5 Galaxy S8 features people can’t stop talking about, and 2 features no one knows about
5 Galaxy S8 features people can’t stop talking about, and
2 features no one knows about
Zach Epstein
@zacharye March 30th, 2017 at 10:14 AM
It’s funny how you can know just about everything there
is to know about a new flagship smartphone thanks to rumors and leaks, and yet
still be blown away when the phone is finally announced. We’ve seen it time and
time again with Apple’s iPhone lineup since all the details always leak months
in advance, and now we’re seeing it with Samsung’s hot new Galaxy S8 and Galaxy
S8+. Android fans lost count of all the leaks as they flooded the web in the
weeks ahead of Samsung’s big Unpacked press conference on Wednesday, and we’ve
seen photos and videos leak time and time again. Once people actually saw the
full Galaxy S8 and Galaxy S8+ picture come together on stage yesterday,
however, they knew they were watching something special.
We already gave you an extensive hands-on preview of the
Galaxy S8 and Galaxy S8+, and we also ran through a number of the duo’s most
exciting new features. In this post, we’re going to focus on the five new Galaxy
S8 features people just can’t stop talking about, and we’ll also cover two
fantastic new Galaxy S8 features that most people don’t even realize were added
to the new phones.
Design
This is obviously the big one, and for good reason. After
spending just a couple of hours with Samsung’s new Galaxy S8 and Galaxy S8+, we
can already state conclusively that these new flagship smartphones are the
sleekest, most elegant, best-designed handsets the world has ever known.
Just a few short years ago, Samsung was still releasing
flagship phones made out of thin plastic that felt flimsy and cheap.
Fast-forward to 2017 and the company’s new Galaxy S8 and S8+ are unmatched.
Apple’s iPhones have always been considered the gold standard of design — they
are the most copied handsets on the market, after all — but Samsung has bested
Apple in early every way.
First and foremost, Samsung’s new Galaxy S8 and Galaxy
S8+ have narrow bezels and a screen-to-body ratio of 83%. As a result, Samsung
has fit a monstrous 6.2-inch Super AMOLED display into a phone the same size as
Apple’s 5.5-inch iPhone 7 Plus. In fact, at 5.8 inches, even the smaller Galaxy
S8 has a bigger screen than the iPhone 7 Plus.
Then you’ve got the rounded edges on the front and back
of the phones, which makes them fit perfectly in the hand. It also makes
Samsung’s new phones feel incredibly thin despite actually being a tiny bit
thicker than Apple’s iPhones.
Photos will never do the Galaxy S8 and Galaxy S8+
justice. When you finally get the chance to check these hot new handsets out in
stores, you’re going to be blown away.
Bixby
The second most talked-about Galaxy S8 feature has to be
Bixby. This is Samsung’s attempt to combat the rise of digital assistant
products like Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant, and the one that started it all,
Apple’s Siri. This is one of the hottest spaces in consumer tech right now, so
it’s no mystery why Samsung would want in on the action.
It’s obviously far too soon to compare Bixby to any other
virtual personal assistant products out there, though a number of gadget blogs
out there have inexplicably already tried to do so. Early impressions generally
seem positive though, and we’re looking forward to putting Bixby through the
paces when we review Samsung’s new phones.
Bixby Vision
Bixby Vision is an extension of Bixby that brings the
physical world around you into the picture. Literally. Using the camera on the
Galaxy S8 or S8+, Bixby Vision allows the phones to “look” at their
surroundings and offer useful information to users. Bixby Vision can also “see”
printed text and instantly translate more than 50 different languages.
Samsung DeX (Docking Station with Keyboard/Mouse/Monitor
support)
Samsung isn’t the first company to bake a desktop
experience into a smartphone, but it is the first company to bake a desktop
experience into a smartphone that people actually want. Microsoft and its
partners like HP have offered a similar feature on Windows phones, but they
were, well, Windows phones. What’s more, Samsung’s implementation with DeX is
shockingly fast. It looks and feels a bit like Chrome OS, but the idea of
having one device with all of your data, logins and more is compelling. Unless
you need specialized software that’s only available for Windows or macOS,
Samsung’s DeX solution can easily replace the need for a desktop PC for many people.
Processors
To be honest, it’s a bit odd that there’s so much chatter
out there surrounding the processors in Samsung’s new Galaxy S8 and Galaxy S8+.
Specs are important, of course, but they hardly tell the whole story. In the
case of the Galaxy S8 and S8+, however, the processors are more important than
normal because these are the first new smartphones to sport next-generation
10nm chipsets.
The Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 and Samsung Exynos 8895 use a
process that is more compact than any other mass-market processors. They’re
also more energy-efficient and more powerful than any other processors on the
market. In terms of multi-core performance, they absolutely crush everything
else on the market and people are excited to check them out.
Two features almost no one is talking about
Most people were so enamored with Samsung’s new design
that they apparently didn’t bother to really dig into the details. We can’t
blame them, to be honest — these new smartphones are just so gorgeous. There
are two features involving the Galaxy S8’s wireless connectivity that users
should be very excited about, and we’ll quickly cover them here.
First up, the Galaxy S8 will be the first widely
available smartphone with Bluetooth 5.0. This next-generation wireless
technology is better than current versions of Bluetooth in literally every way.
It’s more power efficient, it has four times the range, and it supports two
simultaneous independent streams. That means you can play a video and stream to
two separate pairs of Bluetooth headphones at the same time.
Last but certainly not least, the Galaxy S8 will be the
first phone to support gigabit LTE speeds. That’s right, 1Gbps data transfers
on your phone. Good luck holding onto your tiered data plans in the future…
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