5 Samsung Galaxy S8 features Apple should steal for iPhone 8

Night_Hawk

Siasat.pk - Blogger
[h=1]5 Samsung Galaxy S8 features Apple should steal for iPhone 8[/h] [h=2]Samsung has long been inspired by Apple's hardware design. Apple should "borrow" these Galaxy S8 features in return.[/h]

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Credit: Adam Patrick Murray/IDG

Samsung just took the wraps off its new Galaxy S8 and S8+ smartphones in a bid to make people forget about last years exploding Note 7 disaster. While the Galaxy S8 has a few things working against itnamely that it runs AndroidSamsung gave its new flagship an impressively slick redesign. We wouldnt mind if Apple lifted a few of the S8s features for its 10th anniversary iPhone.


In fact, Apple is reportedly working on a few of these features already. Were not saying that Samsung looks at Apple product rumors to define its own roadmap, butanythings possible.
Here are five Galaxy S8 features wed like to see in the next iPhone:
[h=2]Bye, bezels[/h]
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Adam Patrick Murray, IDG Worldwide
Look at that edge-to-edge display.
Samsungs basically bezel-less infinity display on the Galaxy S8 is bananas, to put it mildly. The new phone has an 83 percent screen-to-body ratio, which means this thing is basically all displaya Super AMOLED display, at that.


Apple is reportedly working on an edge-to-edge display of its own, which is a good thing.

At this point, the iPhones thick bezel and LCD screen feel a bit dated, although the iPhone 7 LCD displays quality has been rated as comparable to its competitors OLED versions. But we would love if the iPhone 8 featured an expansive screen with hairs-width side bezels and a super slim forehead and chin.


Samsung has also gone all-in with curved OLED screens, which Apple is also reportedly considering, though its unclear if the company has found high-quality suppliers that can produce enough curved OLED panels for all those iPhones.
[h=2]Home button, be gone[/h]
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Michael Simon
Samsung put the Galaxy S8's fingerprint sensor on the back, which we hope Apple doesn't do.
With its vast screen, Samsung banished the phones physical home button. The S8s home button is now beneath the display, so you can press the screen and the button will respond with haptic feedback (though our Greenbot colleagues report that the S8s vibrations are nothing like the iPhones).


Samsung kept its flagships fingerprint sensor, but moved it to the backright next to the camera lens. This is a bad move, and one we hope Apple doesnt follow.
Rumor has it Apple is planning to embed Touch ID right into the iPhones display, which makes much more sense than sticking it on the back.
[h=2]Use your face to unlock your phone[/h]The Galaxy S8 turns your face into the password you use to unlock your phone, with an iris scanner to recognize your eyeprint instead of a fingerprint. The S8 also uses biometric facial recognition, so you hold your phone in front of your face and the S8 will immediately slide into your home screen. Given that Samsung put its fingerprint sensor in such an awkward spot, this is a necessary design decision. But its also an insanely cool advance for smartphone technology, and something we hope Apple is exploring for the iPhone.
[h=2]A useful voice assistant[/h]Last year, Samsung acquired Viv, an AI-powered voice assistant created by the founders of Siri. Viv become the foundation of Bixby, the voice-activated assistant baked into the Galaxy S8.


Bixby is contextually aware with the ability to answer follow-up questions. This is something Siri cant do. At all. If youre looking at a map on your screen, Bixby knows what it is and what you mean when you say, Bixby, capture this. Siri doesnt know what youre looking at on your screen, and saying, Siri, capture this, would likely take you to a list of Bing search results for this.


To be fair, the early word on Bixby is that it's incredibly limited and not as cool as it sounds, though Samsung didn't let anyone try it out before unveiling the S8.


Apple is slowly improving its assistants capabilities, but its glacial pace of progress is due to privacy concerns. Apple doesnt want Siri to store information about you or what youre doing on your phone. Anyone who cares about protecting their data appreciates Apples premium on privacy, but there must be some middle ground that would make Siri smarter.
[h=2]Augmented reality comes to the camera[/h]
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Michael Simon
Samsung redesigned the Galaxy S8 camera to include augmented reality.

Samsung also introduced a new feature called Bixby Vision, which lets you use your camera to scan items. Bixby Vision will then overlay details about the item, such as a book, and give you a link to buy it.


Apple is reportedly working on augmented reality, tooCEO Tim Cook has hinted as much in a series of comments over the last year. And rumor has it Apple is still considering the best AR applications for the iPhone camera, though its unclear whether the companys ideal use cases are product scanning and shopping. (Our guess is no.)


Samsung still has to prove that Galaxy S8's new safety-checked battery wont set the phone on fire, which is a pretty low bar to clear.

But the S8s new features are ones we hope Apple is already working to perfect for the iPhone 8, which we expect to launch this September.




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lurker

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
2 Things I don't like.

1.) The placement of the fingerprint reader is all wrong. It should be back and center.
2.) Samsung Touchwiz. Need Stock android and consequently quicker updates.
 

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