The Samsung Epic for Sprint started receiving the Gingerbread update on November 9, 2011 and the update was released for the Samsung Galaxy S 4G on November 15. As of December 1, 2011, the Samsung Fascinate on Verizon has been updated to Gingerbread 2.3 ( Droid-Life ). The Samsung Epic for Sprint started receiving the Gingerbread update on November 9, 2011 and the update was released for the Samsung Galaxy S 4G on November 15. As of December 1, 2011, the Samsung Fascinate on Verizon has been updated to Gingerbread 2.3 ( Droid-Life ).
Main display: Super AMOLED Plus 16M colors 480 x 800 px (4.27″) 218 ppi |
Android 2.3 Gingerbread |
Samsung Exynos 4210 1,20 GHz [Number of cores: 2] |
Li-Po 1650 mAh |
Internal memory: 16 GB |
RAM memory: 1 GB |
8 Mpx, 3264x2448 px |
Other names: | GT-i9100, Galaxy S2, Galaxy S II 4G |
Dimensions: | 125,3 x 66,1 x 8,49 mm |
Weight: | 116 g |
GSM frequencies: | 850/900/1800/1900 |
Standard UMTS: | 850/900/1900/2100 |
Standard battery: | Li-Po 1650 mAh |
Stand-by (max.): | 2G: 710 h 3G: 610 h |
Talk time (max.): | 2G: 18,3 h 3G: 8,7 h |
Internal memory: | 16 GB |
RAM memory: | 1 GB |
Memory cards: | microSD, microSDHC, max 32 GB |
Operating system: | Android 2.3 Gingerbread |
Processor: | Samsung Exynos 4210 1,20 GHz Number of cores: 2 |
GPU: | ARM Mali-400 MP4 @266 MHz |
Main display: | Super AMOLED Plus 16M colors 480 x 800 px (4.27″) 218 ppi |
Touchscreen: | Yes |
Digital camera: | 8 Mpx, 3264x2448 px |
Secondary camera: | 2 Mpx, 1600x1200 px |
Flash: | Yes, LED |
Video: | H.263, H.264 - 30 fps, 1920x1080 px |
MP3: | Yes |
Radio: | Yes |
Dictionary: | Yes, XT9 |
EMS: | - |
MMS: | Yes |
Speakerphone: | Yes |
Voice dial: | Yes |
Call forwarding: | Yes |
e-mail client: | Yes |
IrDA: | - |
Bluetooth: | Yes, v3.0 |
GPRS: | Yes, class 12 |
EDGE: | Yes, class 12 |
WiFi: | Yes, v802.11 a/b/g/n |
Hotspot WiFi: | Yes |
DLNA: | Yes |
WAP: | Yes, v2.0 |
xHTML: | Yes |
HSCSD: | - |
HSDPA: | Yes, 21,00 Mbit/s |
HSUPA: | Yes, 5,76 Mbit/s |
HSPA: | Yes |
HSPA+: | Yes |
NFC: | Yes |
USB | Yes, v2.0 |
GPS: | Yes |
Push To Talk: | - |
Java: | Yes, Dalvik |
Calendar: | Yes |
Watch: | Yes |
Recorder: | Yes |
Alarm: | Yes |
Stopwatch: | - |
Timer: | - |
Organizer: | Yes |
Notebook: | - |
Calculator: | Yes |
Profile: | Yes |
Polyphony: | Yes, 72 głos. |
Mobile terms glossary
GSM stands for Global System for Mobile Communication and is the most popular 2G mobile phone standard in the world.
GSM is used by about 80% of all mobile phones - approximately 2 billion people across more than 212 countries.
The widespread use of the GSM standard has made it easy for most mobile phone users to use their phones overseas thanks to roaming agreements between operators using the same GSM standard.
GSM - then labelled Groupe Spécial Mobile was originally conceived back in 1982 as a European standard for mobile phones. The first GSM network went live in 1992 in Finland.
GSM introduced the concept of the SIM card (Subscriber Identity Module card) - a detachable smart card that lets users swap their phone number and contacts between handset.
3G - Analog cellular phones were the first generation while digital marked the second generation.3G is loosely defined, but generally includes high data speeds, always-on data access, and greater voice capacity.
The high data speeds are possibly the most prominent feature, and certainly the most hyped. They enable such advanced features as live, streaming video.
There are several different 3G technology standards. The most prevalent is UMTS, which is based on WCDMA (the terms WCDMA and UMTS are often used interchangeably).
The GPU (Graphics Processing Unit) is a specialized circuit designed to accelerate the image output in a frame buffer intended for output to a display.
GPUs are very efficient at manipulating computer graphics and are generally more effective than general-purpose CPUs for algorithms where processing of large blocks of data is done in parallel.
Modern smartphones are equipped with advanced embedded chipsets that can do many different tasks depending on their programming. GPUs are an essential part of those chipsets and as mobile games are pushing the boundaries of their capabilities, the GPU performance is becoming increasingly important.
MMS is an extension of the SMS (Short Message Service) protocol, allowing the exchange of text messages exceeding 160 characters. Unlike SMS, which is text-only, MMS can deliver a variety of media. This media may include up to forty seconds of video, audio, one image, or a slideshow of multiple images. MMS requires a third generation (3G) network to send large MMS messages (though smaller MMS messages may be transmitted over second generation networks using GPRS).
Bluetooth is an industry standard for contactless data transmission and communication between two devices. The range is usually 1 to 10 m and rarely more than 100 m. In some cases, distances of up to 200 m are possible.
GPRS stands for General Packet Radio Service and was the first popular data standard for mobile phones.
GPRS was used for WAP and MMS messages and offered modest connection speeds - typically 30-40 Kbit/s, although the theoretical maximum is 115 Kbit/s. GPRS is known as a 2.5G technology.
One of the early advantages of GPRS is that it s always on so no connection handshake is needed. It is still very popular, especially in the developing world.
Epic 4g Touch Root
The name of EDGE in full is Enhanced Data rates for GSM Evolution. This is a 2.75G technology further developed from the 2G and 2.5G technologies. Its data transmission speed is higher than that of GPRS and is closer to 3G technology.Wi-Fi is a short-range wireless communication technology adopting the 802.11 wireless network standard. Most of the notebook computers, mobile phones or mobile Internet devices nowadays are able to support Wi-Fi wireless connection. The transmission speed of Wi-Fi can be up to 54 Mbps, while its communication range can reach 305 meters with high stability and reliability. At present, many coffee shops, shopping malls, hotels and airports offer chargeable or free-of-charge Wi-Fi wireless broadband. The service is also available on some public transport.
DLNA (Digital Living Network Alliance) is a set of protocols to enable sharing of digital media between multimedia devices.
Universal Serial Bus (USB): A standard port that enables you to connect external devices (such as digital cameras, scanners, keyboards, and mice) to computers. The USB standard supports data transfer at three rates: low speed (1.5MBps), full speed (12Mbps) and high speed (480 MBps).
Mbps=million bits per second.
Full phone specifications Samsung Galaxy S II
Samsung Galaxy S II specs
Samsung Galaxy S II specifications
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Samsung Galaxy S II release date
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- Released 2011, September
130g, 10mm thickness
Android 2.3.4
16GB storage, microSD slot - N/A1,416,673 hits
- 4.52'480x800 pixels
- 8MP
- 1GB RAMExynos 4210 Dual
- 1800mAh
For Sprint
Also known as Samsung SPH-D710, Samsung Within
Network | Technology | CDMA / EVDO |
---|---|---|
2G bands | CDMA 800 / 1900 | |
3G bands | CDMA2000 1xEV-DO | |
Speed | EV-DO Rev.A 3.1 Mbps |
Launch | Announced | 2011, August. Released 2011, September |
---|---|---|
Status | Discontinued |
Body | Dimensions | 130 x 70 x 10 mm (5.12 x 2.76 x 0.39 in) |
---|---|---|
Weight | 130 g (4.59 oz) | |
SIM | Mini-SIM |
Display | Type | Super AMOLED Plus capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors |
---|---|---|
Size | 4.52 inches, 58.2 cm2 (~63.9% screen-to-body ratio) | |
Resolution | 480 x 800 pixels, 5:3 ratio (~206 ppi density) | |
Protection | Corning Gorilla Glass | |
TouchWiz UI v4.0 |
Platform | OS | Android 2.3.4 (Gingerbread) |
---|---|---|
Chipset | Exynos 4210 Dual | |
CPU | Dual-core 1.2 GHz Cortex-A9 | |
GPU | Mali-400MP4 |
Memory | Card slot | microSD, up to 32 GB (dedicated slot) |
---|---|---|
Internal | 16GB 1GB RAM |
Main Camera | Single | 8 MP, f/2.6, 1/3.2', AF |
---|---|---|
Features | LED flash | |
Video | 1080p@30fps |
Selfie camera | Single | 2 MP |
---|---|---|
Video |
Sound | Loudspeaker | Yes |
---|---|---|
3.5mm jack | Yes | |
Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic |
Comms | WLAN | Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, dual-band, Wi-Fi Direct, DLNA, hotspot; WiMax |
---|---|---|
Bluetooth | 3.0, A2DP, aptX | |
GPS | Yes, with A-GPS | |
NFC | Optional | |
Radio | No | |
USB | microUSB 2.0 (MHL TV-out), USB On-The-Go |
Features | Sensors | Accelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass |
---|---|---|
Browser | HTML, Adobe Flash | |
MP4/DivX/XviD/WMV/H.264 player MP3/WAV/eAAC+/AC3/FLAC player Photo/video editor Document editor |
Battery | Removable Li-Ion 1800 mAh battery |
---|---|
Stand-by | Up to 252 h |
Talk time | Up to 8 h 45 min |
Misc | Colors | Black, White |
---|---|---|
SAR | 0.40 W/kg (head) 0.54 W/kg (body) | |
Price | About 130 EUR |
Sprint Epic 4g Touch Review
Disclaimer. We can not guarantee that the information on this page is 100% correct. Read more
Samsung Galaxy S II Epic 4G Touch - user opinions and reviews
- Glocksman
- kED
You can't use it on a GSM network. This phone is CDMA/EVDO only. More specifically, Sprint only.
- cbrev11
- QY0
This phone is a awesome phone but its only problem is bloatware.
Epic 4g Touch Review
- 3ac
This phone is in no way 'epic'.