Hardly anybody bought Samsung's last smartphones for AI. It hopes this year's models change that
- Reference: 1772042415
- News link: https://www.theregister.co.uk/2026/02/25/samsung_galaxy_s26_launch/
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The company also told The Register that customers' main "pain point" isn't AI performance – it's battery life. Yet only the base model Galaxy S26 gets a bigger battery than last year's model, up 300 mAh to 4,300 mAh. The other two models, the S26 Ultra and S26+, must make do with faster charging.
The Register last week handled all three models and can report they follow the familiar template for premium smartphones by incorporating gorgeously bright screens into small packages that are a little thinner and lighter than last year's efforts.
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The S26 Ultra gets the most interesting addition, a "privacy display" that renders the screen impossible to read except from directly in front. Samsung told us this is possible because the phone's display uses a mix of narrow and wide pixels, and turning off the latter enables private viewing.
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It's possible to apply privacy mode to whatever area of the screen you desire, or to choose apps that implement it. The Register suggested developers might appreciate an API that enables privacy display in apps, so businesses can deploy custom apps into the field with a little more confidence, or banks could suggest it to enhance security.
Samsung execs could not confirm this will be possible, but did not rule it out, noting that the company has published APIs and developer documentation after device launches in the past.
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Samsung's Galaxy S26 Ultra, Plus, and base model
Another new addition also has privacy implications. An improved scanning app uses AI to automagically remove creases on paper and retains its ability to perform optical character recognition.
Samsung has improved the AI it offers as a personal organizer. We're told that if you consult your calendar and the phone sees you have a meeting in the near future, it might suggest you summon an Uber. Or if a friend texts to suggest catching up on Tuesday, the phone can consult your calendar and propose a time.
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AI will also screen calls from unknown numbers by speaking to the caller. Users can divert a call to have it answered by AI, and with a few taps, have it indicate they're in a meeting and have outsourced their response to the machine. Additionally, we're told AI powers "Privacy Alerts" that inform users if apps attempt to access sensitive data, such as precise location, call logs, or contacts, beyond obviously useful contexts.
[6]Samsung reveals its first tri-fold phone – and its desktop mode
[7]Samsung customers buying now to avoid future tariffs – and may slow purchases once they arrive
[8]Samsung admits Galaxy devices can leak passwords through clipboard wormhole
[9]Samsung trumps USA's tariffs by making displays in Mexico, and elsewhere if needed
Plenty of the new AI features are aimed squarely at consumers, to do things like tidy up photos – in some cases by adding imagined objects that Samsung thinks fit the scene – or lock video recordings horizontally even if users spin their phones. There's also a tool that analyses screenshots and then recommends where to buy any items depicted.
Business buyers haven't been forgotten, as Samsung will again offer Enterprise editions of the handsets, which now come with a three-year warranty – one more than offered with last year's models. We're told Samsung has tools that offer "clearer visibility into firmware update status" to help with device fleet management.
Samsung has [10]signaled it wants to use more of its own Exynos processors in its handsets, but it hasn't got enough of them to power all S26+ and S26 base model units. A Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 Mobile Platform for Galaxy is present in all S26 Ultra units, with its beefed-up NPU necessary to power some features. It will also ship in some of the lesser S26 range. ®
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[6] https://www.theregister.com/2025/12/02/samsung_galaxy_z_trifold/
[7] https://www.theregister.com/2025/05/01/samsunug_q1_2025/
[8] https://www.theregister.com/2025/04/28/security_news_in_brief/
[9] https://www.theregister.com/2025/04/08/samsung_q1_2025_tariff_response/
[10] https://www.theregister.com/2025/10/30/samsung_q3_2025/
[11] https://whitepapers.theregister.com/
No thanks
This is why I stay away from Samsung phone. Bixby was bad enough. I just want phone. Maybe I'll add a few apps of my choosing.
I want a model of phone that has no AI, no Assistants, nothing telling me what to do and think.
Let me choose what is on the device I have just purchased. Thanks
Re: No thanks
"... if you consult your calendar and the phone sees you have a meeting in the near future, it might suggest you summon an Uber."
I'm not quite sure why I need 'AI' for that.
Re: No thanks
Even more so if you have a shared calendar and who you share the calendar with still has not quite got to grips with putting the meeting in at the right time.
Forget how many meetings I get a stupid o'clock (2am) with a title like "Night with the girls - 19:30 at AB1"
Re: No thanks
My 'stupid AI' time story concerns Alexa+. She was installed on one of my Echoes (fortunately the only one capable of running her). One morning she showed a notification and I asked her what it was. She then started babbling away about a wind advisory that was to occur overnight, to be canceled at 7am. It was now well past 7 so I mentioned she was a "Bit late, its nine o'clock". She promptly picked up on this and corrected me, telling me it was actually 8:50, again rather verbosely in her pseudo-Valley Girl voice telling me the precise time, time zone and Heaven only knows what else. I just told her to stop (and promptly switched the "New, Improve" software off). She had the final word with an error report of a time anomaly in the log.
AI is actually rather stupid. I don't mind it being set specific tasks but I don't want it intervening 'helpfully' in my day because it lacks even a token amount of common sense.
No A.I for me, forever
Never going to use the a.i and that applies forever. I disable all that stuff if I can and ignore it if I can't disable it.
Customer feedback
Yeah, we ignore it
Hardly anyone wants AI
They do want
Better battery life
Better camera
maybe microSD slot
Easy ways to disable / remove bloat
That's 19.9998% higher than I would have expected.
Stick with the pre-AI phone you have.
No nagware, no pointless resource use, and you save money that you can spend on chocolate instead.
Just wait until the bubble bursts and AI fades before your next phone purchase.
Re: Stick with the pre-AI phone you have.
Chocolate.................
Users can divert a call to have it answered by AI
Fuck off. I don't want the robo dialer to realise it's found an answering number.
Just gimme a phone with zero bloat and excellent battery life.
I wasn't interested in 3D TV, videodiscs, Betamax VCRs, behavioural advertising or ads that tell me what other people bought, either.
Overpriced, bad interface loaded with bloatware?
IT'S A MYSTERY!
What Is The IQ Of The 20% ?
As per the title, what is the IQ of the 20%.
Also, what will be the IQ of the 20% that use the AI slop after about a year ?
So if the privacy display
Disables the "wide" pixels and uses only the narrow pixels, I guess in that mode you are sacrificing resolution, PPI and brightness?
I suppose not an issue you'll be too bent out of shape over if you are worried about someone next to you on a train reading corporate emails of a sensitive nature, but what if they are directly behind you looking over your shoulder? Can't they still see it then?
Seems like the easiest solution is not to look at stuff you don't want others to see when you're in a place where you can't control who sees your screen. Surf Tik Tok or the news or watch a movie on Netflix, and look at the corporate secrets or your porn collection when you get home.
"AI"... What?
Yeah, AI. I know what it is. But even The Reg couldn't give us a compelling reason to buy a S25.
I own one, I don't really know what the AI features are. Who's fault is that?