Design & Display
The Galaxy S8 will have a 5.8-inch display, 0.7-inches larger than the 5.1-inch Galaxy S7, and The Galaxy S8 Plus will have a 6.2-inch display, also up 0.7-inches on the 5.5-inch Galaxy S7 Edge which it replaces, with A change to wider aspect ratios means both phones will have increased resolutions of 2960 x 2400 pixels (WQHD+).
Both models will feature curved OLED displays for the first time, and The physical home button is indeed being removed.
Iris scanner
A new iris recognition sensor will be part of six sensors along the top bezel of each new Galaxy: proximity, ambient light, iris, an IR-LED transmitter, front camera and receiver, Samsung’s upcoming new Galaxy S8 and “Galaxy S8 Plus” will both feature iris scanners placed on the face of the phones above the displays.
The camera
On each phone at the back are four modules: camera flash (top left), heart rate sensor (bottom left), the main camera (middle) and fingerprint scanner (right - yes, stupidly right), Both phones will have an increased 8MP front camera, but stick with a 12MP rear camera, and A rear dual-camera setup was ditched with Samsung apparently citing both cost and “immature dual-camera ISP design”
Beast Mode
Another new feature reportedly headed to Samsung’s next-generation flagship smartphones is “Beast Mode,” which is something you definitely won’t find on Apple’s upcoming new iPhones. If rumors are correct, this special new feature will basically kick the Galaxy S8 into high gear and provide users with the maximum amount of computing power possible. This feature will definitely be useful for gaming and other resource-heavy functions, and it’ll also thankfully come alongside new fast charging tech that will fill up the Galaxy S8 battery more quickly than ever before.
Desktop Mode
A new PC Mode will be enabled when either phone is placed in a special dock (presumably an optional extra) and connected to a monitor or TV, this creates a desktop-like user environment, This new feature is a potential game-changer for Samsung’s upcoming new Galaxy S8 phones. Word on the street is that the handsets will feature an exciting new desktop mode that will allow a user to connect his or her Galaxy S8 to a monitor and peripherals in order to power a full desktop computing experience. The solution is akin to what we saw in the HP Elite x3, but with one key difference: no one wants Windows on a smartphone. As people move more and more toward mobile for their primary computing experiences, however, Android can most certainly do the trick on a desktop or laptop for many users.
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