What the Samsung Galaxy SIII is all about
For those of you that missed the true message
behind yesterday’s Samsung Galaxy S3 announcement and are frantically comparing
Samsung’s latest against other manufacturers devices in terms of hardware,
please don’t. In my opinion, Samsung is not trying to sell you hardware. They
are trying to sell you software. They are selling software features and
enhancements. They are are on the brink of selling you their own ecosystem.Could
this be that product life cycle curve
where a company decides to differentiate itself from the rest of the flock in
order to survive? The same thing has been done by apple and now all you are
buying is Samsung Galaxy S the brand/product line.
Yesterday, Samsung officially announced the
the next Galaxy, the Samsung Galaxy S3. During the first half hour of the
event, the only spec that was mentioned was the size of the screen, coming in
at a whopping 4.8 inches. Instead of following the normal of most Android smart
phone announcements and harping on numbers, Samsung spent a majority of the
event focused on non-tech buzzwords such as “nature”, “natural” and “organic”. The Galaxy S3 is “really designed for
humans”, which was drilled into viewers throughout entire presentation.
Samsung realizes that they have reached a
point with their products that they no longer need to tout numbers to gain a
large market share. They already have that. Samsung now wishes to win over the
average consumer by touting sheer features and software functionality that just
feels natural to people.This is nothing new to the mobile tech world. Apple,
Samsung’s true mobile competitor, does similar in their marketing efforts for
the iPhone.
The majority of flagship smart phones out their
today only differ slightly in terms of CPU power, graphics output, camera
pixels and screen quality. If you compare the Galaxy Nexus, the HTC One X, the
iPhone 4S, and the upcoming Motorola RAZR HD, to the SGS3, they are all similar
in various specs. Most of these numbers don’t mean a damn thing to the average
consumer. This is where Samsung has stepped in to up their game, helping
differentiate themselves from other similar devices.
The SGS3 comes with a wide variety of Samsung
services and applications. They introduced S Voice, a Siri like a voice
recognition application that does more than just respond to voice commands. S
Voice bests Siri by being able to actually open up applications such as Spotify
for music or Google Maps for navigation. Siri cannot launch applications. The
SGS3 also comes with Samsung’s own version of Android Beam called S Beam. This
NFC technology allows two devices to be placed back to back which then
automatically configures WiFi Direct. Seconds later, the connection is made allowing
users to share files and other content at great speeds. Samsung has many other
software features that aren’t found in other Android devices, which we
highlighted earlier today.
The last, but certainly not least tell tale
sign that Samsung is focused on creating their own ecosystem is the inclusion
of their very own Samsung Store, which is all part of their S Cloud branding.
The SGS3 will come with it’s own Music Hub, which boasts 17 million tracks and
an iTunes Match feature. They also announced Game Hub which will focus on
social gaming and Video Hub shall contain TV shows and movies.
This trend is predicted to continue over the
coming years in the Android scene according Forrester Research which predicts
that proprietary Android ecosystems (such as Samsung) will surpass the Google
Android ecosystem by 2015. We’ve already seen the start of this elsewhere in
the Android world, Amazon’s Kindle Fire and Amazon’s Android Appstore. These
speculations are all subject to change as Google has realized their ecosystem
problems and are set on fixing it.
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