Samsung and LG offered a few more details on two of their upcoming products, the Samsung Galaxy S 4G smartphone and the LG G-Slate tablet. The specs on the Galaxy S 4G will be roughly on par with other smartphones due out at the same time, but the G-Slate will stand out for its adoption of Android 3.0 Honeycomb, 3D video playback, and 3D video recording.

The G-Slate's screen will require glasses to utilize the 8.9-inch screen's 3D capabilities, though LG hasn't said whether they will be active or passive. The tablet will have an NVIDIA Tegra 2 processor and dual-core CPU, and will be capable of 720p video playback on its own screen as well as video output of up to 1080p (also in 3D, if you have the external screen to support it). Two cameras on the back of the G-Slate will allow users to record 1080p 3D video, and one will double as a 5-megapixel camera with flash. A 2-megapixel camera on the front will allow for video chatting.

The Galaxy S 4G will be shipping with Android 2.2 Froyo, instead of the newer 2.3 Gingerbread. It will sport the coveted Super AMOLED screen, a 1GHz Cortex A8 Hummingbird processor, a 5-megapixel camera, and will come with a 16GB memory card. Pretty standard for a smartphone, but it will also pack an ST-Ericsson M5720 HSPA+ modem that, according to Samsung, will allow for download speeds of up to 21Mbps.

Both devices will be available on T-Mobile, with the Galaxy S 4G coming out sometime in February. T-Mobile pegged the G-Slate's release window as "spring," though LG has said the tablet will be out by March in order to compete with the other hotly anticipated Honeycomb gadget, the Motorola Xoom.