الخميس، 14 فبراير 2019

Behold: Samsung also working on Galaxy Tab S5e, renders leaked

Leaked renders have revealed that Samsung is working on a successor to the Galaxy Tab S4. The new tablet is apparently called Galaxy Tab S5e, so we may see the company releasing two models. The big question here is whether Samsung will be launching this new tablet at the Galaxy S10 launch next week. Probably not, as we have seen no leaks or reports hinting at a launch alongside the Galaxy S10 and the Galaxy Tab S4 came out just six months ago.

Of course, it’s possible the ‘e’ in the tablet’s name means it’s a slightly upgraded version of the Galaxy Tab S4, so Samsung could launch the Tab S5e now and then follow up with a Tab S5 a few months later as the true Galaxy Tab S4 successor. Details are scarce at the moment, but from the renders, it seems Samsung has managed to make the new tablet even thinner. We can see the new One UI icons on the display, and at the back, the camera has been moved to the top left corner. The AKG branding remains as is.

What do you make of the Galaxy Tab S5e in the render below?

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Samsung app confirms three new wearables for Galaxy S10 launch

Samsung has officially confirmed that the Galaxy Watch Active, Galaxy Fit, and Galaxy Buds will launch alongside the Galaxy S10 on February 20. Well, the company hasn’t released a statement or anything, but an update to the Galaxy Wearable app now offers users the option to pair their phone with the three new wearables in addition to existing ones like the Galaxy Watch and Gear Sport. All three wearables are likely to be part of Galaxy S10 pre-order promotions.

As we had exclusively reported, the Galaxy Fit will be available in two variants, and one of them is called Galaxy Fit e according to the Galaxy Wearable app. The Galaxy Wearable app also confirms that the Galaxy Watch Active will be smaller than the Gear Sport, as we had revealed in one of our exclusive reports, and lack a bezel ring. With the Galaxy S10, the foldable phone, and these new wearable devices, this year’s Unpacked event will be extremely busy and perhaps the biggest yet in terms of how many devices Samsung will unveil.

The new Galaxy Wearable app update is available now, and you can also find the APK for the newest version in our database.

samsung wearables

Thanks for the tip, Sebastian!

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SamMobile Daily Recap, February 14, 2019: Galaxy S9 update, Galaxy A50 features, and more

We publish a lot of stories on a daily basis. Unfortunately, the majority of news breaks during our European hours of operation, which makes it difficult for our readers in the US (and other regions) to keep up. However, we think we’ve come up with a fantastic solution — a daily recap.

Here’s what we covered today.

Phones

10 years of Samsung Galaxy S flagships: Looking back at the Galaxy S4!

Galaxy A10, Galaxy A30, and Galaxy A50 specs and features leaked

Galaxy M20 and its notched display on their way to Europe

Galaxy S10+ in Luxurious Ceramic White revealed in leaked render

Firmware News

Galaxy S9 update brings February patch, Night mode schedule, and more

General

Samsung recreates ‘Over The Horizon’ for the Galaxy S10

Tablets

Galaxy Tab Active 2 launched in India, available from mid-March

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Galaxy S10+ in Luxurious Ceramic White revealed in leaked render

A newly leaked render is giving us our first possible look at the white version of the Galaxy S10+‘ ceramic variant. We have seen the Galaxy S10 in all of the main color options in the last couple of days, and we also saw an image showing the regular black and ceramic black versions of the S10+ side by side. The Luxurious Ceramic White version has been revealed today and, well, there’s not a lot to be said just based on the render.

Compared to the Prism White Galaxy S10+, the ceramic white version is quite plain at the back, as expected. It may be a better option than the regular white for some, as the latter has greenish hues thanks to the gradient coloring. The ceramic version looks classier, but sadly, the ceramic variants are only going to be available for the Galaxy S10+. A recent listing by a Vietnamese retailer suggested we would see the ceramic version in an 8GB+512GB configuration, but most rumors point at only the 12GB+1TB configuration getting the ceramic back.

You can see the Luxurious Ceramic White and Prism White models next to each other in the image above. We have also added the render of the ceramic black model below so you can see how it compares to the white variant. If you haven’t already, do check out what you can expect from the Galaxy S10 in terms of specs and features and also read up on our memories and experience with previous Galaxy S flagships.

Ceramic Black Galaxy S10+

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Galaxy Tab Active 2 launched in India, available from mid-March

Samsung has launched its latest rugged tablet, the Galaxy Tab Active 2, in India. The MIL-STD-810 certified device is an ultra-durable tablet made to enable efficient work under tough conditions. It is, however, a fairly dated product, having been announced back in October 2017.

Nevertheless, the device can work in extreme conditions with ease, thanks to the IP68 certification. It provides water resistance of up to 1.5m water for 30 minutes and can operate in temperatures ranging from -20°C to 71°C.

Available for purchase from mid-March

The Galaxy Tab Active 2 is an ideal candidate for use in places like construction zones, snowy terrains, or during heavy rains. The device works even when the screen is wet, or with thick gloves on. It comes with Knox security, and hence can be used for storing sensitive information.

As for specifications, the Galaxy Tab Active 2 is powered by a 1.6GHz Exynos 7880 processor and features an 8-inch HD+ LCD display of 1200×800 pixel resolution. It gets 3GB RAM and 16GB internal storage, expandable up to 256GB via a microSD card. The device houses a 4,450mAh replaceable battery for power. For optics, the tablet boasts an 8-megapixel rear and a 5-megapixel front camera. Additional features include a fingerprint sensor, Bixby Home, and a rugged S Pen. There’s also a Pogo Pin connector, giving users multiple connectivity options.

Initially launched with Android 7.1 Nougat, the Galaxy Tab Active 2 has now been upgraded to Android 8 Oreo. However, it does not feature in Samsung’s latest roadmap for the Android Pie (One UI) update, after being named initially. Therefore, it’s not yet clear if the device is eligible for the Android Pie update or not.

Samsung has priced the Galaxy Tab Active 2 at ₹50,990 (roughly $720) in India. The tablet will be available for purchase from mid-March.

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Galaxy S9 update brings February patch, Night mode schedule, and more

The Galaxy S9 and Galaxy S9+ are getting a new software update that brings the February 2019 security patch and adds an important option for One UI’s Night mode feature that was missing from the stable Android Pie builds. Yes, you can now set a schedule for Night mode from the display settings. The update also improves Wi-Fi stability, and we hope this is a fix for the poorer Wi-Fi range the Galaxy S9 has on Android Pie, especially for 5GHz networks.

In addition to Wi-Fi, the update improves NFC, email, and gesture stability. We’re assuming the gestures are the full-screen gestures that one can use on Pie instead of the on-screen navigation keys. With this update, the Galaxy S9 also becomes the first flagship to be getting the February 2019 security patch (at least as an official update and not as part of beta software). Fingers crossed Samsung will release a similar update for the Galaxy Note 9 soon, as the Note 9 also faces some of the same issues as the S9 and S9+ on Android Pie.

The new update comes with software version G960FXXU2CSB3 and G965FXXU2CSB3 for the S9 and S9+ respectively. It’s a 350 MB+ download over the air and is currently rolling out in Germany, though availability should expand to other markets soon. To get the update, open the Settings app on your S9 or S9+, tap Software update, then select the Download and install option. Can’t download the update over the air? Just download the new firmware from our database and flash it on your phone using a Windows PC, or try Samsung’s Smart Switch software.

Received the new Galaxy S9 or S9+ update yet? Let us know if you see anything new or different once the update has installed!

  • Model: SM-G960F
  • Dimensions: 147.7 x 68.7 x 8.5mm
  • Display: 5.8” (146.5mm) Super AMOLED
  • CPU: Exynos 9810
  • Camera: 12 MP, CMOS OIS (F1.5/F2.4)
  • Model: SM-G965F
  • Dimensions: 157.7 x 73.8 x 8.5 mm
  • Display: 6.2” (158.1mm) Super AMOLED
  • CPU: Exynos 9810
  • Camera: 12 MP, CMOS Dual OIS (F1.5/F2.4) & Telephoto: 12MP AF F2.4)

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10 years of Samsung Galaxy S flagships: Looking back at the Galaxy S4!

Welcome to part four of our 10 years of Samsung Galaxy S flagship series, in which we here at SamMobile talk about our experiences and memories of each of the nine Galaxy S flagships that have come before the Galaxy S10. Today, we look back at the Galaxy S4, the best-selling Galaxy S flagship of all time. The Galaxy S4 was partly an improvement over the not-so-attractive design of the Galaxy S III and it added tons of new software features, many of them gesture-based.

The S4 could show you a preview of photos in the gallery if it detected your finger hovering over the screen, pause videos for you if you looked away (an extension of Smart Stay introduced with the S III), and scroll through webpages by tracking the movement of your eyes. Not everyone took kindly to all these gestures, but for the most part, they did make the Galaxy S4 unique in the smartphone market at the time. The Galaxy S4 was also the first time Samsung used a Snapdragon processor in some markets, and the S4 was also the first smartphone ever to support LTE-Advanced (LTE-A) networks, although Samsung released a slightly modified variant to enable LTE-A support.

What are our fondest memories of the Galaxy S4? Read on to find out, and don’t forget to let us know your thoughts and memories about the Galaxy S4 down in the comments section afterwards!

Danny Dorresteijn

What I remember about the Galaxy S4 is that it had a shiny back but felt impressively compact in the hand, especially moving from the Galaxy S III back then. The Galaxy S4 was Samsung’s fastest-selling Galaxy smartphone, and literally everything about it felt awesome. Not just the design; the software was great as well. That light flare unlock effect is still fresh in my mind, but perhaps the thing I remember the most is when Google sent us a takedown notice when we published the stock Android ROM for the Galaxy S4’s Google Play Edition ahead of the phone’s launch. Great times, and both Samsung and SamMobile have grown a lot in the years since thanks to the success of the Galaxy S4.

Martin Reinders

The Galaxy S4 is a phone I can’t remember much about, yet it was the best-selling Samsung phone ever. The only thing I can remember is that bezel on the phone chipped quite easily, but it was quite sleek. I lost the phone during work (yeah, I even had the original Galaxy S stolen from me), and overall, my feelings for the S4 were rather positive.

Michel Groenheijde

To me, the Galaxy S4 represents all that is right and potentially wrong with Samsung. It gave us our first Full HD AMOLED display, which was absolutely awesome at that time, as millions squinted their eyes in an attempt to see individual pixels. The device was relatively compact, and Samsung kept it updated until deep into 2017, four years after its initial release. Still, the S4 was also symptomatic of that other side of Samsung.

The Galaxy S4’s Smart Scroll and Smart Pause features were launched to much fanfare, but proved gimmicky at best. Nobody I know actually used them in real life, for the simple reason that they just didn’t make using the phone easier. Still, these features showcased the innovative Samsung I love, even when it frequently spawned ideas nobody asked for. Since 2013 Samsung has gotten better at not releasing useless functions, while also becoming more conservative on the innovation front.

Adnan Farooqui

What I remember most about the Galaxy S4 are the handful of features that many were quick to relegate to the gimmick bin. Features like Smart Scroll and Smart Pause were trumped up to be more useful than they actually were. It’s a shame that they overshadowed much of what was good about this phone. These early phones from Samsung had a bit of a bloatware issue as well, an issue that was truly alive and well on the Galaxy S4. That Full HD AMOLED display made it worth buying this device, though.

Abhijeet Mishra

I’m with Martin on this one, as in I can’t really recall much about the S4. I guess it’s because it simply didn’t have as many as the controversies as the Galaxy S3. Of course, I didn’t buy or use the phone as my personal device, so that’s another reason I can’t say much about it. Oh, and I hadn’t joined SamMobile yet and was fixated on the Google Nexus phones thanks to their affordable price tags, so I had also stopped keeping track of non-Nexus devices for a while.


Don’t forget: We want to hear about your fond memories and experience with the Galaxy S4, so go ahead and get a discussion going in the comments!

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Samsung recreates ‘Over The Horizon’ for the Galaxy S10

Samsung recreates its “Over The Horizon” brand theme every now and then when a new Galaxy S flagship gets released. Continuing the tradition, the company has reimagined the tune for its tenth anniversary flagship as well. The new tune will be featured as the default tune of the Galaxy S10 lineup, and possibly every Galaxy device coming later this year.

Inspired by the beauty of the oceans

Samsung’s Over the Horizon is certainly one of the most recognised brand themes of this era. The tune has been reimagined in a variety of genres over the years, from rock to new age, to fusion jazz and more. This year’s version is a classical crossover which, Samsung says, is inspired by the beauty of the oceans. As the company puts it, the new tune evokes “the seas’ vast scale and indescribable majesty through a combination of soothing synthesizers, strings and woodwinds.”

The new ringtone’s debut video was filmed off the shore of Sipadan Island in Malaysia. The video follows Ai Futaki, a renowned conservationist and Guinness World Record-holding freediver. It was shot by acclaimed nature filmmakers James Brickell and Simon Enderby, and the tune was composed by Academy Award-winning composer Steven Price. It was recorded at London’s Abbey Road Studios, which is popular for being the home to many recording sessions by The Beatles and other artists/bands.

This is the tenth anniversary of Samsung’s Galaxy S series, and it has got to be something special. The Galaxy S10 lineup certainly looks worth all the hype, and so should be the foldable smartphone. We shall see how ‘the future unfolds’ on February 20.

Check out the video below, and hit the source link just after the video to listen to the part of the theme that will be used as the ringtone on the S10. You can also listen to all previous iterations of the theme at the source link.

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Galaxy M20 and its notched display on their way to Europe

Samsung could soon launch the Galaxy M20 in some European markets. The Galaxy M20 was first launched in India and then made its way to some Asian markets, such as Indonesia. Now, Galaxy M20 firmware for markets like Germany, Spain and Italy are showing up on our database, so Samsung is certainly preparing to make it more widely available, even if the launch may take some time to actually happen.

What will be interesting to see is how much the Galaxy M20 will cost in Europe. In India, Samsung is only selling the M20 through online stores through a flash sale model, in which limited stocks of the phone are put for sale every few days. Samsung also manufactures the phone locally in India, and all of those factors allow it to sell the phone at an impressively low price. Of course, Samsung might not need to price the M20 aggressively in Europe, as it isn’t facing crazy competition in that continent compared to markets like India.

And even with not-so-aggressive pricing, the Galaxy M20 should see plenty of buyers, as it’s an excellent budget phone. An ultra-wide camera and a 5,000 mAh battery are the highlights, and so is the Infinity-V display with a waterdrop notch. The M20 doesn’t exactly do great in any particular department, but it offers a good overall experience, as you’ll find out in our Galaxy M20 review.

Would you be interested in picking up a Galaxy M20 if launches in your country?

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Galaxy A10, Galaxy A30, and Galaxy A50 specs and features leaked

A detailed spec sheet for three of Samsung’s 2019 Galaxy A series phone has leaked online, courtesy of the folks over at MySmartPrice. These devices are the Galaxy A10, Galaxy A30, and the Galaxy A50. The first two are expected to launch in India alongside the Galaxy A20 at the end of the first quarter of 2019, while the Galaxy A50 should be one of the remaining six A series phones that Samsung is preparing to launch in the first half of the year.

As expected, the Galaxy A10 has the most humble specs here, even missing out on a dual rear camera despite Samsung putting a dual camera setup on the considerably cheap Galaxy M10. The A50 could have a triple-camera setup similar to the Galaxy A7 (2018), with an ultra-wide sensor joining the regular and depth sensors. The A30 will have the Galaxy M20’s rear camera setup and the A10 will have to make do with a single 13MP rear camera. At the front, there’s a 25MP, 16MP, and 5MP camera on the A50, A30, and A10 respectively.

4,000 mAh batteries, Infinity-U displays

One spec common to these devices seems to be the battery, which is a 4,000 mAh unit and gets fast charging support on the A30 and A50. An in-display fingerprint sensor has been rumored for the Galaxy A50, and it is being reiterated here. The Galaxy A10 won’t have a fingerprint sensor, while the A30 could have its fingerprint reader mounted on the back. What’s interesting here is that the A30 and A50 will apparently get an Infinity-U display, not an Infinity-V display that adorns the Galaxy M10 and Galaxy M20.

Both Infinity-U and Infinity-V display feature small notches at the center, so it looks like the one differentiating factor is that the former is a Super AMOLED panel, as suggested in the leak. As far as sizes are concerned, we’re looking at 6.4-inch Full HD+ displays on the A30 and A50 and a 6.2-inch HD+ display on the A10. Under the hood, the A50 will get the new Exynos 9610 SoC. The A30 and A10 will be powered by the Exynos 7884B and Exynos 7904 chipsets, both of which are spin-offs of the Exynos 7885 that debuted with the Galaxy A8 (2018).

As far as the designs are concerned, it looks like all three phones will be less than 8mm thick, with gradient colors for the A30 and A50. As we had exclusively revealed, Samsung could introduce white as a color option with these devices. An interesting thing to note is that the three phones seem to have plastic body, not a glass one like previous Galaxy A series phones. That’s probably a cost-saving measure, and we should see glass on the higher-end new A series phones, like the Galaxy A70 and A90.

Android Pie with Bixby support, but no Samsung Pay

On the software front, it looks like the three phones will have Bixby support, although it remains to be seen if it’s the complete version with a dedicated physical key or just Bixby Home and Reminders (the A10 will probably have the latter only). As the many benchmark appearances have confirmed, these phones will all run Android 9.0 Pie out of the box, so we’ll see them hit retail shelves after the Galaxy S10 has gone on sale.

Like the big Galaxy S10 leak from earlier this week, this one does seems to be rather plausible. Of course, it’s best to keep the proverbial salt container handy with any such leaks until something official comes up.

  • Model: SM-A205F
  • Dimensions: 158.5 x 74.5 x 7.7mm
  • Display: 6.4"(162.5mm)
  • CPU: Exynos 7904
  • Camera: 16 MP, CMOS F1.9 & 5MP, CMOS F2.2 Ultrawide

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