Samsung Hercules for T-Mobile is the stuff from your dreams
T-Mobile might be coming a bit late to the Galaxy S II party, but it seems that it will make a remarkable entrance. We just got word of the upcoming Samsung Hercules, which looks like the most powerful droid the company has ever built, combing the best of both the Infuse 4G and the international Galaxy S II worlds.
We are talking a 4.5” Super AMOLED Plus display and a dual-core CPU clocked at 1.2 GHz. However the chipset will be built by Qualcomm, which means that the processor will be using the Scorpion, rather than the Cortex-A9 architecture. We are yet to see if that’s a change for the better or for the worse.
Samsung Hercules is said to support the 1700 MHz AWS 3G band and if the T-Mobile and AT&T merger goes through it will also come with 850 and 1900 MHz 3G. The great news is that the smartphone will sport HSPA for up to 42Mbps on the downlink and up to 5.76 Mbps on the uplink. The LTE-packing HTC Thunderbolt aside, this is the fastest network data transfers rates we have seen so far.
The impressive specs sheet of the Samsung Hercules continues with 1GB of RAM, 16 GB of internal storage, a microSD card slot and NFC support. The 8 megapixel camera should be able to capture 1080p videos, which hopefully will be as good as those of the I9100 Galaxy S II (or in the best case scenario, even better).
The USB port will still come with MHL support, which means you are one adapter away from plugging in your regular HDMI cable and using it for TV-out. All this goodness is squeezed in a package with a profile of just 9.4mm.
The rumored price tag of over $350 will hardly surprise anyone given the feature set. Unfortunately it will take at least until August for the handset to materialize in T-Mobile stores.
Reader comments
- ken
- 07 Aug 2011
- 4fn
.2" diagonally. Go to an AT&T store and pick up the HTC Inspire and the Samsung Infuse. They're 4.3 vs. 4.5. The Samsung feels huge. The 4.3 feels natural for a phone. The Samsung screen is craploads better...
- AnonD-12991
- 06 Jul 2011
- Rcx
I'm sure it sounds crazy for some but a cellphone that does everything can and will help your life its less cluttery and less heinous for you to get a cell phone and a camera and a navigation system and a ipod and pay a yearly subscription for sirus ...
- Quakermaas
- 05 Jul 2011
- nsm
Not every SGSII has the battery drain problem and it seems to be related to restoring apps + data. Have my SGSII for a month and get a whole day with mid to heavy use and still some to spare, 2 days if its light use. Using Cognition v1.8