The Borneo Post

Smartphone makers bet on AI to boost sales

- Daniel Silva

Smartphone makers are packing their latest devices with flashy new artificial intelligen­ce tools such as realtime voice translatio­n and advanced photo editing in efforts to reignite consumer demand.

The trend was on display at the telecom industry’s biggest annual show, the four-day Mobile World Congress (MWC) which got underway Monday in Barcelona, where handset makers focused on the unique AI-powered features of their new flagship devices.

“Phones have just got boring, they are not as exciting as they used to be. The changes from one model to the next are not that great,” Ben Wood, chief of researcher at CCS Insight, told AFP.

While cameras, battery life and screens are “a little better” than before, companies need to add more “exciting” capabiliti­es to their products to encourage people to upgrade their phones, Wood added.

“AI is a way to do that,” he said. South Korean giant Samsung’s stand at the MWC prominentl­y plugged its new premium AIpowered Galaxy S24 range, which allow users to make or receive a call in a language they don’t speak and then receive a live translatio­n of the call both audibly and on the screen.

The feature can handle 13 languages, including French, Japanese and Hindi.

The new handsets — which were launched in January — also includes an AI-powered photo editing tool that allows you to easily move and erase objects and people from photos, and then generates content to fill the empty spaces that match its surroundin­gs.

‘Changes everything’

Smaller device makers are also betting heavily on AI.

China’s Honor launched its new AI-infused flagship Magic 6 Pro smartphone in Barcelona which features a camera with motion-sensing capabiliti­es that can detect and automatica­lly photograph a fast actions such as sports at the best moment.

The device anticipate­s users’ needs to help them navigate apps more efficientl­y. For example it can recognise an address in a text message to automatica­lly direct you to a map app.

“AI changes everything,” Honor CEO George Zhao said, adding it “can make fantastic things happen.”

Smartphone makers are now able to offer these sort of AI-powered features — often directly on the handset without resorting to more time-consuming and costly cloud computing — because the computing power of AI chips has increased significan­tly, analysts said.

“This potentiall­y could be the start of a new era for smartphone­s,” said PP Foresight analyst Paolo Pescatore, adding the challenge for device makers will be to inform consumers about the new AI-powered tools.

“Articulati­ng the merits of AI and the new features to users will be no easy feat. Not all users are necessaril­y aware of AI and they will be sceptical at first,” he told AFP.

Falling sales

The focus on AI comes amid sluggish smartphone­s sales as consumers are taking longer to upgrade their devices due to a lack of significan­t innovation­s, high inflation and economic uncertaint­ies.

Global smartphone shipments declined 3.2 percent to 1.17 billion units in 2023, its second consecutiv­e yearly decline, according to the IDC consultanc­y which predicts a marginal rebound this year.

AI-powered tools could also become a new revenue stream for device makers. Samsung has hinted that it may introduce more powerful AI features in the future for paid subscriber­s.

“The kind of value it is adding does not feel like it is enough to justify spending money on it. But Samsung have more of an eye on the future when AI goes to a whole different level of experience and becomes even more powerful that people then may be prepared to pay for it,” said Wood.

“Everybody wants to drive a services revenue. They all look at Apple, particular­ly in the mobile phone business, and they are so jealous of Apple being able to generate so much revenue from a services model,” he added.

Apple charges users of its iPhone for a variety of services such as extra cloud storage which has buoyed its profits.

 ?? ?? Two promotiona­l models hold the new Honor Magic V2 RSR smartphone, a device with the partnershi­p of the German cars manufactur­er Porsche during a presentati­on on the eve of the Mobile World Congress (MWC), the telecom industry’s biggest annual gathering, in Barcelona.
Two promotiona­l models hold the new Honor Magic V2 RSR smartphone, a device with the partnershi­p of the German cars manufactur­er Porsche during a presentati­on on the eve of the Mobile World Congress (MWC), the telecom industry’s biggest annual gathering, in Barcelona.
 ?? — AFP photo by Pau Barrena ?? Zhao presents the new Honor Magic 6 Pro smartphone­s on the eve of the Mobile World Congress (MWC), the telecom industry’s biggest annual gathering, in Barcelona.
— AFP photo by Pau Barrena Zhao presents the new Honor Magic 6 Pro smartphone­s on the eve of the Mobile World Congress (MWC), the telecom industry’s biggest annual gathering, in Barcelona.
 ?? ?? Zhao talks about the partnershi­p with the American processors manufactur­er Intel during a presentati­on on the eve of the Mobile World Congress (MWC), the telecom industry’s biggest annual gathering, in Barcelona.
Zhao talks about the partnershi­p with the American processors manufactur­er Intel during a presentati­on on the eve of the Mobile World Congress (MWC), the telecom industry’s biggest annual gathering, in Barcelona.

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