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a month ago in
Galaxy SYour screen. Your business.🔒
With world's first Privacy Display on the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra, what’s on your screen stays yours.
Know more: samsung.com
#GalaxyAI #GalaxyS26Ultra #PrivacyDisplay #Samsung
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a month ago in
Galaxy SBattery: Still 5,000 mAh (same as S25). No real improvement there.
Charging: 60W wired is good, but incremental. Not a game-changer.
Camera: 200MP with F1.4 aperture offers better night performance (Samsung) , but if you're coming from S23 Ultra, the actual photo quality jump is minimal.
Design: Back to aluminum from titanium, slightly thinner (Samsung) —nice but cosmetic.
The real issue: Chinese phones at this price point (Xiaomi, OnePlus) are delivering:
Bigger batteries
Faster charging (80-120W)
Serious camera sensor upgrades
Better thermals
Samsung's charging a premium for a privacy feature while the core fundamentals barely budge. For S23 users, sure, it's an upgrade. But at this price? Chinese brands are running circles around Samsung with actual performance jumps.
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4 weeks ago (Last edited 4 weeks ago ) in
Galaxy SRecently, social media even showed a child’s phone catching fire while charging. Samsung is actually working on higher capacity while ensuring total safety.
Chinese phones might offer performance upgrades, but they only give 3-4 years (5-6 is very rare) of updates. They launch new devices yearly to handle new OS versions, quickly dropping old models and forcing you to buy new ones because the hardware isn't efficient enough to keep up. Meanwhile, Samsung provides 6-7 years of updates. To ensure a device launched today can handle the OS of 2031, you can't just have "big leap" gimmicks—it needs a stable, capable foundation. So, how can you expect 'big leap' upgrades??
When it comes to cameras, Chinese specs look high, but the processing algorithm of Samsung, iPhone, and Sony is unmatchable. A 48MP iPhone will still capture better shots than a 108MP Chinese phone because processing matters the most.
You pay nearly 7-8% for the brand (gets reduced after discounts and warrenty service), but what you’re really getting is that "buttery" One UI and a level of hardware-software integration that other Androids just haven't hit yet.
While Chinese brands like Redmi or Vivo, etc throw every spec at the wall, Samsung's "inner gold" is how deep that OS actually goes.
To see the difference, just try this experiment:
Install Activity Launcher on a Samsung and any Chinese device.
Open a system app activity like "Settings" on both phones.
On the Samsung, you’ll notice that only the activities meant to be accessible—like jumping straight to Dark Mode settings—actually open. Anything that could compromise security or requires specific conditions stays locked or shows an error. It’s tight, secure, and intentional.
But Chinese phones just mess this up. You’ll find "ghost" features in the Activity Launcher—like speaker cleaners, display enhancements, or flicker modes—that you can’t even find in the actual settings menu. You can toggle them on, but they don't actually work. It’s like the software is full of half-baked ideas that aren't truly integrated, which makes navigating or fixing issues a nightmare.
Samsung avoids this by keeping the core OS light and moving experimental features into Good Lock modules. Since they are separate entities, they don't mess up the system like Chinese UIs do. The very reason the a heavy chinese os support few years in chinese devices but Samsung supports updates much longer with light One UI. When you add in Knox security, the ability to cast audio to two devices at once, and 7 years of support, it's clear why they stay on top. While everyone else focuses on the outer cover, Samsung, apple focuses on the soul of the phone.
That’s why Samsung will be SΛMSUNG in the GΛLAXY of Tech.
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a month ago in
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a month ago in
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a month ago in
Galaxy S