Samsung delays new Android after Jobs’ death

Tuesday, 11 October 2011 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Reuters: Samsung Electronics Co said on Monday it had delayed the launch of a new smartphone based on Google’s latest version of Android operating system while the world paid tribute following the death of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs.

The delay also comes as intensifying legal battle between Apple and Samsung is set to reach the most crucial moment this week, with the two technology giants set to meet in courtrooms in the United States, the Netherlands, Australia, South Korea and Japan.

Samsung had planned to introduce the new product based on the Ice Cream Sandwich system, which will unite the Android software used in tablets and smartphones, at its Mobile Unpack event in San Diego on Tuesday.

“We decided it was not the right time to announce a new product while the world was expressing tribute to Steve Jobs’s passing,” a Samsung spokesman said.

Samsung has yet to decide on a new date for the release, the spokesman said.

Jobs died on Wednesday following a years-long battle with pancreatic cancer, and tributes from world leaders, business rivals and fans have poured in since.

Samsung and Apple are suing each other in 10 countries over 20 cases since April, but few of them holding as much significance as the California court ruling on Thursday, since it could affect Samsung’s mobile device sales in the United States, one of its biggest markets.

Samsung said it has no plan to delay scheduled hearing dates due to Jobs’s death. Less than a day before his death on Wednesday, Samsung widened its patent-infringement cases with the US firm to ban the sale of Apple’s new iPhone in France and Italy after a series of setbacks in Australia and Europe.

Apple says Samsung’s Galaxy line of mobile phones and tablets ‘slavishly’ copied its iPhone and iPad. Samsung rejects the claims and argue the US firm infringed on its mobile patents.

Last week, Apple rejected an offer from Samsung to settle a tablet computer dispute in Australia, possibly killing off the commercial viability of the new Galaxy tablet in that market.

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