Samsung wows investors with futuristic tech that Apple's iPhone is already delivering

Posted:
in iPhone edited November 2015
Speaking at Samsung Electronics' 2015 Investors Forum, a series of company executives spent hours saying very little, while talking about "innovations" such as phase detection Focus Pixels and camera sensor Deep Trench Isolation that iPhones already have.


Source: Samsung

Samsung will "lead by following" Apple Watch

Samsung LSI marketing team head Kyushik Hong spoke at length about "Innovation for the next mobile experience," outlining plans to introduce a "Bio Processor" chip that packed a series of components related to health related data recording.


Source: Samsung


Asked when the new chip would be introduced and when Samsung expected it to become a meaningful revenue generator, Hong stated that it was expected to ship early next year and might be used in some kind of band or other product focusing on activity, not necessarily from Samsung.





Source: Samsung


And while his presentation discussed "wearable device trend" and the potential of wearables to grow dramatically in shipment volumes, there was no discussion of how Samsung was actually performing in the smartwatch category it largely introduced, before partnering with Google on Android Wear and then going solo with its own Tizen-based Gear watches, all without achieving any success along the way, before being steamrolled by the arrival of Apple Watch.

At the same time, the "trends" Samsung identified for wearable devices included authentication and payment, features Samsung's Galaxy Gear models continue to lack. Apple Watch introduced Apple Pay last fall, but the company's own new "Samsung Pay" is a feature still confined to Samsung's phones.

The primary unique "feature" Samsung added to its watches that Apple didn't was a small, low quality 1.9 MP camera, which gave it a creepy voyeur-vibe reminiscent of Google Glass while failing to capture images of any useful quality.

Samsung's Galaxy Gear lineup hasn't attract many buyers. Instead, the watch ended up with Best Buy seeing more than 30 percent of its sales being returned by unsatisfied customers, according to a report by Ars.

Samsung unveils some existing camera technology

Focusing next on photography as a feature of smartphones, Hong introduced "fast and accurate auto focus" using phase detection. Apple calls this "Focus Pixels," and introduced it last year as a feature of iPhone 6 (using sensors developed by Sony). While much attention is devoted to imaging how Apple's innovations and technologies will be commodified by Android, the reverse actually seems to be happening

Samsung had earlier introduced phase detection autofocus in its Galaxy S5, but its speed to market didn't change the fact that the S5 was outsold by Apple's iPhone 5s models without the feature. iPhone 6, with Focus Pixels of its own, further trounced the Galaxy S6.

While much attention is devoted to imagining how Apple's innovations and technologies will be commodified by Android licensees, the reverse actually seems to be happening: any technical advantage introduced by others is eventually adopted by Apple (examples include LTE, NFC and barometers), while Apple's technical leaps remain largely unmatched by rivals (such as Touch ID, Continuity and 3D Touch).





Source: Samsung


Other "futuristic" ideas the company addressed included using multiple exposures composited to achieve wide dynamic range and "ISOCELL technology" that puts a barrier between pixels to increase light sensitivity and effectively "controls the absorption of electrons."


Source: Samsung


If that sounds familiar, it's because Apple introduced the concept as "deep trench isolation," in explaining its efforts to increase the pixel count within the iPhone 6s camera sensor without also increasing the noise commonly experienced as pixels get smaller as they are packed more densely to increase overall resolution.

Samsung rushed high resolution camera sensors to market before Apple, but their high megapixel counts didn't result in better photos. Instead, it resulted in low light noise and less accurate color reproduction.

While Apple explained that it was using this new technology to increase iPhone camera resolution without losing quality, Samsung stated that its goal for the same process (under a different name) was to reduce pixel size in order to help reduce the overall thickness of its phones.


Source: Samsung


Samsung stated it was reducing the pixel size of its 16MP sensor from 1.12um to 1.0um to achieve 1mm of reduced thickness. Apple reduced the pixel size of iPhone 6 from 8MP at 1.5um to 12MP at 1.22um, not primarily to reduce device thickness, but to increase photo and video capture resolution without losing quality, maintaining larger pixels than competing sensors. Pixel size reduction on its own simply makes each pixel less sensitive to light.

It's noteworthy that while Apple uses a custom version of Sony's camera sensor for iPhone 6/6s, Samsung also uses Sony's IMX240 sensor in its Galaxy S6/S6 Edge, at least in the versions it sends to reviewers. Regular users are finding that Samsung might also swap in its own ISOCELL camera sensors to save money, resulting in reduced image quality.

This all happened before

Overall, Samsung's investor conference seemed far less ambitious and confident as its event from 2013, where JK Shin, Samsung's president and chief executive of IT & Mobile, promised that the company would "play a key role in the premium smartphone market."

As AppleInsider noted at the time, this was a direct contradiction of the warning Samsung had earlier given its investors of slowing profits.

It also belied the reality that most of the phones Samsung had been--and was currently selling--were low end devices, not premium phones. Further, Samsung has been--and continues to repeatedly note--that its premium sales remain static (rather than experiencing any tremendous growth in demand as promised) and that its unit growth is coming from low end devices, which are eroding its Average Selling Price.


Source: Samsung


Back in 2013, Samsung focused upon screen resolutions, forecasting that by this year, it would be selling smartphones with 3840x2160 displays. Instead of that happening, the company is still selling "WQHD" screens, and even those are plaguing Samsung's high end devices with excessive screen resolutions that its relatively anemic Application Processors aren't quite capable of driving competitively.


Source: Samsung


In 2013, Samsung also laid out a plan for delivering 64-bit cores just like Apple had in its A7, but then actually spent two years trying to catch up.

Based on the company's still-vapor promises regarding the performance of its Exynos 8, it will remain slower at real world tasks than the A9 chip Apple has already sold by the millions in its iPhone 6s phones.
«134

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 64
    C'moon DED, this is article is full of bs.

    Samsung used ISOCELL sensor in Galaxy S5, and if I remember correctly in Note 4. So they were using "Deep Trench Isolation" well before Apple. So clearly Samsung did not announced that technology in their Investor Forum.

    And you decided to not even mention BRITECELL technology, which was the only "new" thing in their representation.
  • Reply 2 of 64

    FYI DED

     

    1. Samsung unveiled ISOCELL tech couple years ago. They have used it already in Galaxy S5 and in Note 4. 

    2. Therefore, Samsung used tech well before Apple (or actually Deep Trench is Sony's tech and so is Focus Pixels).

    3. Why you did not mention BRITECELL (replacing green pixels with white ones), which was only new tech in Samsung's representation?

  • Reply 3 of 64
    It sounds like management was aiming on baffling the stockholders with bullshit, but how many years can they get by without delivering on the promises...

    It must rub managements asses raw that Apple's success at Samsung's expense just gets better and better.

    3D touch is a advancement in UI that Apple may leverage in apps and iOS to really hurt Samsung and the rest of the money losers in the very near future. I don't think the Android users really understand what a killer feature 3D touch can become once developers start implementing it fully.

    Plus, Apple likely has some more hardware and iOS tricks to spring on the world... things that may be even harder to emulate and take longer to develop alternatives to—Meanwhile Apple further builds out its ecosystem and tightens the family of product's integration. I love it!
  • Reply 4 of 64
    It sounds like management was aiming on baffling the stockholders with bullshit, but how many years can they get by without delivering on the promises...

    It must rub managements asses raw that Apple's success at Samsung's expense just gets better and better.

    3D touch is a advancement in UI that Apple may leverage in apps and iOS to really hurt Samsung and the rest of the money losers in the very near future. I don't think the Android users really understand what a killer feature 3D touch can become once developers start implementing it fully.

    Plus, Apple likely has some more hardware and iOS tricks to spring on the world... things that may be even harder to emulate and take longer to develop alternatives to—Meanwhile Apple further builds out its ecosystem and tightens the family of product's integration. I love it!

    The answer to your years question is many more years. As long as Samsung can safely say they ship more phones than any other company, investors will accept the delusion Samsung spews to them.
  • Reply 5 of 64



    Samsung : Back to the future !

  • Reply 6 of 64
    asciiascii Posts: 5,936member
    In the past people have worried that cheaper foreign manufacturers can just copy American designs and sell them for cheap. But what if the American innovations were too complicated to copy quickly (requiring both software and hardware changes)? And by the time they were copied, the American company had already moved on to something else?

    It just goes to show the strategic power of raw speed in business.
  • Reply 7 of 64
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,727member
    It just seems hard to believe Samsung doesn't gain knowledge from the work it does for Apple, it would not otherwise. Let us not forget Bill Gates having access to the first Mac OS when hired by Apple to develop Steve's concept, Office for Mac, before Windows existed or Office for the PC for that matter. Wholesale intellectual theft was the very basis of Microsoft why not Samsung's mobile strategy?
  • Reply 8 of 64
    davdav Posts: 115member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by digitalclips View Post



    It just seems hard to believe Samsung doesn't gain knowledge from the work it does for Apple, it would not otherwise. Let us not forget Bill Gates having access to the first Mac OS when hired by Apple to develop Steve's concept, Office for Mac, before Windows existed or Office for the PC for that matter. Wholesale intellectual theft was the very basis of Microsoft why not Samsung's mobile strategy?



    i think software is easier to steal/copy than hardware; when both are integrated, harder still.

  • Reply 9 of 64
    badmonkbadmonk Posts: 1,293member
    sog35 wrote: »
    Much thank to you loyalist Samsung fan.
    We much appreciate you tell truth the.
    Check is in the mail.

    Sincerly
    Kim Samsung

    He is actually a Korean orphan working from the Samsung comments factory.
  • Reply 10 of 64
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,727member
    dav wrote: »

    i think software is easier to steal/copy than hardware; when both are integrated, harder still.

    I totally agree and that has been Apple's best defense. They learned from their past experiences with Gates for sure.
  • Reply 11 of 64
    mike1mike1 Posts: 3,284member

     

    Funny, the "conventional" pic looks better and more natural. The one on the right is all washed out. All it did was make it brighter, certainly not better.

  • Reply 12 of 64
    badmonkbadmonk Posts: 1,293member
    Thank you DED for your undercover work. Luckily you escaped intact. I would hate to have to send VICE TV and Dennis Rodman to negotiate for your release.
  • Reply 13 of 64
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by macaw-fi View Post

     

    FYI DED

     

    1. Samsung unveiled ISOCELL tech couple years ago. They have used it already in Galaxy S5 and in Note 4. 

    2. Therefore, Samsung used tech well before Apple (or actually Deep Trench is Sony's tech and so is Focus Pixels).

    3. Why you did not mention BRITECELL (replacing green pixels with white ones), which was only new tech in Samsung's representation?




    Features, features, features. . . Is that all you people can talk about?

  • Reply 14 of 64
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,213member
    danielsw wrote: »

    Features, features, features. . . Is that all you people can talk about?
    That's the focus of DED's article isn't it? Features. . .
  • Reply 15 of 64
    wigbywigby Posts: 692member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by mike1 View Post

     

     

    Funny, the "conventional" pic looks better and more natural. The one on the right is all washed out. All it did was make it brighter, certainly not better.




    I think it looks more natural as a photograph but not as a visual. Nothing is really washed out because the blowouts in the sky are no more blown out in the right image. No detail is lost in the brighter areas of the image on the right. I think we're getting to a place where we have to decide if we want photos to look like photos or do we want them to look like our memory of an real "snapshot" from our life.

  • Reply 16 of 64
    mobiusmobius Posts: 380member
    Apple's technical leaps remain largely unmatched by rivals (such as Touch ID, Continuity and 3D Touch).

    Whilst I normally enjoy these digs at Samsung, I thought the concensus among reviewers was that the fingerprint scanner technology in their newest models was a vast improvement and on a par with Apple's Touch ID.
  • Reply 17 of 64
    radarthekatradarthekat Posts: 3,842moderator
    ascii wrote: »
    In the past people have worried that cheaper foreign manufacturers can just copy American designs and sell them for cheap. But what if the American innovations were too complicated to copy quickly (requiring both software and hardware changes)? And by the time they were copied, the American company had already moved on to something else?

    It just goes to show the strategic power of raw speed in business.

    Speed, and true innovation.
  • Reply 18 of 64
    mobiusmobius Posts: 380member
    sog35 wrote: »
    No it isn't.  Especially on the security side (secure enclave)
    Ok, fair enough.
  • Reply 19 of 64
    asciiascii Posts: 5,936member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by RadarTheKat View Post





    Speed, and true innovation.



    Yes, you have to not be afraid to take on the really hard problems.

  • Reply 20 of 64
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,213member
    sog35 wrote: »
    No it isn't.  Especially on the security side (secure enclave)
    I think Samsung Pay requires the same general type of hardware-based "secure enclave" that Apple Pay does but I'll confirm that.

    You're likely being confused by Android Pay which doesn't require it of all handsets, tho they do require tokenization. Samsung Pay and Android Pay are two different mobile payment solutions, similar of course but with distinct differences.

    EDIT: Dang! It looks like everyone is moving to hardware-based secure elements for payment processing. As usual Apple pushed the entire industry forward.

    http://www.nfcworld.com/technology/embedded-secure-element-ese/
Sign In or Register to comment.