Didn't you say 4S in the other thread?Any ideas how much for the normal Iphone 4 16GB Black. Sorry I cant view it on my iPhone for some reason. Thanks ;D
Anyway, apparently it's £104.60 for the regular 4.
Didn't you say 4S in the other thread?Any ideas how much for the normal Iphone 4 16GB Black. Sorry I cant view it on my iPhone for some reason. Thanks ;D
One stat I recently found amazing was how much of a leg-up Samsung has on every other smartphone player in the industry in regards to supply chain.
The BOM on a GS4 is around $240, and the BOM on an iPhone 5 is around $200. But a full $140 of the GS4's BOM goes back into Samsung's pocket, because they make so many key parts of the phone.
Now with HTC forced to delay their product launch because of component shortages, you can appreciate how good Samsung has it.
Pretty sure it's the other way around: 4mp is ONLY when you shoot 16:9.The biggest kicker is that the HONE's highest resolution is 4:3 but this guy took pictures in the cropped 16:9
Pretty sure it's the other way around: 4mp is ONLY when you shoot 16:9.
That one screams camera movement to me. It's definitely a bad shot. Even the S3 is better in that example even though the S4 clearly has a better camera, judging from all the other photos.But take a look at some of the indoor ones and see what a blurry mess the GS4 camera is:
http://www.mobile-review.com/review/image/samsung/galaxy-s4-camera/add/in/02-sgs4.jpg
http://www.mobile-review.com/review/image/samsung/galaxy-s4-camera/add/in/02-htc-one.jpg
Oh? I got it backwards then. That's a pretty strange design choice.
That one screams camera movement to me. It's definitely a bad shot. Even the S3 is better in that example even though the S4 clearly has a better camera, judging from all the other photos.
Because portrait mode is now totally useless.It's a strange design choice for the max sensor res to match the ratio of the screen? Why?
Heh heh. Yes, it's better in literally every way. Except price. And the fact that you have to wait another month.
Do note that you can either sell your current i4S or trade it in (if good condition) to Carphone Warehouse for £200.
I doubt it. They probably have the clout to get better-binned chips... (Cf. the One camera fiasco.)
One stat I recently found amazing was how much of a leg-up Samsung has on every other smartphone player in the industry in regards to supply chain.
The BOM on a GS4 is around $240, and the BOM on an iPhone 5 is around $200. But a full $140 of the GS4's BOM goes back into Samsung's pocket, because they make so many key parts of the phone.
Now with HTC forced to delay their product launch because of component shortages, you can appreciate how good Samsung has it.
What makes you say that? We already knew that there would be less detail in outdoor images because it has a third of the pixels of the GS4 sensor.
But take a look at some of the indoor ones and see what a blurry mess the GS4 camera is:
http://www.mobile-review.com/review/image/samsung/galaxy-s4-camera/add/in/02-sgs4.jpg
http://www.mobile-review.com/review/image/samsung/galaxy-s4-camera/add/in/02-htc-one.jpg
The biggest kicker is that the HONE's highest resolution is 4:3 but this guy took pictures in the cropped 16:9
There's a difference between sensitivity and dynamic range. The eye has a way greater dynamic range than any camera.It's an interesting dynamic. Maybe an expert can explain for me but why a lens that sees more light than human eyes in darkness don't treat daylight the same?
Something like that works when you have rivals-turned-customers helping subsidize your capital spending. But, then bad things start to happen. Like when your competitors don't want to do business with you anymore and you have to rely on your own brand. For example, all the Japanese television makers have left Samsung for tv panels from LG and Taiwanese manufacturers. Now, it's only Samsung and Chinese manufacturers (until they eventually bail). You can easily see the end result of this in 4K panels. There is Samsung, LG, Sharp, and Taiwanese manufacturers. The Japanese firms are either using Sharp, LG or the Taiwanese manufacturers. This helps lower the cost for everyone. LG's 84" 4K television is selling for $15k. SONY's (which uses the same panel) is selling for $20-$25k. How much is Samsung's 85" 4K television selling for? $40K. That is ridiculous. Also, as of last week, LG became the largest television panel producer in the world, bypassing Samsung because everyone has abandoned Samsung.
So, yeah, vertical integration works. But it is extremely expensive. That is why Samsung chose to source manufacturing for competitors to lower costs. But, when your customers abandon you and your shareholders start to grumble about high capital expenditures, you will have no choice but to start outsourcing yourself. This can lead to shrinkage. I don't think Samsung will be an exception to this rule.
Can someone remember, when the S3 was release did they have contracts without paying upfront for the phone? so just paying monthly instead?
LOL.
You think Samsung actually gives a hoot to super-high end TVs, as if the TV market now is anything than a saturated low-margin commoditized business. Heck the Japanese are bleeding money like no tomorrow for years precisely because of their TVs.
LOL.
You think Samsung actually gives a hoot to super-high end TVs, as if the TV market now is anything than a saturated low-margin commoditized business. Heck the Japanese are bleeding money like no tomorrow for years precisely because of their TVs.