Samsung's annual Galaxy Unpacked finally wrapped up Wednesday morning, and the streamed event included all the big reveals we already expected.
So, in no particular order, here are all the major products announced on the livestream: The Galaxy Note20 and Note20 Ultra, Tab S7 and S7+, Galaxy Watch3, and the Galaxy Buds Live.
We were also graced with some exciting specs and pricing details, which can be found below.
The Galaxy Buds Live (aka Beans) are Samsung's newest wireless earbuds and feature active noise cancelation. So, hopefully, your podcasts will come through all that much clearer as you exercise in the confines of your own home for the foreseeable future.
They have three microphones and something called a Voice Pickup Unit. The speaker is 12mm, and has a "bass duct."
You can buy them starting Thursday, for $169.99. Color options are Mystic Bronze, Mystic White, and Mystic Black.
Samsung's new tablets, the Tab S7 and S7+, are (surprise) two different sizes and support the S Pen. The former has an 11-inch display, and the latter has a 12.4-inch display.
Where 5G is available, they can support it. The battery is "super fast charging supported."
You can buy them in the U.S. sometime this fall, and cost $649.99 for the S7 and $849.99 for the S7+. Colors include Mystic Black, Mystic Silver, and Mystic Bronze.
Samsung's latest smartwatch does more than tell the time. Specifically, the Galaxy Watch3 also offers ECG and blood-pressure monitoring (only in South Korea).
You can buy the Bluetooth and LTE models starting Thursday, and can chose from two sizes: 41mm and 45mm. The Bluetooth watch has two models priced starting at $399.99 and $429.99, respectively. The two LTE sizes are priced starting at $449.99 and $479.99.
The 41mm size comes in Mystic Bronze and Mystic Silver, and the 45mm size comes in Mystic Silver and Mystic Black.
The Galaxy Note line of phablets gets even more phab with the addition of the Note20 and Note20 Ultra. (So Samsung promises!)
The two versions are both 5G capable, and sport an 8K camera. The Note20 Ultra has a Dynamic AMOLED 2X display and a 120Hz refresh rate. The battery is something special, too, allowing for a 50 percent charge in just 30 minutes.
The Note20 comes in Mystic Bronze, Mystic Gray, and Mystic Green. The storage option for this one is just 128GB, with 8GB RAM.
The Note20 Ultra comes in Mystic Bronze, Mystic Black, Mystic White. The storage options are 128GB and 512GB, with 12GBM RAM.
You can preorder both phones starting Thursday. The Note20 starts at $999.99, and the Note20 Ultra starts at $1,299.99.
The last Fold had some serious durability issues. Samsung claims they solved them with the new Z Fold2, which also features a larger cover display that stretches 6.2 inches.
The phone unfolds into a massive 7.6-inch edge-to-edge display. It also now has a free-standing hinge that lets users keep the device open at multiple angles.
Now word on pricing, or camera or processor specs, yet. But it will be available for pre-order on Sept. 1.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Everything announced at Samsung's Galaxy Unpacked 2020-蜻蜓点水网
sitemap
文章
17417
浏览
53
获赞
27
Amazon's Alexa will now help you out in 'Destiny 2'
Destiny 2is now accepting voice commands thanks to a new game-specific skill for Amazon's Alexa smarHow to use iOS message effects on your iPhone
Merely texting your friends without any effects is so boringin 2021. The time is now to figure out hAkamai outage breaks the internet
Having trouble accessing the Playstation Network or LastPass today?You're not alone.Some of the biggWebb telescope captures weird auroras on Neptune for the first time
Even at Neptune's incredible distance from the sun, astronomers have long suspected it has auroras,YouTube faces an existential threat as it moderates its worst videos
YouTube has spent years operating like many other tech platforms: Hear no evil, see no evil. That'sIf the Webb telescope detects these molecules, they may point to life
Considering humans don't have a spacecraftcapable of traveling to planets beyond the solar system, sWhy landing a NASA spaceship on the moon is still so challenging
At only some 1,600 feet above the moon's surface, Neil Armstrong grabbed control of the Apollo moonGoogle's new search results page will answer your question with more (useful) questions
Google doesn’t just have all the answers. It thinks it has the questions, too. Google is redesDoes Melania Trump use a body double? We investigate.
Every once in a while, a conspiracy theory comes along that's so emotionally satisfying I have no chGoogle just took visual search to a whole new level
Have a question about something you can see but can't describe? Just ask Google.Google has unveiledThe planets Venus and Mars are amazing in June, and you should look up
It's a superb time to view our quirky planetary neighbors Venus and Mars.June 2023 brings a number oMysterious U.S. spaceplane returns to Earth, and Space Force snaps photos
The secretive exploits of the X-37B spaceplane continue. After spending 434 days in space, the crewlPaul Ryan tried to roast Donald Trump, and Twitter wasn't having it
When people think "funny," I'm fairly confident Paul Ryan does not come to mind.Still, the Speaker oMillions of Americans are about to see yet another solar eclipse
Fresh off a spectacular total lunar eclipse, millions of Americans will soon witness a solar eclipseAstronomers have detected oxygen in the most ancient known galaxy
Scientists using two enormous telescopes — one on Earth and the other in space— have det