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Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Still Could Feature a Flexible OLED Display

The Samsung Galaxy Note 3 could still feature a flexible OLED display.

Samsung is still deciding whether or not to use one on the upcoming phablet, according to a new report from Asia Economic. The company is waiting to see if its display-making unit is able to achieve adequate production yields in order to supply the masses with the device.

The publication also stated that Samsung will wait until the end of August to decide if they want to give the Note 3 a flexible display or not. However, this contradicts some of the recent rumors that point to the company unveiling the device in the beginning of September. The report also reiterates that Samsung will ship multiple variants of the Note 3 including versions with LCD, glass-based OLED and plastic-based OLED.

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The Galaxy Note 3 recently appeared in an AnTuTu Benchmark score using an Exynos 4 Octa-core processor.

The chipset clocked in at 1.9GHz and the device was believed to have been running Android 4.2.2, JellyBean. The smartphone found in the benchmark is titled as SM-900, which could be a Hong Variant of the Note 3. It scored 33,082, which is a very good number.

Samsung will have to give fans something really different in order for them to upgrade from the already impressive Galaxy Note 2. The phablet does just about everything you would need and was rated as 2012's best phone by The Christian Post.

The upcoming Galaxy Note 3 also allegedly made an appearance on Samsung's official website last week revealing that there will be two different models and that the new Note will feature a 1920 x 1020 display. The phablet is expected to launch in about two months time.

Industry analysts recently weighed in on the device, confirming its screen size and release date. The Galaxy Note 3 will be an LTE-A handset. The Galaxy S4 was the company's first LTE-A device, which is currently available in South Korea.

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