Tianjin factory that made Samsung Note 7 batteries catches fire

February 09 10:57 2017

Samsung released the official results of its investigation into the exploding batteries of the discontinued Galaxy Note 7 last month, revealing the reasons for the issue that plagued the smartphone since it was launched in August 2016. The rumored 5.8-inch Galaxy S8 will be powered by a 3,000mAh battery, which is equivalent to the one packed within the previous generation S series phone.

The device adheres to 16-megapixel f/1.9 rear camera with an autofocus set up, The Independent reported. VentureBeat also confirms The Guardian’s report that Samsung will offer an HDMI equipped dock that will allow users to connect the Galaxy S8 to a desktop monitor, mouse and keyboard. This is pure speculation, and we’ll have to wait until March 29, to see what Samsung has in store in terms of AI technology.

The factory that made the faulty batteries on the Samsung Galaxy Note 7 had apparently caught fire.

However, after this incident, Samsung has been taking all measures necessary to ensure that their future products remain safe and are only visible in palms and pockets, rather than on warning signs with dangerously flammable goods for company. Welding burrs on the positive electrode penetrated the battery’s insulating tape, causing direct contact between the two electrodes.

The phone’s headphone connected had been called into question in recent weeks, with multiple reports suggesting the phone would echo the iPhone 7 and ditch the traditional headphone connector.

However, because of these missing features SamMobile questions if the photo is “a product of some Photoshop wizardry”. If it does, the level of expansions you could gain from a single port will be phenomenal.

On the other hand, Samsung could have developed a full-screen mode that manually activates, which allows for an end-to-end screen.

Samsung never just stops.

This isn’t Samsung’s first explosion.

The Galaxy S8, of course, will be waterproof, like its predecessor devices.

The factory tasked with producing and later recycling the batteries for the self-detonating Samsung Note 7 has itself fallen victim to a fire.

Samsung

Tianjin factory that made Samsung Note 7 batteries catches fire
 
 
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