I used Galaxy S26 Ultra DeX feature, and it is improving my productivity and helping me monitor tasks simultaneously. My work sessions have improved, and sometimes I do not need to carry a laptop everywhere. Also, sometimes I do not even use a mouse my phone screen acts like a virtual trackpad.
No need to block unwanted numbers now since my AI assistant is fixing it for me. I usually ignore unknown numbers, but the AI Call Screening on the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra is handling a couple of spam calls without me needing to pick them up first. It is a relief now, filtering all the nuisance calls. No need to be bothered about it.
I often use Galaxy AI on Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra during online meetings, taking notes, screenshots, and recordings. It is impressive how seamless the entire experience is. I can easily organise my daily tasks using AI, without manual intervention. It is almost like a personal assistant for me!
Has anyone tried Audio Eraser on the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra? I tested it for my beach video, and I was surprised to see that there were no windy noises. I can hear the better, cleaner sounds.
Samsung is pushing Galaxy AI across everything from photos to calls on its Galaxy S26 series. It sounds useful, but many AI features end up unused after a few days. If AI is built into everyday actions like editing or search, it might actually make a difference.
Samsung's Live Translate now supports more local dialects. Has Siri finally caught up, or is it still struggling with our Hinglish conversations?
Is innovation dead for Samsung A series phones? Don’t you think that Galaxy A57 pricing is creeping up. Previously, a series used to offer better value for money. Now, the starting price is about Rs. 58k, it feels like the gap is shrinking fast and is closely touching to premium phones.
I was trying to figure out which model offers the best value this time. Though Ultra looks great, the price jump is significant. I am a bit curious what people are leaning towards.
So, Samsung just launched the Galaxy S26 series, and while the Ultra's Privacy Display is impressive, the vanilla Galaxy S26 model has disappointed once again. There are barely any upgrades in terms of camera and battery life, and even where there are, markets like India get the inferior Exynos chip instead of Qualcomm's. And the pricing, oh man. Imagine spending nearly 1.3 lakh for a GALAXY S26! Better to go and buy the iPhone 17 right now, before Apple realises Samsung's troubles and hikes its prices.
One of the most talked-about upgrades on the Galaxy S26 Ultra is going to be its built-in Privacy Display, designed to limit side viewing without needing a screen protector. Samsung says it can automatically activate while entering passwords, viewing sensitive content, or using selected apps, keeping information visible only to the user. For Indian smartphone users who often use phones in crowded spaces like metros, offices, and cafes, this sounds practical. But how well does it work in real life, and does it affect brightness, color accuracy, or battery life? What do you think?
The Galaxy S26 Ultra starts at Rs. 1,39,999 in India and climbs to Rs. 1,89,999 for the highest variant, a price point that demands justification. Samsung is leaning hard on AI features and hardware upgrades to make that case, and there's genuinely interesting stuff here: a built-in Privacy Display, the multi-agent Galaxy AI setup, a serious camera system, and a new APV video codec for sharper footage. On paper, it's a strong package. But Indian buyers are pragmatic. With bank offers, exchange deals, and upgrade cycles stretching past two years, the real test isn't what the spec sheet says, it's whether any of this changes how you actually use your phone day to day. Increasingly, the Ultra feels like it's chasing a specific kind of user: the creator, the power user, the tech enthusiast. For everyone else paying flagship money, the calculus is getting harder to square.