OCTA-Display of Galaxy Note 7 To Be Used In Galaxy S8 Flagship; Verizon To Oficially Kill Galaxy Note 7
Galaxy S8 is one of the most anticipated smartphones that will arrive early in 2017. Rumors at rife suggesting that Samsung will re-use the advanced Y-OCTA display of the suddenly ill-device, Galaxy Note 7 to powered Galaxy S7.
Around 5 million Galaxy Note 7 was released in August and was a hit back then. It even released a new "Black Onyx" that was very popular in Apple's new iPhone 7 and 7 plus, but the feature didn't pursue after a massive recall was mandated after some defects and some accidents that the device exploded. But the feature of Galaxy Note 7 will live on.
The feature of Note 7 is set to star again to its flagship Galaxy S series, Galaxy S8.
People who bought the Note 7 reviewed and gave their comments on how thin and gorgeous its curved display was. Since the Y-OCTA Display was first debuted in Note 7, the giant tech thinks "why not?" to bring again its latest Y-OCTA display to S8.
But according to Tech Times, Y-OCTA display will be limited on to a smaller model of Galaxy S8, wherein feature a 5.7-inch Quad HD Super AMOLED display with a fingerprint scanner. Meanwhile, the Galaxy S8 plus suggest to pack in much larger 6.2-inch Quad HD Super AMOLED screen. In February 2017, at the Mobile World Congress, Samsung is expected to unveil the S8 slick new design.
Moreover, According to the report obtained by Fortune, Verizon just recently decided to kill drastically the remaining Galaxy Note 7 Phones. The AT&T, Sprint, and T-Mobile both agreed to an update that would totally make Note 7, a dead phone as it will be disabled from connecting to other networks, by means of cutting off all communications.
Verizon didn't agree at first but on Thursday, the company shifted course and posting a note on their website. The note stated that on January 5, 2017, an update will be distributed throughout the remaining 10% of users who didn't send back their smartphones when Samsung sends a message to refund or to exchange the device.
Verizon didn't further give details pertaining to their decision but surely, they just wanted to keep their customers safe.
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