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Guru3D.com » News » Samsung Galaxy S6 Announced

Samsung Galaxy S6 Announced

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 03/02/2015 10:08 AM | source: | 27 comment(s)
Samsung Galaxy S6 Announced

Samsung on Sunday launched the new Galaxy S6 smartphone and its cousin, the Galaxy S6 Edge. A unique phone with a curved screen on both sides of the device. The Super AMOLED display measures 5.1 inches across the diagonal and includes 2560 x 1440 pixels (quad HD). Samsung says it has enhanced brightness for better outdoor viewability.

ccording to Samsung, the display is protected by Corning Gorilla Glass 4 and comes in several jewel tones with names like black sapphire, white pearl, blue topaz, and gold platinum. Aside from the display, all specs are shared between the two phones. The GS6 and GS6 Edge measure 6.8mm and 7.0mm thick, respectively. The 16-megapixel main camera boasts optical image stabilization, auto HDR, and a Quick Launch feature that starts the camera app in less than a second. The user-facing camera rates 5-megpaixels; both have an aperture of f/1.9 for better low-light performance.

Samsung is relying on its own technology to power the GS6 and GS6 Edge. It ships with an octa-core processor with a quad-core bank of processors clocked at 2.1GHz and a second quad-core bank clocked at 1.5GHz. The processor is paired with 3GB of LPDDR4 memory and UFS 2.0 flash for faster storage performance. The phone includes a 2,600mAh battery that supports both the WPC and PMA wireless charging standards, in addition to quick charging. Samsung says it has upgraded its KNOX security platform to better protect the device, added a Find My Device tool and remote wipe/remote reactivate tools, and improved the fingerprint scanner. The security tools will help when Samsung launches Samsung Pay, a mobile payment service planned for the second half of the year. 

The curved screen puts Samsung on the cutting edge of new form factors, but the obligatory upgrade in specs is also impressive, including faster processing speeds, quicker battery charging and a super-fast, high-resolution camera.

Ultimately the question is whether that will all be enough to attract consumers in the midst of some other potentially negative tradeoffs. Primarily: Samsung Galaxy fans love the fact that its phones allow you to pop out the battery and also insert a microSD card.

Yet the S6 got rid of both these features.

Samsung executives actually addressed this on stage at Sunday’s launch event, arguing that the battery life of the S6 was so good now, that owners wouldn’t even have to worry about replacing it. Still, the u-turn might drive some Samsung faithful away.


The battery for both phones lasts for up to 12 hours on Wi-Fi and charges “faster than any other smartphone in the industry,” Samsung CEO JK Shin said. It takes 10 minutes to charge the S6 to get four hours of battery life, he claimed. To get to 100%, it takes the S6 roughly half the time of the iPhone 6 to charge.

Now for those curves. It’s unclear at this point if Samsung is releasing an API that will allow third-party developers to create apps that utilize the curved sides of the screen, but bear in the mind that the curves themselves are subtle.

They don’t play that same second-screen role as that of the Galaxy Note Edge. They’re more gentle slopes than clearly-defined, rounded edges.

Yet they can still come in handy with a couple of features that Samsung has pre-installed on the Edge. There’s a feature called Quick Contacts, that allows you to swipe in a column for contacts shaded in various colors on the curved side of the screen.

In addition, when the phone is lying flat on its screen, the color of that contact will glow when they call, so you can know who it is without having to pick up the phone.

Fundamentally though, the curves still seem like more of a statement piece than a practical use case. One of Samsung’s executives practically admitted this on stage: “It’s a more comfortable grip, amazing user experience and above all, your friends will think it’s very cool!” said Young Hee Lee, executive vice president for marketing at Samsung.

An endless display of Galaxy S6 smartphones, on display at a launch event in Barcelona.
An endless display of Galaxy S6 smartphones, on display at a launch event in Barcelona.

Cool begets novel, which potentially begets the-dreaded “gimmick.” If consumers start seeing the curved novelty as more of a gimmick than useful feature that could be a big problem for sales of the S6 Edge.

Analysts I spoke to after the launch event were dubious about whether the Edge had enough of a wow-factor to give Samsung a much needed bump in smartphone sales.

Not helping matters: HTC will be preempting Samsung by shipping its own latest smartphone ahead of the Edge. Typically Samsung new phones ship before HTC, but this time around HTC has said its new M9 smartphone would be released on March 31, a week and a half before the S6 and S6 Edge.

Hands on, the Edge does indeed have a comfortable grip, though the tapered sides may take some getting used to for those who’ve carried rounded or square-edged phone for the last few years.

One of the real standout features though is the camera. At its launch event, Samsung showed low-light photos taken by the iPhone 6 Plus and the Galaxy S6 side by side on the large screen.

The latter won out hands down both for photos and video. In one demo a video showing a couple sitting in front of a fountain at night almost looked like silhouettes on the iPhone 6 video, but they were clearly illuminated in the Galaxy S6 version.

The camera benefits from a 16-megapixel sensor and an F1.9 lens that’s also very quick to load. Just tap the home button twice and it launches almost immediately — in 0.7 seconds, according to Samsung.

The screen’s resolution is also super crisp, packing in an incredible 577 pixels per inch on the phone’s AMOLED screen.

All told the Edge is an impressive effort by Samsung and the curved screen shows a bold attempt to redefine the way smartphones are designed and used.

Still, there’s a sense that Samsung could have taken this a bit further, and given Edge an even more dramatic curvature like the Note Edge to open the door to new kinds of applications, taking it safely beyond the role of novelty.

The built-in battery and lack of a microSD card may also be a tough pill for Samsung fans to swallow. All the more reason to fear the company’s best years of smartphone sales may well be behind it.



Samsung Galaxy S6 Announced




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Denial
Senior Member



Posts: 14048
Joined: 2004-05-16

#5022497 Posted on: 03/02/2015 02:33 PM
It's a Samsung, if you so much as look at it wrong the screen will break! I've replaced several screens on phones that were in cases, probably in part because a lot of people go for those flip covers with the magnets in (which incidentally can also screw up the orientation sensor).


Which is weird because most people will tell you that the plastic construction that Samsung uses is relatively the most durable. Samsung claims that this phone is "50% stronger" then the competition. Whatever the hell that means.

I've owned a S4 and Note 4 and honestly the worst part about both was always the software. It was a laggy bloated cluster****. Supposedly with Android 5 they fixed this but they also said that with every previous iteration. The quick charge (10 minutes for 4 hours of battery) sounds really good. And at 14nm that processor should use less power then the snapdragon 810 competition, not to mention the fact that it's faster as the 810 has throttling problems. UFS 2.0 is a pretty big gain too.

As of right now I'm loving my 1+1. Customer support sucks but I haven't had a problem with the phone yet. $350 and I prefer it to the Note 4, which cost me $800 on T-Mobile.

morbias
Moderator



Posts: 13444
Joined: 2004-09-20

#5022502 Posted on: 03/02/2015 02:41 PM
The plastic is very forgiving but it's the crazy thin bezel around the screen; any impact to that and the screen is done. With the edge having a curve around screen I would think that it's going to be easier to break! Iphones are just as bad, but a nightmare to replace in comparison, Samsungs are so easy to work on.

The quick charging sounds good if it works properly, charge time has been a big problem for recent Samsung tablets especially. With the SM-Txxx or SM-Pxxx the battery charges at roughly the same rate as it discharges so you really do end up spending the same amount of time charging the blasted thing as using it.

I suppose it'll be a while before weak points in the design of these phones start to surface, as is always the way.

xIcarus
Senior Member



Posts: 989
Joined: 2010-08-24

#5022611 Posted on: 03/02/2015 06:56 PM
As a samsung user, I'm honestly disappointed by this unveiling (is that the right word?).

I mean I expected the s6 edge's edges (lol) to have some more functionality. It really sounds like it's just a gimmick. Like with the note edge. I really long for something like a taskbar on one of those edges. I'm sick and tired of pressing the recent apps button every time I want to switch.

The unremovable battery. Ok I can cope with that. A potential upside is that when your phone is stolen, the thief can't just pull the battery out so you couldn't track the device. If some discrete low-level tracking mechanisms could be active even when the phone is shut down, this could be a big plus.

The inability to insert an sd card? What? Why would you handicap your phone in such a manner? I mean I understand that 32GB for the entry-level model is enough, AT LEAST FOR ME since I have a 16GB S5 and it's enough. But there are a lot of people that put a lot of stuff in their phones. No sd card really makes no sense to me.

Overall I feel that they've missed the potential of that curved display. Disappointing.

vbetts
Moderator



Posts: 15142
Joined: 2006-07-04

#5022614 Posted on: 03/02/2015 06:59 PM
Yeah, battery life will suck. 2600mAh to power a 5.1" 1440 x 2560 screen? Hell no!


The SoC is 14nm, and Super AMOLED already uses less power compared to LCD used in other devices.

PhazeDelta1
Senior Member



Posts: 15616
Joined: 2010-09-12

#5022620 Posted on: 03/02/2015 07:15 PM
No microSD is a no go for me. Not really worried about the non removable battery.

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