Engineering:Samsung Focus S

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Samsung Focus S
ManufacturerSamsung
Compatible networksGSM 850; GSM 900; GSM 1800; GSM 1900; Edge; UMTS 850; UMTS 1900; UMTS 2100
First releasedNovember 6, 2011
PredecessorSamsung Focus
SuccessorSamsung ATIV S
Form factorSlate / smartphone
Dimensions126 x 66.8 x 8.5 mm
(4.96" L x 2.63" W x 0.33" D)
Mass110.6 g (3.9 oz)
Operating systemWindows Phone (with Mango)
CPU1.4 GHz Qualcomm MSM8255 Snapdragon, Adreno 205 GPU
Memory1GB RAM
Storage16 GB
Removable storageNone
BatteryLi-ion 1650 mAh
Talk: up to 6.5 hrs
Standby: up to 250 hrs
Data inputsMulti-touch display
Dual microphone
3-axis accelerometer
Digital compass
Proximity sensor
Ambient light sensor
Display4.27-inch (diagonal) widescreen
Super AMOLED Plus
480-by-800 WVGA
Rear camera8 MP with autofocus
5× digital zoom
720p HD video recording
LED flash
Geotagging
Image stabilization
Smile detection
Front camera1.3 MP front-facing camera

The Samsung Focus S is a slate smartphone that runs Microsoft's Windows Phone 7.5 (code-named "Mango") operating system. It is the successor to the Samsung Focus, and was released on November 6, 2011, in the United States. Currently, the Focus S is available exclusively through AT&T.[1]

Hardware and Display

The display is a 4.3-inch, WVGA (480 x 800 pixel) display. Unlike some former models, it uses a standard RGB layout instead of PenTile. The display has a high viewing angle. Below the display are three capacitive buttons for back, Start, and search, as seen on most Windows Phones. Above it is the earpiece, light sensors, and afront-facing camera. The sides of the phone are home to a dual-stage camera key, power/sleep/unlock key (right side), and volume rocker (left side).

The Samsung Focus S is powered by a 1.4 GHz Qualcomm processor.

Software

The device ships with Windows Phone 7.5 and can be upgraded to Windows Phone Tango (build 8773).

Languages

Unlike its Android counterpart, the Samsung Galaxy S II, the Focus S supports more languages out of the box.

  • Czech
  • Danish
  • German (Germany)
  • German (Austria)
  • German (Switzerland)
  • English (Australia)
  • English (Ireland)
  • English (New Zealand)
  • English (South Africa)
  • English (United Kingdom)
  • English (United States)
  • Spanish (Spain)
  • Spanish (United States)
  • French (France)
  • French (Switzerland)
  • Italian
  • Hungarian
  • Dutch (Belgium)
  • Dutch (Netherlands)
  • Norwegian Bokmål
  • Polish
  • Portuguese (Brazil)
  • Portuguese (Portugal)
  • Finnish
  • Swedish
  • Greek
  • Russian
  • Korean
  • Chinese (Simplified)
  • Chinese (Traditional)
  • Japanese

References

External links