first 5G smartphone from Samsung has been downgraded to quarterly updates

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 Samsung ended software support for the Galaxy S9 series in April and switched the Galaxy S10 series from monthly to quarterly upgrades. Because it was released a few months after the 4G variations, the Galaxy S10 5G, the company's first 5G smartphone, was exempt from this and received monthly updates. The Galaxy S10 5G, on the other hand, has been downgraded to a quarterly upgrade schedule.


Samsung's first 5G smartphone, the Galaxy S10 5G, was released in early 2019 and is dubbed "Samsung's first 5G smartphone." The smartphone came with two processor options: Exynos 9820 and Snapdragon 855.

Since its introduction, the device has received monthly security upgrades. However, now that it is more than three years old, the business has decided to downgrade it to a quarterly update schedule, which means it will only receive security updates every three months.


The May Security Patch was the most recent update for the Galaxy S10 5G, which means it won't be updated again until August. The OG S10 5G is reaching the end of its life cycle, and it will no longer get major OS upgrades. Its final version was Android 12 OS.


In addition, the update timetable for a few mid-range devices has been changed. The Galaxy A41, Galaxy A51 5G, and Galaxy M01 are now on a bi-annual upgrade schedule, which means they will be updated just twice a year. The Galaxy M13 has been added to the quarterly update cycle, which means it will get security upgrades every three months.


Furthermore, Samsung is discontinuing the Galaxy A6 and Galaxy J7 Duo, which will no longer get any updates.

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