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#is better than sending them to a brand new albeit smaller facility
orcinus-veterinarius · 6 months
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I’m starting to feel like it’s a legitimate possibility that Wikie and Keijo will end up as the very first orcas to be transferred to a sea sanctuary. Combine the untimely deaths of Moana and Inouk and a financially troubled park with the blocked transfers to Japan (and the new park has already started taking in whales from other Japanese facilities, so I don’t think they’re waiting for them) and a government that’s eager to offload its cetaceans, and you’ve got the perfect recipe.
I hope it works.
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toldnews-blog · 6 years
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New Post has been published on https://toldnews.com/business/samsung-reveals-galaxy-fold-and-s10-5g/
Samsung reveals Galaxy Fold and S10 5G
Image copyright Samsung
Image caption The Samsung Fold has a hinge built into it
Samsung has unveiled a foldable smartphone – the Galaxy Fold – alongside its first 5G handset and three further Galaxy S10 mobiles.
The Fold will go on sale in just over two months time, earlier than many expected.
The Galaxy S10 5G device features the firm’s biggest-ever non-folding phone display and promises faster data speeds when networks become available.
The line-up also includes the introduction of a lower cost model.
Open-up screen
Samsung said the Galaxy Fold would open up to create a 7.3in (18.5cm) tablet-like display and would be able to run up to three apps at once.
Image copyright Samsung
Image caption The Samsung fold offers 3 app multitasking
A demo showed off “continuity” features by which the device smoothly transferred from one mode to another. One example involved a small map appearing on the smaller sized screen and then expanding to a larger view when the handset was opened.
The handset is set to launch on April 26 and will start at $1,980 (£1,515). Samsung described it as being a “luxury” item.
Image copyright Samsung
Image caption The phone comes in four colours
“Fold is an experience that gives people who want a phone but also a larger screen with no compromise on the phone experience,” commented Carolina Milanesi from the consultancy Creative Strategies.
“There’s a lot of tech packed in there. And it makes sense to have kept it under $2,000 even if only for the psychological effect that has.”
Galaxy S series
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Media captionWATCH: Hands-on with the new Samsung Galaxy S10
The S10 and S10+ will cost roughly the same as the phones they supersede.
But the S10e means the Galaxy S range now starts at a lower price-point, albeit with lower specifications to match.
Samsung had previously acknowledged that the cost of its S9 range had contributed to “lower-than-expected sales”.
Image caption The S10 family comes in four different sizes, each with a choice of different storage
“Having a 5G variant is strategically important for Samsung as it gives them the jump on Apple and helps maintain the firm’s brand strength and perceived technology leadership,” commented Ben Wood, from the CCS Insight consultancy.
“It also gives the operators a tier-one brand for their 5G launches.
“But as far as consumers are concerned, unless you have a very good reason to buy a 5G phone this summer, one of the other three S10 handsets is probably a better investment, and will be viable for use for many years.”
The launch comes days before Mobile World Congress in Barcelona – a trade event where Samsung’s rivals will unveil new handsets of their own.
The overall smartphone market shrank in 2018, but Samsung’s sales saw a particularly pronounced drop-off as Huawei and other Chinese manufacturers wooed away customers.
Manufacturer Global smartphone shipments in 2018 Year-on-year change Market share Q4 Samsung 292.2 million -8.0% 18.7% Apple 208.8 million -3.2% 18.2% Huawei 206.0 million 33.6% 16.1% Xiaomi 122.5 million 32.1% 7.6% Oppo 113.3 million 1.4% 7.8% Others 463.2 million -19.2% 31.8% Industry total 1.4 billion -4.1% 100%
Source: IDC
Cut-out cameras
All four versions of the S10 are distinguished from last year’s models by embedding the front cameras within their displays.
Samsung refers to this as being the Infinity O design, but it is more commonly referred to as the “hole punch”.
Image caption The phone’s selfie camera is surrounded by its screen
The move allows the phones to feature a thinner top bezel without having the kind of “notch” found on many rivals.
It has, however, caused the firm to ditch the eye iris-scanner introduced in the S8.
Samsung says a new ultrasonic fingerprint sensor placed under the screens of the three higher-end phones offers close to the same level of security, and is more convenient to use than a scanner formerly placed on phone backs.
Image caption A graphic symbol tells users where they need to press to provide a fingerprint
It is based on a technology unveiled by Qualcomm in 2015.
All versions of the handset feature wireless charging and introduce the ability to wirelessly charge other compatible devices in turn.
This mirrors a feature first offered by Huawei’s Mate 20.
Samsung demoed the facility at a dual London and San Francisco launch as a way to recharge a new pair of Bluetooth headphones without having to use a separate cable or power mat.
Image caption The phone can be used to send power to the Galaxy Buds’ charging case
Smarter photography
All four devices now feature a 10 megapixel selfie camera and introduce a 16MP “ultra-wide” rear version, which offers a slightly larger field-of-view than our eyes.
The S10+ also has a second selfie camera to help it take depth readings.
Other improvements include:
the ability to detect 10 additional types of scene, so as to automatically adjust the colours and sharpness to suit the subject. These now include shoes, cats and clothing
a “super steady” video mode that combines both digital and optical stabilisation to create the kind of smooth footage that would traditionally have required a gimbal or other add-on stabiliser
In addition, the S10+ and S10 5G now offer up to one terabyte of internal storage, which the firm says could appeal to those shooting lots of 4K video or storing many game files.
Image caption The S10 phones can tell when they are taking photos of a shoe and will adjust the image to suit
“What’s positive is that Samsung has moved away from software that nobody wants – like AR emojis and Samsung Cloud – and has gone back to its roots to deliver market-leading hardware,” commented Ben Stanton, from market analysis firm Canalys.
“So for the premium part of the market, these are good phones.
“But my concern is that [they are still] not innovative enough to stop people from looking down to lower-price bands and being drawn into mid-range products from Chinese companies that are super-competitive.”
High and low-end
The introduction of a lower price tier may help address this.
But trade-offs for picking the S10e include:
a lower-resolution, smaller 5.8in screen that does not curve round the device’s sides like the 6.1in and 6.4in displays of the S10 and S10+
no telephoto “portrait” rear camera
no heart rate sensor
a capacitive fingerprint scanner on its side, rather than the ultrasonic in-screen option of the more expensive phones
Image caption The S10 5G features three photo cameras and a 3D depth sensor on its rear
By contrast, the S10 5G benefits from several exclusive features:
a 6.7in (17cm) display. For comparison, the Note 9 is 6.4in and the iPhone XS Max 6.5in
faster wired-charging
3D depth-sensing cameras on its front and rear. These could be used to offer improved facial scans and photo-background blurs, although details have yet to be confirmed
“The phone had to be larger to feature a bigger battery because 5G [data transfers] will drain it much faster,” commented Mr Stanton.
“But it was also smart to offer a large screen.
“The use cases for 5G aren’t yet defined, but one potential is to stream 4K video rather than HD. And having a bigger screen makes that more compelling.”
Galaxy S (2010):
The original S-series handset was released days ahead of Apple’s iPhone 4, and had a bigger 4in screen and microSD card slot in its favour.
At that point, its main Android rival was the HTC Desire, and although Samsung’s device was lighter, thinner, and had a more powerful graphics processor, some reviewers said it felt less “premium” in the hand than its competitor.
Galaxy S2 (2011):
The second-generation device saw its display grow to 4.3in, its rear camera increase in resolution to 8MP, and its processor move over to a dual-core design.
It was praised for allowing owners to unlock it by pressing the home key, rather than having to press a button on top as before. And although some griped that it still felt plasticky, it sold in its millions – helping Samsung overtake Nokia as the world’s bestselling mobile phone-maker.
Galaxy S3 (2012):
The third-generation model established a trend of including a bigger display but compensating for the growth by shrinking the size of the bezels.
Its innovations included the ability to detect when the screen was being looked at, so as to avoid dimming the image. And it introduced S Voice, allowing users to command music to play and photos to be taken by speaking to it.
Galaxy S4 (2013):
Samsung added further touchless controls to the S4, letting owners scroll through text by making eye movements, and accept calls with a hand wave.
A dual-camera feature also created photos that blended together the views from the front and rear lenses.
Some critics found this all to be a bit gimmicky, and although the handset was a hit, there were reports that its sales fell short of Samsung’s expectations.
Galaxy S5 (2014):
The S5 added a fingerprint scanner, which could be used to authenticate purchases via PayPal.
It also introduced a black-and-white mode to help save battery life. But predictions that the firm would ditch Android for its in-house operating system Tizen proved to be inaccurate.
Galaxy S6 (2015):
The S-series split in two in 2015 with a premium-priced Edge version offering a screen that curved round one of its sides.
A metal frame and glass back gave the handsets a more luxury feel, but they ditched water resistance and a microSD slot to make this possible.
Galaxy S7 (2016):
The seventh-generation phones looked pretty similar to their predecessors, but restored the ability to dunk them in water and slot in extra storage.
Other improvements centred on the camera with better low-light and autofocus capabilities.
Galaxy S8 (2017):
The S8 and larger S8+ ditched the home button, took Samsung’s logo off the front and added the virtual assistant Bixby.
They also gained an iris scanner, which was billed as “one of the safest ways” to keep data private.
After scandals involving exploding Note 7s and the arrest of the firm’s vice-chairman, the launch helped return the firm to surer footing.
Galaxy S9 (2018):
The S9 and S9+ gained new camera features including a super-slow-motion video mode and a variable aperture – allowing owners to control how much light reached the sensor.
AR emojis also allowed users to create animated cartoon characters that looked like them.
But sales were lacklustre, and several months after it was unveiled Samsung acknowledged there had been “resistance” to its price.
Galaxy S10 (2019):
Cameras that poke out of the screen and four distinct models mark out the latest generation.
But there are signs Samsung’s smartphone dominance is slipping…
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