Skip to main content

New! You can personalise your feed. Try it now

Advertisement

Advertisement

Samsung Galaxy Note8 available in Singapore from Sept 15; pre-orders to start from noon on Aug 25

NEW YORK/SINGAPORE — It's official: The new Samsung Galaxy Note8 will hit store shelves in Singapore on Sept 15 and retail for S$1,398, Samsung announced on Thursday (Aug 24). However, pre-orders and registration of interest for the phone will kick off at noon on Friday (Aug 25).

Koh Dong-jin, president of Samsung Electronics' Mobile Communications, shows the Galaxy Note 8 smartphone during the launch event in New York City, US, on Aug 23, 2017. Photo: REUTERS

Koh Dong-jin, president of Samsung Electronics' Mobile Communications, shows the Galaxy Note 8 smartphone during the launch event in New York City, US, on Aug 23, 2017. Photo: REUTERS

NEW YORK/SINGAPORE — It's official: The new Samsung Galaxy Note8 will hit store shelves in Singapore on Sept 15 and retail for S$1,398, Samsung announced on Thursday (Aug 24). However, pre-orders and registration of interest for the phone will kick off at noon on Friday (Aug 25).

You can either register with telco operators Singtel, M1 and Starhub, or online at Samsung’s online store or retails outlets such as Courts, Best Denki or Harvey Norman, among others; or head on down to the brick-and-mortar establishments.

For Singapore, the Note8 will come in three colours: Midnight Black, Maple Gold and Orchid Gray. 

The stakes are high for Samsung's rollout of the Note8, after the previous model’s exploding battery fiasco last year.

“None of us will ever forget what happened last year,” Samsung Mobile chief executive DJ Koh told a New York audience at the phone’s unveiling.

Like the Note7, which was scrapped and cost the South Korean company an estimated US$6 billion (S$8.2 billion), the new smartphone sports a big screen and advanced features to make it a more versatile device compared with Samsung’s main Galaxy S8 flagship product. Like its predecessors, it includes a stylus.

By keeping the same brand name, Samsung is making clear that the Note8 is an iterative (and better) device, and signals that it thinks it’s fixed the problems with the previous version. While the Note doesn’t command as wide an appeal as the Galaxy S line, both are premium devices in Samsung’s efforts against Apple Inc. in the battle for global smartphone supremacy. The Note also helps the Suwon-based manufacturer keep pressure on its rival just before the release of three new iPhone models in September.

“The Note8 is arguably Samsung’s most important smartphone launch in its history,” said Neil Mawston, executive director at Strategy Analytics. “After the Note7 battery fiasco, Samsung has been given a second chance by consumers and the company must not screw it up.”

Even with the Note7 debacle and the de facto head of the Samsung conglomerate on trial for bribery and embezzlement, Samsung’s ability to sell hardware and earn profits remains intact. Net income was a record 10.8 trillion won (S$13 billion) in the latest quarter, on sales that rose 20 per cent to 61 trillion won in the three months ended June.

The most significant change in the Note8 is a larger display that curves at the edges like the S8. The 6.3-inch AMOLED screen, a variant of the organic light-emitting diode display used on many recent high-end smartphones, is noticeably bigger than the Note7’s 5.7-inch touchscreen and slightly larger than the Galaxy S8+’s 6.2-inch display. Although many phone makers are working on ways to get a fingerprint scanner built into the display, the Note8 — like many other models — will have one in the back.

The company also posted information about a new smartwatch online. Called the Gear Fit 2 Pro, it will be water-resistant and capable of tracking swimmers, two features that became available on the Apple Watch in 2016. Apple plans to debut a new version of its watch later this year that adds support for LTE wireless networks, Bloomberg News has reported. In an interview with CNBC, Mr Koh confirmed the company is also working on a smart speaker to take on Amazon’s Echo and Apple’s upcoming HomePod, but he didn’t disclose details or timing.

The longer screen on the new phone lets users view more content, such as text messages and emails, without having to scroll, Samsung said in a demonstration. The Note8 also has new features for the stylus: users can write notes without unlocking the device, draw animated pictures that can be shared with contacts and words can be highlighted to be translated into different languages. The bigger screen also lets users swipe from the display’s edge to launch two paired apps at a time in a split view.

The new smartphone from Samsung will also feature an upgraded camera system that sports two lenses on the back for the first time. Like the iPhone 7 Plus, the advanced optics let users take pictures that can determine depth so that the background behind a person’s profile can appear blurred. The Note8 will also support Gigabit LTE, a faster networking technology for browsing the web and downloading content, which the next iPhone won’t have, Bloomberg News has reported.

In the US, the Note8 will be available for pre-order on Aug 24 and will hit store shelves on Sept 15. Former Note7 owners are eligible for a special offer on Samsung.com where they’ll receive an instant trade-in value of up to US$425 (S$580) when they upgrade their current phone for a Note8.

The Note8 will face competition from not only Apple’s new iPhone, but also Huawei Technologies’ Mate 9, LG Electronics’ upgraded V series, and Essential’s PH-1, according to Mawston. Samsung regained its No 1 position in global smartphone shipments earlier this year, with 23 per cent of the market, after losing ground during the Note7 debacle. Cupertino, California-based Apple had 12 per cent in the second quarter, while Huawei held 11 per cent, according to IHS Markit.

In an effort to reassure customers who may have lost trust in Samsung devices because of the Note7 fiasco, Samsung said it worked with Underwriters Laboratories, a safety certification firm, to validate the Note8’s reliability. The new smartphone will sport a battery of 3300 mAh, slightly smaller than the Note7’s power pack. Samsung also released a re-purposed version of the Note7 called the Note FE last month with a smaller battery.

“I know lots of loyal Note series customers, they were so disappointed,” Mr Koh said in an interview in June. “Disappointment is deeper, the expectation is higher, so I must meet their demand and their expectation through the Note8.” AGENCIES

Read more of the latest in

Advertisement

Advertisement

Stay in the know. Anytime. Anywhere.

Subscribe to get daily news updates, insights and must reads delivered straight to your inbox.

By clicking subscribe, I agree for my personal data to be used to send me TODAY newsletters, promotional offers and for research and analysis.