The Samsung Impression, the first phone on the U.S. market with a screen that uses organic light-emitting diodes rather than liquid crystals, is shown at the International CTIA Wireless show in Las Vegas, Wednesday, April 1, 2009. The shift from numerical keypads to alphabetic keyboards, which has overturned cell phone design in the space of a two years, is a recognition of the popularity of text messaging, and to a lesser extent, wireless Internet use.
A large display made with AMOLED screens is shown at the Samsung booth at the International CTIA Wireless show in Las Vegas, Wednesday, April 1, 2009.
The Samsung Instinct s30 is shown at the International CTIA Wireless show in Las Vegas, Wednesday, April 1, 2009. A follow-up to the first Instinct, which Sprint Nextel Corp. introduced last year as a touch-screen phone to compete with the iPhone, the s30 has a thinner, more rounded body and includes a more fully featured Web browser.
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