Samsung’s first flagship smartphones for 2017 are here, and they’re… pretty much what we expected, thanks to a series of leaks. But the Samsung Galaxy S8 and Galaxy S8+ are still noteworthy because of all the things that make them different from Samsung’s previous phones.

First up, the new phones are nearly all-screen (on the front). Second, they’re among the first to ship with Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 chips (at least in some markets… some S8 models will have Samsung Exynos processors instead). And unlike the Galaxy S7, the new models have stereo speakers.

After last year’s disastrous Galaxy Note 7 launch, Samsung also did something interesting: it brought big screens to its Galaxy S lineup. You’ll have to wait until later this year to get a new Samsung phone with support for an S Pen stylus, but if your primary reason for preferring the Note series is the large display, you might want to take a look at the Galaxy S8 or S8+.

The Samsung Galaxy S8 has a 5.8 inch, 2960 x 1440 pixel Super AMOLED display which wraps around the left and right edges of the phone. The Galaxy S8+ has a 6.2 inch screen with the same resolution.

Since unusual screen shapes mean that you can’t always tell how big a phone is just by measuring the diagonal length anymore, here are some more figures: the larger phone measures 159.5mm x 73.4mm x 8.1mm and the smaller model is 148.9mm x 68.1mm x 8mm.

Both models feature 4GB of RAM, Android 7.0 software, Snapdragon 835 or Exynos 8895 processors, 12MP rear and 8MP front cameras.

The larger version has a 3,500 mAh battery while the smaller model has a 3,000 mAh battery. Neither is removable, but that helps the phone achieve its IP68 water and dust resistance rating. Unlike many competing flagship phones, the Galaxy S8 series models do have microSD card slots with support for up to 256GB of removable storage.

They also have USB Type-C ports and 3.5mm headphone jacks, which is something you can’t take for granted anymore.

One trend Samsung doesn’t seem to be jumping on is the dual-camera fad. But that doesn’t mean the phone doesn’t have some camera tricks. There’s a hybrid autofocus feature which combines phase detection and laser autofocus for the rear camera, and the front-facing camera also supports autofocus. The Galaxy S8 phones also have iris recognition, allowing you to login to your phone just by looking at it.

As expected, Samsung has moved the fingerprint sensor to the back of the phone, next to the camera. And the Galaxy S8 is the first device to ship with Samsung’s new Bixby voice assistant software.

Like the LG G6, the new phones have ultra-wide displays (which makes it a little tricky to compare their physical dimensions with other phones just by looking at the diagonal screen measurements). One benefit is that you should be able to use multitasking to view two apps in identically-sized side-by-side windows.

As expected, Samsung will offer a range of accessories, including cases, wireless chargers, and a desktop dock called the DeX Station that lets you connect an external display to use the phones like desktop-style computers. The DeX Station also gives you an Ethernet jack and full-sized USB Ports, and charges the phone while it’s in use.

The Samsung Galaxy S8 goes up for pre-order starting March 30th, and should be available in stores and from wireless carriers in the US starting April 21st.

Customers who pre-order will also get a free Samsung Gear VR headset and controller.

Meanwhile, it looks like those leaked details about accessories were spot-on.

 

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6 replies on “Samsung launches Galaxy S8 and Galaxy S8 Plus smartphones (with big, high-res displays)”

  1. People were complaining that LG’s new 18:9 phone should be called a 2:1 phone. So, now that Samsung has come out with an 18.5:9 phone, do we call it a 37:18 phone instead?

    Obviously, there is increasing merit in using the standard 16:9 as the baseline and standardizing on 9 as the denominator, even if in the long run it’s just an accident of history. Much easier for comparison’s sake.

    1. Nah, the 18.5:9 is a crappy aspect ratio. If they wanted Ultrawide, they should’ve just gone ultrawide 21:9 as per the standard.

      A 2:1 is MUCH MUCH better, as it allows two Apps to fit PIXEL perfect side-by-side and scales up nicely. I’d say it’s better than 16:9 as well, but since that’s the dominant ratio there’s merit to sticking to it.

      But even better than those is this Aspect Ratio:
      √2. (1:1.414)
      Like A4 paper as per the International Standards.
      And it scales PERFECTLY with Powers of 2/Binary.

      Example:
      E1= 1,2,4,8,16,32,64
      E7= 128 x 90
      E7+= 180 x 128
      E8 = 256 x 180
      E8+= 362 x 256
      E9 = 512 x 362
      E9+= 724 x 512
      E10 = 1024 x 724
      E10+= 1448 x 1024
      E11 = 2048 x 1448
      E11+= 2896 x 2048
      E12 = 4096 x 2896
      E12+= 5792 x 4096
      E13 = 8192 x 5792
      E13+= 11584 x 8192
      … … … etc etc

  2. The most surprising thing to me was Dex, Samsung straight up ripped off Microsofts Continuum feature right down to the look of Windows as well, MS even helped them tailor Office for Android so it would make the most of it.

    Okay it’s one thing keeping Office on top but not sure what MS is thinking, letting them copy Windows so blatantly when it has it’s own cell pc project in the works as next gen Continuum.

    1. It’s often the case in big corporations that one division of the company will cooperate closely with a company that might be in direct competition with another division. In this case, the Office division clearly make a stronger case for cooperation than the Windows mobile division did against it, which given Office’s ongoing strength vs. the struggles of the MS mobile division, is not surprising.

    2. I think Microsoft ripped off the idea from Motorola. They had a multimedia dock and a laptop dock (Lapdock) for converting their Atrix and Bionic phones years ago. Plugging in the phone started the webtop interface which was a more desktop-like environment. Same exact concept. And MS Office Mobile apps run on any android device, so nothing new here, but Microsoft did not originate this.

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