Sales of the Galaxy Note 7 were suspended last September, but
Samsung confirmed in March that it plans to sell refurbished Galaxy Note 7s instead of throwing them away. Samsung Electronics announced today that it will recycle parts from Galaxy Note 7 smartphones, which gained notoriety last year after a battery defect caused several to burst into flames. The company said in a statement on its Korean site (via
Google Translate) that it also expects to recover 157 tonnes of rare metals, including gold, from the devices. In its new announcement, Samsung said it will recover components like OLED display modules, memory chips, and camera modules from Galaxy Note 7s and reuse them for repairs or recycle them. Rare metals, including cobalt, copper, and gold, will be recovered during the recycling process.
referring to The
Samsung Galaxy S8 is already equipped for T-Mobile's 600MHz LTE network, which began rolling out in select markets late-last month. Ray indirectly confirms that both the Galaxy Note8 and
LGV30 will also be compatible with LTE's huge lump of precious 600MHz spectrum LTE. T-Mobile also tweeted that its new 600MHz network is now going to roll out in 6-months rather than over 2 years. Also happy to announce that @TMobile customers will be able to take advantage of 600 MHz with devices THIS YEAR from 2 OEMs - Samsung & LG! Lower frequencies like this one and T-Mobile's 700MHz LTE (band 12) improve building penetration and have longer range.
referring to
to read more visit us
Samsung collected by :
Andro Alex
Post a Comment