Samsung delays Tizen smartphone sales launch

The new Samsung Z910F smartphone (R) and the SM-R380 smartwatch on display at the Tizen Developer Conference in San Francisco, C
The new Samsung Z910F smartphone (R) and the SM-R380 smartwatch on display at the Tizen Developer Conference in San Francisco, California on June 3, 2014

Samsung Electronics said Monday it would postpone the roll-out of its new smartphone based on Tizen, a home-grown operating system aimed at breaking away from Google's Android system.

The delay is seen as a blow to Samsung's campaign to carve out a niche in mobile software and services, to complement its dominant hardware role.

The Samsung Z, which has been specially developed by Samsung to run on the Tizen platform, was to go on sale in Russia in the third quarter of this year before reaching other markets.

But the world's largest smartphone maker said the launch was being pushed back in order to "further enhance the Tizen ecosystem."

It did not provide a new launch timeframe.

The vast majority of Samsung's popular devices, including its flagship Galaxy S smartphones, use Android.

Samsung has touted Tizen as a platform not just for phones, but for a range of connected devices from home appliances to door locks and watches which may communicate with one another in the future.

In recent months, Samsung has unveiled a line of Tizen-powered devices including cameras and smartwatches, as well as prototypes of Tizen televisions and smartphones.

© 2014 AFP

Citation: Samsung delays Tizen smartphone sales launch (2014, July 28) retrieved 19 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2014-07-samsung-tizen-smartphone-sales.html
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