SEOUL: 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 cofounder 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 yearslong
 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 
patentinfringement cases with the U.S. 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 U.S. firm infringed on its mobile patents.
 Samsung
 is the most credible challenger to Apple. It said on Friday its 
quarterly profit should top the most bullish market forecasts, with 
smartphones becoming its main profit engine despite intense competition 
from bigger rival Apple.
 Apple unveiled its latest iPhone last 
week, leaving investors and fans wishing for more than a soupedup 
version of last year's device at a time of heightened competition from 
rival smartphone makers.
 But U.S. mobile carrier AT&T said on
 Friday it has seen "extraordinary demand" for the new iPhone with over 
200,000 preorders in the first 12 hours.
 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.
 Samsung is the biggest maker of mobile phones that are based on Android, which is available for free to handset vendors such as Motorola Mobility and HTC Corp.
 Android phones have a greater combined market share than Apple's iPhone, the world's bestselling smartphone.
 Shares in Samsung were trading up 2.2 percent by 0025 GMT, versus a 0.8 percent rise in the wider market.
Technical News, Fundamental News and World Updates In Brief
Monday, 10 October 2011
Samsung delays new Android model release after Jobs's death
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