The Galaxy S8's misplaced fingerprint scanner was probably a last-minute change

Ask anyone to tell you where a smartphone's fingerprint
reader should be and, though the answers will vary, you'll never be
told "off center, right next to the camera lens on the back." But lo and
behold, that's exactly where Samsung plopped its fingerprint scanner on the new (and otherwise delightful)
Galaxy S8. It's a perplexing decision if we consider it as a deliberate
design choice, but reports ahead of the S8's launch, which now seem
validated by the device itself, suggest that it was a last-minute
alteration enforced by the slower-than-desired development of more
ambitious technology.
A March 13th report out of Korea
lays it all out lucidly. Samsung, working in collaboration with
Synaptics, had initially hoped to build the fingerprint sensing tech
directly into the screen itself. "Samsung poured resources into
Synaptics’ fledgling technology last year but the results were
frustrating," an informed source is quoted as saying. "With the
production imminent, the company had to decide to relocate the
fingerprint scanning home button to the back of the device at the last
minute."
I've handled the Galaxy S8 myself and noticed how much
time Samsung has committed to recreating the tactile home button it's
had at the front of its phones since the Galaxy S series' inception.
There's localized haptic feedback at the location of the new on-screen
home button on the S8, and Samsung's demo staff are fully trained up to
explain the difference to uninitiated users. Even the lock screen has a
"place finger to unlock" graphic that hovers immediately above the
software home button's spot — which would also be the most logical place
to find an integrated fingerprint reader.
It may be circumstantial supposition, but I'm far more
willing to believe Samsung made a bad compromise late in the development
process of its new flagship than I am to think that the company
intended to have the current design all along. Samsung has gotten too
good at industrial design for that to be the case.

What I'm noticing these days is that the leading hardware
companies are clashing with engineering problems and limitations more
often than ever before. The Galaxy Note 7 debacle
last year was the result of Samsung trying to squeeze every last bit of
battery that it could into its premium phone. A few months later,
Apple's MacBook Pro refresh was supposed to come with a tailored battery design,
which apparently didn't pan out in time and the laptop was eventually
released with a more conventional battery setup. The more mature a tech
category is, the harder it becomes to accomplish the next great jump
forward.
As far as the Galaxy S8 is concerned, we'll have to wait
until we've reviewed the new phone to decide if its fingerprint reader
location is as bad as it looks at first glance. Maybe we'll all develop
the alacrity to unlock our Samsung phones without always smudging up
their camera lenses. Either way, we can probably look forward to seeing
Samsung and Synaptics finishing off their work and releasing a phone
whose all-encompassing display is capable of reading its user's
fingerprint directly. Perhaps in time for the Galaxy Note 8.
The article was published on : theverge
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