Current:Home > ScamsSamsung debuts Galaxy S24 smartphones with built-in AI tools -Elevate Profit Vision
Samsung debuts Galaxy S24 smartphones with built-in AI tools
View
Date:2025-04-12 04:15:01
Samsung on Wednesday unveiled its latest lineup of Galaxy smartphones featuring a suite of baked-in AI tools, as it aims to widen the appeal of its Android devices and win back its spot as the world's biggest phone seller from Apple.
The company debuted the devices during its annual product launch in San Jose, California, emphasizing the new AI integrations, including smart translation and interpretation services and in-app image searches. The focus on AI marks a shift in the tech giant's previous hardware-heavy approach to developing and marketing its smartphones.
The next-generation lineup includes three phones:
- The Galaxy S24, which retails for $799.99
- The Galaxy S24 Plus, which costs $999.99
- The Galaxy S24 Ultra, which is priced at $1,299.99
The Galaxy S24 Ultra's price represents a price hike of $100, or an 8% increase, from last year's comparable model. The increase mirrors what Apple did with its fanciest model, the iPhone 15 Pro Max, released in September.
Customers can preorder the devices starting Wednesday. The new phones will begin shipping on January 31.
Here's what to expect from Samsung's next-generation Galaxy smartphones.
Live foreign language interpretations
The new phone will allow users to access a function that enables foreign language interpretation during calls. The feature will support 13 languages and 17 dialects, and it will be accessible for calls to and from any type of smartphones as well as landlines.
The feature saves users' preferred language settings, in addition to collecting data on which languages are used on each of the users' phone calls.
In-app image searches
Google will offer "Circle To Search" on the newest Galaxy smartphones, allowing users to circle snippets of text, parts of photos or videos to get instant search results about whatever has been highlighted.
The new Galaxy phones will also enable quick and easy ways to manipulate the appearance and placement of specific parts of pictures taken on the devices' camera. It's a feature that could help people refine their photos, but could also make it easier to create misleading images.
AI-powered photo editing tools
The new smartphones will come with a range of AI-powered photo editing tools. With the generative edit tool, users can erase or modify the position of objects in their images, in addition to filling in images' borders to correct a crooked photo frame.
Galaxy's AI will also offer an edit suggestion option, allowing users to receive automated feedback on how to optimize and tweak their photos.
How does this compare with Apple's iPhones?
Apple is expected to put more AI into its next generation of iPhones in September, but now Samsung has a head start toward gaining the upper hand in making the technology more ubiquitous, Forrester Research analyst Thomas Husson said.
It's a competitive edge that Samsung could use, having ceded its longstanding mantle as the world's largest seller of smartphones to Apple last year, according to the market research firm International Data Corp.
"Samsung's marketing challenge is precisely to make the technology transparent to impress consumers with magic and invisible experiences," Husson said.
—With reporting by the Associated Press.
- In:
- Smartphone
- AI
Elizabeth Napolitano is a freelance reporter at CBS MoneyWatch, where she covers business and technology news. She also writes for CoinDesk. Before joining CBS, she interned at NBC News' BizTech Unit and worked on The Associated Press' web scraping team.
veryGood! (832)
Related
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Jennifer Lopez's Sizzling Shirtless Photo of Daddy Ben Affleck Will Have You on the Floor
- Let Your Reflection Show You These 17 Secrets About Mulan
- COP26 Presented Forests as a Climate Solution, But May Not Be Able to Keep Them Standing
- Sam Taylor
- A Watershed Moment: How Boston’s Charles River Went From Polluted to Pristine
- Charles Ponzi's scheme
- Britney Spears' memoir The Woman in Me gets release date
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Love Is Blind’s Jessica Batten Gives Birth, Welcomes First Baby With Husband Ben McGrath
Ranking
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Unsolved Mysteries: How Kayla Unbehaun's Abduction Case Ended With Her Mother's Arrest
- The U.S. economy ended 2022 on a high note. This year is looking different
- New York orders Trump companies to pay $1.6M for tax fraud
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- A Complete Timeline of Teresa Giudice's Feud With the Gorgas and Where Their RHONJ Costars Stand
- Microsoft applications like Outlook and Teams were down for thousands of users
- These Bathroom Organizers Are So Chic, You'd Never Guess They Were From Amazon
Recommendation
Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
The great turnaround in shipping
Jeffrey Carlson, actor who played groundbreaking transgender character on All My Children, dead at 48
Covid-19 and Climate Change Will Remain Inextricably Linked, Thanks to the Parallels (and the Denial)
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
And Just Like That Costume Designer Molly Rogers Teases More Details on Kim Cattrall's Cameo
Farmers Insurance pulls out of Florida, affecting 100,000 policies
This snowplow driver just started his own service. But warmer winters threaten it