الجمعة، 13 نوفمبر 2020

Galaxy A42 5G is now live in Thailand bringing 5G support for under $400

Samsung’s most affordable 5G smartphone to date, the Galaxy A42 5G, is now available in Thailand. Unlike in Taiwan where the same device was announced exclusively with 4GB of RAM a couple of weeks ago, Samsung Thailand is bringing customers the top-tier 8GB Galaxy A42 5G model. The phone is available in three color options including black, silver, and white.

Samsung fans in Thailand can now pick up the Galaxy A42 5G via Samsung’s online store in exchange for 11,990 Baht ($397). The 4GB and 6GB models are not yet listed on the store and Samsung’s launch announcement makes no mention of them, though they might be offered in Thailand later down the line. For now, customers can only choose the most powerful variant, unlike buyers in other markets where the the least-powerful model is paving the way for the others.

3700 Mbps download speeds on a budget

The Galaxy A42 5G is technically capable of achieving download speeds of up to 3700 Mbps over 5G, although in the real world, transfer rates will differ depending on the carrier network you’re using and other factors. Either way, the Galaxy A42 5G remains the most affordable entry into the 5G era for Samsung fans.

The smartphone is equipped with the Snapdragon 750G chipset and it’s powered by a 5,000mAh battery with 15W fast charging support. The back panel features a quad camera combo comprising a 48MP main shooter, an 8MP ultra-wide sensor with 123-degrees field of view, a 5MP depth camera and a 5MP macro sensor.

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Investors buying spree raises Samsung’s share price to pre-COVID levels

Foreign investors are confident that Samsung will recover next year from the economic impact left behind by COVID-19. Anticipating growth across various segments – especially in the semiconductor market – foreign investors have been on a Samsung share buying spree for the past week. This has driven the company’s shares to a historic high and has increased share prices to a level similar to where they were before the COVID-19 pandemic.

Global investment firms JP Morgan has acquired 3.41 million Samsung shares in the last week, whereas Merril Lynch has secured 2.22 million shares within the same time window, reveals The Korea Economic Daily. The publication claims that other individual investors have sold off shares for a net worth of 2.9 trillion won ($2.6 million).

Today, November 13, foreign investors have secured a net 578.5 billion won ($518 million) worth of shares, and Samsung’s share price stood at 63,200 won ($57), the highest it’s been since the COVID-19 outbreak began.

Investors are betting big on Samsung’s 2021 recovery

The share price increase was driven by foreign investors who anticipate businesses to recover next year. In particular, investors expect Samsung’s semiconductor business to perform very well in 2021 thanks to an increase in demand for DRAM chips. Samsung was the world’s largest DRAM supplier for the smartphone market in the first half of 2020. It was followed by SK Hynix.

Aside from a healthy semiconductor business, investors are looking at other external factors that will likely continue to drive Samsung’s share price up, such as exchange rates and interest rates, and the capital inflow into emerging markets. Joe Biden’s administration could also lead to a decrease in USD value compared to emerging market currencies, resulting in foreign investors continuing to buy off Samsung shares.

The post Investors buying spree raises Samsung’s share price to pre-COVID levels appeared first on SamMobile.



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The Premiere 4K projector goes live in the UK with cashback offer in tow

Samsung’s The Premiere series of projectors will be available for purchase in the UK starting today. Although The Premiere is not yet listed on Samsung UK’s online store as of this writing, it should hit the company’s virtual shelves before the end of the day and customers will also have the option of buying the product from partner retailer Harrods.

The Premiere lineup consists of two Ultra Short Throw (UST) laser projectors, namely the 120-inch LSP7T and the 130-inch LSP9T. The former is hitting the UK market for £3,999 whereas the latter will be paired with a £6,999 price tag.

Both the LSP7T and LSP9T are capable of 4K resolutions but only the LSP9T model supports both 4K and HDR10+. In fact, The Premiere LSP9T is the world’s first projector to offer this feature combo. Otherwise, both projectors boast smart TV features such as screen mirroring and access to Bixby and Alexa. The projectors ship with streaming service apps pre-installed, including Netflix, Disney+, Amazon Prime, YouTube Plus and more.

Buy The Premiere before January 19 and claim up to £700 cashback

Samsung is not only bringing The Premiere to the UK but it has also prepared a promotion for prospective buyers. Those who purchase The Premiere before January 19, 2021, will be eligible to claim up to £700 cashback. Samsung’s wording suggests that some customers may receive under £700 cashback but the criteria are unclear.

The Premiere series boasts Filmmaker Mode which, according to Samsung, is a first-of-its-kind setting on a projector. Meanwhile, the more expensive LSP9T model includes a built-in 40 watts 4.2 channel audio system and takes advantage of Acoustic Beam technology, which Samsung claims to bring cinema-grade sound quality to the living room.

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Galaxy Note 10 owners in the UK have gained access to One UI 3.0 beta

Samsung had welcomed the Galaxy Note 10+ to the One UI 3.0 beta program a couple of days ago but the initial release was limited to Samsung’s home country of South Korea. Thankfully for Galaxy Note 10 owners elsewhere who may want to test the latest beta firmware, Samsung has just extended the beta program and made it available in the UK.

The One UI 3.0 beta firmware in the UK is reportedly available for both the Galaxy Note 10 as well as the Galaxy Note 10+. Samsung fans in the UK who may want to test the latest beta firmware for themselves can do so after joining the beta program through the Samsung Members app.

One UI 3.0 beta should soon reach the Galaxy Note 10 in EU markets

Samsung has so far released the One UI 3.0 beta firmware for the Galaxy Note 10 series in South Korea and the UK, but it’s almost a guarantee that the company will bring the beta program to key markets across the European continent in the coming weeks. We’ll keep you up to speed as soon as this happens.

Keep in mind that although One UI 3.0 is bringing a handful of new features, a beta release is always susceptible to bugs and issues with varying degrees of severity. If the Galaxy Note 10 / Note 10+ is your only phone, you may want to avoid downloading the beta firmware as there’s always a risk of some features not working as intended.

If you decide to wait until Samsung is ready to release the first public One UI 3.0 build for the Galaxy Note 10 series then you might have to wait for a few more months. Samsung will first bring the firmware update to its more recent devices including the Galaxy Note 20 series, after which it will shift its focus on older phones. The Galaxy Note 10 lineup will likely receive the first public One UI 3.0 / Android 11 build in early 2021.

  • Model: SM-N970F
  • Dimensions: Bar: 151.0 x 71.8 x 7.9 mm
  • Display: 6.3 inch / 160.02 mm Dynamic AMOLED Display
  • CPU: Exynos 9825
  • Camera: 16MP

  • Model: SM-N975F
  • Dimensions: Bar: 162.3 x 77.2 x 7.9 mm
  • Display: 6.8 inch / 172.72 mm Dynamic AMOLED Display
  • CPU: Exynos 9825
  • Camera: 16MP

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Was Samsung chief just caught with a stretchable smartphone prototype?

Samsung Chairman Lee Jae-yong knows a thing or two about returning to the public eye in style. His latest comeback happened less than a full day ago, bringing some interesting news about Samsung’s long-term design strategy.

What’s even more interesting, however, is the above photograph of Lee during his Thursday tour of Samsung’s main research and development center in Seoul. As the image shows the executive holding a curious smartphone prototype unlike anything else we have seen from the tech giant to date.

Speculation about the device in question is already running rampant, and the currently most popular theory among Korean media is that we are looking at a smartphone with an expandable display.

Do stretchable smartphones even make sense?

Rumors about such a device have been circulating the industry for a while now, albeit without any indication of whether Samsung is actually prototyping the idea. Then again, the possibility of yet another novel experiment with a flexible mobile display is hardly outrageous, seeing how adventurous-yet-calculated Samsung remains in its approach to bendable screen technology.

It’s debatable whether its first foray into such elastic display technology would even revolve around a smartphone or a more specialized device like a smart speaker.

And believe it or not, stretchable displays aren’t entirely new ground for Samsung. It’s actually been three and a half years since the company showcased its first such innovation – a 9.1-inch AMOLED display capable of expanding like it’s elastic.

This hopefully isn’t the last we’ve seen of this paper-thin device, though the claim that an expandable display is Samsung’s most bizarre smartphone idea ever is dubious at best. After all, it was only last month that we have stumbled on one of its designs meant to be bizarre enough that you can hear it.

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Galaxy Z Fold 2 is awesome, but here’s why I won’t be buying one

For the last couple of weeks, I have been using the Galaxy Z Fold 2 as my daily driver. I had the Galaxy Z Flip as my main device back when it launched, and I had been impressed with how normal Samsung’s foldable flip phone felt despite only being the company’s second folding phone. And the Galaxy Z Fold 2 has given me a similar impression. It totally doesn’t feel like an experimental device, which is high praise considering Samsung has only launched three foldable phones in total up to this point.

And the Z Fold 2 has many of the same features we have come to expect from Samsung’s standard non-folding flagship phones, such as fast performance, feature-rich yet user-friendly software, an excellent main camera, and high-quality stereo sound (which is actually better here because there are two dedicated loudspeakers instead of the earpiece doubling up as the second speaker). Battery life is excellent as well, and that’s despite the 120Hz refresh rate of the main display.

Yes, that main display still has a crease, and it’s still plastic (the ultra-thin glass is too thin and covered with a compulsory plastic screen protector), but that is to be expected from all foldable phones for the foreseeable future, so I don’t hold it against the Z Fold 2, and it would not stop me from buying this thing on my own money. What is stopping me from doing so is that other screen, along with the outdated zoom camera.

The outer screen is just too narrow

One of the easiest criticisms to lay on the Fold was that the outer screen was just too small, and on the Z Fold 2, it’s how narrow the outer screen is. It’s not as narrow as to be a pain to use sparingly, but if you have to use it for the better part of the day, it quickly becomes a problem. And I realized that I was spending a lot of time on the cover display, as you don’t always have the luxury to open up the main display and dedicate both hands to using the phone.

Typing is unsurprisingly affected most because of the cover display’s slim profile. I didn’t have as much trouble typing on it as I had expected, but enough mistakes happen that it becomes frustrating after a point. The inner display is amazing for typing, but again, that’s moot unless you unfold it every time you want to jot something down or shoot a message.

Can Samsung do anything about the narrow cover display? I’m not sure. The Z Fold 2 is quite heavy, and a foldable phone with a wider outer screen would weigh even more. And I don’t think everyone will like that, no matter how much they may love the idea of being able to unfold their phone to turn it into a mini tablet. I guess it’s a compromise we will probably always have with in-folding foldable phones, though one can hope Samsung will find a way to make bigger foldables without a proportional increase in overall weight.

2017 called, it wants its telephoto camera back

I have said it before, and I will say it again: It’s downright offensive that Samsung decided to equip the Z Fold 2 with a 2x zoom camera. The Galaxy S20 FE, a $699 phone, has 3x optical zoom and up to 30x digital zoom, while the $2000 Z Fold 2 is stuck with a 2x optical/10x digital zoom sensor that Samsung first introduced to its phones with the Galaxy Note 8 back in 2017.

It totally ruins the camera experience for me and makes the Z Fold 2’s camera capabilities feel very outdated, especially since I brought home a dog a few months back. Dogs do cute stuff all day long, but anyone who has ever owned a dog knows those cute moments come and go quickly, and taking a photo by zooming in instead of physically moving closer is a great way to make sure you are actually able to capture those moments.

And 2x optical zoom is woefully inadequate for that, and for taking pictures in general. It was fine last year, when a 2x telephoto lens was all Samsung had to offer. But it just doesn’t feel right in 2020, especially on a device as costly as the Galaxy Z Fold 2. I’ll be sticking to the Galaxy S20 Ultra for now and keeping my fingers crossed that the next Z Fold series phone boasts more robust and modern camera system, because other than the outdated zoom camera and the lack of screen estate on the outside, the Z Fold 2 is downright awesome.

The post Galaxy Z Fold 2 is awesome, but here’s why I won’t be buying one appeared first on SamMobile.



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New Galaxy S20 One UI 3.0 beta brings fixes and December patch

Samsung’s sending out new One UI 3.0 beta updates every other day it seems. It sent one out just three days ago with a handful of fixes. There’s already another Galaxy S20 One UI 3.0 beta update out today. It brings a handful of bug fixes but that’s not the most surprising thing about this update.

The surprising thing is that it comes with the security patch for the month of December 2020. It has only been a few days since Samsung really started sending out the November 2020 patch for eligible devices. It’s just racing ahead for this beta updates.

New One UI 3.0 beta update out now

The speed that Samsung is showing here is certainly impressive. It’s trying to wrap up the beta program quickly so that One UI 3.0 can be released for everyone. The company has previously said that the Galaxy S20 lineup will be updated to One UI 3.0 before the end of this year.

Samsung has rolled out One UI 3.0 beta update with firmware version G98xxXXU5ZTKA in the United Kingdom today. This is the fourth beta update for the UK. The changelog lists all of the bugs that have been fixed. They include the expansion of the navigation gesture recognition area, fixed pop-up view when swiping edge lighting pop-up and more.

One UI 3.0 beta testers in other markets should expect to receive this latest update in the near future. Samsung will be gradually rolling it out there as well. There’s little reason to believe that the company may not meet its self-imposed deadline for the One UI 3.0 public release. So we could all be using the latest iteration of its custom skin just weeks from now.

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Samsung boss stresses importance of integrated design in future strategy meeting

After the death of Samsung chairman Lee Kun-hee last month, the company’s heir Lee Jae-yong has resumed his work. He held a design strategy meeting yesterday and stressed the importance of an integrated design. This is the first time that high-ranking executives from all the important Samsung business units have attended a common meeting.

The future design strategy meeting was held at Samsung’s R&D center in Seoul. Lee explained the importance of extensive design integration that encompasses both hardware and software. Lee, who is facing fraud allegations regarding the merger of two Samsung business divisions, also said that the convergence between products and services improves with 5G, AI, and IoT technologies. He said, “Let us achieve another design revolution. Let us endlessly challenge ourselves for the future.

The following top executives attended the meeting:

  • TM Roh, CEO of IT and Mobile Communications
  • DJ Koh, co-CEO of IT and Mobile Communications
  • Han Jong-hee, CEO of the TV division
  • Kim Hyun-seok, CEO of Samsung Electronics Consumer Electronics
  • Choi Yoon-ho, Director of Management Support
  • Seung Hyun-jun, Director of Samsung Research
  • Lee Don-tae, Director of Design Management Center

Before this strategy meeting, each Samsung business unit used to have its own design strategy meet. The late Samsung chairman used to stress the importance of design, and he started Samsung’s design revolution in 1996. Since then, the South Korean tech giant has formed a Design Management Center to improve product design, foster talent, and manage its design strategy.

Samsung currently has seven design centers—Seoul, San Francisco, London, New Delhi, Beijing, Tokyo, and Sao Paulo—globally, and more than 1,500 employees work there collectively. At the Seoul R&D center, Lee inspected products like service robots and wearable devices. The company has also set up the Samsung Art and Design Institute (SADI) to improve design integration.

Samsung Design Strategy Meeting Lee Jae-Yong DJ Koh

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جميع الحقوق محفوظة لمدونة الغريب 2013