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Samsung to merge smartphone and camera divisions

Samsung-Galaxy-S-III-Smartphone-Based-Camera-In-the-Works-2Samsung has announced plans to merge its smartphone and camera divisions, according to Korean news station ETNews.

It has reorganised the divisions so that the two are essentially one and the same. Samsung Electronics said, “We will transplant the brand, sales networks, software competency and manufacturing competitiveness of the Wireless Business Division into the Camera Business Division, and integrate the technical know-how of the two business divisions into competency for differentiating our smartphones.”

By taking advantage of two very powerful arms of its business, Samsung will attempt to increase its marketshare in the camera market, while also capitalising on the technology for its handsets. The two divisions will also work together to market products and analyse data to help map out the best possible sales outcomes.

It seems Samsung had this in mind for a while. Last year, it revealed the Samsung Galaxy Camera, and followed up in June with the Galaxy NX, an Android-powered DSLR with interchangeable lenses.

It’s likely you’ll see Samsung make an even bigger marketing push for the camera contained inside its line of Galaxy phones. Already, Samsung touts its features, including twelve automatic shooting modes and additional apps that help edit and organise photos.

Some of the camera features are gimmicky, but Samsung’s inclusion of them seems to have caught on with other Android manufacturers, like LG and HTC, who also include a large number of shooting modes with their devices.

For the most part, the Android platform doesn’t really have the quintessential “camera phone” like iOS and Windows Phone do. With the latest news that Google released an update specifically to help refine the quality of photos taken the Nexus 5, it’s clear that this is an area – at least in the Android world – that remains underdeveloped. What Samsung likely hopes to do is eclipse any other smartphone maker in the camera game, notably Apple and Nokia. Either that, or it speculates that there’s a future of “smart” cameras coming in 2015 and it’ll be darned if it’s not the first.

 

 

Originally published on TechHive. Click here to read the original story. Reprinted with permission from IDG.net. Story copyright 2024 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
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