Heard about Samsung's premium 'Galaxy F' lineup of smartphones the company is preparing to announce? Well, we had reported you with this news the past year, and now we have the evidence coming in from the leakster, evleaks, showing-off the Press Render of a smartphone, claiming it to be the South Korean's impending Galaxy F handset.
We had also heard about a premium or prime version of the company's latest flagship phone, named as Samsung Galaxy S5 Prime, which had also made it's way to India and leaked in a few live pictures, earlier. Sadly, both the phones don't seems to match well enough from the back battery door design. Okay folks, even though the tipster calls the above phone the Galaxy F, the phone looks a lot similar to their lately announced front runner smartphone from the whole design language. What so ever, it depends upon Samsung, what they call their new release, once announced officially.
As we are already expecting changes here, what we do notice at the first glance from the above device is that brushed metal finish (either patterned over plastic or made out of complete metal) on the back, where previously the Galaxy F and Galaxy S5 Prime smartphones were also said to ship with metal constructed body, unlike now where Samsung has made a habit of announcing their smartphones designed in faux leather (plastic) back covers with stitching and perforated patterns. From the above picture we also spot the heart rate sensor alongside the unit's LED flash light under the primary lens, just like a GS5.
Other than the exterior hardware changes, the leaked phone is speculated with a Quad-Core Qualcomm Snapdragon 805 processor and a 5.3-inches Quad High Definition screen of 2560 x 1440 resolution display. Reportedly, the new 'Galaxy F' series is read to replace the company's 'Galaxy S' fleet of smartphones, claiming we won't see Samsung announce a Galaxy S6. The phone is also allegedly said to launch at the firm's 'Unpacked Episode 2' event. But remember, nothing is just official, so it's better to take in that sense.
Source: @evleaks 1, 2