Mission accomplished. The Korean Samsung set a main goal for its mobile line in 2010: to reach ten million Samsung Galaxy S terminals before the end of the year. And so it has been. The Asian manufacturer surpassed the barrier within the set deadline, which was a marathon task, since in mid-December it had just reached nine million devices.
The manufacturer's strategy has earned it a historic brand, since the more than ten mobile phones of the Galaxy S brand (which in different parts of the planet were baptized with different model names) have managed to be sold in just seven months, since they were put the first terminal up for sale at the end of June 2010.
It seems that the Samsung Galaxy S has been a prophet in its land. And it is that only in South C orea have two million units of the Samsung Galaxy S been sold. A little more, 2.5 million, are those that have been commercialized in Europe, while a total of four million were distributed between the United States and Canada. The remaining one and a half million Samsung Galaxy S's were placed between South America and various Asian regions.
At the moment, Samsung has not announced new objectives for what is still its flagship smartphone. In the coming weeks we could attend the presentation of the second generation of the Galaxy S range (which has been filtered through the Samsung Galaxy S2 i9100 or Samsung Galaxy S2 i9200), which will improve the multimedia playback and recording systems, in addition to present the latest serial versions of Android and incorporate a new dual-core processor.
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