With the mess that was the Samsung Galaxy Note 7’s exploding batteries, we’re sure that battery is one of the issues that are on the minds of many Samsung customers. Now we know that Samsung has already put into place safeguards and processes to ensure that the Note 7’s incident won’t happen again, but there is more.

According to a report from Android Police, it seems that Samsung has told them that with the Galaxy S8 and S8+, the batteries in these phones will apparently degrade at a slower rate compared to its predecessor, the Galaxy S7. From what Samsung told them, it seems that after a typical year’s worth of charges and discharges, the Galaxy S8 will be able to maintain 95% of its capacity.

This is versus the Galaxy S7 which maintained about 80% of its total capacity. This means that in theory, you should be able to keep the handset around longer without having to worry about its battery losing its charge too quickly. Unfortunately Samsung did not detail exactly how they accomplished this, so we guess we’ll have to take their word for it for now.

In case you did not know this, lithium batteries have a natural tendency to degrade over time. This is why you might notice that some of your older devices no longer hold their charges as long as they did when they were new. While there are advancements made to batteries, for the most part lithium ion is still more or less the standard when it comes to portable devices.

Filed in Cellphones. Read more about , and .

5.8"
  • 2960x1440
  • Super AMOLED
  • 568 PPI
12 MP
  • f/1.7 Aperture
  • OIS
3000 mAh
  • Non-Removable
  • Wireless Charging
4GB RAM
  • Snapdragon 835
  • MicroSD
Price
~$369 - Amazon
Weight
155 g
Launched in
2017-03-29
Storage (GB)
  • 64

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