Review: Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra

(wired.com)

45 points | by joozio 3 days ago

10 comments

  • rchard2scout 3 minutes ago
    > if you don't want any of these AI capabilities, you can spend a few minutes disabling and getting rid of most of them.

    Why is this "a few minutes" and "most of them"? Why isn't it "a few seconds" and "all of them with a single toggle in Settings"?

  • mosselman 1 hour ago
    This phone costs 1700 euros here... 1700 (Netherlands)! That is the price of a gaming laptop!

    Everything has become so incredibly expensive it just isn't fun to buy anything anymore.

    My iPhone 11's FaceID broke a few weeks ago and despite that I think I will just stick with it with today's phone prices.

    • throwaway270925 1 hour ago
      > 1700 euros

      Right, thats the top specced 1TB version isnt it?

      Amazon Germany has the basic 256g version for 1200€

      • oytis 55 minutes ago
        Still a phone for over 1000€ is crazy. Iphone 17 is much cheaper, and iphones are supposed to be the most expensive smartphones in my book.
        • arrowleaf 50 minutes ago
          Are these comments from 2018? 'Pro' models of iPhones have been $999 or more, not adjusted for inflation, at their lowest tier since 'Pro' has been a thing. I would expect the same of a Samsung 'Ultra' flagship?
        • layer8 27 minutes ago
          IPhones go from $599 up to $1999.
      • mosselman 19 minutes ago
        512GB at Mediamarkt. The 1TB is 1950 euros and the 256GB costs 1500 euros
    • yread 1 hour ago
      No one sane buys it for the list price. During launch there are always various discounts. I got S25U for 800 (without sending my old phone, just some coupons) with a 5eur/month contract last year at launch. If it really lasts 7 years it's not even that expensive.
    • chistev 1 hour ago
      What gaming laptop?
  • josalhor 55 minutes ago
    People use their phone today to: Manage 100k+,1M+ bank accounts, 2FA, secret messaging, sensitive media, medication, credentials and more. This privacy feature makes a lot of sense. Give it a couple of iterations and I think this will be the standard in business. It never made sense to me the trust that we put on no one looking at the contents of a display at the same time as us.
    • idle_zealot 43 minutes ago
      I'm much less concerned about a rando looking over my shoulder than I am the wealth of information the software hands out to its owners. It's like the difference between being seen in public by other pedestrians versus being captured by thousands of fixed surveillance cameras. Look all you want, so long as you're not wired into a database. Different threat models, I guess.
    • observationist 42 minutes ago
      Or displaying your card out in the open, flashing it in front of everyone in the restaurant, grocery store, etc. With remote workers scanning through video feeds of people in public, it won't be long before they figure out the Meta glasses and similar cameras are high enough resolution to capture sensitive information, even if the actual user is 100% innocent and not doing anything wrong.

      There was a gas station cashier that was using a memory palace trick to memorize card numbers and details, then stealing money later on. The bar was one of a little effort - not many people can do the memory palace thing, so it wasn't a threat vector. Now, everything is being recorded all the time, and you basically have to trust that everyone in the long list of people who have access to the video won't use it maliciously. We absolutely don't live in the type of society where that type of trust is warranted - there's gonna be lots of crime from unexpected places.

      Throw in capturing logins, secure pins, touchscreen swipe sequences, etc, it won't even matter if you have all the best security features in the world.

      Maybe implanted cryptographic key devices are the way to go, and you have to go into a perfectly secure SCIF with a faraday shielded closet in order to enter in your personal key, which can be used to provide tokens for other logins, verify actions, etc.

      The world is so ridiculously insecure.

  • TrainedMonkey 2 hours ago
    > it doesn't dramatically reduce screen brightness or image quality.

    AFAIK it significantly decreases the brightness. Jerry Rig Everything demonstrates this here - https://youtu.be/TRW4W7KkJXs?t=32

    • throwaway270925 1 hour ago
      significantly and dramatically are two different things. I was sceptic when buying it but have no problem using the display with privacy screen on, and dont see that much difference in brightness, even in direct sunlight, fwiw.

      Bonus with it on you can stretch your battery life, only half the pixels actually active saves quite some battery, who knew!

      • aucisson_masque 1 hour ago
        You’re paying more for less brightness.
        • samtheDamned 1 hour ago
          Only if you turn it on for the whole screen at all times, and you are still getting a privacy screen out of it so its not a loss with no benefits.
  • abluentalpaca 1 hour ago
    This chip is faster in Geekbench than the Ryzen 3900X system I just upgraded. At the time, this was at the top-end for multithreading performance, with a 105W TDP. Now outclassed by a phone.
    • automatic6131 57 minutes ago
      I just don't believe these geekbench numbers represent real world performance numbers. Like... Firefox compile times or late game civ 6 turn times or such things
      • ariwilson 39 minutes ago
        yes because a phone cpu cannot cool itself to keep at peak performance like a desktop processor can
  • Trung0246 23 minutes ago
    Does Live Caption Translate available? I think that feature is only available for Google Pixel which is unfortunate.
  • broadsidepicnic 1 hour ago
    How's the dex? It's close to the only thing I miss from samsungs, which I used good 15 years I guess before hopping onto grapheneos.
  • malfist 2 hours ago
    Yeah, watch out for those nosy people looking over your shoulder at your phone, they're spying on you.

    Please ignore all the data mining we're doing on your phone and please don't make us continually harass you first thing in the morning every morning to accept new terms and conditions. (For what it's worth, my Fold 7 harasses me to accept two sets of updates to terms and conditions first thing in the morning every morning)

    • throwa356262 1 hour ago
      Remove your Samsung account.

      It is needed for a bunch of things including all bixby stuff (which is admittedly starting to get useful) but those constant ToS updates can drive a man mad.

      If any Samsung employees are reading this: whoever is pushing those ToS changes is probably a on Apples payroll ;)

      • zugi 1 hour ago
        I've had Samsung phones for years and never made a Samsung account. Every few weeks my phone suggests signing in or accepting new terms and conditions, and I refuse.

        I know Google is mining my information, but I convince myself I'm "sticking it to the man" and taking at least one small stand...

      • malfist 1 hour ago
        If I sign out, samsung nukes step tracking and basically neuters my watch's health metrics.
        • zugi 1 hour ago
          There are a bunch of free or cheap alternative apps. Probably not as smoothly integrated, but years ago a change to Samsung's terms popped up in the health app; I saw it said they could do anything they want with my private health data, so I rejected the terms and stopped using it.
          • freedomben 5 minutes ago
            It blows my mind that Samsung has been sitting on a premium hardware gold mine for so long, but insists on these anti-features. I would be buying expensive premium samsung phones if they just offered something not so maddening. I was so hoping (but certainly not holding my breath) that Samsung was GrapheneOS's partner. Oh well, I guess S doesn't want my money, so I'll give it Moto.
    • throwaway270925 1 hour ago
      Two problems can be concerning at the same time!
  • mortenjorck 1 hour ago
    I was hoping, this being Wired, the article would have at least a surface-level technical description of how a software-defined privacy filter works, but alas.

    How does it work? I'm guessing it's some kind of extension of the LCD polarizer, but all I can find online are explanations of the software like in the Wired article.

  • AntonyVo87 4 minutes ago
    [dead]