Samsung has been long-rumoured to include the eye-scanning feature in
the anticipated Galaxy S5 smartphone; however a new report has claimed
that the company might instead bet on a more viable (as shown by Apple)
fingerprint sensor for the device.
The Korea Herald in a report has
claimed that the South Korean manufacturer is considering equipping its
2014 flagship with the fingerprint sensor feature, contrary to the
earlier reports which revealed an eye-scanner feature expected in the alleged Samsung Galaxy S5. The report cites an
unnamed industry source who said, "Among the different types of
biometric sensors that Samsung is testing for its Galaxy S5, the tech
giant will go for fingerprint authentication rather than unintuitive
user experience of iris recognition."
According to the report, the
company plans to include the fingerprint sensor below the alleged Galaxy
S5's display, while users will have to scan their fingerprints on the
screen.
A report on Monday allegedly revealed that the yet-to-be-announced Galaxy S5 might still sport a plastic build, instead of the long-rumoured metallic body with a complete design overhaul.
Further, the leak suggested some specifications of the alleged Galaxy S5, which include a 2K display boasting a resolution of 1440x2560 pixels (QHD); 2900mAh battery, and an eye-scanning sensor. Notably, a device codenamed Samsung SM-G900S sporting a screen resolution of 1440x2560 pixels (2K) was leaked in December last year. The device was believed to be the Samsung Galaxy S5, and was said to feature a 5-inch or 5.2-inch display, making the pixel density an incredible 560ppi at that resolution.
Further, the alleged device is said to sport a 20-megapixel rear camera with 4K video record support, opposing previous reports that claimed a 16-megapixel camera on the device.