It looks like Samsung is Married Woman Fan Club (2020)finally ready to share its findings on what went wrong with the Galaxy Note7.
After months of promising to make public the results of its investigations into the phone, the Korean electronics giant revealed Thursday that it would be sharing the source of the Note7's issues in a press conference slated for Jan. 22, 2017, at 8 p.m. ET.
At the press conference, which will be livestreamed in English on Samsung's website, company executives, along with independent investigators, will share the results of their months-long investigations, according to the company.
"Samsung will discuss the findings of the investigations and unveil new measures Samsung has implemented in response to the incidents," Samsung said in a statement.
The company had previously confirmed a report on their investigation, which reportedly concluded in December, would be coming soon. At a press conference during CES, Samsung America's COO, Tim Baxter, promised the company was committed to learning from its investigation and would be "recommitting itself to customers."
The press conference should help finally bring to a close the protracted public relations nightmare that has been the Note7. Initially one of the most widely praised phones the company had ever made, Samsung was forced to recall all the handsets after multiple reports of them catching fire. Many experts now believe faulty batteries are to blame.
Samsung is likely hoping that, by finally sharing the findings of its investigation with the public, the company will be able to put the Note7 behind them and focus its attention on its next flagship, the Galaxy S8, set to launch later this year.
Topics Samsung
Slovakia vs. Spain 2025 livestream: Watch U21 Euro 2025 for freeThings Intel Needs to FixToday's Hurdle hints and answers for June 12, 2025Best TV deal: Save over $300 on the Hisense Canvas TVBlockchain Explained: How It Works, Who Cares and What Its Future May HoldThe Best Sports Video Game of All TimeHisense 75Finland vs. Netherlands 2025 livestream: Watch U21 Euro 2025 for freeWhat is Vcore and How Does It Help with Overclocking?Best Echo deal: Save $25 on Amazon Echo Show 5X threatened lawsuits to pressure advertisers into returning, report saysAnalyzing Graphics Card Pricing: October 2018Poland vs. Georgia 2025 livestream: Watch U21 Euro 2025 for freeBest speaker deal: Save $50 on the Beats PillDisney takes on AI image generator Midjourney in scathing suitLego free Planet: How to get free Lego for World Play DayBest Echo deal: Save $25 on Amazon Echo Show 5How to Get Your Significant Other Into GamingBest streaming deal: Get 3 months of ESPN+ for $4.99 per monthCzech Republic vs. England 2025 livestream: Watch U21 Euro 2025 for free 'Secret Invasion's AI credits aren't clever — they're downright scary What to do when body image is affecting your sex life Paula Fox and the Gift of Understanding by Elisabeth Donnelly The Most Expensive Book in the World, and Other News by Sadie Stein This Is a Bookstore by Sadie Stein The 20 best TV shows streaming on Max No, the missing Titanic sub did not rely on Starlink for communication Eugenides on Moshfegh by Jeffrey Eugenides What We’re Loving: Smells, Films, and Flames by The Paris Review You Take Your Love Where You Get It: An Interview with Kenneth Goldsmith by Christopher Higgs Summer solstice: How to see Mars and Venus in the night sky Moist, and Other News by Sadie Stein 'Secret Invasion' review: What happens when Marvel makes a spy thriller? Animal Farm Timeline by John Reed Everything They Cook Takes Five Hours: An Interview with Director Alexa Karolinski by Tim Small OpenAI quietly lobbied for weaker AI regulations People cheer as trucks carrying COVID vaccines depart Pfizer facility Decadent Prose: An Interview with Translator Kit Schluter by Sarah Gerard Paula Fox, Fighting Perfection by Jonathan Franzen Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, 1927–2013 by Thessaly La Force
0.6366s , 8203.6953125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Married Woman Fan Club (2020)】,Unobstructed Information Network