Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Cellphones

Samsung Officially Unpacks Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 Edge At MWC 235

MojoKid writes Today, at Mobile World Congress, Samsung took the veil off of its much-anticipated Galaxy S6, and also the Galaxy S6 edge. As has been heavily rumored, the S6 foregoes the plastic shell of its predecessor and integrates metal and glass instead, resulting in a far more premium feel, a thickness of 6.8mm, and a weight of 138g on the normal S6 and 132g on the edge. Samsung made it a point to mention that the metal it uses in the S6 is 50% stronger than other smartphones- a Apple bendgate jab, perhaps? Both the S6 and S6 edge share the same hardware, which includes a 5.1-inch Quad HD Super AMOLED display. That gives us a resolution of 2560x1440, and a high pixel density of 577 ppi. The new phones also include an octa-core processor (2.1GHz quad + 1.5GHz quad), 3GB of DDR4 memory, and LTE cat 6 (300/50Mbps) support. Also of note is the phone's rear 16 megapixel f/1.9 camera, which Samsung says will launch in less than a second (0.6 seconds, to be exact). The front camera is no slouch either, also boasting an aperture of f/1.9, and coming in at 5 megapixels. The company says that the phone can add 4 hours of battery-life after a mere 10 minutes of charging, and when compared to the iPhone, it charges up to full in half the time. The S6 also has built-in wireless charging as well.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Samsung Officially Unpacks Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 Edge At MWC

Comments Filter:
  • Nope (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ledow ( 319597 ) on Sunday March 01, 2015 @06:15PM (#49160133) Homepage

    Non-user-replaceable battery, and no SD expansion.

    Stick it up your backside, Samsung, and stop emulating the WORST features of your competitors.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      Non-user-replaceable battery, and no SD expansion.

      A replaceable battery costs more upfront and is incompatible with thinness. Most people get a new phone long before the battery dies.

      • Re:Nope (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ganjadude ( 952775 ) on Sunday March 01, 2015 @06:44PM (#49160273) Homepage
        5 years ago that was true. Im still using my GS3 which works fine to this day. it gets a little hot, but after replacing the battery i could see me getting a good 2 more years out of it (longer if i wasnt using a bunch of apps)
        • by gutnor ( 872759 )

          Most people get their mobile replaced as part of their contract every 2 years. I don't know many person for which it is not the case: they tends to either do not care at all and have a non-smart phone, or they come from a country where getting a mobile with your contract is not legal (which btw does not mean they don't replace their phone every 2 years regardless).

          Samsung is going to sell thousands of its smartphone to contracts for each one they sell to somebody like you and me ( I'm using my second sma

          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by vux984 ( 928602 )

          5 years ago that was true. Im still using my GS3 which works fine to this day. it gets a little hot, but after replacing the battery i could see me getting a good 2 more years out of it (longer if i wasnt using a bunch of apps)

          You can replace the battery on most "sealed phones" too. Its just more of a process; and depending on your comfort level you might prefer to take it to a shop to do it for $20+price-of-battery for you. But you can still do that. And you only need to do it once, after 3-4 years.

          Who car

        • I have a GS3, and it is fine and I won't replace it until it dies.. But I find that I get very poor battery life out of it. Like sometimes dead by 1pm when charged overnight. I bought another fresh battery and same result. I just charge them overnight and swap them so it's really not an issue. I even looked at alternative ROMs because some have improvement on battery use, but mine is a vendor model which most ROMs don't work on.

          So.. yeah. No user replaceable battery in the S6? Even though I wouldn't
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by olddoc ( 152678 )
        I don't care about thinness. I want to use my phone hard and have it last a full day. I have an aftermarket battery in my S4 and love it. The new battery will charge quickly only with a special charger. If you connect it to a regular USB outlet you won't get very far very fast. The built in battery doesn't have to die. If it loses 30% of capacity before a typical 2 year US contract is up you will want to replace it.
      • Re:Nope (Score:5, Interesting)

        by ganjadude ( 952775 ) on Sunday March 01, 2015 @06:56PM (#49160307) Homepage
        as for thinness, I dont want that! Gimme a phone 2x as thick as current top tier phones (or about 1/2 as thick as old nokia candy bar phones) and give me 4X the battery life. I want some heft in my phone. not zach morris phone thick, but old candy bar phone thick
        • as for thinness, I dont want that! Gimme a phone 2x as thick as current top tier phones (or about 1/2 as thick as old nokia candy bar phones) and give me 4X the battery life. I want some heft in my phone. not zach morris phone thick, but old candy bar phone thick

          Yup. Thinness is a terrible tradeoff.

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          Gimme a phone 2x as thick as current top tier phones and give me 4X the battery life.

          Simple solution: Get a USB power brick and tape it to the back of your phone.

          • yes. because that is totally logical (not that i havent done that in the past with a phone whos battery was totally shot while waiting on the replacement battery. What do i do now when that happens with this phone??? oh well, no phone til you ship it out/ bring it to someone else to do it)
        • Speaking of style over function, I take it the new phone is not using LiquidMetal for it's metal. They teased a liquid metal ad last week. But it looks like just polished metal to me. Or is it? Apple's exclusive rights purchase for liquid Metal technology I beleive ran out a week ago, making it possible this could be a liquid metal phone case.

        • as for thinness, I dont want that! Gimme a phone 2x as thick as current top tier phones (or about 1/2 as thick as old nokia candy bar phones) and give me 4X the battery life. I want some heft in my phone. not zach morris phone thick, but old candy bar phone thick

          Just get a battery boost pack. Mophie [mophie.com] (and others im sure) are already announcing their products for these new samsung phones.

          • the point is i shouldnt have to rely on a 3rd party to do the job of my product.
            • the point is i shouldnt have to rely on a 3rd party to do the job of my product.

              But that product doesn't do what you want it to do but you can buy an accessory that does make it do what you want it to do. So either buy something different or buy this product and the accessory.

              • by AuMatar ( 183847 )

                Or buy a competing product that does do what you want. Like one of the gadzillion other android devices out there.

      • Re:Nope (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 01, 2015 @07:05PM (#49160343)

        Non-user-replaceable battery, and no SD expansion.

        A replaceable battery costs more upfront and is incompatible with thinness. Most people get a new phone long before the battery dies.

        1)
        You do not speak for anyone but yourself, despite the fantasies you so obviously entertain.

        2)
        Some of us want a battery which can be removed so the phone can be powered off without
        any question. A non-removable battery is a deal-breaker for those who want this.

        /

      • A replaceable battery costs more upfront

        Amazing the el-cheapo feature and smartphones are able to afford replaceable batteries while these things tend to go missing in higher end versions costing >5x more.

        and is incompatible with thinness.

        Why do you say that?

        My phone has a replaceable battery, if it were any thinner I wouldn't want it.. hard enough as it is trying to hold without sides of your fingers touching the edge of the digitizer. I've seen back covers of LG and Samsung models and don't see any wasted space.

        Most people get a new phone long before the battery dies.

        Funny there seems to be a healthy market for replacement and a

      • by Krojack ( 575051 )

        I always have 1-2 spare batteries with me. If i'm away from being able to charge it then I can swap the battery with a fully charged one. I would rather do this than carry an external charger as well.

        • How is that any different from someone that carries an external battery pack for a phone? Most are smaller in form factor than second batteries for a phone would be... and they have the same result as having that second battery (only they are even slightly more useful since they don't need to be in the phone to charge).

      • A replaceable battery to to recharge when you are away from home. I bike to work and cannot charge at work as my phone needs to be on me or on the way there. I often spend 20 hours away from a charge. It's not about the battery wearing out, it's about double capacity without lunging around a spare charger. Also A SD card is awesome for it's usefulness in trip phones or carrying movies and music.
      • Lots of people - possibly outside of thhe USA - have to go for DAYS without a power source - perhaps because they work (or play) away from home/ I normally keep a stack of four batteries charged. While this usage pattern my not be common in America and Japan, it is for much of the world.

        As for removable SD car - I want to be able to instantly swap content OUT as much as in. I do not want to take one client's data onto another's premises ever. And I may have recreational content I do not want in the work pl

    • Re:Nope (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ganjadude ( 952775 ) on Sunday March 01, 2015 @06:43PM (#49160269) Homepage
      the funny thing is how all the bloggers and reporters are calling this a step in the right direction. for me it pretty much sealed their fate, no more galaxy line for me.

      Everyone talking about how "premium" it feels and is... well a premium phone IMO has expandable storage. It has a removable battery. It can take a fall from a few feet up (glass back???? really??? all my friends who had iphone 4s had cracked backs

      to top it all off i dont want to spend money on a "premium feel" when all im gonna do is wrap it in an otterbox anyway!

      does anyone make a top tier phone, with an SD slot and a removable battery anymore? because that is who will be getting my business when i buy my next phone (it sucks too because I was putting off buying a new phone for a few months waiting on this one)
      • Last year's LG G3 was the only other flagship to have an SD and removable battery, but it is phablet sized at 5.5".

        • The Lg G3 is a brilliant phone and while it is a large screen it doesn't actually feel like that big of a phone. I am still running the lg g2, but the wife got the g3 and never looked back.

          Only think I would change is I wouldn't have the crazy high resolution screen. I believe that it eats way more power than it is worth and a 1920x1080 screen would have been a better choice. At that resolution and small size its hard to tell the difference.

      • by Eythian ( 552130 )

        Maybe it's just that what you think "premium" means isn't what everyone else thinks it means? Though, I'm still rocking a Nexus 4 with a glass back, no expandable storage, and no removable battery. It's a pretty nice phone and I don't care about those things.

      • As soon as I read the words, "has a more premium feel", I knew this review had been written by a mouth-breathing marketing moron. WTF is that even supposed to be, other than words strung together in attempt to make idiots feel smug about their cluelessness?

        As for mine--no removable battery, no removable storage, no desire whatsoever to buy.

        • by Ksevio ( 865461 )
          It likely means it feels more robust and well made. I have an S5, and while it is a good phone, the plastic cover makes it feel a bit cheaper and flimsy.

          The vast majority of customers don't remove the battery anyways, so it was probably a move in the right direction on that front. The 128GB internal storage negates the no removable storage issue.

          The thing that bugs me is they've given up on making it waterproof which is a cool feature in previous models.
          • But plastics used nowadays are clearly superior to metal for a phone body. Less denting, less slippery, more flexible at the stress levels typically endured by phones so protects phone innards better.

            So metal necessarily is less well made than plastics typically used for phones.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Dracos ( 107777 )

      Yet another phone without a full QWERTY hardware keyboard, so I'll be keeping my Epic 4G even longer.

      Thinness is an anti-feature. If people really wanted their phones to be paper thin, there wouldn't be a market for phone cases.

    • by rossz ( 67331 )

      I was thinking about upgrading and figured I'd wait until the S6 was available, but those two flaws make it a deal breaker.

    • Non-user-replaceable battery, and no SD expansion.

      Stick it up your backside, Samsung, and stop emulating the WORST features of your competitors.

      Non replaceable battery, meh. Non expandable memory, now that is a show stopper right there.

  • by DanTheManMS ( 1039636 ) on Sunday March 01, 2015 @06:16PM (#49160143)
    No removable battery. Less space than an SD card. Lame.

    In all seriousness, it does look like a very nice phone. And Samsung has gotten better about pre-loading less bloatware on their more recent releases. We'll have to see how the general public receives it though.
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday March 01, 2015 @06:16PM (#49160149)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 01, 2015 @06:28PM (#49160201)

    megapixels, GHz, bus speed, blah blah blah...I may be the only person on the planet who actually cares about this esoteric feature, but I'll ask anyway: How well does it function as a telephone? Are calls clear & loud? How much does the microphone collect sound? Is it sensitive to wind (noise)? etc. etc. etc. I ask because most cell phones sound dreadful -- like a 3rd generation mp3 played through an AM radio.

    In these days of feature checklist pissing contests over most pixels and CPU power, it'd be good to know if a $700 phone can make a decent phone call.

    • by AbRASiON ( 589899 ) * on Sunday March 01, 2015 @06:34PM (#49160233) Journal

      Mod anon up, important question.
      Also often overlooked

      Audio quality from headphone port
      Speakerphone quality
      Mic quality
      Time to charge (addressed in this case)
      Shock resistance
      Warranty period
      Quality of service from provider (hate to tip the hat to Apple but holy crap good service)
      Screen brightness in the sun
      etc.

    • that would require some attention to detail, which samsung definitely lacks. it will get harder and harder for them to sell phones based on features that have long ago crossed the border of usefullness. 577 ppi - are you selling those phones to eagles? 16mp - i'd rather have 10mp with bigger pixels - plus those photos don't use that much space. 2.1 ghz quad + 1.5 ghz quad, 3gb ram? just give me software that runs on an 1.2 ghz dualcore, that should be more than enough. saves battery too.
    • by arielCo ( 995647 )

      Blame that on your stingy provider, skimping on bandwidth by packing you all in a few channels. Full-rate GSM is quite clear.

  • by dwheeler ( 321049 ) on Sunday March 01, 2015 @06:34PM (#49160227) Homepage Journal
    One reason I bought an earlier Samsung is *specifically* because it supports a micro-SD card. Nice specs, but no micro-SD is a weakness to me.
    • Judging on my past usage patterns, a lack of a removable battery isn't a big deal for me; but the SD card is.

      Anyone have any suggestions for a good new model phone that still comes with one, since Samsung is apparently out?
    • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
      If I didn't want an SD slot, I'd have gotten the Oppo R5. Cheaper and thinner than the S6, and the commercial for it shows a car driving over it, and using it to hammer in a nail, without a scratch. But I passed on the Oppo R5 because of the lack of SD slot. OnePlus, cheaper and better than Samsung. And if you don't like stock Android, I like ColorOS better than TouchWiz (I like Sense over TouchWiz as well, TouchWiz isn't great, but I haven't played with it since it came with fewer bloat items).

      Oh, and
  • by jpellino ( 202698 ) on Sunday March 01, 2015 @06:46PM (#49160277)
    just flagpole-sitting at this point?
    • just flagpole-sitting at this point?

      Yes. Also, 1080p is more pratical as it allows 1:1 clone to TV.

      • I wonder what the power drain is on these things - GPU wise.

        I'm mean if the inbuilt camera shoots video at 1080 and the screen is 1440, then the system is upscaling during playback.

  • Samsung (Score:2, Flamebait)

    by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
    The company that thinks it's ok to make TV's that spy on you - no thanks. Not interested in any of their products.
  • by ZipK ( 1051658 ) on Sunday March 01, 2015 @08:19PM (#49160775)

    The new phones also include an octa-core processor...

    The first blade grabs at the whisker, tugging it away from your face to protect it from the second blade.
    Blade number two catches and digs into the stubble before it has the chance to snap back and injure you, pulling it farther out so that it is now ready for shearing.
    Triple-Trac's third blade, a finely-honed bonded platinum instrument, cuts cleanly through the whisker at its base, leaving your face as smooth as a billiard ball.

    The Triple Trac [jt.org]

  • by WaffleMonster ( 969671 ) on Sunday March 01, 2015 @08:24PM (#49160797)

    Oh come on 2560x1440 AMOLED is just insane and pointless. 1080 is ridiculous as-is nobody is ever going to benefit from or notice any difference.

    More importantly I won't buy a phone with an AMOLED display. IPS is more reliable, lasts longer, no burn-in issues and easier to see in daylight.

    Also no SD card? WTF were they thinking?

    No replaceable battery in a device that costs hundreds of dollars... Don't think so - not that rich/stupid.

    • 1080 is ridiculous as-is nobody is ever going to benefit from or notice any difference.

      1080 is the Full HD video format that these phones can now record.

      Displaying the video you just shot makes sense - at the same pixel count without scaling.

  • The good news is (Score:5, Insightful)

    by denisbergeron ( 197036 ) <`moc.oohay' `ta' `noregreBsineD'> on Sunday March 01, 2015 @08:37PM (#49160869)

    The older S5 with a removable battery and a SD card will see the price down.

  • by sremick ( 91371 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @01:46AM (#49162085)

    No MicroSD slot and no removable battery means no sale for me. And from the posts on this forum, I'm far from alone.

    When my S2 died a couple weeks ago I had already read the rumors that the S6 would lack these critical, basic features. So I went ahead and bought an S5. So glad I didn't wait for the anti-consumer S6.

    Removable batteries are both about getting through a full day of hardcore usage without ever being tethered to a charging wire, as well as increasing the overal longevity of the phone by being able to replace it 2-3 years in when it no longer holds a decent charge.

    Expandable storage isn't just about having more storage in the device. It's about being able to have safe storage independent of the device that can survive the device failing. Every night my phone does an automatic backup of all my apps and data to my MicroSD card. I can't tell you how many times this has saved me over the years, on multiple phones. More than once on my Samsung Captivate (original Galaxy S). More than once on my S2... including this most-recent time 2 weeks ago. I moved my MicroSD card over to my new S5, restored my data and I was right back where I left off.

    And don't give me that crap about backing up to the "cloud". The "cloud" is a joke, and those of us in the Real World don't have data, let alone wifi access 24/7. Just because I don't have wireless signal doesn't mean I don't want my data backed up that night.

    Every cell phone I've ever owned has had a removable battery, and every smartphone I've ever had has had a MicroSD card... including some non-smartphones from back when they were called TransFlash. There's no way in hell I'm going to start giving up these basic, core features of owning a phone. If Samsung doesn't get its head out of its ass, stop being stupid and stop being anti-consumer then the S5 could easily be the last Samsung phone I ever buy. I'll miss the OLED screen but they won't deserve my money at that point. I'll vote with my money and give it to a company that isn't into the business of screwing the user and forced-obsolescence.

  • It looks like the Galaxy line is dead for me (no SD, no battery change).

    What phones with both of these features are still out there ?

HELP!!!! I'm being held prisoner in /usr/games/lib!

Working...