Samsung Officially Cancels the Galaxy Note 7

AB Ziggy

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Wouldn't be surprised if the Note 7 fiasco makes people skeptical of buying future Samsung phones, including the S series. This will take years to recover from reputation wise.

This is the perfect strike the Google Pixel needs to take market share, especially if the S8 or Note 8 come without headphone Jacks.
 

O.G.B

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Lol yeah ur a Stan

The only STAN is you constantly cheerleading for Apple like a whiny little bytch!


Which lookin at it now is laughable since the replacements are fukkin up too.

So I guess Apple should be mandatorily recalling their iPhone's also then since 5 (iPhone 6 & 7) models have exploded within the last week! :pachaha:


They got involved because the number of exploding note 7s was growing and Samsung only did a bs voluntary recall.
Bullshyt! The U.S Governmental agencies only got involved because it was a perfect opportunity to bamboozle the public while propping themselves up as a ardent watchdog for consumer safety.

Funny, none of the other 7 countries (Canada, Mexico, Puerto Rico, New Zealand, Taiwan, the UAE and Korea) affected by Note 7 batteries had these governmental agencies stick their nose into Samsung's recall.

Also where was the FAA when an iPhone 6 burst into flames on a plane from Washington to Hawaii over 6 months ago? :patrice:

:sas2: Don't worry iLoser, I'll wait?




Cnet-logo-2011-300x220.png


iPhone bursts into flames on flight, owner thought plane would crash

An Alaska Air flight on its way to Hawaii sees a troubling occurrence. The iPhone 6's owner says there were 8-inch flames.

iphone-bursts-into-flames-on-flight-owner-thought-plane-would-crash-cnet.jpeg



There are many ways of inflaming passengers on today's claustrophobically cramped airlines.

Anna Crail, however, managed it in quite a novel and inadvertent way.

She was flying from Bellingham, Washington to Hawaii with Alaska Air on Thursday. It's spring break, don't you know.

Suddenly she started to emit flames. Well, her iPhone 6 did.


"When it started I thought we were going down, and I was like, 'oh my god, there's a fire on the plane,'" she told KOMO News.

The fire, it seems, came from her own phone. And the plane was 90 minutes from Honolulu, over the Pacific Ocean.

"All of the sudden there was like 8-inch flames coming out of my phone," she told KOMO. "And I flipped it off onto the ground and it got under someone's seat, and the flames were just getting higher and a bunch of people stood up."

One imagines they did. It's not every day you see flames on a plane. Snakes, certainly. But not flames.

A spokesman added that the Boeing 737 landed safely, with no damage to humans or machine. Other than the iPhone, that is.
Apple Inc. and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) have yet to respond to a request for comment on the incident. :sas1:

Reports of flaming phones have occurred from time to time over the years.

This isn't even the first time a phone has burst into flames on a flight. Five years, a passenger on an Australian flight suddenly noticed his iPhone began to glow and emit smoke.



iPhone bursts into flames on flight, owner thought plane would crash


You must not be aware then that countries outside the us you can't even get a note 7. They've pulled them off shelves.

Sorry, but "you must not be aware" that this was only a temporary situation based on the recall & the Note 7 is being re-launched in these countries.


Lol floundering profits, Apple controls over 90% of total mobile profit leaving scraps to the rest.

Apple also has lost close to 200 billion in market valuation based on it's stock faltering due to lackluster iPhone sales. :jawalrus:
 
Last edited:

Truefan31

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The only STAN is you constantly cheerleading for Apple like a whiny little bytch!




So I guess Apple should be mandatorily recalling their iPhone's also then since 5 (iPhone 6 & 7) models have exploded within the last week! :pachaha:



Bullshyt! The U.S Governmental agencies only got involved because it was a perfect opportunity to bamboozle the public while propping themselves up as a ardent watchdog for consumer safety.

Funny, none of the other 7 countries (Canada, Mexico, Puerto Rico, New Zealand, Taiwan, the UAE and Korea) affected by Note 7 batteries had these governmental agencies stick their nose into Samsung's recall.

Also where was the FAA when an iPhone 6 burst into flames on a plane from Washington to Hawaii over 6 months ago? :patrice:

:sas2: Don't worry iLoser, I'll wait?




Cnet-logo-2011-300x220.png


iPhone bursts into flames on flight, owner thought plane would crash

An Alaska Air flight on its way to Hawaii sees a troubling occurrence. The iPhone 6's owner says there were 8-inch flames.

iphone-bursts-into-flames-on-flight-owner-thought-plane-would-crash-cnet.jpeg



There are many ways of inflaming passengers on today's claustrophobically cramped airlines.

Anna Crail, however, managed it in quite a novel and inadvertent way.

She was flying from Bellingham, Washington to Hawaii with Alaska Air on Thursday. It's spring break, don't you know.

Suddenly she started to emit flames. Well, her iPhone 6 did.


"When it started I thought we were going down, and I was like, 'oh my god, there's a fire on the plane,'" she told KOMO News.

The fire, it seems, came from her own phone. And the plane was 90 minutes from Honolulu, over the Pacific Ocean.

"All of the sudden there was like 8-inch flames coming out of my phone," she told KOMO. "And I flipped it off onto the ground and it got under someone's seat, and the flames were just getting higher and a bunch of people stood up."

One imagines they did. It's not every day you see flames on a plane. Snakes, certainly. But not flames.

A spokesman added that the Boeing 737 landed safely, with no damage to humans or machine. Other than the iPhone, that is.
Apple Inc. and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) have yet to respond to a request for comment on the incident. :sas1:

Reports of flaming phones have occurred from time to time over the years.

This isn't even the first time a phone has burst into flames on a flight. Five years, a passenger on an Australian flight suddenly noticed his iPhone began to glow and emit smoke.



iPhone bursts into flames on flight, owner thought plane would crash




Sorry, but "you must not be aware" that this was only a temporary situation based on the recall & the Note 7 is being re-launched in these countries.




Apple also has lost close to 200 billion in market valuation based on it's stock faltering due to lackluster iPhone sales. :jawalrus:


Lol all that wasted post and yet you can't accept the facts. Keep blaming the govt for samsungs fukk up. Note 7 is a big L.

Apple losing 200 billi in market valuation, yet they're still the most valuable company in the world. They still sell more iPhones, way more than the Galaxy.

Apple still gettin way more bread than Samsung in this supposed down year. You posted all those financials gassin up Samsung, lol breh they still way behind Apple. :mjlol: It's not like Samsung is the 2nd most valuable company either lol. What are they like 15th? Lol

Samsung can't even send good replacements to people. 900 phone you can't use on a plane brehs:mjlol:
 

winb83

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If this is the best reply you can assemble, then you shouldn't have bothered responding at all! :pachaha:
So what you're saying is Samsung introducing the fingerprint scanner the next year after Apple has nothing to do with Apple? Same with Samsung Pay? Same with live photos? Samsung steals features from Apple all the time. Blatantly with no fukks given. Look at the bottom of the S6 then look at the bottom of the iPhone 6. Hell the S6 took several main concepts from the iPhone like non-removable batteries, non-expandable storage, physical design cues. Some of the stuff Samsung the year before mocked Apple for in the ad I posted. Let's not act like Samsung didn't introduce gold and rose gold colored phones following Apple.

Samsung has been sued and lost for stealing ideas from Apple. These are facts, they aren't my opinions either. There's talk now that Samsung is looking to ditch the physical home button and may be looking to drop the headphone jack on the S8.
 

winb83

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O.G.B

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Keep blaming the govt for samsungs fukk up. Note 7 is a big L.

The only thing that's a big L is Apple's iPhone.

iPhone 7 Issues:
Users Report iPhone 7 LTE And GPS Connection Problems
Network Disconnects After Switch Off Airplane Mode

"Updates will probably solve this problem in the future, but for the time being Apple is recommending customers to remove and reinsert the SIM card included in their iPhone device."
:lolbron:

Hissing Sound
Consumers Complain Of Dropped Calls, Data Interruptions And More
Lightning EarPods regularly crash
iPhone 7 doesn’t actually have a real sapphire Camera lens as Apple claimed
iPhone 7 and BMW Owners Experiencing Bluetooth Audio Issues



Outdated LED screen display is still just 750p/1080p
:heh: :flabbynsick:

Apple losing 200 billi in market valuation, yet they're still the most valuable company in the world.
A 200 billion loss is STILL a 200 billion loss, no matter how you try to spin it. :umad:



They still sell more iPhones, way more than the Galaxy.

But Samsung is still KING in the smartphone market & sell way more smartphones than Apple in overall worldwide sales.
Hassan_UMAD.png


Also in the U.S, Samsung sells more Galaxy S7 series phones than Apple's iPhone 6s & 7 :russ:


you can't accept the facts.

The only fact to accept is that your utter Apple dikkriding is shameful & a complete fail!
10fwc5v.jpg
 
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O.G.B

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So what you're saying is Samsung introducing the fingerprint scanner the next year after Apple has nothing to do with Apple? Same with Samsung Pay? ? Samsung steals features from Apple all the time. Blatantly with no fukks given. Look at the bottom of the S6 then look at the bottom of the iPhone 6. Hell the S6 took several main concepts from the iPhone like non-removable batteries, non-expandable storage, physical design cues. Some of the stuff Samsung the year before mocked Apple for in the ad I posted. Let's not act like Samsung didn't introduce gold and rose gold colored phones following Apple.

Samsung has been sued and lost for stealing ideas from Apple. These are facts, they aren't my opinions either. There's talk now that Samsung is looking to ditch the physical home button and may be looking to drop the headphone jack on the S8.

:russell:
Both Apple & Android/Samsung have utilized or taken ideas or concepts from each other. The only difference is that Apple pretends & markets to mindless consumers that many of the features or hardware they offer on the iPhone are uniquely created by Apple themselves.



u-phonearena.png



It's not stealing when Apple does it, because it wasn't stealing when Google did it either


Its-not-stealing-when-Apple-does-it-because-it-wasnt-stealing-when-Google-did-it-either.jpg

Every time there are new features announced for iOS, there is an uproar around the web about Apple "stealing" features. I have talked before about why I think this is a silly argument, but I wanted to put up a refresher on the idea, because the claims simply won't die out. Here's the simple reason: it's not stealing when Apple does it, because it wasn't stealing when Google did it either.
The elephant

First, I have to address the elephant that is always in the room when talking about Apple: lawsuits. Look, no one likes a company that is overly litigious, and Apple certainly fits that bill. Or, at least Apple did fit that bill in the past. I know that Apple is still locked in litigation with a number of different companies, including Samsung and Motorola; but, I feel it's important to note that all of those lawsuits began while Steve Jobs was still CEO.



New CEO Tim Cook has expressed his distaste for lawsuits, and aside from the battles that started before his time, I can't find evidence of a lawsuit that has been filed by Apple since he took over the company two years ago. There have been the endless loop of countersuits with Samsung, but at this point that mess is just as much Samsung's fault as Apple's.
Obviously, this is a fairly short time period, but as I said when Tim Cook first took over the company, we need to put away the ideas about Apple that we had during Steve Jobs' time, and stop judging the company by Steve Jobs, because the company reflects its leader, and its leader is very different than the man who made the company famous.

Yes, Tim Cook could likely put an end to the lawsuits in progress (assuming the companies that have countersued would also agree to ending the wars), but there are signs that Apple is changing, and we should pay attention to that.

The accusations and the real world

First of all, I know that Apple has a dodgy past with claiming a feature is new, original, and unique to iOS when it already exists on another platform, but I didn't see it this time with the WWDC keynote. Remember, there is a difference between saying this is a "new feature" and saying this is "a unique feature to iOS". Of course what was shown off are new features, because iOS users haven't had them before, and those are the people Apple is speaking to in these announcements. And, obviously the features will be "innovative" for users, because again iOS users haven't had these features before.
In the past, maybe I've been a bit too philosophical and abstract, saying that nothing has been stolen because everything is built on ideas that came before it. I thought that was a fairly straightforward argument, but every time the argument pops up again, it seems that the ones calling out Apple for stealing don't have a memory that extends beyond Apple's direct competition. The trouble is that none of the features Apple is being accused of "stealing" were original ideas on Android or Windows Phone either. When Apple first added folders to iOS, we heard calls of "stealing from Android", but when Android added folders, did we also hear the calls of "stealing from Apple" or "stealing from that filing cabinet by my desk"?
Let's run down the list:
  1. That multitasking UI wasn't seen first in Windows Phone 8, it goes back to webOS, and even desktops before that.

  2. Google stole Quick Settings from Zenith!

    Control Center didn't start with Android 4.2, it's just a set of quick toggles that you could find on webOS or a desktop before that, and even farther back (as you can see on the right).
  3. AirDrop/Beam/Group Play are all just variations on previous standards like DLNA for local devices, or Bluetooth sharing which goes back to feature phones.
  4. Tabbed browsing didn't start with Google Chrome, it was available on Firefox before Chrome; and even before that, there was a browser in 1994 called "InternetWorks" that had offered a tabbed interface.
  5. Password autofill also didn't start with Chrome, it goes back to 1Password, LastPass, and plenty of other programs before that.
  6. Live wallpapers didn't start with Android, it first showed up in desktop Windows.
  7. The notification center didn't start with Android, but has roots in desktop systems like Growl, the Windows taskbar, and even in the analog world.
That's another thing we all need to keep in mind. Anything created on a computer screen also has roots in the real world. A notification tray makes sense because we're used to having notifications centralized, like in our mailbox outside, or the answering machine attached to a phone. Quick toggles make sense because we are so used to using remote controls. Tabs were used in binders well before browsers. Password saving used to be done in notebooks and sticky notes. Live wallpapers are called windows, because the world outside moves. Sharing makes sense because we're all human, and we like to show friends cool things, even stuff we found in the dirt while walking to school.
Basic features and trends
These different features keep popping up in various mobile systems, not because one company is determined to copy another, but because we're starting to reach a consensus on what basic features should exist in all mobile operating systems. The original Windows back in 1985 wasn't copying Apple's OS released the year before, it just so happened that people understood the idea of folders (you know, from having them on their physical desks for years and years), and a window was the best way to represent that on a screen.

Notification trays are the best way to organize a rush of data and keep it from being too intrusive, but still have quick access to it at all times. The best way to switch between apps is to see screenshots of each app, so you can find things easier. And, you can put pictures of the Windows Phone 8 calendar and calculator apps next to the iOS 7 versions, or even the Android versions, but that doesn't prove anything. If you really think any of these things are copying, just answer one question: how else would you propose a company design these solutions, especially the digital objects that have had standardized layouts in the analog world for generations?
If we go beyond the features to the design aspect of things, the arguments don't get any better. The overall trend in design right now is in a type of modern minimalism, which unfortunately is going to lead to a certain amount of overlap. Users don't want to see different design just for the sake of being different. They want something that makes sense, something that is familiar, but maybe has a fresh idea or two to make certain actions easier. There's a reason why Windows has used the same basic UI for such a long time, and why so many have rebelled against the massive shift that happened with the Windows 8 UI. The same thing happened in the Linux community with the shift from GNOME 2 (a very Windows-like UI) to GNOME 3 (more minimalist, and more like MacOS really, just with more customization options and keyboard shortcuts.)
Conclusion

Sure, Apple has added a number of features that look a lot like what we've seen on other mobile operating systems. But, we have to be careful about tossing around the term "stealing", because 1) that implies that these features never existed before they appeared on the other mobile operating systems, which is almost never the case; and, 2) it also implies that Apple has claimed it is the first to offer these options, which is also not true. Remember, Apple directly referred to Android Beam/S Beam in its keynote when talking about AirDrop.
If you want to call it stealing, then you have to extend your memory and call out Google, Microsoft, BlackBerry, Palm, Canonical, and every other software maker for stealing as well, because everything we're seeing in mobile operating systems has come before both in desktop systems and in some form in the real world that exists outside of your computer.


It's not stealing when Apple does it, because it wasn't stealing when Google did it either

Same with live photos

You keep repeating inaccurate information hoping it will stick, but it won't. How could Samsung steal live photos from Apple, when HTC had this software feature first, which was stolen by Apple?

:sas2:

There's talk now that Samsung is looking to ditch the physical home button and may be looking to drop the headphone jack on the S8.

Sorry, but alleged rumors aren't facts
 

hayesc0

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winb83

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:russell:
Both Apple & Android/Samsung have utilized or taken ideas or concepts from each other. The only difference is that Apple pretends & markets to mindless consumers that many of the features or hardware they offer on the iPhone are uniquely created by Apple themselves.



u-phonearena.png



It's not stealing when Apple does it, because it wasn't stealing when Google did it either


Its-not-stealing-when-Apple-does-it-because-it-wasnt-stealing-when-Google-did-it-either.jpg

Every time there are new features announced for iOS, there is an uproar around the web about Apple "stealing" features. I have talked before about why I think this is a silly argument, but I wanted to put up a refresher on the idea, because the claims simply won't die out. Here's the simple reason: it's not stealing when Apple does it, because it wasn't stealing when Google did it either.
The elephant

First, I have to address the elephant that is always in the room when talking about Apple: lawsuits. Look, no one likes a company that is overly litigious, and Apple certainly fits that bill. Or, at least Apple did fit that bill in the past. I know that Apple is still locked in litigation with a number of different companies, including Samsung and Motorola; but, I feel it's important to note that all of those lawsuits began while Steve Jobs was still CEO.



New CEO Tim Cook has expressed his distaste for lawsuits, and aside from the battles that started before his time, I can't find evidence of a lawsuit that has been filed by Apple since he took over the company two years ago. There have been the endless loop of countersuits with Samsung, but at this point that mess is just as much Samsung's fault as Apple's.
Obviously, this is a fairly short time period, but as I said when Tim Cook first took over the company, we need to put away the ideas about Apple that we had during Steve Jobs' time, and stop judging the company by Steve Jobs, because the company reflects its leader, and its leader is very different than the man who made the company famous.

Yes, Tim Cook could likely put an end to the lawsuits in progress (assuming the companies that have countersued would also agree to ending the wars), but there are signs that Apple is changing, and we should pay attention to that.

The accusations and the real world

First of all, I know that Apple has a dodgy past with claiming a feature is new, original, and unique to iOS when it already exists on another platform, but I didn't see it this time with the WWDC keynote. Remember, there is a difference between saying this is a "new feature" and saying this is "a unique feature to iOS". Of course what was shown off are new features, because iOS users haven't had them before, and those are the people Apple is speaking to in these announcements. And, obviously the features will be "innovative" for users, because again iOS users haven't had these features before.
In the past, maybe I've been a bit too philosophical and abstract, saying that nothing has been stolen because everything is built on ideas that came before it. I thought that was a fairly straightforward argument, but every time the argument pops up again, it seems that the ones calling out Apple for stealing don't have a memory that extends beyond Apple's direct competition. The trouble is that none of the features Apple is being accused of "stealing" were original ideas on Android or Windows Phone either. When Apple first added folders to iOS, we heard calls of "stealing from Android", but when Android added folders, did we also hear the calls of "stealing from Apple" or "stealing from that filing cabinet by my desk"?
Let's run down the list:
  1. That multitasking UI wasn't seen first in Windows Phone 8, it goes back to webOS, and even desktops before that.

  2. Google stole Quick Settings from Zenith!

    Control Center didn't start with Android 4.2, it's just a set of quick toggles that you could find on webOS or a desktop before that, and even farther back (as you can see on the right).
  3. AirDrop/Beam/Group Play are all just variations on previous standards like DLNA for local devices, or Bluetooth sharing which goes back to feature phones.
  4. Tabbed browsing didn't start with Google Chrome, it was available on Firefox before Chrome; and even before that, there was a browser in 1994 called "InternetWorks" that had offered a tabbed interface.
  5. Password autofill also didn't start with Chrome, it goes back to 1Password, LastPass, and plenty of other programs before that.
  6. Live wallpapers didn't start with Android, it first showed up in desktop Windows.
  7. The notification center didn't start with Android, but has roots in desktop systems like Growl, the Windows taskbar, and even in the analog world.
That's another thing we all need to keep in mind. Anything created on a computer screen also has roots in the real world. A notification tray makes sense because we're used to having notifications centralized, like in our mailbox outside, or the answering machine attached to a phone. Quick toggles make sense because we are so used to using remote controls. Tabs were used in binders well before browsers. Password saving used to be done in notebooks and sticky notes. Live wallpapers are called windows, because the world outside moves. Sharing makes sense because we're all human, and we like to show friends cool things, even stuff we found in the dirt while walking to school.
Basic features and trends
These different features keep popping up in various mobile systems, not because one company is determined to copy another, but because we're starting to reach a consensus on what basic features should exist in all mobile operating systems. The original Windows back in 1985 wasn't copying Apple's OS released the year before, it just so happened that people understood the idea of folders (you know, from having them on their physical desks for years and years), and a window was the best way to represent that on a screen.

Notification trays are the best way to organize a rush of data and keep it from being too intrusive, but still have quick access to it at all times. The best way to switch between apps is to see screenshots of each app, so you can find things easier. And, you can put pictures of the Windows Phone 8 calendar and calculator apps next to the iOS 7 versions, or even the Android versions, but that doesn't prove anything. If you really think any of these things are copying, just answer one question: how else would you propose a company design these solutions, especially the digital objects that have had standardized layouts in the analog world for generations?
If we go beyond the features to the design aspect of things, the arguments don't get any better. The overall trend in design right now is in a type of modern minimalism, which unfortunately is going to lead to a certain amount of overlap. Users don't want to see different design just for the sake of being different. They want something that makes sense, something that is familiar, but maybe has a fresh idea or two to make certain actions easier. There's a reason why Windows has used the same basic UI for such a long time, and why so many have rebelled against the massive shift that happened with the Windows 8 UI. The same thing happened in the Linux community with the shift from GNOME 2 (a very Windows-like UI) to GNOME 3 (more minimalist, and more like MacOS really, just with more customization options and keyboard shortcuts.)
Conclusion

Sure, Apple has added a number of features that look a lot like what we've seen on other mobile operating systems. But, we have to be careful about tossing around the term "stealing", because 1) that implies that these features never existed before they appeared on the other mobile operating systems, which is almost never the case; and, 2) it also implies that Apple has claimed it is the first to offer these options, which is also not true. Remember, Apple directly referred to Android Beam/S Beam in its keynote when talking about AirDrop.
If you want to call it stealing, then you have to extend your memory and call out Google, Microsoft, BlackBerry, Palm, Canonical, and every other software maker for stealing as well, because everything we're seeing in mobile operating systems has come before both in desktop systems and in some form in the real world that exists outside of your computer.


It's not stealing when Apple does it, because it wasn't stealing when Google did it either



You keep repeating inaccurate information hoping it will stick, but it won't. How could Samsung steal live photos from Apple, when HTC had this software feature first, which was stolen by Apple?

:sas2:



Sorry, but alleged rumors aren't facts
This is a company that had leaked over a 100 page document of how they could copy the iPhone. And you are trying to argue that they aren't trying to copy the iPhone? Are you insane?

Like I said many of the features Samsung takes from Apple are things Apple didn't invent or originate but when Apple pushes them to the mainstream the very next year they're on Samsung phones.
 

O.G.B

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This is a company that had leaked over a 100 page document of how they could copy the iPhone. And you are trying to argue that they aren't trying to copy the iPhone? Are you insane?

Like I said many of the features Samsung takes from Apple are things Apple didn't invent or originate but when Apple pushes them to the mainstream the very next year they're on Samsung phones.

Despite your incessant babbling, what you fail to realize or choose to ignore is that Samsung has more exclusive, state of the art innovations & tech firsts than any other smartphone manufacturer which can't be refuted.

Apple can't even build a iPhone without Samsung parts! :mjlol: :pachaha:
 
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winb83

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Despite your incessant babbling, what you fail to realize or choose to ignore is that Samsung has more exclusive, state of the art innovations & tech firsts than any other smartphone manufacturer which can't be refuted.

Apple can't even build a iPhone without Samsung parts! :mjlol: :pachaha:
That has nothing to do with the point of them copying the iPhone. It's been proven.

Anyway another replacement caught fire in Texas. The fifth so far.
Samsung says it's 'working diligently' as fifth replacement Note 7 burns

Here's the fourth
A fourth replacement Galaxy Note 7 caught fire in Virginia this morning
 

O.G.B

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That has nothing to do with the point of them copying the iPhone. It's been proven.

And it's also been proven that Apple has copied Samsung!:youngsabo:


:rudy: Meh, iPhones have been exploding, injuring & killing people for years & 5 iPhones (6 & 7 models) have also blown up within the last week.

The difference however, is that there isn't the same media/government bias, outrage, scrutiny or legislative action when Apple has or has had the exact same issues with iPhone's as Samsung is currently having with the Note 7.
 
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