Samsung Electronics has quashed rumors that it plans to launch the Galaxy S9 at CES this year. The South Korean tech giant will unveil its flagship Galaxy S9 at the upcoming Mobile World Congress in February, its mobile boss says.
DJ Koh, president of Samsung's mobile business, said its first flagship smartphone of the year will be unveiled at the trade show in February with the sales date also announced at the event, at a press conference at CES in Las Vegas.
Samsung unveiled the Galaxy S8 last year at an Unpacked Event in March in New York and starting selling the device in April. The unveiling of the Galaxy S9 comes a month earlier and sales will likely begin in March this year.
Koh also said that the company was planning to launch its fold-able phone sometime next year. Last year he told reporters in South Korea that the company was targeting a launch this year.
He said UX was the biggest obstacle in commercialization and added that the company was aggressively looking to overcome the issue.
Company insiders say the company was tentatively planning to begin production late this year.
The mobile boss also said that Bixby 2.0 will be launched within the year and stressed that all Samsung devices will support the virtual assistant by 2020.
"Many companies have AI competence, but not many have hardware competence," Koh said. "We started a little later [than others] but we are confident in offering the best experience for consumers."
The company has previously said it was targeting putting AI features in all its home appliances by 2020.
Samsung's Galaxy S9 will likely be the first smartphone from the company to offer 512GB storage.
Source: Zdnet
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