Get a first look at the brand new Samsung Experience Shops coming soon to the majority Best Buy's retail stores in this video from CIO.com's Al Sacco. Samsung Experience Shop in Watertown, Mass., Best Buy You’ve been able to purchase Samsung products at Best Buy for some time, but your local Best Buy is likely about to get its very own Samsung Experience Shop staffed by Samsung reps who are there to demo the company’s latest and greatest products and answer whatever questions you may have. This morning, I visited the brand new Samsung Experience Shop inside the Best Buy in the now infamous Watertown, MA. (Watertown Strong!) These new Experience kiosks will be setup in high-traffic areas of about 90 percent of Best Buy stores. By the end of July, Samsung hopes to have its Experience Shops ready in 1,400 Best Buys. Roughly 350 of them are currently operational. Obviously you’ll be able to check out your own Samsung Experience Shop soon enough, assuming you live an area with Best Buy that has or is getting one, but for now check out the video below for a tour with Samsung’s Jennifer Pabian. And you can visit BestBuy.com for more details. AS Related content feature Key IT initiatives reshape the CIO agenda While cloud, cybersecurity, and analytics remain top of mind for IT leaders, a shift toward delivering business value is altering how CIOs approach key priorities, pushing transformative projects to the next phase. By Mary Pratt May 30, 2023 10 mins IT Strategy IT Leadership opinion Managing IT right starts with rightsizing IT for value While there are few universals when it comes to saying unambiguously what ‘managing IT right’ looks like, knowing how to navigate the limitless possibilities of IT is surely one. By Thornton May May 30, 2023 6 mins Digital Transformation IT Strategy IT Leadership brandpost Designing the campus of the future starts with high-quality 10Gbps connectivity By Huawei May 30, 2023 4 mins Network Architect Networking Devices Networking feature Red Hat embraces hybrid cloud for internal IT The maker of OpenShift has leveraged its own open container offering to migrate business-critical apps to AWS as part of a strategy to move beyond facilitating hybrid cloud for others and capitalize on the model for itself. By Paula Rooney May 29, 2023 5 mins CIO 100 Technology Industry Hybrid Cloud Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe