Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Odin is a utility software program developed and used by Samsung internally which is used to communicate with Samsung devices in Odin mode (also called download mode) through the Thor (protocol). It can be used to flash a custom recovery firmware image (as opposed to the stock recovery firmware image) to a Samsung Android device .
The Samsung Galaxy Tab A7 is a mid-range Android tablet computer designed by Samsung Electronics. There are two variants: Samsung Galaxy Tab A7 (2020) and Samsung Galaxy Tab A7 Lite, with 10.4-inch and 8.7-inch screens respectively.
autorun.inf is an ASCII text file located in the root folder of a CD-ROM or other volume device medium (See AutoPlay device types).The structure is that of a classic Windows .ini file, containing information and commands as "key=value" pairs, grouped into sections. [1]
April 2010: Samsung releases 512 Mbit PRAM with 65 nm process, in Multi-Chip-Package. [44] February 2011: Samsung presented 58 nm 1.8V 1 Gb PRAM. [45] February 2012: Samsung presented 20 nm 1.8V 8 Gb PRAM [46] July 2012: Micron announces availability of Phase-Change Memory for mobile devices - the first PRAM solution in volume production [47]
The Samsung Focus (also known as the SGH-i917 and Samsung Cetus) is a slate smartphone which runs Microsoft's Windows Phone operating system. It features a 1 GHz Qualcomm® Snapdragon™ processor, a 4.0-inch Super AMOLED screen, and 8 GB of internal storage (expandable to 40 GB with a 32 GB microSD card).
It bypassed MS-DOS and directly accessed the disk, either via the BIOS or (preferably) 32-bit disk access (Windows-native protected mode disk drivers). This feature was a backport from the then-unreleased Windows 95 , as suggested by Microsoft's advertisements for Windows for Workgroups 3.11 ("the 32-bit file system from our Chicago project").
The Samsung Omnia W (also known as the Samsung Focus Flash and GT-I8350) is a slate device running Windows Phone operating system 7.5. [1] The launch of the phone was first announced on September 26, 2011 and was subsequently released later that year. [ 2 ]
FLAC (/ f l æ k /; Free Lossless Audio Codec) is an audio coding format for lossless compression of digital audio, developed by the Xiph.Org Foundation, and is also the name of the free software project producing the FLAC tools, the reference software package that includes a codec implementation.