Technology
Get a free pair of Galaxy Buds when you purchase a Galaxy S10 Lite
TL;DR: As of May 1, Samsung is offering a free pair of Galaxy Buds when you pick up a Galaxy S10 Lite smartphone.
With the recent release of the iPhone SE, lots of people are looking to get a new phone — specifically one that won’t cost them $1,000 and upwards. While the SE might be the best budget smartphone you can get right now, it kind of leaves Android users in the dark.
But we haven’t heard of Apple throwing in a free pair of AirPods with the SE — Samsung is doing just that with the Galaxy S10 Lite for a limited time (not with AirPods; Galaxy Buds), and it’s only $399.99. That’s about $150 in savings right there.
The Galaxy S10 Lite is a great budget smartphone option — it uses the same powerful processor that powers the more expensive Galaxy S10, includes 128 GB of storage, 8GB of RAM, a pro-quality camera, and a crisps edge-to-edge AMOLED display. The Galaxy Buds are the perfect counterpart to the S10 Lite, featuring 22 hours of battery life, seamless Bluetooth pairing, and ambient noise filters. Oh yeah, and they’re free.
Take advantage of this deal while it lasts — pick up an unlocked Samsung Galaxy S10 Lite and get a pair of Galaxy Buds free of charge.
-
Business6 days ago
UnitedHealth says Change hackers stole health data on ‘substantial proportion of people in America’
-
Business5 days ago
Tesla’s new growth plan is centered around mysterious cheaper models
-
Business6 days ago
Mood.camera is an iOS app that feels like using a retro analog camera
-
Business4 days ago
Xaira, an AI drug discovery startup, launches with a massive $1B, says it’s ‘ready’ to start developing drugs
-
Business4 days ago
UK probes Amazon and Microsoft over AI partnerships with Mistral, Anthropic, and Inflection
-
Entertainment7 days ago
Furious Watcher fans are blasting it as ‘greedy’ over paid subscription service
-
Business6 days ago
Two widow founders launch DayNew, a social platform for people dealing with grief and trauma
-
Entertainment5 days ago
Tesla’s in trouble. Is Elon Musk the problem?