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Samsung S3650 (also known as Genio Touch and formally Samsung Corby) is an entry-level touchscreen smartphone that was released in October 2009 by Samsung. It has a 2 MP camera and a 2.8-inch capacitive TFT touch screen. [1] [2] There is also a QWERTY and a QWERTY slide version of the phone, Samsung B3210 and Samsung B5310, respectively.
The Samsung GT-B3410 (also known as Delphi, Star QWERTY, Ping Touch, Ch@t (for B3410W) and formerly Corby Plus) is a mobile phone released in October 2009 by Samsung. It has a 2 MP camera, 2.6-inch resistive TFT touchscreen and sliding QWERTY keyboard. [1] The updated version GT-B3410W Ch@t was announced in February 2010 along with the GT-S5620 ...
ChatON was available on Android, [8] iOS, [9] BlackBerry, Windows Phone (Samsung Zone), [10] Windows Mobile (Korea), and Bada smartphones. [11] Additionally, a web client was offered for access to the service via web browsers. [12] Users could invite and register buddies via Facebook and Twitter as well as share ChatON content on Facebook.
(Reuters) - Meta Platforms plans to launch a microblogging app, Threads, days after Twitter executive chair Elon Musk announced a temporary cap on how many posts users can read on the social media ...
Samsung GT-B5310 is a type of Corby mobile phone, also known as Samsung Genio Slide or Samsung Corby Pro and was released in 2009. [1] It was manufactured by Samsung Electronics . Later it was released for Canada, named GT-B5310R, and it was available through Rogers Wireless .
The Samsung Corby Speed is a smartphone developed by Samsung Telecommunications. It is the Code-division multiple access (CDMA) version of the Samsung Corby series of phones. It also allows users to access the internet at a maximum speed of 2.4 Mbit/s through its Open Market Handset system (OMH).
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In October 2015, Twitter introduced "Moments"—a feature that allows users to curate tweets from other users into a larger collection. Twitter initially intended the feature to be used by its in-house editorial team and other partners; they populated a dedicated tab in Twitter's apps, chronicling news headlines, sporting events, and other content.