Samsung Unveils Galaxy Note 8; One Of The Biggest Handsets
Samsung's Galaxy Note 8 is one of the biggest handsets to date |
It was the most disastrous product
recall in the history of the mobile phone industry. Now, a year on from
the exploding Galaxy Note 7 fiasco, Samsung has unveiled the new version
of its giant smartphone.
But here's a funny thing - the Korean company can afford to be pretty relaxed about the Note 8. Because even before the phone goes on sale, the company's record results and soaring share price show that the crises of the past year have done little damage to its bottom line.
What is more, the prospects for the Note 8 look rosy. The new version features the biggest screen of any mainstream phone, along with new multi-tasking capabilities, and a dual lens rear camera with optical image stabilisation. The S Pen stylus that comes with the Note, and is seen by Samsung as a key draw, has also been upgraded so that you can produce fine writing even if the screen is wet.
But he is impressed by the sheer stubbornness the company has shown in relaunching the phone.
"You have to admire their grit and determination," he says. "I thought the Samsung brand would recover but the Note brand was more open to question."
He says the buzz around the new Note is good, with reports of plenty of pent-up demand, A successful debut will mean that, with the Galaxy S8 and S8+, Samsung once again dominates the market in high-end Android phones.
The company has also been eager to make plenty of noise about the Note before Apple's latest iPhone, expected in September, grabs all the attention.
Samsung believes that it has consistently introduced new innovations, from bigger screens to better cameras, before its rival, and may hope that some Apple users will be lured away.
Ben Wood is sceptical: "It's proved just about impossible to lever iPhones out of their users' hands."
That leaves things back where they have been for much of the past decade, with two companies dominating the mobile market.
"It's a two-horse race outside China," Mr Wood adds.
The past week has seen launches from the reborn Nokia, and from Android founder Andy Rubin's new Essential phone business. But neither looks likely to win a fraction of the sales - or profits - that Samsung will get from the Note 8
On Friday, its former boss Lee Jae-yong is in court again, with prosecutors seeking a 12-year jail sentence for his alleged role in a bribery scandal. But if its rivals hoped the company would take its eye off the ball, they have been disappointed.
Samsung sails on, its course unaltered by the squalls of the past year.
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