Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 is the sequel to Guardians of the Galaxy and the fifteenth film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe finds the Guardians pursuit by the Sovereign and Star-Lord meeting his dad. The film was released worldwide on May 5, 2017. In 1980 Quill's father, Ego shows his mom.
. Try and upgrade your generators and mines as much as possible. The extra energy and titanium will help you build new towers, buildings, and upgrades. Don't upgrade all your defensive building at the same time. This will leave you open to attack. Save your crystals for drones. This will help you level up faster later in the game.
Join a corporation. They will send you free troops to help to attack (once you have obtained a corporate HQ). Just be sure to send some back.
Plan your upgrades to happen when you cannot be on the game. This will optimize your build times. Place one drone building far away from your base. This will make the troops have to move after destroying the rest of your base potentially stopping them from getting 100%.
Don't accept any resources from challenges until you need them. This will provide free resources for later. Build troops and attack as much as possible. This is easy resources and medals. Build all of your available towers. This will make you base harder to destroy and provide defense for your resource/ town buildings. Max out your base as much as possible before upgrading to headquarters level.
If you rush higher level headquarters and your base is slacking in defense you will be getting higher level players to attack and defend. Always make sure your drones are busy. I usually have one major upgrade that takes 6 hours or more, then I use the other drone(s) to do some minor upgrades such as Generators and Mines. Try to not use all of your resources at once. Don't assume a legendary modules is going to be more beneficial to socket on one of your units than a rare. For example, a level 4 rare module for raiders that is +40% damage +7 second shield is going to be more useful than a level 1 legendary that is +10% health, +10% damage +4 second shield. Do not discard the legendary, simply hold onto it until you can merge it with another legendary and then decide if it's time to use the level 2 legendary or if you're still better off using the rare until you can get the legendary module to level 3.
Watch the videos for your defensive battles, both wins and losses. That way you will know what is and is not working for you.
Galaxy S II in whiteCodenamei9100Vivid. List., AllShare, Exchange ActiveSync, Damage-resistant, Polaris™ Office. Online services, ( Social Hub, Readers Hub and Game Hub). Int'l version:Head: 0.16 W/kg 1 gBody: 0.96 W/kg 1 gHotspot: 1.16 W/kg 1 g. U.S. Version:0.34 W/kg (head)M3/T3The Samsung Galaxy S II is a -enabled, -format designed, developed, and marketed by, as the second smartphone of the. It has additional software features, expanded hardware, and a redesigned physique compared to its predecessor, the.
The S II was launched with, with updates to.Samsung unveiled the S II on 13 February 2011 at the (MWC) in Barcelona. It was one of the slimmest smartphones of the time, mostly 8.49 mm thick, except for two small bulges which take the maximum thickness of the phone to 9.91 mm.The Galaxy S II has a 1.2 GHz ' (SoC) processor, 1 GB of, a 10.8 cm (4.3 in) screen display and an 8- camera with flash and full high definition video recording.
It is one of the first devices to offer a (MHL), which allows up to 1080p output to an MHL enabled TV or to an MHL to adapter, while charging the device at the same time. Is supported.The user-replaceable battery gives up to ten hours of heavy usage, or two days of lighter usage. According to Samsung, the Galaxy S II is capable of providing 9 hours of talk time on 3G and 18.3 hours on 2G.The Galaxy S II was popular and a huge success both critically and commercially, selling 3 million units within its first 55 days on the market, which smartphone was succeeded by the next. It was succeeded by the in May 2012.
Contents.Release The Galaxy S II was given worldwide release dates starting from May 2011, by more than 140 vendors in some 120 countries. On May 9, 2011, Samsung announced that they had received pre-orders for 3 million Galaxy S II units globally.Some time after the device's release, Samsung also released a variation of the phone known as the, which uses a chipset.Samsung also reportedly shipped Galaxy S II's for free, to several developers of the custom Android distribution (particularly those who had maintained its ports for the Galaxy S with an intent for them to port CyanogenMod 7 to the device). In 2019, the Galaxy S II received Android 9.0 Pie (through custom ROMs), although it only supports up to Android 4.1.2Features Software and services The Galaxy S II was launched with. American variants began shipments with the slightly updated version 2.3.5 installed. Version 2.3.6 was made globally available on December 12, 2011.
On March 13, 2012, Samsung began to roll out upgrades to through their phone management software to users in South Korea, Hungary, Poland and Sweden. Russian users received the update on July 5, 2012, while the rest of Europe received it on August 1, 2012. In February 2013, Samsung began rolling out an update to for the device.The S II employs the 4.0 user interface, following the same principle as TouchWiz 3.0 found on the Galaxy S, with new improvements, such as. It also has an optional -based interaction called 'motion' which (among other things) allows users to zoom in and out by placing two fingers on the screen and tilting the device towards and away from themselves to zoom in and out respectively.
This gesture function works on both the web browser and the images in gallery used within this device. 'Panning' on TouchWiz 4.0 allows the movement of widgets and icons shortcuts between screens, by allowing the device to be held and moved from side to side to scroll through home screens. This gesture-based management of widgets is a new optional method next to the existing method of holding and swiping between home screens. Dismantled Samsung Galaxy S II in black, from left to right components include the handset, battery and back coverThe Galaxy S II has a 1.2 GHz processor that uses Samsung's own ' 4210' (SoC) that was previously code-named 'Orion'. The Exynos branded SoC was the source of much speculation concerning another branded successor to the previous ' single-core SoC of the Samsung Galaxy S. The Exynos 4 Dual 45 nm (previously Exynos 4210) uses 's Mali-400 MP. This graphics GPU, supplied by ARM, is a move away from the GPU of the Samsung Galaxy S.The Exynos 4210 supports ARM's engine (also known as Media Processing Engine, or 'NEON' instructions), and may give a significant performance advantage in critical performance situations such as accelerated decoding for many multimedia codecs and formats (e.g., On2's /7/8 or formats).The Mali 400 GPU in the Exynos 4210 SOC is one of the only, if not the only GPU powering Android devices, that does not support GLRGB Framebuffer Objects (FBOs), only GLRGBA.
The newer Galaxy S II (9100G), based on the PowerVR SGX540, does not exhibit the issue.At the 2011 ARM's representatives demonstrated 60 Hz framerate playback in stereoscopic 3D running on the same Mali-400 MP and Exynos SoC. They said that an increased framerate of 70 Hz would be possible through the use of an port.The advertised in June 2011 that it was 'the world's most powerful smartphone'; in August 2011 the UK ruled that the Atrix was not as powerful as Galaxy S II due to its faster processor.A newer Samsung Galaxy S II (i9100G) uses a 1.2 GHz dual core TI OMAP 4430 processor with PowerVR SGX540 graphics.The Galaxy S II has 1 GB of dedicated RAM and 16 GB of internal mass storage. Within the battery compartment there is an external card slot capable of recognizing and utilizing a 64 GB card. The Samsung Galaxy S II uses a 108.5-millimetre (4.27 in) WVGA (800 x 480) that is covered by with an fingerprint-resistant coating. The display is an upgrade of its predecessor, and the 'Plus' signifies that the display panel has done away with Pentile matrix to regular matrix display which results in a 50% increase in sub-pixels. This translates to grain reduction and sharper images and text.
In addition, Samsung has claimed that Super AMOLED Plus displays are 18% more power efficient than the older Super AMOLED displays. Some phones have display issues, with a few users reporting a 'yellow tint' on the left bottom edge of the display when a neutral grey background is displayed.The Galaxy S II uses audio hardware. The Galaxy S II's predecessor, the original Galaxy S, used 's WM8994 DAC.
User feedback on as well as an in-depth review at Clove, have expressed the Yamaha chip's inferior sound quality compared to that of the Wolfson chip featured in the original Galaxy S.On the back of the device is an 8-megapixel camera with single-LED flash that can record videos in full high-definition at 30 frames per second. There is also a fixed focus front-facing 2-megapixel camera for, taking photos as well as general video recording, with a maximum resolution of 640x480.The Galaxy S II is one of the earliest Android devices to natively support NFC.
This follows on from the Google which was the first de facto NFC smartphone device. Reportedly the UK version was supplied without an NFC chip at the beginning of its production run, with an NFC-equipped version released later in 2011.Samsung has also included a new high-definition connection technology called (MHL). The main specialty of MHL is that it is optimized for mobile devices by allowing the device's battery to be charged while at the same time playing back multimedia content. For the Galaxy S II, the industry standard micro USB port found on the bottom of the device can be used with an MHL connector for a TV out connection to an external display, such as a television.The micro USB port on this device also supports standard which means the Galaxy S II can act as a 'host' device in the same way as a desktop computer in allowing external USB devices to be plugged in and used.
These external USB devices typically include and separately powered. A video demonstration on YouTube has shown the OTG function to be readily available with an ordinary micro USB (B-type) OTG adaptor. The same YouTube video goes on to mention a successful test completed on a 2 USB external hard drive (requiring own power source) but however reports of failure when trying to connect USB keyboards, tested USB mice and tested USB.
Currently the only supported for USB drives within OTG is.A 3.5 mm headset jack is available and is located on the top side of the device. The micro USB connection port is located on the bottom side of the device.Broadcom BCM4330 combo chip integrates Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.0+HS and FM radio. Phones released to the US market lack the FM receiver. BCM4330 supports that enable devices to communicate directly with one another without having to interact with an access point. Even if the BCM4330 chip supports Bluetooth 4.0, the Galaxy S2 is limited to Bluetooth 3.0 using the last Android version released by Samsung (4.1.2). Bluetooth 4.0 support has been introduced in Android 4.3 versions, however the upgrade to an alternative firmware is required.Additional accessories available include:.
for battery charging and output. MHL cable which makes use of the device's port for HDMI output. USB OTG adaptor for use with external USB devices such as.
for use on the device's capacitive screen. Support for a stylus on the Galaxy S II was a precursor to the. A number of case manufacturers have released a variety of cases for the Galaxy S II. A Samsung branded headset for making phone calls. A pair of portable speakers powered by the phone's USB port.
A vehicle mounting kit for dashboard placement of the phone, allows navigation using the phone.Variants Galaxy S II - Model GT-I9100G The Samsung Galaxy S II GT-I9100G was released in late 2011, and is usually sold instead of the original GT-I9100 in certain markets (mostly Asia and some parts of Europe). An overview of the Samsung Galaxy S II GT-I9100G can be seen on 's official website. It features a Texas Instruments OMAP4430 SoC instead of the Exynos 4210 in the GT-I9100. It is visually identical to the GT-I9100, as well as having the same 1.2 GHz processor speed and dual-core ARM Cortex A9 processor technology. However, the SoC is of a different design and the Mali-400 GPU has been replaced by a PowerVR SGX 540 GPU.
Sprint's Samsung Galaxy S II Epic 4G Touch (Model SPH-D710)The variant (Model SPH-D710) of the Galaxy S II was initially released as the Galaxy S II Epic 4G Touch and was later renamed to the simpler Galaxy S II 4G. Prior to its release, Sprint's variant was codenamed 'Within' by Samsung. The SPH-D710 first became available for Sprint customers on 16 September 2011, making Sprint the first carrier in the United States to offer a variant of the S II. The SPH-D710 is available to Sprint customers in black, titanium grey or white.The Sprint variant has key differences from the 'International' version of the Galaxy S II. The Sprint variant includes a 2500 MHz WiMax radio. The display of the Sprint variant, at 4.52 inches, is larger than that of the international version.
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