Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Samsung turns up the heat
Galaxy S 4 boasts even bigger screen
NEW YORK -- Samsung Electronics is kicking up its competition with Apple with its new Galaxy S 4 smartphone, which has a larger, sharper screen than its predecessor, the bestselling S III.
Samsung trumpeted the much-anticipated phone's arrival Thursday at an event accompanied by a live orchestra while an audience of thousands watched the onstage theatrics. The Galaxy S 4, which crams a five-inch screen into a body slightly smaller than the S III's, will go on sale globally in the April-to-June period.
In the U.S., it will be sold by all four national carriers -- Verizon Wireless, AT&T, Sprint Nextel and T-Mobile USA -- as well as by smaller ones US Cellular and Cricket.
Samsung didn't say what the phone will cost, but it can be expected to start at $200 with a two-year contract in the U.S.
JK Shin, the executive in charge of Samsung's mobile communications division, promised the money would be well-spent for a "life companion" that will "improve the way most people live every day."
That bold promise set the tone for the kind of flashy presentation associated with the showmanship of Apple, the company Samsung has been trying to upstage. Apple contends Samsung has been trying to do it by stealing its ideas -- an allegation that has triggered bitter courtroom battles around the world.
In the last two years, Samsung has emerged as Apple's main competitor in the high-end smartphone market. At the same time, it has sold enough inexpensive low-end phones to edge out Nokia Corp. as the world's largest maker of phones.
The Galaxy line has been Samsung's chief weapon in the smartphone fight, and it has succeeded in making it a recognizable brand while competitors such as Taiwan's HTC Corp. and Korean rival LG have stumbled. Samsung has sold 100 million Galaxy S phones since they first came out in 2010. That's still well below the 268 million iPhones Apple has sold in the same period, but Samsung's sales rate is catching up.
Research firm Strategy Analytics said the Galaxy S III overtook Apple's iPhone 4S as the world's bestselling smartphone for the first time in the third quarter of last year, as Apple fans were holding off for the iPhone 5. The iPhone 5 took back the crown in the fourth quarter.
One way Samsung and other makers of Android phones have been one-upping Apple is by increasing the screen size. Every successive generation of the Galaxy line has been bigger than the one before. The S III sported a screen that measures 4.8 inches on the diagonal, already substantially larger than the iPhone 5's four-inch screen. The S 4's screen is 56 per cent larger than the iPhone's.
In an interview Wednesday, Phil Schiller, senior vice-president of worldwide marketing for Apple, declined to discuss whether they are considering enlarging the screen on the next model of the iPhone.
-- The Associated Press
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition March 15, 2013 B13
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