Up Close With Samsung’s
Galaxy S5 and Three New Smartwatches
BARCELONA — Samsung promised the goods at its Mobile World
Congress event here in Barcelona. The company didn’t
disappoint, either, revealing a brand-new flagship
smartphone and three new wearable watch devices,
all of which we got to spend some time with last night after Samsung’s
presentation.
The centerpiece of the event was the Galaxy S5, the fifth entry in
the company’s wildly successful premium Android handset line. The device updates 2013’s Galaxy S4 with
some solid tweaks to both the software and the phone itself, including a
redesigned operating system based on Android, an Apple-like fingerprint sensor
to replace your password, a much-improved camera and several features focused
on your health.
In doing so, Samsung appears to have made a terrific phone even
better.
There are a few changes to the body of the phone — most notably on
the back of the device. Samsung tossed out the word “glam” to describe the new
perforated back. It comes in a half-dozen different covers, including black,
white and gold, and features little divots all around the surface. After
playing around with Sony’s gorgeous Z2 smartphone earlier in the day, it’s hard
to call the Galaxy S5 “glam.” Compared with the Z2, it’s still relatively chunky
and a bit plasticky.
The S5 is, however, a bit more rugged than its predecessor, with
built-in dust and water resistance.
It’s not totally waterproof — you can’t go deep-sea diving with it — but still,
it’s nice to see that feature becoming more common on flagship devices.
Photography is a big focus on the Galaxy S5. On the back of the
device, you’ll find a 16-megapixel camera, a sizable sensor that should make
for improved photography and a super-fast focus feature that lets you snap
photos quickly.
Samsung has also baked fitness features like a heart-rate monitor
and pedometer directly into the phone. The heart-rate monitor sits under the
back camera; stick your finger on it, and the phone takes your pulse. You can
also log your meals, step count and daily activity on Samsung’s updated
S-Health app.
Fitness, in fact, is a theme that carries across all of Monday’s
announcements from Samsung. The latest version of the company’s Gear smartwatch
sports those sensors as well. The real improvements here are to the build of
the device. Samsung has added a physical home button and moved the camera
directly into the bezel of the Galaxy Gear 2, from the wristband in the
previous version.
That means the watch isn’t nearly as bulky as its predecessor. It
also means you can swap wristband colors. The new Gear is smaller and lighter
than the first generation, but it’s still a bit bulky for my taste.
Thankfully, there’s the extremely cool Gear Fit. The device takes
the wearable fitness tracker theme exemplified by the likes of Fitbit and, erm,
runs with it. The device features a bright, full-color display that curves to
fit your wrist.
Using that, you can receive notifications and other messages from
your mobile device, making this thing half-smartwatch, half-fitness band. It’s
certainly a fair bit bulkier than the competition, but it may be worth it for
that added functionality.
Posted BY::Muhammad Usman
Source:Yahoo news
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Click to see the code!
To insert emoticon you must added at least one space before the code.