Samsung

Android Go is the closest you can get to the stock version of Google's operating system on a non-Google phone -- it's Google's bloatskrieg against the irritating mass of third-party software that ships on many Android phones. It also includes tools to help manage data consumption for areas where your signal isn't always great or data is too expensive.

Google created it for regions with a high cost of living relative to income, which tends to go hand in hand with poor signal coverage. Into that market Samsung is launching its first Android Go phone, the entry-level Galaxy J2 Core.

Though only available in Malaysia and India at launch, Samsung does say it will expand to other markets in the future. Samsung didn't provide a price, but the higher-end J2 launched in April starts at 8,190 rupees, which is about $120, £90 or AU$160. The J2 Core will likely cost less.

Specs include:

5-inch, 960x540-pixel screen



8-megapixel f2.2 rear camera, 5-megapixel f2.2 front camera



1GB up to 8GB RAM



Exynos 7570 processor



Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n (2.4GHz), Bluetooth 4.2, USB 2.0



2,600-mAh battery



Android Oreo Go Edition



Samsung doesn't specify which networks it will run on, but the J2 runs on 2, 3 and 4G, so those are probably a good bet. That's an improvement over the J2 Pro, launched recently, which doesn't connect to any networks at all.