Samsung could on the standard model of the next Samsung flagship series Galaxy S23 to apply a cost-cutting strategy, the result of which would be to "cut back" or trim some functions. According to the new leak, one of the downgraded functions could be a "vibration engine", i.e. haptic feedback.
A leaker who goes by the name No name (@chunvn8888) on Twitter came up with information, that basic model Galaxy The S23 will have its haptics significantly trimmed. He didn't share more details, which could mean a few things.
It could be that the S23+ and S23 Ultra will get even better haptic feedback than the series Galaxy S22, while the base model does not. Or it could mean the S23+ and S23 Ultra will get the same haptic response as the series Galaxy S22 (which received significant improvements over the S21 range), while the standard model will be downright inferior - even compared to Galaxy S22.
Even assuming that this leak is based on the truth, there is no guarantee that the standard Galaxy The S23 will be cheaper than the SXNUMX when it goes on sale Galaxy S22. On the one hand, Samsung may try to fill the gap after the FE (Fan Edition) series, on the other hand, anecdotal reports from the summer suggested that the series could return next year. The Korean giant this year model of this series in the form Galaxy He hasn't released the S22 FE yet, and there's no sign of it either.
Standard Galaxy The S23 should otherwise have the same display size as the S22 and practically the same ones dimensions, with a slightly higher capacity battery and like the other models, it will apparently be powered by a Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset (and possibly an Exynos 2300 as well). The series will reportedly be introduced in February.
These are rumours, savings are being cut, "robbed", renamed everywhere... Like u Apple, so with Samsung (and probably others?), how is one to choose?! This is how phone manufacturers are against each other, why change phones year after year when there is nothing new, not even for rock fans, geeks and technical enthusiasts...
This way, we will probably change phones every 3-4 years, so that we can at least recognize the difference a little. Well, "normal people", they will fiddle with their mobile phone until it falls apart.... Who will the companies profit from? This is how the "lost profits" will be extracted from us customers in a different way, viz. ads in stores and other apps.