Samsung officially unveiled the latest Galaxy devices at its Unpacked event in New York today. Previous Galaxy phones were part Porsche 911 Carrera, with an easily recognizable curvaceous style, and part Swiss Army knife, bristling with technology and features. This analogy holds true for the 5.8-inch Galaxy S8 and 6.2-inch Galaxy S8+, which share the same design DNA as the previous two generations.

The new phones’ aluminum frame remains sandwiched between edge-to-edge Corning Gorilla Glass 5, with curved sides on the front and back. The curved rear glass makes the phones easier to pick up and more comfortable to hold just as they did for the S7 and S7 edge, while the curved front glass—now standard on both S8 models—adds some visual flair.

There’s not much difference between the S8 and S7 along the sides either. The USB Type-C port on the bottom is flanked by a 3.5mm headphone jack and a single downward-firing speaker. The microSD/NanoSIM combo tray still resides on the top, and the thin power button is still a bit more than halfway up the right side. The only differences between new and old lie on the left side, where the volume buttons have been combined into a single rocker and a dedicated button for launching Samsung’s Bixby assistant makes its debut. Unlike the power button, I found myself occasionally pressing the Bixby button accidentally when picking up the smaller S8.

The most significant change is found up front, however, and it’s one that impacts both form and function. The Galaxy S8 and S8+ adopt Samsung’s new “Infinity Display” that stretches the screen vertically but not horizontally, deviating from the traditional 16:9 aspect ratio. The result is a QHD+ SAMOLED display with a 2960x1440 resolution and an 18.5:9 aspect ratio that’s very similar to the 18:9 aspect ratio display LG is using in its G6. Both Samsung and LG cite market research for this new display direction: People want larger screens that can show more content, but they also want phones that are useable with one hand and can fit in their pocket. The taller screen fits more content, so less scrolling, but keeps the phone narrow, so it’s easier to wrap your hand around.

Both S8 phones incorporate another emerging design trend: rounded display corners. Where LG’s G6 is using an LCD panel that actually has rounded corners, it appears Samsung is using a rounded bezel to cover the S8’s still sharp-cornered display. This avoids the aliasing that’s evident in the G6’s corners, producing a much smoother, nicer looking effect. While my time with the S8 was limited, it appears that TouchWiz and Samsung’s apps were redesigned to account for the rounded corners: Backgrounds extend the full height of the display and visual elements are still displayed along the top and bottom edges without getting cut off. Third-party apps, however, find their vertical dimensions constrained to the purely rectangular portion of the display, with the status bar above and the navigation bar below taking on black backgrounds.

The S8 and S8+ are also the first phones to receive the UHD Alliance’s Mobile HDR Premium certification that ensures a mobile device meets the minimum requirements for playback of 4K HDR video. This means that both S8s are capable of rendering at least 90% of the DCI-P3 color gamut, have a dynamic range of at least 0.0005-540 nits, and support a 10-bit display pipeline.

To keep the overall size of the phones in check, the S8/S8+ and G6 have dramatically reduced the bezel area around the taller screens. Samsung claims a screen-to-body ratio of 83% for its new Galaxy phones, less than the 91.3% of Xiaomi’s Mi MIX concept phone, but impressive nonetheless, especially considering how much hardware is located in the S8’s upper bezel. Besides the usual earpiece and proximity/ambient light sensors, there’s a new 8MP front-facing camera with f/1.7 lens and Smart AF that uses facial recognition for accurate focusing when taking selfies. There’s also an IR LED and IR camera for the iris-scanning security feature that made its debut on the ill-fated Galaxy Note7.

Shrinking the size of the lower bezel required relocating the fingerprint sensor to the back. Instead of placing it below the rear camera like we see on most other phones, Samsung places it next to the flush-mounted camera, which is less than ideal. Both the camera and the sensor are surrounded by a raised lip and are similar in size, making it difficult to locate the sensor by feel, and if your finger misses the sensor, you end up with a nice fingerprint on the camera lens. On the smaller S8, this issue may be mitigated with practice, but the problem is worse for the S8+. Being taller, it places the camera and sensor further from the lower edge, making it very difficult, if not impossible, to reach the sensor when holding the phone with a natural grip. Even with my larger-than-average hands, I struggled to reach the sensor without shifting my grip. I suspect people will turn to the iris scanner or the new face unlock feature, which uses the front camera for facial recognition after pressing the power button, to overcome the poor fingerprint sensor placement. The physical home button and capacitive navigation buttons, iconic Galaxy design features, have also been evicted in favor of the slimmer bezel, replaced by onscreen controls.

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  • Lord-Bryan - Wednesday, March 29, 2017 - link

    "Android has come a long way and this might be a good desktop PC replacement for the vast majority of mundane PC tasks"
    This must be a joke or something, cause you need to go find out why and tablets suck and this will suck for the same reason, and cost you 99$ more and a monitor. Just look at that setup, it looks weird.
  • BrokenCrayons - Wednesday, March 29, 2017 - link

    The arrangement was done to demonstrate functionality for a video. Other arrangements would obviously be made for someone using those capabilities that wasn't concerned with camera angles and visibility. All of those parts and pieces can be moved around or placed on a different, more suitable desk. I'm sort of surprised that wouldn't be outwardly obvious right away given the context of the demonstration.

    By nature of owning a computer, I also happen to own a monitor. Again, it's surprising that wouldn't be apparent given the nature of the website we're both reading.

    As for your feelings about how this "will suck" -- that's an opinion and you're welcome to have it, but it might be wise to support it with evidence or at least get a bit more specific. Given your clear misses about the monitor and desk arrangement, I suppose you're just reacting to stimulus rather than thinking before responding.
  • Lord-Bryan - Wednesday, March 29, 2017 - link

    Hope it replaces your desktop workloads, or maybe you will just watch videos, browse, open PDFs
  • BrokenCrayons - Thursday, March 30, 2017 - link

    I've already done it once before with a much smaller/less capable LG Optimus V (600Mhz single core, 320MB RAM, 3.2 inch screen, 170MB or so of onboard storage and a 16GB microSD card) and a Bluetooth keyboard when I tried traveling with just a phone. It worked pretty well, hanging out in a hotel room after work pecking out a few pages in a book I was writing at the time, fetching e-mail, web surfing, and playing a couple of games on a Game Boy emulator. The big drawback was the smaller screen and the single-tasking nature of the OS, but it was totally managable for the vast majority of what I wanted to do on a PC (creative writing, communication, and entertainment). I still own that little phone today though it hasn't had cell service for years. I use it for many of the same things I used to before when I don't feel like turning on my laptop.
  • Rod_Serling_Lives - Saturday, April 1, 2017 - link

    DeX is DOA. I know people get all excited and hopeful at the promise of their phone docking and becoming a desktop PC, but it is a pipe dream right now. The Galaxy sells on name, display and camera. It is good at those things. I applaud them increasing feature sets, but they aren't very compelling outside of the S-Pen in the Note Series.
  • Mavendependency - Wednesday, March 29, 2017 - link

    The G6 has a chamfered display, once you get it, it is pretty much un-seeable.
  • goatfajitas - Wednesday, March 29, 2017 - link

    Not bad but I would have preferred to stay at 16x9. I love the smaller bezels, but would rather just have a shorter phone than adding length where it wasnt really needed.
  • mkozakewich - Wednesday, March 29, 2017 - link

    It didn't really add length. They're replacing the dead face with active screen area. On the whole, I'd support a screen full of display with the on-screen buttons taking up none of the 16:9 'main' area.
  • goatfajitas - Thursday, March 30, 2017 - link

    I meant adding length to the screen. I would have preferred to just keep a 16x9 screen and have a shorter phone.
  • zeeBomb - Wednesday, March 29, 2017 - link

    Well thank you leaks! The fingerprint and finish of the phone tho...

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