct access to your content through Samsung’s new personalised UX, a magazine style layout that selects contents that you use the most, your gallery, music, videos, SNS, emails, notes, games and weather, then displays them on your main screen. This live content ecosystem can be customised to your taste and provides easy access to your contents. Don’t search for content, live it!
Readers Hub
Leave the bookshelf at home and carry your Samsung GALAXY S II in your hand. Readers Hub is a great place to flip through your library of classics & best sellers or browse through more than two million books to choose from. On top of that, you will have access to more than 2500 magazines in 20 languages and 2000 of newspapers in 47 languages at your fingertips. Crisp, sharp text makes reading a pleasure and your experience will be easier to manage with magnification, text only and page views (for magazine and newspapers), audio access (for newspapers), one touch sharing via email (for magazines), and more features. Believe in books, but look beyond paper.
Say N Go : Samsung Voice Solution
Get vocal. Just double tap the home key and you can control the Samsung GALAXY S II with a few selected words. Take charge and execute major functions like calling, music, messaging, scheduling and launching apps with the ease of a voice command. You can also capture your thoughts, make a note to yourself and send it to your friends by simply saying send!
Game Hub
Join in on the action. The Samsung GALAXY S II’s Game Hub lets you to download high quality games, providing over 20 social network games and premium games. Search for games and new release information or play away. With an accelerometer, and gyroscope sensors dynamic hand and arm movement games stand out from the crowd. The slightest tilt and you’re dead – now that’s entertainment.
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Samsung Galaxy S2 Phone Covers
- Capturing unmissable moments
- Support for a healthier lifestyle
- Protected from dust and water
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- Share your music and photos using Group Play
- Control the Galaxy S4 without touching it with Air Gesture
- Simply expand your memory with a MicroSD card
Samsung Galaxy S2 Phone Repair
- 4.3' SUPER AMOLED Plus Display
- Now with Ice Cream
- Take pictures with sound thanks to Sound & Shot
- Share your music and photos using Group Play
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- Capturing unmissable moments
- Support for a healthier lifestyle
- Protected from dust and water
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Battery time is based on our own laboratory measurements, and may vary depending on factors such as device settings, usage patterns and operating conditions.
*The 8.49mm measurement applies to the majority of the phone; some protruding parts of the phone have a thickness of up to 9.89mm
** User memory is less than the total memory due to storage of the operating system and software used to operate the phones features. Actual user memory will vary depending on the mobile phone operator and may change after software upgrades are performed.
*** External Memory may be used to store media (photos, video, and music files) but not applications.
Notice to our customers - safe battery use
If your mobile phone battery is damaged, for example if it is dented, we recommend that you stop using it immediately and replace it with a Samsung genuine battery. If a damaged battery is used, this may affect performance of the battery and in some cases cause damage or injury through overheating, fire or explosion. Examples of situations in which a battery may become damaged are: use in an excessively hot environment, dropping the battery, external pressure on the battery, pet-biting, etc. We recommend that spare batteries are kept in a hard-shell case when not in use.
You should use only Samsung genuine or approved batteries that have been specifically designed for use in Samsung products. The use of incompatible batteries, cables and chargers may not be safe to use and could cause damage to the device or external damage. Please purchase Samsung-branded batteries from reputable and approved sellers to ensure the batteries are not counterfeit.
Battery time is based on our own laboratory measurements, and may vary depending on factors such as device settings, usage patterns and operating conditions.
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