Highlights: Samsung Galaxy S10+ spotted on Geekbench website. The phone is expected to launch with Snapdragon 855/Exynos 9820 SoC. It’s just over a month left for Samsung to finally reveal its Galaxy S10 lineup of smartphones at an ‘Unpacked’ event in San Francisco. In what could be called the first proof of how powerful the device would be, the Samsung Galaxy S10+ has been found listed on the Geekbench website. The phone, with model number SM-G975U, on the listing is seen having a Qualcomm 855 mobile platform, coupled with 6GB of RAM. Running Android Pie 9.0, the phone is seen with a score of 3413 points in single-core tests and 10256 points on multi-core tests. Samsung generally launches its phones with different chipsets for specific markets. For example, the South Korean company puts indigenously developed Exynos processors for Indian market and Qualcomm mobile platforms under the hood for the US market. Earlier this month, famous tipster Ice Universe tweeted that “The Galaxy S10 Lite also uses the Snapdragon 855/Exynos 9820 processor,” implying that Samsung will not compromise on the processor front in any of the Galaxy S10 variants. Apart from that, it is also said that the storage in the devices would be upgraded to UFS 3.0. When it comes to RAM, it is possible that the new lineup will have LPDDR5 RAMs. Samsung has already developed the industry’s first 10-nanometer (nm) class 8-gigabit (Gb) LPDDR5 DRAM, which is pegged to set the stage for transition to upcoming 5G and Artificial Intelligence (AI)-powered mobile applications. Samsung claims that the 8GB LPDDR5 boasts a data rate of up to 6,400Mb/s, which is 1.5 times as fast as the mobile DRAM chips used in current flagship mobile devices (LPDDR4X, 4266Mb/s). Related Read: Samsung Galaxy S10 5G variant may be called "Galaxy S10 X': Report
from Latest Technology News http://bit.ly/2svpoSR
Post Top Ad
Post Bottom Ad
Author Details
this website It Tech Technology all last updated information technology mobile-computers