Latest news with #Gaiser


India Today
06-06-2025
- India Today
Samsung defends Galaxy S25 Edge battery and camera choices, calls it the right move
Samsung has defended its choices for the Galaxy S25 Edge's battery capacity and camera prowess, positioning them as intentional decisions aligned with the phone's core design philosophy. That philosophy, as it turns out, was to make an exceptionally thin and light phone that also offers a flagship experience. In essence, it is an ultra-phone without going ultra in while it is stacked in almost all the right ways, its 3900mAh battery and lack of a dedicated telephoto camera leave something to be desired, especially for those chasing 'big' numbers and benchmark Galaxy S25 Edge measures just 5.8mm and weighs only 163 grams, making it the slimmest and lightest Galaxy S series phone to date (excluding its foldables when unfolded). The 3900mAh battery appears to be a big trade-off for the incredibly thin profile – at least on paper – but according to Blake Gaiser, US Mobile Director for Samsung America, that is hardly an issue because, despite the smaller capacity, the phone is optimised to last 'all day' for most users and performs comparably to the Galaxy S25 with a 4,000mAh battery. 'I think enough battery life for most customers is just an all-day usage. What we've seen with this device is that it has worked as well or better than the S24 base model and very close to the S25 base model,' Gaiser said in an interview with Tom's Guide. 'As long as you can live with it from sun up to sun down without having any issues, we think that's a great experience. And personally, I haven't had much of an issue with the battery life whatsoever.'advertisementThe senior executive hinted that Samsung was exploring silicon-carbon batteries, though he fell short of revealing if it plans to use the technology in its phones anytime soon.'Samsung's always looking at every new emerging technology that's out there. So it's something that we're definitely not keeping our eyes off of,' Gaiser said while reiterating that the traditional lithium-ion battery was 'the right move' for the Galaxy S25 for the lack of a proper zoom camera, he said most users preferred ultrawide and while 100X Space Zoom was nice, many are less likely to use it every day or even every month.


Tom's Guide
04-06-2025
- Business
- Tom's Guide
Exclusive: Samsung exec shuts down the Galaxy S25 Edge haters, talks triple foldable
The Galaxy S25 Edge is the thinnest Samsung S series phone ever at just 5.8mm. But a lot of people are focusing on the trade-offs that need to be made to get something so slim. Yes, the Galaxy S25 Edge has a smaller battery than the regular S25. There's no telephoto zoom. And it costs $1,099. But for Blake Gaiser, who is the director of smartphone product management at Samsung Electronics America, focusing on the specs over the user experience is besides the point of this device. In fact, Gaiser describes the Galaxy S25 Edge as the 'Goldilocks' of smartphones, giving you the same performance and camera quality of the best phones in something you can easily slip into a pocket and almost forget that it's there. 'And so when I hear those naysayers, I'm like, okay, get your hands on the device, and then let's see what your opinion is,' says Gaiser. I had a chance to sit down with Blake on launch day for the Galaxy S25 Edge to talk about how Samsung got the device so thin and to weigh in on those trade-offs. Plus, we discuss what's coming with Samsung's foldables — including a possible triple foldable design. Blake Gaiser: There is actually a pretty good segment out there that's right in between an Ultra owner or a Plus owner. They like the big screen, but they're not an S-pen user. They want a flagship camera, but they don't want the weight and heft that you get with the ultra. So there are quite a lot of people out there who just want a light, tech-forward, fashionable device that has all the performance that you would expect from a high-end flagship phone. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. Gaiser: We do consider it to be a flagship. It is a new innovation piece that we're bringing forth where we're taking out so much weight, so much thickness of this device, while not compromising on the things that are really important to our customers, such as durability, the performance of the chipset, having that flagship 200MP camera. And so we do believe that this is that kind of Goldilocks for so many of our customers that is going to give them everything they want and not give them the things that they're not looking for. Gaiser: What's so amazing about this device is that I just kind of gave up on PowerPoint. I gave up on saying, here's the tech specs, here's why it's so cool. Before any of that, just hold it. Not only is it so thin, it has the full Plus screen to it. It almost doesn't feel real. When I hear those naysayers, I'm like, okay, get your hands on the device, and then let's see what your opinion is And so it's like, once people get it in their hand, that hand feel is not just about thickness, it's not just about weight, it's about weight distribution, it's about how you can reach across the screen. And so when I hear those naysayers, I'm like, okay, get your hands on the device, and then let's see what your opinion is. We really designed this from the ground up to be thin. The goal was to be thin without compromise. We really didn't want to take things away from a device to make it thin. We could have done that years ago. Everything about this device was focusing on that slimness. So making sure structurally it was going to be extremely durable. We're utilizing a titanium frame, we're utilizing Corning's Ceramic 2 glass. We're even putting in a vapor chamber cooling system that's larger than the Plus model. So that way, we're able to utilize every single component as efficiently and effectively as possible and making sure that how we put it together gives you a really good balance in the hand. So it wasn't top heavy or bottom heavy, but yeah, every single detail was meticulously planned out to make this device. Gaiser: We are just so far ahead in our camera tech that people don't really understand the quality of their photos that they're getting. Not only is it things like optical zooms, but it's also the agentic AI that we have built in, from the chipset up, utilizing cognitive-aware engines so that your camera understands what you're taking photos of and is able to utilize AI to give you that perfect shot. But when we're looking at the usage of our cameras with our customers, we know a couple of things. We know that the most popular zooms that our customers use are the 0.6X to get those really wide macro views, the 1X, 2X and 3X. Is it nice to have the 100X Space Zoom at times? Absolutely. Sure. But is it something that you're going to use every day or even every month? When you're doing side-by-side comparisons, I think customers are really going to see that you're getting fantastic quality that meets or beats our competition. Gaiser: I think enough battery life for most customers is just an all-day usage. You don't want to find yourself at lunch with an empty battery. And what we've seen with this device is that it has worked as well or better than the S24 base model and very close to the S25 base model. And so as long as you can live with it from sun up to sun down without having any issues, we think that's a great experience. And personally, I haven't had much of an issue with the battery life whatsoever. Samsung's always looking at every new emerging technology that's out there. So it's something that we're definitely not keeping our eyes off of. But with that new chipset, with agentic AI helping with performance and efficiencies of these batteries, we really felt that going with our traditional lithium-ion battery was the right move for this device. The S25 Edge has everything that the S25 family has. And probably the most exciting one that people are utilizing the most is Audio Eraser, where you can just take noise and pull it out of the video. So whether it be construction noise or nature noise or general audience noise or music, you can customize the EQ that to give you the video that you want. And it's something that you can play with real time that we've seen a lot of people extremely happy with that one. Gaiser: One of the things that we look at from a product standpoint is, how can we take clicks away from our customer? What we see is, after three or four clicks that you have to do, you kind of get overwhelmed or bored, or it's not worth it for you. So utilizing AI and multimodality to be able to do multiple things with just one voice prompt has been a real game changer. And we're just scratching the surface. So imagine you want to find a restaurant. You're not exactly sure what kind of restaurant. You want to invite some friends. You want to be reminded and then get directions there. That's like 20 clicks for you to go out, search Google, find the restaurant, go into your text messages, text your friends, put it on your calendar, then go into Google Maps. Gasier: You know, we have six generations out right now. Six years of learning how to make these very complicated, hard devices work beautifully. We're very proud of the state of our foldables. But we also recognize that awareness of foldables isn't near what it is for a traditional smartphone. A lot of people, even to our surprise, don't even know that they exist yet. I feel like a lot of your tech savvy listeners are going to say, how does nobody know about these devices? But it's very, very true. And One UI 8 and foldables, I think that [what] we're really excited about foldables is that with that different form factor of those devices, it allows us to do more with AI. Because it is a device that can do literally a lot more than a traditional smartphone can do. Gaiser: I would love to tell you all that I know about these kind of things. But what I can say is that we're looking at every single possibility of what a phone's going to look like a year from now, five years from now, 10 years from now. And what are the features and benefits of those different form factors? What we do know is that phones are going to evolve. We are uniquely positioned with our displays, with our engineering, with all the different things that Samsung does to really push the envelope on new form factors. And I would expect, without knowing much of the future, that Samsung would be first to innovate within those spaces.


NZ Herald
13-05-2025
- NZ Herald
Do you want a skinny smartphone with worse battery life?
Polling by YouGov has found that what people want most from their smartphones is better battery life. So why are Apple and Samsung pitching you skinnier but potentially battery-compromised phones? I want to hold these skinnier phones in my hand and see if I'm bowled over by the difference, especially once you add a phone case. It could dent your enthusiasm, though, knowing that these new designs may be motivated most by Samsung and Apple's desperation to sell you something new – anything. Can you tell the difference? Samsung acknowledged it really doesn't know if you want a skinnier phone. Blake Gaiser, head of smartphone product management at Samsung Electronics America, says the company is making a limited number of S25 Edge devices and they won't be sold everywhere. He said it's a test of whether you want what he called a 'Goldilocks device' – not as fancy as Samsung's top-tier model at $1300, but jazzier than other high-end Samsung phones. Samsung says the S25 Edge is 5.8mm thick, not including the protruding camera lenses on the back of the phone, and assuming you don't use a case. For comparison, Samsung's new S25 (non-thin) phone is 7.2mm and the iPhone 16 is 7.8mm. Eyeballing my ruler, I can barely see the difference between 6mm and 7mm. Gaiser said the new model's size and weight 'makes a huge difference in your hand' – and some early reviewers said the same. But the trade-off of slimness is a lower capacity battery than that of comparable new Galaxy devices, which typically means shorter battery life. That could be too big of a compromise for some of you. Apple's rumoured new 5.5mm deep iPhone Air will also reportedly have drawbacks, including wimpier battery life. To compensate, Apple will sell a case with a backup battery built in, the Information reported. Gaiser said Samsung made the phone more efficient to go easy on the battery. Apple plans to do the same with its new models, Bloomberg News reported. Skinny phones are born of desperation Ultimately, the motivation behind slimmer phones is jolting smartphone sales, which are lower today than they were in 2017, according to figures from research firm IDC. You know why. Smartphones don't change much from year to year, and they're good enough now to hold on to them for a long time. Advertisement Advertise with NZME. That makes a smartphone like a car and a fridge – products we rely on but don't upgrade often. That's not great for Samsung and Apple, so they'll try anything to get you excited about something new. Trying out skinny phones, even if you don't embrace them, could also give Apple and Samsung a chance to test wild technologies that you might like, like phones that fold open to reveal more screen real estate. The concept hasn't yet caught on widely because the devices cost a fortune and most of us aren't sure why we'd want one. (Apple is aiming for its first folding smartphone by 2027, Bloomberg News reported.) Myriam Joire, a technology journalist and podcaster, says skinny phones could catch on, as lighter, slimmer laptops did following Apple's introduction of its MacBook Air in 2008. But she said Samsung and Apple didn't need to make so many trade-offs. She said Chinese phone brands like Xiaomi and OnePlus, which are hard to buy in the United States, use novel battery technology created for electric cars to make slim phones with great battery life, and at significantly lower prices than higher-end phones from Samsung and Apple. Apple and Samsung, Joire said, 'are not innovating anymore because they have no competition' in North America.


New York Times
02-04-2025
- Politics
- New York Times
Trump to Pick Ohio's Solicitor General for Top Justice Department Legal Post
President Trump intends to nominate T. Elliot Gaiser, the conservative solicitor general of Ohio, to be the assistant attorney general leading the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel, according to a Justice Department official. That position has traditionally often had the final say on legal debates within the executive branch. The Office of Legal Counsel issues authoritative interpretations of the law for the executive branch through courtlike opinions. Its view of what the law permits is binding on other agencies and officials unless the attorney general overrides the office or the president opts not to take its advice. The office was at the center of many legal and policy fights during Mr. Trump's first administration. Led by the Trump appointee Steven Engel, it signed off on the ordering of the targeted killing of a top Iranian official and the Treasury Department's withholding of Mr. Trump's tax returns from Congress. Mr. Gaiser, whose selection as the forthcoming nominee was provided by the official on condition of anonymity to discuss a matter that has not yet been announced, has a strong conservative legal résumé. He clerked for Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. during the Supreme Court's 2021-22 term, when Justice Alito wrote the majority opinion overruling the Roe v. Wade abortion rights precedent. Mr. Gaiser had previously served two clerkship years with prominent conservative appellate court judges, Judge Neomi Rao of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and Judge Edith H. Jones of the Fifth Circuit, while alternating with short stints at law firms. He did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment late on Tuesday. A native of Ohio, Mr. Gaiser attended Hillsdale College, a Christian liberal arts college in Michigan, and graduated in 2012 with a degree in political economy and speech studies. He spent a year at Ohio State University's law school before transferring to the University of Chicago to finish his degree, according to his LinkedIn profile. After his Supreme Court clerkship, Mr. Gaiser spent a year as an associate at the law firm Jones Day before the Ohio attorney general, Dave Yost, appointed him as the state's solicitor general, representing the state government in appellate matters. Mr. Gaiser had clerked in that office after his second year in law school. In announcing the appointment in October 2023, Mr. Yost called Mr. Gaiser 'a master craftsman of ironclad legal arguments rooted in originalist principles and constitutional restraint.' He argued before the Supreme Court in February, defending a state agency in a discrimination case brought by a heterosexual woman who twice lost positions to gay colleagues. His arguments attracted puzzlement from the justices because he disavowed lower-court rulings in favor of the state that had turned on the idea that a member of a majority group must provide extra evidence of discrimination, compared to a member of a minority. Mr. Gaiser told the Supreme Court that the plaintiff could not establish that she was discriminated against based on her sexual orientation so should lose the case — but also that the state agreed with her that 'it is wrong to hold some litigants to a higher standard because of their protected characteristics.' That prompted Justice Elena Kagan to ask whether the appeals court — which had ruled for Ohio — was wrong. Mr. Gaiser said it was. 'The idea that you hold people to different standards because of their protected characteristics is wrong,' he said. The website for the Federalist Society, the conservative legal network, shows that Mr. Gaiser has participated in numerous events sponsored by the group in recent years. And the Heritage Foundation, where he was an intern in the summer of 2013, honored him last December as a distinguished alumnus. He told a Heritage Foundation-linked online publication in December that Ohio was suing the Biden administration in 44 cases, while expressing conservative views on issues like environmental regulations, illegal immigration and transgender rights.
Yahoo
25-03-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Ohio AG's office lays out argument in appeal that avoids fighting the six-week abortion ban
Photo by Getty Images. The Ohio Attorney General's Office does not plan to fight a court ruling overturning the six-week abortion ban, but he wants an appellate court to roll back rulings that overturned other parts of the same law. In a brief submitted to the First District Court of Appeals, Ohio's solicitor general, T. Elliot Gaiser, reiterated that the appeal before the court didn't have anything to do with attempting to roll back a Hamilton County judge's ruling that a ban on abortions at six weeks gestation, included in 2019's Senate Bill 23, was unconstitutional. 'The state has long conceded the obvious: The state's 'Heartbeat Ban' – which banned abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected – was overridden by the new Abortion Amendment,' Gaiser wrote, referring to the 2023 constitutional amendment passed by 57% of Ohio voters to enshrine reproductive rights including abortion into the state document. 'Thus, the state is not defending that Heartbeat Ban. Nor is the state even trying, in this appeal, to defend the merits of any of the ancillary abortion regulations that were amended or enacted in the same bill as the Heartbeat Ban.' Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas Judge Christian Jenkins cited the constitutional amendment as part of his October 2024 ruling, saying the Ohio Constitution now protects 'the right to pre-viability abortion,' and to 'give meaning to the voice of Ohio's voters, the Amendment must be given full effect, and laws such as those enacted by (Senate Bill) 23 must be enjoined.' The state is appealing decisions it says came alongside the six-week abortion ban ruling, that were made by the judge without a request from the groups suing to see the abortion ban struck down. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX The solicitor general claimed the trial court decision 'broke all the rules,' and the plaintiffs in the case 'filed a vague, unclear motion for judgment.' Gaiser said the trial court should have asked whether the provisions of the law could 'stand alone' without the six-week abortion ban attached to them. 'Many provisions here plainly can, as they were law for years before S.B. 23 was enacted,' the brief stated. Those provisions included what Gaiser called a 'Check and Tell' provision, a requirement that doctors check for fetal cardiac activity and offer to allow the pregnant individual to hear it. The main reason supporters called the law the 'Heartbeat Act' was because they claimed a fetal heartbeat was present at six weeks of pregnancy. Scientist say fetal cardiac activity at that stage isn't a fully formed heart, but instead indicates cardiac tissue development. Some of the provisions brought up in the brief have been temporarily paused by a different court case, one in Franklin County in August 2024. In that case, a judge in the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas pumped the brakes on a 24-hour waiting period required before an abortion and the provision requiring doctors to check fetal activity. Judge David C. Young cited the constitutional amendment as reason to stop enforcement of the requirements in that case for now. Gaiser said the Hamilton County court that took up the S.B. 23 case 'relied on the analysis' from the Franklin County case in issuing its decision, even though 'plaintiffs did not even identify the challenged statutes' in the initial lawsuit 'and did not offer any substantive challenge to them.' Provisions such as definition sections, Ohio Department of Health reporting requirements, and others 'can all work on their own without a Heartbeat Ban,' according to the brief. 'True, some (of the other provisions) might not seem to achieve much – such as the express protection of contraception – but they also do not harm Plaintiffs by staying in place, and even if they merely state the General Assembly's intent as to contraception and the like, that is no small thing,' Gaiser wrote. 'One critical representative function of any legislature is to codify the moral judgments of the community, including moral approval – here, of contraceptives.' SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE