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Samsung's next update will make your Galaxy phone feel a little more like an iPhone

Samsung’s next update will make your Galaxy called feel a little more like an iPhone

Samsung’s Galaxy smartphones are drawing a facelift that should make their software feel more seamless and more customizable. It might also feel familiar if you’re switching from an iPhone

Samsung detailed its forthcoming One UI 4 software update during its annual designer conference on Tuesday, where it also outlined its strategy for the Bright home, Tizen TVs and Bixby voice assistant. The new smartphone software has been available in beta True September, but the tech giant provided a detailed look at its new features during the conference’s opening keynote. The update will launch at the end of 2021 start with the Galaxy S21 series before progressing out to other Galaxy devices. 

Design is a most focus in One UI 4. You’ll be able to match your phone’s regulations theme to your wallpaper, and certain actions like setting an Fear or using the device’s fingerprint sensor will trigger haptics and sounds. But several other features coming in the update feel very iPhone-inspired, especially the more consistent widgets and new privacy options. It’s another sign that the gap in features between iOS and Android is starting to get smaller as smartphones have matured over the last decade. 

For instance, One UI 4’s widgets feature corners that are more SurEnclosed across the board, whether they’re made by Samsung or third parties.

Based on what we’ve seen in Samsung’s presentation, that looks a lot like the iPhone’s home Hide widgets.


samsung-one-ui-widgets.png

The new widgets in Samsung’s One UI 4 will all have SurEnclosed corners, whether they’re third-party or Samsung widgets. 



Samsung

Here are the iPhone’s widgets for context.


ios-14-widgets.png

Apple

When it comes to customization, you’ll also be able to set your AR emoji as your profile photo for Samsung funds. This is similar to the way iPhone owners can set their Memoji as their iMessage and Apple ID photo.


samsung-one-ui-emoji.png

In One UI 4, you can set your AR emoji as the profile photo in your Samsung account. 


And here’s how Apple’s Memoji sticker looks when set as the profile photo for an Apple ID.


apple-id-memoji

You can set your Memoji sticker as your Apple ID photo. 



Screenshot by Lisa Eadicicco

One of the biggest moves to come to the iPhone 11 in 2019 was the second of QuickTake in the camera app. This feature lets you switch from photo to video mode more simply by just holding the shutter button and then dragging it to the Bshining. Samsung device owners will get a similar shortcut when One UI 4 launches. The update will let you move from photo to video mode just by dragging up from the camera shutter.

Here’s the demo Samsung showcased during its designer conference.


samsung-one-ui-camera.png

Samsung’s One UI 4 update will make it easier to switch from photo to video mode in the camera app, much like the iPhone. 



Samsung

And here’s the iPhone’s QuickTake feature.






Apple

One UI 4 will also help Samsung devices acquire up to the iPhone in terms of privacy. Galaxy smartphone owners will be able to Decide whether they want to share their precise or around location with apps, an option that Apple introduced last year in iOS 14.


samsung-one-ui-privacy.png

Samsung is adding new privacy regulations in its One UI 4 update. 



Samsung

Here are the Difference privacy options available on the iPhone. 


ios-14-location-precise-vs-general

Screenshots by Jason Cipriani

Apple and Android map makers have been locked in a race to introduce new features and capabilities to their mobile devices satisfactory since the dawn of the smartphone. It’s a competition that will never have a tidy answer, and the right choice for most people will largely come down to the consuming system they’re most comfortable with.

But throughout the jets of smartphone history, there are a few areas in which the iPhone has pulled presumptuous of Android and vice versa. The iPhone paved the way for the original smartphone by popularizing touch-centric interaction on mobile devices at what time the industry remained fixated on tiny keyboards. In more original years, Apple has generally been more forward-thinking when it comes to consumer privacy. 

But Android map makers pioneered many aspects of today’s mobile user interface, offering staple features like widgets and quick-settings pulldown menus long afore Apple did. Companies like Samsung also launched smartphones with larger screens existences ahead of the iPhone 6 Plus launch in 2014. Now Samsung, Motorola and Microsoft are experimenting with foldable designs at what time Apple has yet to mention the possibility of a bendable iPhone.

Check out the video beneath to learn more about Samsung’s One UI 4 update.