Samsung Bada Operating System - News and Updates
Galaxy Nexus , Nexus S and Motorola XOOM Getting Android Jelly Bean !
12th July, 2012
Android Jelly Bean has begun rolling out for the Samsung Galaxy
Samsung Wave III Review
25th November, 2011
Emailing and social networking is well taken care of by the Wave III.
Samsung Bada 2.0 Explained
2nd September, 2011
The Samsung Bada 2.0 operating system is explained by Justin Hong in
Samsung Bada App Downloads Near 15 Million
14th September, 2010
Its 12 months since the Samsung App store launched.
Samsung Android Mobile Phones Get FlipFont
14th April, 2010
Samsung Android Mobile Phones Get FlipFont
Samsung To Merge Bada Operating System With Tizen
16th January, 2012
Samsung is incorporating its Bada platform into the Tizen operating
Samsung Wave and Wave II to Get Bada 2.0
12th September, 2011
Older Samsung Wave smartphones to be updated to Samsung Bada 2.0
Android and Nokia Smartphone Users To Get A R Drone Helicopter
13th June, 2011
A R Drone helicopter on Android will be ready in July.
Samsung Wave 578 Bada Smartphone Announced
17th February, 2011
Powered by Samsung’s own Bada operating system
Samsung Wave II Officially Confirmed
13th October, 2010
The Samsung Wave II is a high-end smartphone that runs on the Samsung
Samsung Wave and Bada Close Up
9th June, 2010
Of course the Samsung Wave is one of the first to use the new Samsung
Samsung Wave Bada-Based SmartPhone Announced
15th February, 2010
The Samsung Wave is the first mobile that runs on Samsungs new
Samsung already has Windows Phones and Android phones as well its own version of Symbian phones – but that didn’t stop it from launching its own operating system, bada, built for 3G phones and intended to bring that smartphone experience to all price ranges.
Bada is similar to Android in its icon-based interface, with tons of widgets – or live-updating boxes placed on a homescreen – lending it more interactivity that the similar ‘sea of apps’ system on iPhones. The Samsung Apps store contains bada-optimised apps as well as more basic ones, though the quantity (and indeed, quality) trails behind that of Android and iOS, and even the relatively young Windows Marketplace.


