How Samsung's new S8 phone may lure you back
Samsung is set to debut its next major smartphones on March 29. Here's what to expect.
Samsung is set to debut its next major smartphones on March 29. Here's what to expect.
The Galaxy S8 to be unveiled this month will blend fingerprint, iris and facial detection to verify users accessing mobile services.
With Samsung and Apple both giving Mobile World Congress a miss, rival brands had the chance to show the fresh features they offer.
If your phone is more than a couple of years old, there's probably a lot you're missing out on.
Months of testing reveals what we all thought anyway: it was the batteries that were to blame for Samsung's flagship phone exploding.
* Samsung mobile chief, Koh Dong-jin, to attend briefing
The soon-to-be released Samsung Galaxy S8 is expected to look something like this, gadget leakers say.
Samsung posted a solid profit as buoyant memory chip prices more than made up for the death of its fire-prone Galaxy Note 7.
Samsung has announced its first new smartphones since being forced to scrap the Galaxy Note7.
Samsung will create an all-screen front for the Galaxy S8, as rivals move to scrap the home button.
Samsung plans to equip its next Galaxy S phones with a Siri-like digital assistant.
Let's face it, anyone who still has a Note 7 is probably holding out. And who could blame them?
Samsung will target innovation and a better crisis-management system.
The Galaxy Note 7 stumble is an opportunity for investors to buy Samsung at bargain levels.
Apple is planning to adopt OLED technology for the next major upgrade to the iPhone.
All Samsung Electronics Note 7 smartphones will be banned from airline flights by the US government.
Samsung expanded its recall of Galaxy Note 7 smartphones to include all replacement devices.
Apple has added 10 per cent to its market value since Samsung suspended Note 7 sales.
Australian virtual reality headset sales are tipped to surge, with Sony's PlayStation VR expected to be most popular.
Royal Mail bans Samsung Note 7 returns outright, while FedEx and UPS enforce restrictions.
Samsung slashed third-quarter profit estimates, saying it'll cost $3 billion to scrap the problem-plagued Galaxy Note 7.
Samsung Electronics cut its outlook for third-quarter operating profit and sales after ending production of its fire-prone Galaxy Note 7 smartphones amidst the deepest crisis at the South Korean company in years.
In August, Samsung assigned hundreds of employees to test exploding phones. None were able to do it.
Samsung has extended its recall to all Galaxy Note 7 mobiles and canned production of the fire-prone smartphones.
Other brands could take advantage of the crisis for Samsung's reputation.
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