الأحد، 5 يوليو 2020

Galaxy Fold 2 to come bundled with 25W fast charger

Samsung is expected to announce four new high-end smartphones—Galaxy Fold 2, Galaxy Note 20, Galaxy Note 20 Ultra, and Galaxy Z Flip 5G—next month. The design and features of a few of these phones have been leaked ahead of the official announcement, but a few minor details were still missing. Now, the Galaxy Fold 2 5G has passed through China’s 3C certification process, revealing its charger’s specifications.

The 5G variant of the Galaxy Fold 2 with model number SM-F9160 has received the 3C certification, and the supporting documents reveal that the foldable smartphone from Samsung will come bundled with the EP-TA800 charger. The charger has a maximum power output of 9V and 2.27A or 11V and 2.25A, resulting in a total power output of 25W. This is the same charger that comes bundled with Samsung’s other high-end and mid-range smartphones, including the Galaxy S20 series, Galaxy Note 10 series, and the Galaxy A71.

A 25W charger is a step up from the first-generation Galaxy Fold’s 15W fast charger. It was revealed earlier that the Galaxy Fold 2 will come equipped with two batteries (2,275mAh and 2,090mAh), equalling a combined battery capacity of 4,365AmAh. A recent report had claimed that Samsung could launch the Galaxy Fold 2 in only a 5G variant. The Snapdragon 865+ processor could power the second-generation Galaxy Fold device.

Samsung Galaxy Fold 2 (SM-F9160) 25W Fast Charger EP-TA800

Developing…

The post Galaxy Fold 2 to come bundled with 25W fast charger appeared first on SamMobile.



from SamMobile https://ift.tt/2VPzpcE
via IFTTT

Galaxy Watch 3 support pages go live on Samsung India website

Samsung’s next flagship smartwatch, the Galaxy Watch 3, is expected to go official later this month. We had exclusively leaked its specifications last month, and the smartwatch’s images have been leaked as well. Now, traces of the Galaxy Watch 3 have appeared on Samsung’s own website, seemingly confirming that the wearable device will launch soon.

Support pages for SM-R845F and SM-R850 have been found on Samsung India’s website. These model numbers correspond to 45mm and 41mm variants of the Galaxy Watch 3. The existence of these pages confirms that the 41mm and 45mm versions of the smartwatch will be launched in India. The South Korean tech giant plans to launch stainless steel and titanium variants of the Galaxy Watch 3, and there would be Wi-Fi only and Wi-Fi + LTE versions of the smartwatch as well.

The Galaxy Watch 3 features a circular Super AMOLED display and an MIL-STD-810G compliant design with IP68 certification for dust and 5 ATM water resistance. The 41mm version of the watch will have a 1.2-inch screen, while the 45mm version sports a 1.4-inch screen. It will also feature Gorilla Glass DX for screen protection. The wearable device will run Tizen OS 5.5 and it will have 1GB RAM and 8GB storage.

Samsung will equip the Galaxy Watch 3 with all the activity and health tracking features such as blood pressure monitoring, heart-rate tracking, ECG, sleep tracking, and more. Connectivity features of the smartwatch include LTE (in some variants), GPS, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.0, and NFC. The 41mm version of the device will be powered by a 247mAh battery, while the 45mm version will come packed with a 340mAh battery.

Samsung Galaxy Watch 3 SM-R845F Support Page India Samsung Galaxy Watch 3 SM-R850 Support Page India

The post Galaxy Watch 3 support pages go live on Samsung India website appeared first on SamMobile.



from SamMobile https://ift.tt/3f3A0iF
via IFTTT

Samsung’s honeymoon period in 5G smartphone market could be ending

Samsung had a surprisingly easy run in the early 5G smartphone race but its market position is about to get much less comfortable, some prominent analysts predict. While the still-ongoing coronavirus pandemic posed an indubitable setback to global adoption of 5G-ready mobile devices throughout the first half of the year, the market should manage to recover some momentum in the final six months of 2020. More importantly, it’s likely to do so at Samsung’s expense. The Korean company has so far encountered little resistance in the U.S. and some other key markets expected to evolve into early 5G device strongholds.

With that said, between Apple preparing to launch the first 5G iPhone generation and Huawei regrouping in the aftermath of the latest sanctions from the Trump administration, the global 5G smartphone market is about to become way more competitive in a matter of months, if not weeks.

Both Apple and Huawei expected to beat Samsung in 2020 5G race

5G devices are expected to account for 15% of this year’s global smartphone sales, as per a newly published Strategy Analytics report. In terms of units, the research firm has that percentage pegged at 234 million devices, an enormous spike compared to 18.6 million estimated to have been sold in 2019. The same source has Huawei as the favorite to win this year’s 5G smartphone sales race. The Chinese conglomerate is expected to seize approximately 27.3% of the market with nearly 65 million 5G handset sales in total.

Strategy Analytics expects Apple to seize the second-largest piece of the next-gen smartphone pie amounting to 21.4% of the market. Today’s forecast has Samsung coming in third with a 17.8% industry share, or about 41.5 million sales. The company’s medium-term outlook is even more pessimistic about Samsung’s overall prospects in the 5G handset space, estimating the firm’s share will hover around the 15% mark in 2021. Granted, that would still be enough for a podium finish, which is hardly a terrible consolation prize given how the market is expected to grow to 600 million 5G device sales come next year.

With that said, Samsung can’t afford to rest on its laurels regardless of the niche; had the U.S. government not targeted Huawei in recent times, Samsung would have already lost its once unassailable position of the world’s largest smartphone brand in 2020. Some industry watchers even claim this ranking switch already happened earlier this year, albeit only briefly. As for the global 5G race, in particular, Samsung’s long-term prospects are extremely dependent on how eagerly developing nations with massive potential – India, most of all – will embrace the fifth generation of mobile networks, Strategy Analytics concluded.

The post Samsung’s honeymoon period in 5G smartphone market could be ending appeared first on SamMobile.



from SamMobile https://ift.tt/2NTtLSu
via IFTTT

I’m likely to buy the Galaxy Note 20 Ultra for these features alone

The Galaxy Note 20 may not launch as the most exciting smartphone lineup Samsung ever conceived, but after a lot of consideration, I’m fairly certain I’m buying into it anyway. Assuming a specific handful of recent reports about the flagship are legitimate, which we have reason to believe they are. Now, before we delve into the nitty-gritty, it goes without saying that your mileage may vary, especially since I’m pretty far from your average Samsung customer – even within the demographic that consistently buys its ultra-premium smartphones. But if the perspective of someone who loves flagships and hates money isn’t valuable, what is?

With that out of the way, here’s what likely Galaxy Note 20 (Ultra) features are simply too good for me to pass up.

Best smartphone accessory is getting even better

I’ve used a Galaxy Note-series handset as my daily driver for six out of the last eight years – primarily because a stylus is an absolute game changer for me. It’s such an ennobling addition to so many scenarios that I feel maimed without one. Note-taking, granular screenshot management, video editing, and Nintendo DS emulation aside, the only area in which I never felt the S Pen was industry-leading was drawing. Sure, a smartphone screen is never an ideal solution for artwork but neither is my talent, so I need every help I can get. And compared to the Apple Pencil, drawing with an S Pen never felt as good.

That’s definitely in part due to differences in software support quality, especially of the third-party variety (what I wouldn’t give for an Android version of Procreate). However, we’ve had a non-negligible gap on a hardware level for over a year now. Fortunately, the move to 120Hz displays should allow the Galaxy Note series to catch up with the Apple Pencil’s 9ms response time, an engineering feat that would have been largely useless on a 60Hz screen, anyway. This is coming directly from the Feline Lord’s mouth, mind you, in his characteristically verbose manner:

I really find it mental that in 12 years of Android smartphones being a thing, the only company that so much as attempted competing with Samsung’s stylus-equipped flagship concept was Huawei. But even if my level of trust in Huawei was anywhere close to my confidence in Samsung (it isn’t), its sole high-end smartphone with a stylus that isn’t crippled by the U.S. government — the Mate 20 range — is almost two years old at this point. Not to mention that the inventively named M-Pen is sold separately and still feels inferior to the last three S Pen generations.

A 120Hz display that doesn’t feel like a sidegrade

In hindsight, I bought into the 120Hz hype surrounding the Galaxy S20 range a little too easily. Particularly since I had first-hand experience with the OG 120Hz handset – the 2017 Razer Phone. Alas, three years of extra R&D did not amount to a much better end product. Not that Samsung failed to deliver an amazingly smooth viewing experience that even makes 2019 flagships look like iPAQs, it’s just that this luxury feature came at way too high of a price; the kind which can’t even be expressed in currency but screen-on time – which was woeful in the Galaxy S20’s case.

On the bright side, mistakes are integral to improvement, doubly so in highly iterative industries like smartphones. Samsung’s second take on 120Hz mobile displays hence sounds much more promising. More specifically, it seems that the Galaxy Note 20 Ultra will feature an LTPO backplane instead of an LTPS one. What that means in non-boring speak is much more intelligent implementation of variable refresh rates expected to be 15-20% more efficient in real-world scenarios than what the Galaxy S20 family delivered.

We’re talking hours of difference here, courtesy of the so-called “HOP” tech. Now, assuming I’m not getting taken for a ride on the 120Hz hype train for the second time this year, I’m hopeful that the Galaxy Note 20 Ultra will allow me to enjoy a mobile display with a high refresh rate that doesn’t feel like a sidegrade due to its crippling energy requirements.

A balanced camera designed around the mobile form factor’s strengths

There’s no accounting for taste and all that, but whoever has moon photography high on their list of must-have smartphone features is wrong and I hate them.

This may seem silly at first, but I really feel the industry’s been losing the plot on mobile camera tech advancements in recent years. Not that I don’t find it cool that the Galaxy S20 Ultra can take somewhat legible moon photographs, or that it’s pretty good at faking bokeh despite its entrance pupil diameter (real focal length divided by f-number) being like 5% of what you’d need to get the “real” thing with a traditional camera. It’s just that I expect to take between zero and three moon photographs with my smartphone over the course of its life and Live Focus (bokeh) mode isn’t my thing, either.

Which is why I’m really loving the recent reports about the Galaxy Note 20 Ultra’s camera and how it’s shaping up to be a much more balanced solution compared to Samsung’s recent flagship setups. Many SamMobile readers seem to prefer non-gimmicky cameras as well, so hopefully Samsung truly ends up delivering a technically sound setup that isn’t obsessed with its natural limitations but instead doubles down on its strengths – portability, shareability, accessibility, and the like. In other words: UI refinements, a more practical zoom range, tighter app integrations, an upgraded laser autofocusing system made in accordance with latest industry standards – things that consistently add value to the overall mobile photography proposition offered by any given device.


One final thing worth pointing out is that while I’m fairly positive I’m upgrading to the Galaxy Note 20 Ultra (from the Galaxy Note 10), I still haven’t decided when exactly to pull the plug on the purchase. Given how badly this year is turning out for Samsung in terms of sales, there’s a decent chance we’ll see more generous deals akin to the extremely tempting 50% buyback promotion attached to the Galaxy S20 range shortly following its release. That particular deal would have seemed almost too good to be true just a year ago, so I’m likely to wait for a similar offer on the Galaxy Note 20 Ultra this fall. I’d advise most other prospective adopters to do the same, provided they aren’t really, really concerned about Samsung’s profit margins.

The post I’m likely to buy the Galaxy Note 20 Ultra for these features alone appeared first on SamMobile.



from SamMobile https://ift.tt/2VLPzDU
via IFTTT

جميع الحقوق محفوظة لمدونة الغريب 2013