Samsung ditches plastic design, adds mobile pay in new phone

The new Galaxy S6, right, and S6 Edge are displayed during a Samsung Galaxy Unpacked 2015 event on the eve of this week’s Mobile World Congress wireless show in Barcelona, Spain

The new Galaxy S6, right, and S6 Edge are displayed during a Samsung Galaxy Unpacked 2015 event on the eve of this week’s Mobile World Congress wireless show in Barcelona, Spain

Samsung, locked in a tight race with Apple to be the world’s biggest smartphone maker, has unveiled an important new phone that ditches its signature plastic design for more stylish metal and glass.
The South Korean phone manufacturer also unveiled a premium model with a display that curves around the left and right edges so that information can be glanced at on the side. The Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge will both include technology for mobile payments, though Samsung isn’t unveiling a service to rival the iPhone’s Apple Pay until this summer.
Samsung and Apple have gone back and forth as the world’s top smartphone maker in recent years. Apple’s iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, released last year, have helped the Cupertino, California, company catch up. Both of Apple’s new phones are larger than previous versions and their size was heavily marketed, in part to appeal to customers who liked Samsung’s large phones.
Now Samsung’s S6 phones will have a metal frame — like the iPhone. The phones also have a glass back, which Apple abandoned in favor of metal in recent iPhones.
Although the resolution of the phones’ rear camera remains at 16 megapixels, cameras on both sides will have wider openings to let in more light and make for sharper photos. The phones also promise better focus and color accuracy — achieved in part by using the infrared capabilities on the phones’ heart-rate sensor to detect lighting conditions.
Earlier Sunday, HTC announced a new HTC One smartphone that also sports a better camera, while keeping such previously lauded elements as a metal design and polished finish. HTC Corp. also unveiled a fitness tracker, the Grip. Unlike trackers from Jawbone and Fitbit, the Grip isn’t meant for couch potatoes looking to motivate themselves by counting steps. Rather, HTC is partnering with sports clothing maker Under Armour to offer features for those with active lifestyles.
The announcements come on the eve of this week’s Mobile World Congress wireless show in Barcelona, Spain.
Samsung Electronics Co. said its new design took years to develop. As phones got thinner, the company inevitably ended up “with a device that’s very cold and very industrial,” said Hong Yeo, a senior designer at Samsung. The company’s “Project Zero” team “was given the freedom to design our dream device,” he said.
The new models use glass on both sides, encased in a metal frame. The software will also be simplified. Many of the icons, for instance, will be replaced with text to reduce guesswork.
Previous Samsung phones had removable plastic backs, so the battery could be swapped with a spare. Samsung now joins Apple, HTC and others in favoring a better design over that replacement capability. Samsung is promoting the new phones’ ability to charge quickly — in 30 minutes they can reach 50 percent.
The screen remains 5.1 inches, but the display resolution increases to 577 pixels per inch, up from 432 in last year’s Galaxy S5. By comparison, Apple’s 4.7-inch iPhone 6 has 326. The fingerprint sensor is also improved. Instead of swiping down on the home button, you simply touch it, much the way you already do on iPhones. Both the S6 and the S6 Edge are slightly lighter, thinner and narrower than the S5, though they are a tad taller.
Samsung’s new phones will incorporate technology from LoopPay, a startup that Samsung is buying. LoopPay’s technology reproduces the signals from a credit card’s magnetic swipe, so it can work with existing retail equipment. Most rivals, including Apple Pay, require newer equipment.
The Samsung phones will debut overseas on April 10, at prices to be announced. A U.S. launch date wasn’t given. Samsung is also making an S6 version of its Gear VR virtual-reality headset, which currently works only with the Galaxy Note 4.
HTC’s Grip fitness tracker will cost USD199 when it goes on sale in North America this spring. The new HTC One phone, dubbed M9, is expected to come out in March in some overseas markets. A U.S. debut is likely in April. Prices weren’t immediately announced. Anick Jesdanun, Technology Writer, New York, AP

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