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If you missed out on seeing the reveal, we recently

If you missed out on seeing the reveal, we recently got a look at Samsung's next iteration of the Galaxy Tab, which will be available this fall. It will have a much larger display, an "edge display" that resembles a smartphone, and will be able to hold its own in both portrait and landscape modes.

Samsung does not release the exact list of features or specifications, but we're told they've already added a lot of features to the Tab. One feature that Samsung hasn't released is the Tab's large curved screen. The company has released two prototypes of the Tab, the Galaxy Tab 2. It's been reported that the Tab 2 will have a 1.2" screen, but we still don't know whether the screen will actually be a 2" or 3" screen. Samsung is already releasing the most recent version of the Galaxy Tab 3, the Tab 2. It's been reported that it will use a 5.5mm IPS display and the 3.7mm resolution (as opposed to a 4.7mm display) is also rumored for the Tab 3. It's been noted that the Tab 2 will use an 8-megapixel rear camera, and while that could be a big deal if it's the 2.3" model, that's pretty much all we know about it. The Tab 2 also won't be the first phone to use the Samsung Galaxy Tab 3.

If you're curious to see how this looks on display at Mobile World Congress, check out the video below, which can be streamed on YouTube.The UK's financial services industry, as well as the government, is considering an expansion of a tax credit for the use of online banking services.

A number of companies, including Royal Bank of Scotland, HSBC and the UK's biggest financial services group, HSBC UK, are offering a "tax credit for online banking services". The Credit for Online Banking Credit, which is due to run until May, will give the service a further five years of tax credit to help people make payments online, which will then be used for new business.

The British government has already made some of its own online banking services available to businesses, such as a scheme to allow people to withdraw £10 a week from their accounts, with one company offering "a free 3.5 years of tax credit for using online banking services".

The Scottish government has been planning a similar scheme for a long time, as it's the first of its kind in the UK, with the first being made possible

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