An interview with an Apple executive complains that Samsung spoofs the iPhone tech and uses it to make the screen bigger.

Economic media The Wall Street Journal has released a short video documentary regarding the 15-year history of one of the world’s best-selling iPhones, going back to when the first iPhones went on sale on June 29, 2007. The documentary also has an interview with one of Apple’s executives who said that in the early days. Samsung phones copied the iPhone technology, but only made the screen bigger.

It’s really called being a stumbling block for Samsung and Apple, because they are both dominant in the smartphone market that are constantly taking turns, and in the past we’ve seen both sides pick up the feature. the other side used Maybe the other side took some features on this side. It’s a funny story for fans of each camp to take ginger for a while.

In the documentary, there is an interview with Greg Joswiak, who is Apple’s senior vice president of marketing. When asked how the iPhone was initially released, the product from competitors like Samsung was how it affected Apple. Flagships such as the Galaxy S and the first Galaxy Note, the way Samsung has copied Apple’s technology with careless use and just flipped it on with larger-screen phones. Greg admits that Samsung was annoying back then, and Apple wasn’t happy.

There was also a section discussing smartphone screen sizes that when Steve Jobs was still around, he had an anti-big screen phone. Samsung, meanwhile, thinks customers will prefer large-screen phones. which is true accordingly Because at present, the mobile phone screen has a size of 6 inches to 7 inches, it still has

Including the iPhone itself, it has to adjust accordingly, starting with the iPhone 6 Series, which has moved the screen up to 4.7 – 5.5 inches, from the iPhone 5, whose screen is still only 4 inches, and has continued to expand until Currently, the iPhone 13 Max and 13 Pro Max have a screen as big as 6.68 inches. On the other hand… small-screen phones like the iPhone 12 mini and iPhone 13 mini have turned out to be low-priced models instead.

In the end, it continues to be an issue of who will copy who’s features. Because, as you know, mobile technology is still circling around, not tearing much at all. Whoever picks it up first becomes the leader. Whoever uses it later becomes an impersonator.

Source: AndroidAuthority, Wall Street Journal

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