Samsung became the first handset maker to announce a smartphone using
Microsoft's latest mobile software, making its surprise, hurried
announcement just days before the highly anticipated launch of Nokia's
version.
The brief announcement on Wednesday at a Berlin electronics show comes amid expectations that smartphone makers may turn increasingly
to Windows devices after a US jury decided many of Samsung's Google
Android-based phones infringed Apple Inc patents.
"It looks like a good phone, and seems like a pre-emptive
announcement ahead of Nokia," said Sid Parakh, an analyst at investment
firm McAdams Wright Ragen, of the Samsung phone.
"Microsoft or Windows never got their best teams, never got their
best designs, just because Android was doing so well. With the change in
the legal environment, there's a case to be made that Samsung will
likely shift some of those resources to broaden out or diversify their
own exposure."
Nokia, the ailing Finnish mobile firm, once the world's leading
producer of phones but now struggling to reverse losses, is due to
unveil its new Lumia line of smartphones using Windows Phone 8 in New
York on September 5.
Samsung's new phone called ATIV S -- tacked onto the end of a long
news conference in Berlin that focused on other products -- may elevate
expectations for the Lumia. Samsung's ATIV S Windows phone sports a
high-end 4.8-inch display, Corning "Gorilla" glass, and an 8-megapixel
rear camera and 1.9-megapixel front-facing camera, Microsoft posted on
its official blog on Wednesday.
"Expectations for a 40 megapixel or possibly 20 megapixel camera
model are running high. If Nokia does not unveil a monster camera
handset next week, many will be disappointed," said Tero Kuittinen,
analyst at mobile analytics firm Alekstra.
But "this leaves Nokia plenty of room to draw a clear contrast with its upcoming announcement."
Samsung's Windows-based smartphone, introduced on Wednesday, marks
the first in a "big lineup of new hardware" from the South Korean
company based on Microsoft's software, Microsoft executive Ben Rudolph
said in a blog posting.
Analysts say the introduction of Samsung's Windows phone may be
designed to assuage concerns that Microsoft will favor Nokia, whose
Chief Executive Stephen Elop -- himself a former senior Microsoft
executive -- has staked its future on the Windows platform.
"The fact Samsung was allowed to be the first to announce is
Microsoft's backhanded way of letting other vendors know that Nokia is
not getting special treatment," Current Analysis analyst Avi Greengart
said.
But Jack Gold, an independent mobile consultant who runs J. Gold
Associates, argued Samsung had signalled its commitment to Windows for a
while, but Nokia will remain the primary driver of the new breed of
Microsoft-powered devices.
"Samsung has crossed the start line first and set the bar for Nokia's launch," said Geoff Blaber, analyst at CCS Insight.
Stealing a marchMicrosoft gave a preview of its
Windows Phone 8 software in June, and promised the first phones would be
on the market by the autumn.
Windows Phone 8 looks similar to, and is built on the same core code
as Microsoft's upcoming Windows 8 operating system, but is not the same
product. Windows 8, which will run on tablets and PCs, is scheduled to
launch on October 26.
Samsung said the ATIV phone would hit stores in the October-November period but did not give an exact start date.
On Wednesday, the Korean corporation also showed off a slew of
tablets using Windows 8 software and the second generation of its
popular Google Android-based Galaxy Note phone-cum-tablet "phablet" in
downtown Berlin.
Samsung has sold some 10 million of its original Galaxy Note devices,
creating a new product category which has smaller screen than tablets,
but bigger than smartphones.
"I am pretty confident it will even outsell its predecessor," said JK Shin, Samsung's chief of mobile business.
Samsung hopes the new device will take the focus away from its loss
of the court case. Apple is now seeking speedy bans on the sale of eight
Samsung phones, moving swiftly to turn legal victory into tangible
business gain.
Samsung hopes the phablet upgrade will lift any post-Apple gloom. The
new version of the Note features a thinner and slightly bigger 5.5-inch
screen, quad-core processor, the latest version of the Android
operating system called Jellybean, and improved stylus function.
"There won't be huge innovative changes in design, but the Note 2
will feature quite a few improvements and enable Samsung to carry on its
strong sales momentum in the category," said Lee Sun-tae, an analyst at
NH Investment & Securities. "With the launch, Samsung will also be
trying to turn around downbeat sentiment after the US legal defeat."
Apple did not include the Note and other newly unveiled Samsung
products in its original lawsuit. But the company and its lawyers are
expected by many legal experts to try and use last week's legal victory
to go after future gadgets, especially because the jury found infringing
features in Samsung phones such as pinch-and-zoom and bounce-back --
common in Android.
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