However, at the launch Samsung confirmed that the UK version of the phone will have a measly four cores. The good news is that the UK S4’s Snapdragon 600 chipset will run at a faster 1.9GHz, which will hopefully go some way to making up for the cores shortfall.
Speaking of battery life, the new handset will use a 2,600mAh battery. That’s 500mAh bigger than the one in the S3 and should be big enough to cope with the slightly-enlarged screen, and the greater demands of 4G, while still running all day. For use at home there’s also better Wi-Fi support, with the new 802.11ac standard supported. We’ve seen this networking standard deliver speeds well over 200Mbit/s, so using super-fast broadband speeds on your phone at home is going to easy. NFC makes an appearance, so the phone will be compatible with Google Wallet, so you can pay for goods in compatible shops using just your phone. It will also support Visa’s payWave, widening the choice and range of places that you can shop in.
In addition, Samsung showed some other ways that NFC can be used. One of the most different was Group Play. By tapping your Samsung Galaxy S4 to another one, you can share music and pictures. Samsung has also promised that the technology will support multi-player gaming and it’s opening up the SDK to encourage other companies to develop for it.
No great surprises on the storage front, with 16GB, 32GB and 64GB models announced. However, it’s good to see that there’s still a microSD card slot, so you can add up to 64GB of storage. Depending on the prices, it may even work out cheaper to buy a lower capacity model and then upgrade it when you need to with a memory card.
With fitness accessories apps being big business, Samsung clearly doesn’t want to miss out and has launched S Health with the Galaxy S4. Using your phone a variety of accessories, you’ll be able to measure your weight and health.The new S4 also includes a number of new features. If all of that wasn’t enough, the Galaxy S4 also has an IR transmitter, which you can use to control your home entertainment kit via the WatchOn app. There’s also S Voice Drive, which puts up a simpler interface for when you’re driving and recognizes voice prompts. Finally, when you’re abroad the translation services let you type in a message and have the phone read it out in a different language; the spoken reply is then converted back into your language on the screen.