Samsung aims to turn its next generation of Galaxy smartphones into AI
companions
Send a link to a friend
[January 23, 2025] By
MICHAEL LIEDTKE
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — Samsung is injecting another dose of artificial
intelligence into its next lineup of Galaxy smartphones, escalating an
effort to simplify people’s lives while deepening their dependence on a
device that accompanies them almost everywhere.
The three Galaxy S25 models unveiled Wednesday in San Jose, California,
are the second generation to be designed for the AI age — a craze that
market-leading Apple joined last September with the release of the
iPhone 16. Most of the hardware on the Galaxy S25 is mostly the same as
last year's model, except for a faster chip and a more powerful
ultrawide lens on the camera.
In its next phase, Samsung is positioning the Galaxy S25 as an “AI
companion” capable of pulling more requests out of conversations,
learning people’s routines, anticipating people's needs and performing
more technological tricks, such as being able to remove unwanted sounds
from videos or identifying the name of a song upon request.
The AI on the new Galaxy phones has been designed to toggle from one app
to another to fetch, summarize and manage information, entertainment and
other content stored on the devices. In an attempt to make the
technology even more indispensable, the AI on Galaxy S25 will be able to
create customized digital dossiers on users' behavior patterns and other
unique characteristics that Samsung is calling a “personal data engine.”
“Everything you see here is the beginning of a new reality," said TM Roh,
the Samsung executive who oversees its smartphones. “Things that you
thought you could never do, but now you can.”
As Apple has been doing with its AI features, Samsung is promising that
its technology will shield users' privacy while also peering into their
lives. Samsung is providing the protection primarily by keeping all the
knowledge accrued by its AI technology on the Galaxy devices — within a
digital fortress the company nicknamed after Fort Knox, the Kentucky
Army base seated next to the U.S. government’s depository for gold.
[to top of second column] |
The new line of Samsung Galaxy S25 phones, with advanced camera and
artificial intelligence capabilities, are unveiled at a media
preview event in San Jose, Calif. on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025. (AP
Photo/Haven Daily)
After raising prices last year,
Samsung is standing pat with the Galaxy S25 phones, with the
standard model starting at $800, the Plus model at $1,000 and the
Ultra model at $1,300. The phones are scheduled to be in stores
starting Feb. 7.
Forrester Research analyst Thomas Husson thinks the Galaxy S25
models “will offer a more intuitive user experience with more
integrated vocal and cross-app experiences, but AI is not yet a key
reason to buy a new smartphone.”
Samsung is doubling down on its AI bet after getting a sales bump
from the past year's emphasis on the technology. The South Korean
company sold 32 million of its Galaxy S24 models from January
through September last year, a 25% increase from the same time in
the previous year, according to the research group Canalys.
But Samsung didn’t fare as well in the lower end of the smartphone
market, where it was hurt by cheaper devices made by Chinese
competitors. That’s one of the reasons Samsung’s total smartphone
shipments fell by 1% last year, leaving it slightly behind Apple in
the worldwide market, according to the research firm International
Data Crop.
As was the case with last year’s models, the Galaxy S25 will draw
heavily on AI technology made by Google, the maker of the free
operating system Android that Samsung has long used for its
smartphones.
Some of the new AI tricks, such as the ability to deploy Google's
“circle to search” technology to quickly identify the song title of
music playing in a video, will debut on the Galaxy S25 before coming
to other Android phones later this year. Google also has been
planting more AI on its own phone, the Pixel, but that device still
lags far behind the iPhone
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |