Top smartphones and phablets including Samsung's Galaxy phones and Note 2 will get user interface in 9 Indian languages including Hindi
This is going to make Samsung smartphone users in India a lot happy. The Korean tech giant that is the biggest smartphone and feature phone vendor in India has launched user interface in at least nine leading Indian languages for its smartphone and tablet users. This is going to further increase the acceptability and demand of its products across the country.
Samsung has squarely beaten other market competitors when it comes to smartphones in India. Even in feature phone market it recently toppled Finnish smartphone company Nokia to become the number one brand in the country. It has been launching handsets so fast that it has become sort of hard to keep a tab on all the handsets. Nonetheless its Galaxy S4 has created a record of sort by becoming the fastest selling handset in the weeks following its launch some four months ago.
With the new development, people in India will be able to get user interface on Samsung handset not just in Hindi, but in eight other regional languages. The languages that have been introduced include Hindi, Punjabi, Bengali, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi and Gujarati. The devices supporting the newly introduced languages include Galaxy Grand, Galaxy S4 and Tab 3
Samsung, in the meantime seems very excited about the latest development. In a statement the company said, "The initiative will enable consumers to access applications from the Samsung Application Store in their language in various categories ranging from entertainment, games, utility, lifestyle, devotional and business. Users can get experience in their own language by using Chaton, Facebook, Gmail and Newshunt on select Samsung devices." Commenting in the new introduction, Vineet Taneja, country head, Samsung Mobile and IT , Samsung India said: "Availability of content combined with easy access is the key driver for usage of any language. We sense a need and a demand amongst users to communicate in local languages using their mobile devices."
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