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Omnia I (i900) and Omnia I (i910) (US version) come with Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional Omnia II (i8000) is the upgrade to the original Omnia. The HSDPA Omnia II gets Windows Mobile 6.1 or 6.5 Professional, TouchWiz 2.0 UI, a 3.7-inch AMOLED display, 5-megapixel camera, AGPS, up to 32 GB memory via microSD, Wi-Fi and launched in December 2009.
Samsung GT-i8910 Omnia HD is a smartphone manufactured by Samsung Electronics, first announced at MWC 2009 on February 18, 2009. The device was the first phone capable of playing and recording 720p HD video. [2]
The Samsung SGH-i900, also known as Omnia I or WiTu[2] (in Russia only), is a smartphone created by Samsung Mobile. Announced in June 2008, the Omnia was launched in Singapore in mid-June, available in stores on the 20th of June, and in the rest of Asia in July.
The ATIV SE is a smartphone manufactured by Samsung which runs Windows Phone 8. It's an LTE device with a 5-inch 1080p AMOLED display, a 2.3 GHz quad-core CPU (presumably the Qualcomm Snapdragon 800), 2 GB RAM, 16 GB expandable storage memory, a pair of 13 MP rear and 2 MP front cameras with 1080p video recording, and a 2600 mAh battery.
The Samsung Omnia 7 (also known as the GT-i8700) is a smartphone which runs Microsoft's Windows Phone operating system. It features a Qualcomm Snapdragon QSD8250 SoC clocked at 1 GHz, a 4.0-inch Super AMOLED screen with a resolution of 480×800, and either 8 GB or 16 GB capacity of internal storage.
Samsung Galaxy W (i8150), also known as Samsung Wonder, is an Android smartphone that is a smaller-sized variant of Samsung Galaxy S II. [1] [2]Galaxy W is a less-powerful downgrade compared to Galaxy S II, with specifications comparable to the larger Galaxy R.
160 x 128 TFT LCD. The Samsung SGH-T100 is a dual-band GSM mobile phone manufactured by Samsung in 2002. [1] It was the first mobile phone to use a thin-film transistor active matrix LCD display; prior to the release of the SGH-T100 all phones had used passive matrix display technology. [2] By 2003, it sold over 10 million units worldwide.
This is a ranking of the highest-grossing Bangladeshi films screened at cinemas in Bangladesh and globally. Films generate income from several revenue streams, including box office sales (admissions), theatrical exhibition, television broadcast rights, and music album sales. There is no official tracking of sales and online sources publishing data are frequently unreliable.