Samsung Galaxy S8 and the sad state of smartphones
Devices from the stables of Apple, Samsung,
LG, HTC, among others sure make great companions, are they really the
"innovations" as the companies dub them to be?
After the exploding Galaxy Note 7 fiasco, Samsung needed a smartphone that could thrust it back into reckoning and inspire
confidence in customers. The company's answer — Samsung Galaxy S8 that
was unveiled on Wednesday — marks the progression in smartphones, but
isn't a technological marvel.
Barring Bixby, Samsung's virtual
assistant, the Galaxy S8 is just an upgrade. It may not necessarily mean
that the smartphone wouldn't give you bang for the buck, but the
Samsung Galaxy S8 is the latest indicator of a malaise that the smartphone industry is dealing with
Devices from the stables of
Apple, Samsung, LG, HTC, among others, sure make great companions but
are they really the "innovations" which the companies claim they are?
Samsung
Galaxy S8's Infinity Display or bezel-less display is only a hardware
upgrade — curved displays, high-resolution displays have been in the
market for a few years now. A better camera, a better processor and
battery and slimmer phone is no surprise — it is an edict for smartphone
makers.
Apple Co-founder Steve Jobs had said "Stay hungry, stay
foolish". Smartphone companies, including Apple, are surely hungry for
more customers, but aren't foolish to take risks, and instead are
playing safe with tried and tested methodologies. They are not thinking
out of the box.
Take, for example, Bixby — the virtual assistant
spirals Samsung into the league of Apple and Google. It understands your
interaction with the phone to give contextually relevant results. It
looks smart, is aware and intelligent enough to take care of the
Internet of Things set up at your home or workplace.
Time will tell if
there is a competitor worthy of taking on Google Assistant and Apple's
Siri. Just like the two, Bixby and Samsung will struggle to get
customers to use it and developers to customise apps with it.
That's
where the problem lies. Cutting-edge technology is being offered as an
add-on. Hence, the industry can get away by saying it was a technology
that was way ahead of its time. Customers, too, are at fault for not
seeking more — they should make use of the technology and give a
feedback.
Till then, smartphone makers would do well to take note of
Jobs's mantra: "Innovation distinguishes between a leader and a
follower.
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