Samsung plans to launch new Galaxy Gear models next week & it will run Tizen, instead of Android

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Samsung plans to launch new Galaxy Gear models next week
By Chris Ziegleron February 18, 2014 04:35 pm

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Samsung could take the wraps off multiple new Galaxy Gear wearables at the Mobile World Congress trade show in Barcelona next week, according to a source familiar with the company's plans. The announcements would come just half a year after the launch of the original Galaxy Gear, a smartwatch critically panned for lackluster battery life, an odd appearance, and a generally unintuitive interface.

Separately, USA Today reports that a new Galaxy Gear model will run Tizen, the carrier-friendly mobile operating system championed by Samsung that has yet to see commercial availability; the current Gear runs Android, suggesting that the company could be looking to move away from Google's platform across a number of different market segments. The Verge was unable to confirm that a Tizen-powered Gear would bow at the show, however.

Samsung could take the wraps off multiple new Galaxy Gear wearables at the Mobile World Congress trade show in Barcelona next week, according to a source familiar with the company's plans. The announcements would come just half a year after the launch of the original Galaxy Gear, a smartwatch critically panned for lackluster battery life, an odd appearance, and a generally unintuitive interface.

Separately, USA Today reports that a new Galaxy Gear model will run Tizen, the carrier-friendly mobile operating system championed by Samsung that has yet to see commercial availability; the current Gear runs Android, suggesting that the company could be looking to move away from Google's platform across a number of different market segments. The Verge was unable to confirm that a Tizen-powered Gear would bow at the show, however.

Samsung is already widely expected to announced the Galaxy S5 next week — the latest version of its flagship smartphone, and arguably its single most important product — at the Barcelona event. In other words, MWC is shaping up to be a particularly big show for Samsung right as major consumer electronics firms have been focusing on their own events rather than trade expos, tightly-packed circuses where attention is spread thin among dozens of announcements.

Apple, Google, Microsoft, and others are widely believed to be working on wearables of their own, putting Samsung in the unusual position of potentially launching multiple generations of a product before its biggest competitors launch even one. That can be a major competitive advantage when the technology and design are executed well — but it can be an even bigger liability when the concept comes off rushed.


http://www.theverge.com/2014/2/18/5423472/samsung-plans-to-launch-new-galaxy-gear-models-next-week

Samsung's updated smartwatch to shun Android

Alistair Barr, USA TODAY 4:20 p.m. EST February 18, 2014

As wearable technology begins to take off, Samsung hopes to avoid giving Google's Android operating system the same boost it got in the smartphone and tablet market

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With the BMW app on Samsung Galaxy Gear smartwatch, you can check your car's remaining range, see if you left your sunroof open or windows down, or more.

SAN FRANCISCO - The new version of Samsung's Gear smartwatch will run on Tizen, not Google's Android operating system, the latest attempt by the South Korean electronics giant to develop more of its own software and services, according to three people familiar with the situation.

Samsung will unveil the updated Gear watch, and a new HTML5 version of the Tizen operating system, at an event at the Mobile World Congress later this month in Barcelona, Spain, the people said. They did not want to be identified because Samsung's plans are not yet public.

A Samsung spokesman did not return an email seeking comment on Tuesday.

Tizen, which is being pushed heavily by Samsung, is an open-source project that is trying to develop a software platform for smartphones and other connected devices. Launched last year, the effort had a tough start, with some members dropping out. But on Feb. 12, the organization announced 15 new partners, including mobile and Internet giants Sprint, SoftBank and Baidu.

The first version of the Gear smartwatch, launched last year, ran on Android, the Google mobile operating system that has become dominant in the smartphone market. Replacing Android with Tizen for the new version of the Gear gadget suggests that Samsung is not giving up on Tizen despite recent setbacks.

Samsung is also trying to avoid giving Google too much power as the world's largest Internet search provider develops a version of Android for wearable devices. Some developers and hardware makers are concerned that this new wearable Android OS may be less open than the original mobile platform, although it is too early to tell how Google will approach this.

In the smartphone and tablet market, hardware manufacturers typically make devices that run on Android. This puts several Google services, such as search, maps and email, on many gadgets and generates billions of dollars in advertising revenue for the company. The hardware manufacturers are left with the less profitable task of churning out the actual devices and have struggled to develop their own lucrative software and services.

Samsung wants to avoid the same thing happening in the market for wearable technology. By having its own wearable operating system, the company may be able to generate more revenue from its own software and services.

The new Gear smartwatch operating system will be an HTML5 version of Tizen, the people said. HTML5 is the latest version of the language and broader technology that is used to develop websites and web-based applications.

This means Samsung may be able to attract more web developers to develop new apps for its smartwatch. But it is also a risk because, in the past, HTML5 apps have not performed as well as so-called native apps that run on more traditional mobile platforms like Android and Apple's iOS, one of the people said.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2014/02/18/samsung-gear-smartwatch-tizen-android/5583023/



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