The old saying "where there's smoke, there's fire" is being challenged
by Taiwan-based chassis manufacturers. We have recently seen a number of
stories about the upcoming Samsung Galaxy S5 and if there is one constant in all of them, it is that a metal version of the phone is coming. While the Samsung Galaxy S4 remained the flagship Android model this year, and will most likely end up number one in sales among Android smartphones, sales still fell flat after a terrific start with many criticizing Samsung for not turning to a metal chassis like HTC used with the HTC One.
With
all of these rumors and rampant speculation about a metal Galaxy S5,
the days of plastic are over for Samsung's top of the line Android
phone, right? Uh, not exactly. A published report on Wednesday cites the
aforementioned Taiwan-based chassis manufacturers as saying that it is
"unlikely" that Samsung will offer a metal version of the Samsung Galaxy
S5. This is based on the notion that the new model will be unveiled
late in February 2014, and still there have been no mass produced metal
chassis for the phone.
And while these same sources say that the
Korean based OEM is still evaluating the use of metal, the company has
become the largest smartphone producer on the planet using plastic,
leaving Samsung with no reason to make the change. The report says that
in order to save costs in the future, Samsung might turn to a compound
material like fiberglass/plastic or carbon fiber/plastic for its
smartphones.
Labels: Android, Rumored, Samsung, Smartphone