

The Samsung Galaxy Tab (Samsung.com)
AT&T will sell the Samsung Galaxy Tab, $50 more expensive, actually, $100 more expensive.
More expensive Samsung Tablet courtesy of AT&T
AT&T will sell Samsung Galaxy Tablet, the so-called 7-inch “iPad competition.” But that is not the headliner, they will sell this baby $50 more, compared to deals offered by competition Verizon and Sprint.
According to the company’s press release, the Samsung Galaxy Tab will be available for $649.99 at more than 2,200 AT&T company owned stores and online. The $650 deal is for the customers who wants a month to month plan.
AT&T also revealed that there are two data plans available for Samsung Galaxy Tab, the $14.99 “pay-as-you-go” plan for 30 days, and $25 “pay-as-you-go plan.” The $15 plan includes 250MB usage, while the $25 has 2GB of usage. Both plans are renewable, the company added.
To convince more customers, the company also decided to include $50 gift card for the Samsung Media Hub movie rental store. That’s sweet.
Are you planning to buy Samsung Galaxy Tab in AT&T? Or are you going to wait for the Black Friday 2010 where Best Buy is set to sell it for $549? The deal includes plans for Verizon and Sprint.
By the way, Samsung Galaxy Tab is an Android OS powered tablet.
Wal-Mart Black Friday Ads leaked
And speaking of Black Friday, Google is currently bombarded by users looking for Wal-Mart’s Black Friday 2010 ads scans.
According to Christian Science Monitor, a website posted the scans even before the company’s “rule” of November 21st. I think its not only one website, the last time I checked, Wal-Mart’s BF ads are everywhere including Facebook and Twitter.
Anyway, I saw the scans. And some of the sweetest deals include an 8 GB iPod Touch for $225 with free $50 Wal-Mart gift card, and the Emerson 42-inch HDTV for $398. These deals occupied the first page of the 24-page scanned sheets.
Aside from Wal-Mart, other retail stores like Target, Macy’s and Best Buy have have their ads leaked on the internet too.
Oh consumers just can’t wait for the Black Friday. Or they’re “computing,” and “comparing” to get more out of their budget.


