Samsung begins to prepare for the release of Galaxy Note 20...
In an official announcement, Samsung confirmed that it has begun mass production of next-generation storages that will be “available for flagship smartphones to be released later this year.”
This puts the Galaxy Note 20 ahead of the line, and that means that it will not only be another big difference compared to the Galaxy Note 10.
Samsung’s new storage called eUFS 3.1 delivers sequential write speeds of over 1200 MB per second. For comparison: Samsung claims that it is three times faster than the write speed of the eUFS 3.0 memory used in the Galaxy Note 10 and Galaxy S20. It is also 60% faster than UFS 3.0, with random read (100,000 IOP) and write (70,000 IOPS) and will have storage options of 128, 256 and 512 GB.
Yes, the new owners of the Galaxy S20 have every right to be disappointed that they missed it, and this is just the latest in a series of technical improvements that could almost be skipped.
In February (just a week before the Galaxy S20 phones were released), Samsung announced the mass release of its next-generation mobile screen, calling it an “optimized OLED display for 5G smartphones with recently reduced blue light emission and low power consumption”. It is expected to be used in both Note 20 and iPhone 12. Then, just a few days later, Samsung introduced new RAM modules, which are 30% faster and 20% more energy efficient than the modules in S20 and Note 10 They will be ready to launch Note 20 again.
Buyers of the Galaxy S20 also (oddly enough) missed Qualcomm’s highly modernized 3D fingerprint scanner Sonic Max. This happened despite the fact that Qualcomm provided fingerprint readers to smartphone makers five months before the launch of the Galaxy S20. Note 20 will fix this error as well.
Add to that the fact that the Galaxy Note 20 line will receive updates to the S20 flagship camera along with an even more refined design and a radically updated S Pen (which is behind the code name for the Project Canvas line), and the S20 will begin to look like an act of warm-up for 2020.
And here's what is remarkable: if the Note 20 launches, and you still prefer the Galaxy S20, you can laugh all the way to the bank, because historical data shows that the cost of the Galaxy S10 fell by 65% by the summer of 2019 in the form of promotions and discounts . Given the fact that the demand for new smartphones is understandably low in the current conditions, we can expect that an increase in inventories will lead to an even greater decline in prices for the Galaxy S20 this year.
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