Samsung Electronics Co.
(005930) will introduce a wristwatch-like device named the
Galaxy Gear next month that can make phone calls, surf the Web and handle
e-mails, according to two people familiar with the matter.
The Galaxy Gear will be powered
by Google Inc. (GOOG)’s
Android operating system and go on sale this year to beat a potentially
competing product from Apple Inc. (AAPL), the people said. The device will be
unveiled Sept. 4, two days before the IFA consumer electronics show begins
in Berlin, one of the people said, asking not to be identified because the
plans are private.
Asia’s biggest
technology company is racing other electronics makers, including Sony Corp. (6758), to create a new industry of wearable
devices as the market for top-end handsets nears saturation. The global watch
industry will generate more than $60 billion in sales this year, and the first
companies to sell devices that multitask could lock customers into their
platform, boosting sales of smartphones, tablets and TVs.
“It will carve a niche for sure as
this is an initial product in the market,” said Chung Chang Won, an analyst at
Nomura Holdings Inc. in Seoul. “Wearable devices could be one of the trends in
the smartphone market, but I’m not sure yet whether watches or glasses will set
the trend.”
The Galaxy Gear being released next
month won’t have a flexible display, though the company is continuing to work
on developing a bendable screen, one person said. It will be unveiled the same
day as Samsung’s Galaxy Note 3, a combination smartphone and tablet computer.
APPLE WATCH
Apple had a team of about 100
designers working on watch-like device, two people familiar with the matter
said in February. The Cupertino, California-based company is seeking to
introduce its device this year, one of the people familiar said at the time.
Samsung became the world’s largest
smartphone maker last year, overtaking Apple. The Suwon, South Korea-based
company had about 33 percent of the global smartphone market in the second
quarter, while the iPhone maker fell to a three-year low as more consumers
chose inexpensive handsets from Chinese makers, according to researcher Strategy
Analytics.
Samsung posted second-quarter
earnings July 26 that missed analyst estimates as sales growth for the flagship
Galaxy S4 was curbed by slowing demand for high-end handsets. Shares have
fallen 15 percent this year in Seoul trading, compared with a 4 percent decline
in the benchmark Kospi index.
Samsung released the Galaxy S4
smartphone in April and plans at least two other high-end handsets this year,
including a device using the Tizen operating system.
Lee Young Hee, executive vice
president of Samsung’s mobile business, said in a March interview the company
was working on a watch device.
IFA runs Sept. 6-11.
No comments:
Post a Comment