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text_id stringlengths 22 22 | page_url stringlengths 31 389 | page_title stringlengths 1 250 | section_title stringlengths 0 4.67k | context_page_description stringlengths 0 108k | context_section_description stringlengths 1 187k | media list | hierachy list | category list |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
projected-23579162-004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew%20A.%20Michta | Andrew A. Michta | Works | Andrew Alexander Michta (born April 4, 1956) is an American political scientist and Dean of the College of International and Security Studies at the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies in Germany. Previously he was Professor of National Security Affairs at the US Naval War College. He was also an a... | The Limits of Alliance: The United States, NATO and the EU in North and Central Europe. Rowman & Littlefield (2006).
The Soldier-Citizen
Polish Foreign Policy Reconsidered
East Central Europe after the Warsaw Pact
The Government and Politics of Postcommunist Europe
America's New Allies: Poland, Hungary and the Czech Re... | [] | [
"Works"
] | [
"1956 births",
"Living people",
"American political scientists",
"Johns Hopkins University alumni",
"George Washington University faculty"
] |
projected-23579163-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangakuri%20River | Mangakuri River | Introduction | The Mangakuri River is a river of the Hawke's Bay region of New Zealand's North Island. It flows north, paralleling the Pacific Ocean coast before veering northeast to reach the sea at Kairakau Beach, south of Cape Kidnappers. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Rivers of the Hawke's Bay Region",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] | |
projected-23579163-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangakuri%20River | Mangakuri River | See also | The Mangakuri River is a river of the Hawke's Bay region of New Zealand's North Island. It flows north, paralleling the Pacific Ocean coast before veering northeast to reach the sea at Kairakau Beach, south of Cape Kidnappers. | List of rivers of New Zealand | [] | [
"See also"
] | [
"Rivers of the Hawke's Bay Region",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] |
projected-23579163-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangakuri%20River | Mangakuri River | References | The Mangakuri River is a river of the Hawke's Bay region of New Zealand's North Island. It flows north, paralleling the Pacific Ocean coast before veering northeast to reach the sea at Kairakau Beach, south of Cape Kidnappers. | Category:Rivers of the Hawke's Bay Region
Category:Rivers of New Zealand | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"Rivers of the Hawke's Bay Region",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] |
projected-23579164-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangamaire%20River | Mangamaire River | Introduction | The Mangamaire River is a river of the centre of New Zealand's North Island. One of the headwaters of the Rangitikei River system, it flows generally southwest from its origins southeast of Lake Taupo, forming part of the border of the Kaimanawa Forest Park for much of its length. It meets the young Rangitikei in hill ... | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Rivers of Manawatū-Whanganui",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] | |
projected-23579164-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangamaire%20River | Mangamaire River | See also | The Mangamaire River is a river of the centre of New Zealand's North Island. One of the headwaters of the Rangitikei River system, it flows generally southwest from its origins southeast of Lake Taupo, forming part of the border of the Kaimanawa Forest Park for much of its length. It meets the young Rangitikei in hill ... | List of rivers of New Zealand | [] | [
"See also"
] | [
"Rivers of Manawatū-Whanganui",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] |
projected-23579164-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangamaire%20River | Mangamaire River | References | The Mangamaire River is a river of the centre of New Zealand's North Island. One of the headwaters of the Rangitikei River system, it flows generally southwest from its origins southeast of Lake Taupo, forming part of the border of the Kaimanawa Forest Park for much of its length. It meets the young Rangitikei in hill ... | Category:Rivers of Manawatū-Whanganui
Category:Rivers of New Zealand | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"Rivers of Manawatū-Whanganui",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] |
projected-23579166-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamura%20Station | Hamura Station | Introduction | is a passenger railway station located in the city of Hamura, Tokyo, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East). | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Railway stations in Tokyo",
"Railway stations in Japan opened in 1894",
"Hamura, Tokyo",
"Ōme Line"
] | |
projected-23579166-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamura%20Station | Hamura Station | Lines | is a passenger railway station located in the city of Hamura, Tokyo, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East). | Hamura Station is served by the Ōme Line, and is located 11.7 kilometers from the starting point of the line at Tachikawa Station. | [] | [
"Lines"
] | [
"Railway stations in Tokyo",
"Railway stations in Japan opened in 1894",
"Hamura, Tokyo",
"Ōme Line"
] |
projected-23579166-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamura%20Station | Hamura Station | Station layout | is a passenger railway station located in the city of Hamura, Tokyo, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East). | This station has a single ground-level island platform serving two tracks, with an elevated station building above the platform. The station is staffed. | [] | [
"Station layout"
] | [
"Railway stations in Tokyo",
"Railway stations in Japan opened in 1894",
"Hamura, Tokyo",
"Ōme Line"
] |
projected-23579166-004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamura%20Station | Hamura Station | History | is a passenger railway station located in the city of Hamura, Tokyo, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East). | The station opened on 19 November 1894. With the privatization of Japanese National Railways (JNR) on 1 April 1987, the station came under the control of JR East. | [] | [
"History"
] | [
"Railway stations in Tokyo",
"Railway stations in Japan opened in 1894",
"Hamura, Tokyo",
"Ōme Line"
] |
projected-23579166-005 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamura%20Station | Hamura Station | Passenger statistics | is a passenger railway station located in the city of Hamura, Tokyo, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East). | In fiscal 2019, the station was used by an average of 13,687 passengers daily (boarding passengers only).
The passenger figures for previous years are as shown below. | [] | [
"Passenger statistics"
] | [
"Railway stations in Tokyo",
"Railway stations in Japan opened in 1894",
"Hamura, Tokyo",
"Ōme Line"
] |
projected-23579166-006 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamura%20Station | Hamura Station | Surrounding area | is a passenger railway station located in the city of Hamura, Tokyo, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East). | Tama River
Hamura City Hall | [] | [
"Surrounding area"
] | [
"Railway stations in Tokyo",
"Railway stations in Japan opened in 1894",
"Hamura, Tokyo",
"Ōme Line"
] |
projected-23579166-007 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamura%20Station | Hamura Station | See also | is a passenger railway station located in the city of Hamura, Tokyo, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East). | List of railway stations in Japan | [] | [
"See also"
] | [
"Railway stations in Tokyo",
"Railway stations in Japan opened in 1894",
"Hamura, Tokyo",
"Ōme Line"
] |
projected-23579168-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangamuka%20River | Mangamuka River | Introduction | The Mangamuka River is a river of the far north of the Northland Region of New Zealand's North Island. It flows generally south from the Maungataniwha Range southeast of Kaitaia, and the last few kilometres of its length are a wide, silty arm of the Hokianga Harbour, which it reaches northeast of Rawene. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Hokianga",
"Rivers of the Northland Region",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] | |
projected-23579168-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangamuka%20River | Mangamuka River | See also | The Mangamuka River is a river of the far north of the Northland Region of New Zealand's North Island. It flows generally south from the Maungataniwha Range southeast of Kaitaia, and the last few kilometres of its length are a wide, silty arm of the Hokianga Harbour, which it reaches northeast of Rawene. | List of rivers of New Zealand | [] | [
"See also"
] | [
"Hokianga",
"Rivers of the Northland Region",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] |
projected-23579168-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangamuka%20River | Mangamuka River | References | The Mangamuka River is a river of the far north of the Northland Region of New Zealand's North Island. It flows generally south from the Maungataniwha Range southeast of Kaitaia, and the last few kilometres of its length are a wide, silty arm of the Hokianga Harbour, which it reaches northeast of Rawene. | Category:Hokianga
Category:Rivers of the Northland Region
Category:Rivers of New Zealand | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"Hokianga",
"Rivers of the Northland Region",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] |
projected-20474364-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panamanian%20night%20monkey | Panamanian night monkey | Introduction | The Panamanian night monkey or Chocoan night monkey (Aotus zonalis) is a species of night monkey formerly considered a subspecies of the gray-bellied night monkey of the family Aotidae. Its range consists of Panama and the Chocó region of Colombia. There are also unconfirmed reports of its occurrence in Costa Rica, es... | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Night monkeys",
"Mammals of Colombia",
"Primates of Central America",
"Primates of North America",
"Mammals described in 1843"
] | |
projected-20474364-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panamanian%20night%20monkey | Panamanian night monkey | References | The Panamanian night monkey or Chocoan night monkey (Aotus zonalis) is a species of night monkey formerly considered a subspecies of the gray-bellied night monkey of the family Aotidae. Its range consists of Panama and the Chocó region of Colombia. There are also unconfirmed reports of its occurrence in Costa Rica, es... | Panamanian night monkey
Category:Mammals of Colombia
Category:Primates of Central America
Category:Primates of North America
Panamanian night monkey | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"Night monkeys",
"Mammals of Colombia",
"Primates of Central America",
"Primates of North America",
"Mammals described in 1843"
] |
projected-23579169-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manganui%20River | Manganui River | Introduction | Manganui River may refer to the following New Zealand rivers:
Manganui River, Northland
Manganui River, Waikato
Manganui River, Taranaki
Manganui o te Ao River | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [] | |
projected-23579169-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manganui%20River | Manganui River | See also | Manganui River may refer to the following New Zealand rivers:
Manganui River, Northland
Manganui River, Waikato
Manganui River, Taranaki
Manganui o te Ao River | Manganui
Mangaone River (disambiguation)
Mangapapa River (disambiguation) | [] | [
"See also"
] | [] |
projected-23579172-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manganuioteao%20River | Manganuioteao River | Introduction | The Manganuioteao River (official name since 22 August 1985, also known as Manganui o te Ao River and shown on older maps as Manganuiateau River) is a river of the centre of New Zealand's North Island. It has its source in numerous streams and small rivers which flow west from the slopes of Mount Ruapehu, though the ma... | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Rivers of Manawatū-Whanganui",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] | |
projected-23579172-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manganuioteao%20River | Manganuioteao River | See also | The Manganuioteao River (official name since 22 August 1985, also known as Manganui o te Ao River and shown on older maps as Manganuiateau River) is a river of the centre of New Zealand's North Island. It has its source in numerous streams and small rivers which flow west from the slopes of Mount Ruapehu, though the ma... | List of rivers of New Zealand
Tributary rivers
Makatote River
Mangaturturu River | [] | [
"See also"
] | [
"Rivers of Manawatū-Whanganui",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] |
projected-23579172-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manganuioteao%20River | Manganuioteao River | References | The Manganuioteao River (official name since 22 August 1985, also known as Manganui o te Ao River and shown on older maps as Manganuiateau River) is a river of the centre of New Zealand's North Island. It has its source in numerous streams and small rivers which flow west from the slopes of Mount Ruapehu, though the ma... | Category:Rivers of Manawatū-Whanganui
Category:Rivers of New Zealand | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"Rivers of Manawatū-Whanganui",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] |
projected-23579175-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manganuiohou%20River | Manganuiohou River | Introduction | The Manganuiohou River is a river of the northeast of New Zealand's North Island. It flows southwards from its source in Te Urewera National Park immediately to the northwest of Lake Waikaremoana, and joins with the Waiau River at the park's southwestern boundary. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Rivers of the Hawke's Bay Region",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] | |
projected-23579175-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manganuiohou%20River | Manganuiohou River | See also | The Manganuiohou River is a river of the northeast of New Zealand's North Island. It flows southwards from its source in Te Urewera National Park immediately to the northwest of Lake Waikaremoana, and joins with the Waiau River at the park's southwestern boundary. | List of rivers of New Zealand | [] | [
"See also"
] | [
"Rivers of the Hawke's Bay Region",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] |
projected-23579175-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manganuiohou%20River | Manganuiohou River | References | The Manganuiohou River is a river of the northeast of New Zealand's North Island. It flows southwards from its source in Te Urewera National Park immediately to the northwest of Lake Waikaremoana, and joins with the Waiau River at the park's southwestern boundary. | Category:Rivers of the Hawke's Bay Region
Category:Rivers of New Zealand | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"Rivers of the Hawke's Bay Region",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] |
projected-23579177-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangaone%20River | Mangaone River | Introduction | Mangaone River may refer to:
Mangaone River (Hawke's Bay), a river of the Hawke's Bay Region of New Zealand
Mangaone River (Manawatu-Wanganui), a river of the south of New Zealand's North Island | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [] | |
projected-23579177-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangaone%20River | Mangaone River | See also | Mangaone River may refer to:
Mangaone River (Hawke's Bay), a river of the Hawke's Bay Region of New Zealand
Mangaone River (Manawatu-Wanganui), a river of the south of New Zealand's North Island | Manganui River (disambiguation)
Mangapapa River (disambiguation) | [] | [
"See also"
] | [] |
projected-23579181-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangaoparo%20River | Mangaoparo River | Introduction | The Mangaoparo River is a river of the Gisborne Region of New Zealand's North Island. It is located close to the island's northeasternmost point, flowing southeast from the slopes of Mount Raukumara in the Raukumara Range to reach the Waiapu River northeast of Ruatoria. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Rivers of the Gisborne District",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] | |
projected-23579181-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangaoparo%20River | Mangaoparo River | See also | The Mangaoparo River is a river of the Gisborne Region of New Zealand's North Island. It is located close to the island's northeasternmost point, flowing southeast from the slopes of Mount Raukumara in the Raukumara Range to reach the Waiapu River northeast of Ruatoria. | List of rivers of New Zealand | [] | [
"See also"
] | [
"Rivers of the Gisborne District",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] |
projected-23579181-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangaoparo%20River | Mangaoparo River | References | The Mangaoparo River is a river of the Gisborne Region of New Zealand's North Island. It is located close to the island's northeasternmost point, flowing southeast from the slopes of Mount Raukumara in the Raukumara Range to reach the Waiapu River northeast of Ruatoria. | Category:Rivers of the Gisborne District
Category:Rivers of New Zealand | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"Rivers of the Gisborne District",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] |
projected-71484436-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teofilo%20Rossi | Teofilo Rossi | Introduction | Teofilo Rossi (1865–1927) was an Italian lawyer and politician who served at the Italian Parliament for four successive terms between 1898 and 1909. He was also minister of industry and commerce from 31 October 1922 to 31 July 1923. He was the co-owner of the Italian company Martini & Rossi. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"19th-century Italian businesspeople",
"19th-century Italian lawyers",
"20th-century Italian businesspeople",
"20th-century Italian lawyers",
"1865 births",
"1927 deaths",
"Recipients of the Order of the Crown (Italy)",
"Grand Officers of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus",
"Deputies of Legisl... | |
projected-71484436-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teofilo%20Rossi | Teofilo Rossi | Early life and education | Teofilo Rossi (1865–1927) was an Italian lawyer and politician who served at the Italian Parliament for four successive terms between 1898 and 1909. He was also minister of industry and commerce from 31 October 1922 to 31 July 1923. He was the co-owner of the Italian company Martini & Rossi. | Rossi was born in Chieri on 27 October 1865. His father was the founder of an aromatized wine and liqueur company, which became Martini & Rossi. He was a graduate of the University of Turin where he obtained a degree in law in 1886. | [] | [
"Early life and education"
] | [
"19th-century Italian businesspeople",
"19th-century Italian lawyers",
"20th-century Italian businesspeople",
"20th-century Italian lawyers",
"1865 births",
"1927 deaths",
"Recipients of the Order of the Crown (Italy)",
"Grand Officers of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus",
"Deputies of Legisl... |
projected-71484436-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teofilo%20Rossi | Teofilo Rossi | Career | Teofilo Rossi (1865–1927) was an Italian lawyer and politician who served at the Italian Parliament for four successive terms between 1898 and 1909. He was also minister of industry and commerce from 31 October 1922 to 31 July 1923. He was the co-owner of the Italian company Martini & Rossi. | Rossi was the councilor of the chamber of commerce in Turin in 1893. Between 1896 and 1908 he served as the city councilor of Turin which he held again in the period 1921–1924. He headed the chamber twice: first between 1902 and 1909 and between 1921 and 1924. He was among the founders and owners of Martini & Rossi. In... | [] | [
"Career"
] | [
"19th-century Italian businesspeople",
"19th-century Italian lawyers",
"20th-century Italian businesspeople",
"20th-century Italian lawyers",
"1865 births",
"1927 deaths",
"Recipients of the Order of the Crown (Italy)",
"Grand Officers of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus",
"Deputies of Legisl... |
projected-71484436-003 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teofilo%20Rossi | Teofilo Rossi | Personal life and death | Teofilo Rossi (1865–1927) was an Italian lawyer and politician who served at the Italian Parliament for four successive terms between 1898 and 1909. He was also minister of industry and commerce from 31 October 1922 to 31 July 1923. He was the co-owner of the Italian company Martini & Rossi. | Rossi was married to Clotilde Bosso with whom he had two children: Teofila Alessandrina who married to the Marquis Giovanni dei Medici del Vascello, and Metello Cesare who married to Adele of the Guidobono Cavalchini Roero Di San Severino. He died in Turin on 29 December 1927. | [] | [
"Personal life and death"
] | [
"19th-century Italian businesspeople",
"19th-century Italian lawyers",
"20th-century Italian businesspeople",
"20th-century Italian lawyers",
"1865 births",
"1927 deaths",
"Recipients of the Order of the Crown (Italy)",
"Grand Officers of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus",
"Deputies of Legisl... |
projected-71484436-004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teofilo%20Rossi | Teofilo Rossi | Awards and honors | Teofilo Rossi (1865–1927) was an Italian lawyer and politician who served at the Italian Parliament for four successive terms between 1898 and 1909. He was also minister of industry and commerce from 31 October 1922 to 31 July 1923. He was the co-owner of the Italian company Martini & Rossi. | Rossi was named count of Monterela by a royal decree dated 27 April 1911. He was the recipient of the following:
Commander of the Order of the Crown of Italy
Grand Cordon of the Order of the Crown of Italy
Commander of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus (11 December 1904)
Grand officer of the Order of Saints ... | [] | [
"Awards and honors"
] | [
"19th-century Italian businesspeople",
"19th-century Italian lawyers",
"20th-century Italian businesspeople",
"20th-century Italian lawyers",
"1865 births",
"1927 deaths",
"Recipients of the Order of the Crown (Italy)",
"Grand Officers of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus",
"Deputies of Legisl... |
projected-23579183-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangaorino%20River | Mangaorino River | Introduction | The Mangaorino River is a river of the Waikato region of New Zealand's North island. It is a tributary of the Mangapu River, which it meets north of Te Kuiti. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Rivers of Waikato",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] | |
projected-23579183-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangaorino%20River | Mangaorino River | See also | The Mangaorino River is a river of the Waikato region of New Zealand's North island. It is a tributary of the Mangapu River, which it meets north of Te Kuiti. | List of rivers of New Zealand | [] | [
"See also"
] | [
"Rivers of Waikato",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] |
projected-23579183-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangaorino%20River | Mangaorino River | References | The Mangaorino River is a river of the Waikato region of New Zealand's North island. It is a tributary of the Mangapu River, which it meets north of Te Kuiti. | Category:Rivers of Waikato
Category:Rivers of New Zealand | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"Rivers of Waikato",
"Rivers of New Zealand"
] |
projected-71484441-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RD1%20%28disambiguation%29 | RD1 (disambiguation) | Introduction | RD1 is a distant galaxy.
RD1 may also refer to:
RD1, a wholly owned rural supplier of Fonterra | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [] | |
projected-71484441-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RD1%20%28disambiguation%29 | RD1 (disambiguation) | See also | RD1 is a distant galaxy.
RD1 may also refer to:
RD1, a wholly owned rural supplier of Fonterra | R&D1 | [] | [
"See also"
] | [] |
projected-26727046-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Introduction | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] | |
projected-26727046-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Launch | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The phone was initially launched in Singapore on June 4, 2010. Before the end of its first weekend on sale in Singapore, Samsung tweeted that Singtel, the exclusive carrier to sell the device in Singapore, was sold out of devices. On Friday, June 25, 2010, the phone was launched in Malaysia and South Korea. Overall the... | [] | [
"Launch"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Reception | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | CNET Asia gave the Galaxy S a favorable review with a score of 8.4/10. The Galaxy S was compared to current high-end Android-based phones such as the HTC Desire, Xperia X10, Nexus One, and smartphones using different operating systems like the iPhone 4, which runs iOS, and HTC HD2, which runs Windows Mobile in CNET Asi... | [] | [
"Reception"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Processor | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The Samsung Galaxy S used the Samsung S5PC110 processor. This processor combined a 45 nm 1 GHz ARM Cortex-A8 based CPU core with a PowerVR SGX 540 GPU made by Imagination Technologies which supported OpenGL ES 1.1/2.0 and is capable of up to 90 million triangles per second. The CPU core, code-named "Hummingbird", was c... | [] | [
"Hardware",
"Processor"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-005 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Memory | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The Samsung Galaxy S has 512 MB of LPDDR1 RAM (Mobile DDR). Some variants also come with either 8 GB or 16 GB of OneNAND memory combined in a package-on-package stack with the processor. An external microSD card slot supports up to 32 GB of additional storage memory. | [] | [
"Hardware",
"Memory"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-006 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Screen | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The Samsung Galaxy S uses a Super AMOLED touch screen covered by Gorilla Glass, a special crack and scratch resistant material. The screen is a WVGA PenTile display manufactured by Samsung. | [] | [
"Hardware",
"Screen"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-007 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Audio | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The phone uses Wolfson's WM8994 DAC as its audio hub. | [] | [
"Hardware",
"Audio"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-008 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Camera | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | Samsung Galaxy S has a 5 megapixel back camera with no optical but digital zoom. It has sensor type 1/3.6" (rectangle 4×3 mm), which is a bit smaller in size than usual sensor in digital compact cameras, which have 1/2.33"-1/2.5" type sensor. It also has a 0.3 megapixel VGA front camera. | [
"Samsung Galaxy S camera sensor.jpg"
] | [
"Hardware",
"Camera"
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"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-009 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | GPS | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The Samsung Galaxy 'S' was well known for the poor performance of the GPS module. This was due to poor electrical connectivity caused by the use of 'conductive rubber'. Modification of the i9000 to improve GPS performance was a popular hardware modification within the handset hacker community. | [] | [
"Hardware",
"GPS"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-011 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | User interface | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The phone employs the proprietary Samsung TouchWiz 3.0 user interface. Unlike TouchWiz 3.0 on the Samsung Wave, it allows up to seven homescreens. However, different from other Android user interfaces, TouchWiz 3.0 allows users to add, delete and rearrange homescreens. The program launcher is also different from other ... | [
"2010 Samsung Galaxy Reliance Mart.jpg"
] | [
"Software",
"User interface"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-012 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Bundled applications | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | Other provided software includes the Layar Reality Browser, a program that visualizes GPS direction, and Aldiko, an ebook reader. The phone also comes with various upgraded versions of software that came with Samsung's previous generation of smartphones (such as i8910HD and i8000 Omnia II). | [] | [
"Software",
"Bundled applications"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-013 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Media support | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The Galaxy S comes with support for many multimedia file formats, including audio codecs (FLAC, WAV, Vorbis, MP3, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA, AMR-NB, AMR-WB, MID, AC3, XMF), video codecs (mpeg4, H.264, H.263, Sorenson codec, DivX HD/ XviD, VC-1) and video formats (3GP (MPEG-4), WMV (Advanced Systems Format), AVI (divx), MKV... | [] | [
"Software",
"Media support"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-015 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Android 2.2 upgrade | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | At the time of launch, the Galaxy S had Android 2.1 ("Eclair") installed. An official upgrade to Android 2.2 ("Froyo") began rolling out worldwide in November 2010.
Canada received the 2.2 upgrade for select carriers on December 10, 2010.
According to Samsung the 2.2 upgrade has come to the United States in 2011 for... | [
"Android 4.4.2, CyanogenMod 11 installed on Samsung Galaxy S I9000.png"
] | [
"Software",
"Updates",
"Android 2.2 upgrade"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-016 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Android 2.3 upgrade | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | An Android 2.3 ("Gingerbread") update became available for Nordic countries, The Netherlands and Germany on April 16, 2011. The update reached UK, India and Hong Kong by the start of Nov, 2011. Singapore received the update in June. Australia received the update in August. The Samsung Epic for Sprint started receiving ... | [] | [
"Software",
"Updates",
"Android 2.3 upgrade"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-017 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Android 4.0 and later | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | An official update to Android 4.0 was never released, as Samsung felt that the Galaxy S did not have enough memory (RAM) to run the TouchWiz interface on top of Android 4.0. In lieu of Android 4.0, Samsung released a "Value Pack" update for the Galaxy S in March 2012 in South Korea, which maintains the 2.3 (Gingerbread... | [] | [
"Software",
"Updates",
"Android 4.0 and later"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-018 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Unofficial | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The device was popular with the software modification community due to the popularity of the handset and supported by CyanogenMod until the demise of the project. The Galaxy S is currently supported by the Replicant Operating System, which, at the moment of writing gives Android 10 capability. In 2017, LineageOS v14.1 ... | [] | [
"Unofficial"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-020 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | International | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | International versions of the Galaxy S closely resemble the 'GT-I9000' reference version. | [] | [
"Variants",
"International"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-021 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | GT-I9000B | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The Brazilian "GT-I9000B" includes an ISDB-T 1seg digital television tuner with program guide, closed caption and recording support. The units are manufactured locally by Samsung to take advantage of tax cuts associated with local production. | [] | [
"Variants",
"International",
"GT-I9000B"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-022 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | GT-I9000M | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The Canadian "GT-I9000M" drops UMTS band VIII support for UMTS band V support. Bell, Virgin Mobile and SaskTel offer the model. | [] | [
"Variants",
"International",
"GT-I9000M"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-023 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | GT-I9000T | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The "GT-I9000T" changes UMTS band VIII support for UMTS band V support. It is offered by Telcel in Mexico, Telstra in Australia and numerous other carriers throughout Latin America and the Caribbean. | [] | [
"Variants",
"International",
"GT-I9000T"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-024 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | GT-I9000/M8 | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The "GT-I9000/M8" is the only model to include a quad-band 3G UMTS radio. It is offered primarily in Australia and New Zealand. | [] | [
"Variants",
"International",
"GT-I9000/M8"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | GT-I9003 | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The "GT-I9003" is a late-model, reduced-cost version of the Galaxy S. It substitutes the 4-inch Super AMOLED screen with a cheaper 4-inch SuperClear-LCD screen. It also swaps the Hummingbird SoC with a Texas Instruments OMAP 3630 SoC, which includes the slower PowerVR SGX530 graphics processor and TWL5030 DAC. To co... | [] | [
"Variants",
"International",
"GT-I9003"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-026 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | North America | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | North American versions of the Galaxy S moderately differ from the "GT-I9000" reference version. Most use a 4-button layout, drop the FM tuner and front camera, and include UMTS band V support. A number of models also include 4G support and a physical QWERTY keyboard. | [
"I897.png"
] | [
"North America"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-027 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Captivate | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | AT&T released this variant (SGH-I897) for the United States on July 18, 2010, while Rogers released its own variant (SGH-I896) for Canada. Both variants include 16 GB of internal flash memory, but without the front camera, FM radio and LED camera flash present on other Galaxy S variants. Android 2.3 "Gingerbread" is av... | [] | [
"North America",
"Captivate"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-028 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Vibrant | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | T-Mobile released this variant (SGH-T959) for the United States on July 15, 2010. It is the third Android 2.x phone officially supported by T-Mobile (after the Nexus One and MyTouch 3G Slide). Like the Captivate, it includes 16 GB of internal flash memory, but omits the front camera and FM radio, and lacks an LED cam... | [] | [
"North America",
"Vibrant"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-029 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Fascinate | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | Verizon released this variant (SCH-I500) for the United States on September 9, 2010. It omits the front camera and FM radio of the base model, but adds a LED flash. Android 2.3 "Gingerbread" is available. Its release was accompanied by some controversy over Verizon's decision to replace Google Search with Bing as th... | [] | [
"North America",
"Fascinate"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-030 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Galaxy S Showcase | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | Available on Straight Talk/NET10. Similar to the Verizon Fascinate (SCH-I500) but is thinner and lighter. | [] | [
"North America",
"Galaxy S Showcase"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-031 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Epic 4G | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | Sprint released this variant (SPH-D700) for the United States on August 31, 2010. It lacks an FM radio, but it includes a LED flash, a message indication LED, a full slide-out QWERTY keyboard and 4G WiMax support. The included edition of TouchWiz in Android 2.1 had to be reworked to support landscape mode when using ... | [] | [
"North America",
"Epic 4G"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-032 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Stratosphere | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The Verizon Stratosphere (SCH-I405) is similar to the Epic 4G. Main differences are an upgraded 1.3 MP front camera, 4G LTE support and no message LED. The US Cellular Metrix (SCH-I405U) adds several bands to the LTE support. All models were released with Android 2.3. | [] | [
"North America",
"Stratosphere"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-033 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Indulge | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The MetroPCS variant (SCH-R910) was released on February 21, 2011, for the United States. It was the first LTE smartphone at the time of its release. The Indulge shrinks the screen size from 4 inches to 3.5 inches, removes the front-facing camera, reduces the camera to 3.2 megapixels, removes the flash, lowers the sc... | [] | [
"North America",
"Indulge"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-034 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Galaxy Proclaim | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | Available on Straight Talk/NET10. Similar to the Cricket Indulge (SCH-R915) but lacks the QWERTY keyboard. | [] | [
"North America",
"Galaxy Proclaim"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-035 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Infuse | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | AT&T released this variant (SGH-I997) for the United States on May 15, 2011, while Rogers released it for Canada on July 26, 2011. It includes a faster 1.2 GHz version of the Exynos "Hummingbird" SoC, 16 GB of internal flash memory, 8 MP primary camera, 1.3 MP secondary front-facing camera, HSPA+ support and an improv... | [] | [
"North America",
"Infuse"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-036 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Aviator | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The US Cellular Aviator (SCH-R930) resembles the Infuse 4G, but uses the original 1.0 GHz Hummingbird SoC. It offers a dual-band CDMA and quad-band LTE radio. | [] | [
"North America",
"Aviator"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | SC-02B | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | In Japan, NTT Docomo carries the Galaxy S (SC-02B). It is similar to the GT-I9000, but omits the front-facing camera. | [] | [
"Asia",
"SC-02B"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-039 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | SHW-M110S | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The Galaxy S (SHW-M110S) is an exclusive phone for SK Telecom subscribers. It differs from the GT-I9000 in that it includes a T-DMB tuner. It is sold under the "Anycall" branding. | [] | [
"Asia",
"SHW-M110S"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-040 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | SHW-M130K | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | KT offers this variant (SHW-M130K) for South Korea as the Galaxy K. It includes a tri-band UMTS radio, a faster 1.2 GHz Hummingbird SoC, a T-DMB tuner and a smaller 3.5-inch Super AMOLED screen. It is sold under the "Anycall" branding. | [] | [
"Asia",
"SHW-M130K"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-041 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | SHW-M130L | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | LG U+ offers this variant (SHW-M130L) for South Korea as the Galaxy U. It is similar to the Galaxy K, but instead offers a stock 1.0 GHz Hummingbird SoC and a CDMA 1xEV-DO radio. | [] | [
"Asia",
"SHW-M130L"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-042 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | SCH-I909 | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | China Telecom offers the SCH-I909 variant which supports both GSM and CDMA 2G standards and CDMA 3G. | [] | [
"Asia",
"SCH-I909"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-043 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | SCH-I919 | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | China Telecom later offers this more advanced variant, sporting a design almost identical to the AT&T Infuse 4G, a Qualcomm S2 SoC, while retaining support for CDMA 3G. | [] | [
"Asia",
"SCH-I919"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-044 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | GT-I9008 | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | China Mobile offers the GT-I9008 variant which supports GSM 2G and TD-SCDMA 3G standards. It includes a CMMB digital television tuner. It also uses the OPhone 2.0 platform as opposed to Android. | [] | [
"Asia",
"GT-I9008"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-045 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | GT-I9088 | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | China Unicom offers the GT-I9088 variant which supports GSM 2G and UMTS-FDD 3G standards. | [] | [
"Asia",
"GT-I9088"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-046 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Nexus S | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | The Nexus S is a Galaxy S-derived smartphone co-developed by Google and Samsung in 2010. The Nexus S differs from the Galaxy S in that it runs a stock version of Android provided by Google as opposed to the TouchWiz edition provided by Samsung and the mobile carriers. In addition, the Nexus S drops the microSD slot i... | [] | [
"Nexus S"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-047 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | Legal | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | In a lawsuit filed on April 15, 2011, Apple accused Samsung of committing patent and trademark infringement with the touchscreen on Samsung Galaxy line of mobile products. That includes the Galaxy S smartphone and the Samsung Galaxy Tab tablet. | [] | [
"Legal"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727046-048 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung%20Galaxy%20S%20%282010%20smartphone%29 | Samsung Galaxy S (2010 smartphone) | See also | The Samsung Galaxy S (retrospectively referred to unofficially as the Samsung Galaxy S1, Galaxy S1 or original Galaxy S) is a touchscreen-enabled, slate-format Android smartphone designed, developed, and marketed by Samsung Electronics; it is the first smartphone of the Samsung Galaxy S series. It is the first device o... | Comparison of Samsung Galaxy S smartphones
Samsung Galaxy S series | [] | [
"See also"
] | [
"Android (operating system) devices",
"Discontinued flagship smartphones",
"Samsung mobile phones",
"Samsung Galaxy",
"Mobile phones introduced in 2010",
"Discontinued smartphones",
"Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard",
"Mobile phones with user-replaceable battery"
] |
projected-26727050-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uropterygius%20xenodontus | Uropterygius xenodontus | Introduction | Uropterygius xenodontus is a moray eel found in coral reefs in the Pacific Ocean. It is commonly known as the black snake moray, strange-toothed snake moray, or the wedge-tooth snake moray. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Uropterygius",
"Fish described in 1997"
] | |
projected-26727050-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uropterygius%20xenodontus | Uropterygius xenodontus | References | Uropterygius xenodontus is a moray eel found in coral reefs in the Pacific Ocean. It is commonly known as the black snake moray, strange-toothed snake moray, or the wedge-tooth snake moray. | xenodontus
Category:Fish described in 1997 | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"Uropterygius",
"Fish described in 1997"
] |
projected-71484451-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B8rgen%20N%C3%B8rredam | Jørgen Nørredam | Introduction | Jørgen Nørredam (1920/1921-1965) was a Danish aid worker who died in a plane crash in Tanzania. He worked as a publisher before undertaking overseas humanitarian work for the Red Cross movement and Lutheran World Federation. In Denmark he worked for the Royal Danish Automobile Club, his aid work took him to Austria, Mo... | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"1920s births",
"1965 deaths",
"Danish humanitarians",
"University of Copenhagen alumni",
"People from Copenhagen"
] | |
projected-71484451-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B8rgen%20N%C3%B8rredam | Jørgen Nørredam | Early life and education | Jørgen Nørredam (1920/1921-1965) was a Danish aid worker who died in a plane crash in Tanzania. He worked as a publisher before undertaking overseas humanitarian work for the Red Cross movement and Lutheran World Federation. In Denmark he worked for the Royal Danish Automobile Club, his aid work took him to Austria, Mo... | Nørredam was born in Copenhagen in 1920 or 1921. He studied law at Copenhagen University, graduating in 1949. | [] | [
"Early life and education"
] | [
"1920s births",
"1965 deaths",
"Danish humanitarians",
"University of Copenhagen alumni",
"People from Copenhagen"
] |
projected-71484451-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B8rgen%20N%C3%B8rredam | Jørgen Nørredam | Career | Jørgen Nørredam (1920/1921-1965) was a Danish aid worker who died in a plane crash in Tanzania. He worked as a publisher before undertaking overseas humanitarian work for the Red Cross movement and Lutheran World Federation. In Denmark he worked for the Royal Danish Automobile Club, his aid work took him to Austria, Mo... | After graduation, Nørredam published booked and magazines. From 1956 to 1957, he worked in Austria, working for the Danish Red Cross, helping Hungarian refugees. In 1960, he led the Red Cross' food relief for Algerian refugees in Morocco. From 1960 to 1963, Nørredam was the chief delegate for the League of Red Cross So... | [] | [
"Career"
] | [
"1920s births",
"1965 deaths",
"Danish humanitarians",
"University of Copenhagen alumni",
"People from Copenhagen"
] |
projected-71484451-003 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B8rgen%20N%C3%B8rredam | Jørgen Nørredam | Death | Jørgen Nørredam (1920/1921-1965) was a Danish aid worker who died in a plane crash in Tanzania. He worked as a publisher before undertaking overseas humanitarian work for the Red Cross movement and Lutheran World Federation. In Denmark he worked for the Royal Danish Automobile Club, his aid work took him to Austria, Mo... | On 26th February 1965, Nørredam, and three-and-a-half-years old daughter, were killed when the plane they were travelling in crashed; his wife was severely injured and taken to a hospital in Dar es Salaam. Jørgen Nørredam was 44 years old at the time of his death.
Nørredam was posthumously awarded the Nansen Refugee A... | [] | [
"Death"
] | [
"1920s births",
"1965 deaths",
"Danish humanitarians",
"University of Copenhagen alumni",
"People from Copenhagen"
] |
projected-71484451-004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B8rgen%20N%C3%B8rredam | Jørgen Nørredam | References | Jørgen Nørredam (1920/1921-1965) was a Danish aid worker who died in a plane crash in Tanzania. He worked as a publisher before undertaking overseas humanitarian work for the Red Cross movement and Lutheran World Federation. In Denmark he worked for the Royal Danish Automobile Club, his aid work took him to Austria, Mo... | Category:1920s births
Category:1965 deaths
Category:Danish humanitarians
Category:University of Copenhagen alumni
Category:People from Copenhagen | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"1920s births",
"1965 deaths",
"Danish humanitarians",
"University of Copenhagen alumni",
"People from Copenhagen"
] |
projected-23579184-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozaku%20Station | Ozaku Station | Introduction | is a passenger railway station situated in the city of Hamura, Tokyo, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East). | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Railway stations in Tokyo",
"Railway stations in Japan opened in 1894",
"Hamura, Tokyo",
"Ōme Line"
] | |
projected-23579184-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozaku%20Station | Ozaku Station | Lines | is a passenger railway station situated in the city of Hamura, Tokyo, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East). | Ozaku Station is served by the Ōme Line, and is located 14.1 kilometers from the starting point of the line at Tachikawa Station. | [] | [
"Lines"
] | [
"Railway stations in Tokyo",
"Railway stations in Japan opened in 1894",
"Hamura, Tokyo",
"Ōme Line"
] |
projected-23579184-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozaku%20Station | Ozaku Station | Station layout | is a passenger railway station situated in the city of Hamura, Tokyo, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East). | This station consists of a two opposed ground-level side platforms serving two tracks, with an elevated station building above the tracks and then the platforms. The station is staffed. | [] | [
"Station layout"
] | [
"Railway stations in Tokyo",
"Railway stations in Japan opened in 1894",
"Hamura, Tokyo",
"Ōme Line"
] |
projected-23579184-004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozaku%20Station | Ozaku Station | History | is a passenger railway station situated in the city of Hamura, Tokyo, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East). | The station was first opened on 19 November 1894. With the privatization of Japanese National Railways (JNR) on 1 April 1987, the station came under the control of JR East. A new station building was completed in March 1993. | [] | [
"History"
] | [
"Railway stations in Tokyo",
"Railway stations in Japan opened in 1894",
"Hamura, Tokyo",
"Ōme Line"
] |
projected-23579184-005 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozaku%20Station | Ozaku Station | Passenger statistics | is a passenger railway station situated in the city of Hamura, Tokyo, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East). | In fiscal 2019, the station was used by an average of 16,111 passengers daily (boarding passengers only).
The passenger figures for previous years are as shown below. | [] | [
"Passenger statistics"
] | [
"Railway stations in Tokyo",
"Railway stations in Japan opened in 1894",
"Hamura, Tokyo",
"Ōme Line"
] |
projected-23579184-006 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozaku%20Station | Ozaku Station | Surrounding area | is a passenger railway station situated in the city of Hamura, Tokyo, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East). | Musashino Park | [] | [
"Surrounding area"
] | [
"Railway stations in Tokyo",
"Railway stations in Japan opened in 1894",
"Hamura, Tokyo",
"Ōme Line"
] |
projected-23579184-007 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozaku%20Station | Ozaku Station | See also | is a passenger railway station situated in the city of Hamura, Tokyo, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East). | List of railway stations in Japan | [] | [
"See also"
] | [
"Railway stations in Tokyo",
"Railway stations in Japan opened in 1894",
"Hamura, Tokyo",
"Ōme Line"
] |