(Financial Times) -- If Apple were to challenge its smartphone competitors to
a contest with its all-conquering iPhone 4S, Samsung's Galaxy S would probably
be the model thrown into the arena to compete.
A new, third
version of the Galaxy S will be unveiled in Earls Court, London, on Thursday
amid speculation that it could be the official phone for the 2012 Olympics,
which Samsung is sponsoring.
It will be a
flagship phone but one added to the many models offered by Samsung that now
make it hard to catch in the smartphone race, according to some analysts.
Juniper Research reported on Tuesday that Samsung overtook Apple again in
smartphone sales in the first quarter "in what is increasingly becoming a
two-horse race".
It estimated
that the two companies provided 60 per cent of the 139m smartphones shipped
worldwide, up from 46 per cent in the previous quarter. Samsung "may now
have established a firm lead" with 47m units to Apple's 35m, Juniper said;
although analysts have widely different estimates of Samsung sales, which are
not specified by the company.
Apple still leads
in handset revenues though, according to Juniper, with sales of $22.7bn in the
first quarter compared with about $17bn for Samsung, including the Korean
company's non-smartphones, or feature phones.
Samsung has
produced a wide variety of smartphones running Android, Windows Phone and its
own Bada operating systems. Screen sizes have varied wildly, ranging as big as
the 5.3in Galaxy Note, a smartphone/tablet hybrid equipped with a stylus. In
contrast, Apple has stuck to a 3.5in screen size since the iPhone's debut and
sales are focused on the latest 4S model, although the 4 and 3GS versions
continue to be available.
While Samsung
has enjoyed success with the Note and built Google its own flagship smartphone
in the Galaxy Nexus, it is the Galaxy S that has won the most praise from
critics and proved the most popular with customers.
After the Galaxy
S II was introduced last year, TechRadar blog gave it five stars and said it
set a new bar for smartphones in 2011, while Engadget gave it 9 out of 10 and
called it "the best Android smartphone yet" and "possibly the
best smartphone, period".
Samsung sold 10m
units in the first five months and, after it was introduced in the US in
autumn, sales had reached 20m by February this year.
"The S II
has been a phenomenon," says Ben Wood, mobile analyst with CCS Insight.
"Its volumes have been eye watering and it really has been the making of
Samsung, while other competitors have fallen away."
The blogosphere
has been rampant with rumours of what the Galaxy S III will feature. It is
expected to have Samsung's own Exynos quad-core processor, improved video
performance, a screen size as large as 4.8in, possibly a 12 megapixel camera,
an NFC chip for payments and data exchanges, while it will run the latest
version of the Android operating system, codenamed Ice Cream Sandwich.
"We're
expecting a super-thin device with a stunning display and a top-of-the-line
processor," said Mr Wood.
Mr Wood
predicted it would quickly become the number-one selling Android smartphone but
added that the true test of the device would come later this year when Apple
launches its next iteration of the iPhone.
other news to read:
Late Llorente goal sets up all-Spanish Europa League finalHundreds killed since start of U.N. mission, opposition says
Real pay the penalty Germans progress after 3-1 shoot-out win as Ronaldo missesApple Profit Rises on Higher iPhone and iPad SalesNew trend: Shelters for Merapi victim for tourismNext iPhone may be housed in 'Liquidmetal'Spanish unemployment hits record 5.64 million
0 komentar:
Post a Comment
Give your comment here