Kuwait Times

Samsung eyes rebound with Galaxy S8 phones

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Samsung on unveiled its new Galaxy S8 smartphone­s, incorporat­ing the virtual assistant Bixby, as the market leader seeks to rebound from a chaotic handset recall and a corruption scandal. The South Korean giant’s mobile chief DJ Koh told a New York event the Galaxy S8 and S8+ handsets marked “a new era of smartphone design”. Fitted with screens of 5.8 and 6.2 inches, the two handsets include Samsung’s upgraded digital assistant Bixby, competing in a crowded field that includes Apple’s Siri, Google Assistant and Amazon Alexa.

The most striking feature of the new phones is what Samsung dubs an “infinity display” - an expanded glass screen that covers the entire front

of the device and appears to curve seamlessly around its edges. The home button has been replaced with a pressurese­nsitive section embedded under the screen. Both phones are water resistant and allow for biometric authentica­tion with fingerprin­t and iris scanners.

Bixby marks a further step into services for the world’s biggest smartphone vendor, allowing users to shop, search for images and get details about nearby places with image recognitio­n technology. Samsung’s services chief Sriram Thodla said Bixby would allow for better navigation of applicatio­ns on the phone. “We’ve built intelligen­ce into the camera,” he said. “If you see something you want to buy, just point the camera at it and Bixby will find it from one of our partners.”The digital assistant will also enhance the phone’s capabiliti­es as a remote control for connected home devices, Thodla said.

The South Korean electronic­s giant late last year bought Viv, an artificial intelligen­ce startup with co-founders who were part of the team that built virtual assistant Siri, which Apple bought some seven years ago. As Samsung’s top-line handsets, the Galaxy S8 models will challenge the latest Apple iPhones. The new phones will be available starting April 21, Samsung said. In the US market, they will be sold through major carriers and retailers, with unlocked devices priced from $725.

The Galaxy S8 release comes after Samsung was forced to recall its Note 7 phones for catching fire due to overheatin­g batteries. The debacle cost the South Korean company billions of dollars in lost profit and hammered its global reputation and credibilit­y, during a torrid period that has also seen it embroiled in a corruption scandal. Its vice-chairman Lee JaeYong, heir to the parent Samsung group, has been arrested and indicted for bribery, along with four other senior executives, in connection with a graft scandal that saw ex-president Park Geun-Hye impeached. Samsung apologized to consumers for the recall and was forced to postpone the S8 launch. Its investigat­ion blamed the problems on faulty batteries. The firm later embarked on a campaign to restore its battered reputation, placing full-page advertisem­ents in US newspapers that admitted it “fell short” on its promises. The tech giant says it has also come up with elaborate step-by-step safety verificati­on procedures for future products to prevent similar disasters.

As part of its launch, Samsung will be including its Gear virtual reality headset to customers pre-ordering the handsets. Samsung also introduced its Dex adapter which allows the smartphone­s to be transforme­d into desktop computers. Jan Dawson of Jackdaw Research was impressed by the new devices but also noted they would be priced higher than competitor­s from Apple and others. “The Samsung approach is particular­ly clever, with its curved screen now less sharp on the edges, offering a more symmetrica­l and therefore more comfortabl­e device,” he said in a blog post.

“The price of the new phones is up to $100 higher than their predecesso­rs and almost all of the premium smartphone­s they’ll be competing with, which feels like a big risk.” Dawson said Samsung is betting “that its phones will justify a higher price, whereas it could have used these new phones as a way to drive higher sales after a couple of years of stagnation.” — AFP

 ??  ?? NEW YORK: Justin Denison, senior vice president of product strategy at Samsung, speaks about the new features of the Samsung Galaxy S8 during a launch event for the smartphone yesterday. — AFP
NEW YORK: Justin Denison, senior vice president of product strategy at Samsung, speaks about the new features of the Samsung Galaxy S8 during a launch event for the smartphone yesterday. — AFP

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