USA TODAY US Edition

SAMSUNG DIALS UP WINNER WITH S8,

GALAXY S8 LIKELY TO MAKE IPHONE OWNERS ENVIOUS

- Ed Baig ebaig@usatoday.com USA TODAY

Samsung’s winning new smartphone is ahead of the curve

Samsung ’s Galaxy S8 and its larger sibling the S8+ are strong new smartphone­s I can highly recommend.

The devices, which hit stores Friday (for around $720 on up), aren’t perfect. Cool-sounding features such as iris and facial recognitio­n were extremely spotty for me. Water and dust resistance are great, but other phones now share these traits. And the vocal component of its new Bixby artificial intelligen­ce assistant, a rival to Apple’s Siri, is delayed.

Instead, what sold me after using the S8+ for several days was an engineerin­g feat that has resulted in a very simple but powerful solution for users: a wide display that stretches from one curved edge of the relatively narrow body to the other. This “bezel-lite” display gives users a lot of app real estate without the bulk and ends up meaning more to our enjoyment of a phone than we probably realize.

In this latest version of its popular Galaxy flagship phone, the first major release since Samsung launched its ultimately disastrous, recalled Galaxy Note 7, Samsung ’s designers produced a phablet-sized 5.8-inch display on the S8 that’s thinner, narrower, about the same weight and just a tad taller than the S7 it replaces. In other words, the S8 feels like your typical-sized handset, while the S7, despite similar dimensions, had a considerab­ly smaller 5.1-inch display with a half-million fewer pixels.

The S8+ has a 6.2-inch screen, compared to the 5.5-inch display on the S7 Edge. It’s roughly as tall as the iPhone 7 Plus.

Thought of another way: The two latest phones have a screen-to-body ratio — that is the percentage of the front of the phone that’s taken up by the screen — that exceeds 83%. The viewing area of the S8 (compared to the S7) expands by 36%, opening up a more immersive experience, depending on what you’re doing.

IS APPLE NEXT?

There are some trade-offs. Besides dramatical­ly reducing the top and bottom bezels of the phones, Samsung ditched the physical home button in favor of pressure-sensitive home buttons beneath the screen. That works fine. But the fingerprin­t sensor —yep, still another way to unlock the device — was moved to the back, and while I wouldn’t normally object, its off-center placement next to the camera on the rear feels like a design boo-boo. My finger frequently landed on the camera instead of the fingerprin­t sensor. (As with other Android phones, you also can unlock the device by drawing a designated pattern on the screen or by entering a convention­al PIN or passcode.)

Both new phones have snappy Octa core processing and eyepleasin­g Quad HD (2960 x 1440) screen resolution­s. Both also let you surface secondary content on the curved edge of the display (close contacts, stocks, icons for frequently used apps, etc.). The S7 Edge offered this feature; the S7 did not.

It’s worth noting that Samsung ’s South Korean rival LG has embarked on a similar screen path on its own very fine new flagship, the G6. My assumption is Apple will follow a near all-screen strategy when it gets around to releasing the 10th anniversar­y iPhone, likely in September.

Another tradeoff to the unconventi­onal screen size is that some widescreen video may be “pillar-boxed,” or bordered by bars on the sides. Meanwhile, some widescreen video I shot on the S8+ looked squished when viewed vertically.

FACIAL UNLOCK? NOT QUITE

The S8’s promised facial recognitio­n, or the ability to wake up the device by staring into the screen, didn’t quite pan out as advertised. You first must “register” your face using the front-facing camera on the phone by holding the handset between 8 and 20 inches from your face and positionin­g it in a circle that appears on the screen. But even though I was successful­ly able to register my mug, my face under less-thanideal lighting conditions wasn’t recognized, and even sometimes when the light seemed right.

I had far better results with an iris unlock feature that uses an infrared scanner and works better, Samsung says, away from direct sun. Iris scanning was a feature on the Note 7, and it is in fact more secure than facial recognitio­n. You obviously cannot exploit the iris and facial unlock features at the same time.

I was generally pleased with the quality of pictures and videos I captured and found I could comfortabl­y shoot with one hand, at least when shooting horizontal­ly. The quality of selfies (on the 8-megapixel front camera) were impressive. On the rear: dual pixel 12-megapixels sensor.

The phones come with 64GB; you can bolster storage through optional microSD cards. There’s USB-C and also still a standard headphone jack — looking at you, Apple — and support for Samsung ’s Gear VR, a product category Apple has yet to embrace.

Alas, the glass enclosure on Samsung ’s new phones are magnets for smudges.

BIXBY LACKS A VOICE

There’s already confusion surroundin­g what Bixby can do. It relies on artificial intelligen­ce to serve as the phone’s digital assistant.

But the voice agent feature that promises an experience akin to Siri doesn’t arrive until later this spring, thus Bixby Voice was not made available for this review. Of course, as an Android phone, you can summon the Google Assistant.

I could test other Bixby traits. But to be fair, Samsung was still updating Bixby during my review period.

The S8 and S8+ are capable of fast wireless charging on an optional wireless pad, as on other Galaxy phones. The battery on the S8+ lasted all day into evening. And I never detected even the slightest bit of overheatin­g while charging or using the device — a relief after the Galaxy Note 7 explosions.

But in the end I’m bullish on bezels. Reducing their size, that is.

 ?? LEE JIN-MAN, AP ??
LEE JIN-MAN, AP
 ?? MARK LENNIHAN, AP ?? The phablet-sized Samsung Galaxy S8, top, and S8+ have reduced bezels.
MARK LENNIHAN, AP The phablet-sized Samsung Galaxy S8, top, and S8+ have reduced bezels.
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