Sign in
Edition of 20:00 CETTuesday, June 23, 2026
307 outlets · 17 languages126 briefings today
TechnologyMonday, June 22, 2026

Apple’s Design Pivot and Samsung’s Privacy Push Signal New Smartphone Battlegrounds

As Apple prepares for a leadership change and a design-led product blitz, Samsung moves to extend a hardware privacy feature beyond its top-tier model, signalling a dual industry shift toward aesthetics and user security.

Apple’s scheduled leadership transition in September, when John Ternus succeeds Tim Cook as chief executive, is accompanied by a strategic reorientation that industry reports from the United States frame as a return to the design-first ethos of the Steve Jobs era. A Bloomberg analysis indicates that Ternus will prioritise product aesthetics, a domain that critics argue was subordinated to supply-chain mastery during Cook’s fifteen-year tenure. The immediate effect is a product roadmap that places visual and tactile appeal at the centre of Apple’s most ambitious launch cycle, beginning with the expected unveiling of the iPhone 18 Pro models and the company’s first foldable handset.

The mechanism behind this shift lies in the restoration of a design culture that weakened after the 2019 departure of Jony Ive, the designer behind the original iPhone, Mac, and iPad. Cook’s decision to replace Ive with the chief operating officer is described in the same report as a structural misstep that diluted the design function. Ternus, by contrast, is expected to empower the design studio and align it with a hardware pipeline that extends to 2028. That pipeline includes a redesigned iPhone 20 series for the smartphone’s twentieth anniversary in 2027, featuring a quad-curved display and ultra-thin bezels, alongside AI-powered wearables such as camera-equipped AirPods and augmented-reality glasses intended to compete with offerings from Meta and Google. A tabletop home hub with a robotic arm is also in development, according to the US reports.

Viewed from Seoul, Samsung is pursuing a different axis of differentiation. South Korean industry sources indicate the company is testing its Privacy Display technology for the Galaxy S27 Pro, a model that would sit below the Ultra tier. The feature, which uses a hardware layer to restrict side-angle visibility of on-screen content, debuted on the Galaxy S26 Ultra earlier this year. Its expansion to a broader model line reflects a calculation that privacy can serve as a competitive lever in crowded public spaces, where users increasingly seek to shield passwords, messages, and financial data from onlookers. The move comes as other manufacturers, including laptop makers, explore similar optical privacy solutions.

The next factual milestone is Apple’s September product event, where Ternus will present the first devices developed under his leadership and the market will gauge the initial reception of the foldable iPhone. For Samsung, confirmation of the Galaxy S27 Pro’s specifications is expected in early 2027, ahead of the Mobile World Congress. Both trajectories will test whether design revival and hardware-based privacy can shift purchasing patterns in a maturing smartphone market.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

38%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressArab Gulf press
Latin American press
PragmatismDetachment

Apple is turning a page with new CEO John Ternus, who is expected to revive Steve Jobs' design-centric legacy. Meanwhile, Samsung is expanding its privacy display feature to more Galaxy models.

Arab Gulf press
TriumphPragmatism

Apple is gearing up for its most ambitious product cycle ever, with reports pointing to six new iPhones, smart glasses, and camera-equipped AirPods by 2027. The aggressive roadmap signals a major push to dominate the next wave of consumer technology.

Related articles

Read more
Breaking
Meta undercuts its own Ray-Ban smart glasses with $299 own-brand AI eyewear·Hamilton's Barcelona Breakthrough Reshapes F1 Landscape Ahead of Austrian Test·Saudi Arabia Opens Real Estate to Foreign Buyers Amid Hospitality and Space Push·Putin Lays Out Istanbul, Anchorage, and Battlefield Realities as Basis for Ukraine Talks·A perfect four, a packed polytechnic: what this year’s exam results say about a world in motion·Iran Declares Funeral Holidays for Killed Leader as Safety Fears Resurface·Kenyan Prosecutors to Charge Students with Murder over Dormitory Fire That Killed 16·Airbus orders urgent A380 wing-spar checks after cracks found on Emirates and Qantas jets·Meta undercuts its own Ray-Ban smart glasses with $299 own-brand AI eyewear·Hamilton's Barcelona Breakthrough Reshapes F1 Landscape Ahead of Austrian Test·Saudi Arabia Opens Real Estate to Foreign Buyers Amid Hospitality and Space Push·Putin Lays Out Istanbul, Anchorage, and Battlefield Realities as Basis for Ukraine Talks·A perfect four, a packed polytechnic: what this year’s exam results say about a world in motion·Iran Declares Funeral Holidays for Killed Leader as Safety Fears Resurface·Kenyan Prosecutors to Charge Students with Murder over Dormitory Fire That Killed 16·Airbus orders urgent A380 wing-spar checks after cracks found on Emirates and Qantas jets·
Upd. 11:51 PM3 languages · 4 outlets
4 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Monday, June 22, 2026

Apple’s Design Pivot and Samsung’s Privacy Push Signal New Smartphone Battlegrounds

As Apple prepares for a leadership change and a design-led product blitz, Samsung moves to extend a hardware privacy feature beyond its top-tier model, signalling a dual industry shift toward aesthetics and user security.

Apple’s scheduled leadership transition in September, when John Ternus succeeds Tim Cook as chief executive, is accompanied by a strategic reorientation that industry reports from the United States frame as a return to the design-first ethos of the Steve Jobs era. A Bloomberg analysis indicates that Ternus will prioritise product aesthetics, a domain that critics argue was subordinated to supply-chain mastery during Cook’s fifteen-year tenure. The immediate effect is a product roadmap that places visual and tactile appeal at the centre of Apple’s most ambitious launch cycle, beginning with the expected unveiling of the iPhone 18 Pro models and the company’s first foldable handset.

The mechanism behind this shift lies in the restoration of a design culture that weakened after the 2019 departure of Jony Ive, the designer behind the original iPhone, Mac, and iPad. Cook’s decision to replace Ive with the chief operating officer is described in the same report as a structural misstep that diluted the design function. Ternus, by contrast, is expected to empower the design studio and align it with a hardware pipeline that extends to 2028. That pipeline includes a redesigned iPhone 20 series for the smartphone’s twentieth anniversary in 2027, featuring a quad-curved display and ultra-thin bezels, alongside AI-powered wearables such as camera-equipped AirPods and augmented-reality glasses intended to compete with offerings from Meta and Google. A tabletop home hub with a robotic arm is also in development, according to the US reports.

Viewed from Seoul, Samsung is pursuing a different axis of differentiation. South Korean industry sources indicate the company is testing its Privacy Display technology for the Galaxy S27 Pro, a model that would sit below the Ultra tier. The feature, which uses a hardware layer to restrict side-angle visibility of on-screen content, debuted on the Galaxy S26 Ultra earlier this year. Its expansion to a broader model line reflects a calculation that privacy can serve as a competitive lever in crowded public spaces, where users increasingly seek to shield passwords, messages, and financial data from onlookers. The move comes as other manufacturers, including laptop makers, explore similar optical privacy solutions.

The next factual milestone is Apple’s September product event, where Ternus will present the first devices developed under his leadership and the market will gauge the initial reception of the foldable iPhone. For Samsung, confirmation of the Galaxy S27 Pro’s specifications is expected in early 2027, ahead of the Mobile World Congress. Both trajectories will test whether design revival and hardware-based privacy can shift purchasing patterns in a maturing smartphone market.

Source divergence

Technology · 4 outlets · 3 languages

38%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable25%
Neutral75%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressArab Gulf press
Latin American press
PragmatismDetachment

Apple is turning a page with new CEO John Ternus, who is expected to revive Steve Jobs' design-centric legacy. Meanwhile, Samsung is expanding its privacy display feature to more Galaxy models.

Arab Gulf press
TriumphPragmatism

Apple is gearing up for its most ambitious product cycle ever, with reports pointing to six new iPhones, smart glasses, and camera-equipped AirPods by 2027. The aggressive roadmap signals a major push to dominate the next wave of consumer technology.

This story appeared in

4 outlets · 3 languages

Related articles

Sport

Messi and Ronaldo trade historic blows as World Cup records tumble

11 languages · 58 outlets

Geopolitics & Politics

US Senate Votes to Halt Iran War in Symbolic Rebuke to Trump

13 languages · 47 outlets

Sport

Trump and Infantino to jointly present World Cup trophy at New Jersey final

10 languages · 29 outlets

Read more