Samsung Confirms Galaxy S10 5G Specifications: Exynos Modem 5100 For First 5G Devices In Korea
by Andrei Frumusanu on April 1, 2019 4:30 AM ESTAs highly suspected a little over a week ago in our reporting of the pricing of the new Samsung Galaxy S10 5G, the new 5G model in Korea will indeed come powered by Samsung’s own 5G modem chipset. This morning Samsung confirmed the hardware specifications of the model, along with announcing that the S10 5G will go on sale in Korea on April 5th.
What is extremely interesting about this story is that Samsung S.LSI has seemingly beaten Qualcomm to the punch in terms of delivering the first 5G commercial smartphone silicon. In the press release we see confirmation of the variant hardware uses the Exynos 9820 chipset and talk about features such as its NPU. Although not directly confirming the Exynos Modem 5100 in name, it is the only alternative as Qualcomm confirms that the X50 modem solely works in coordination with the Snapdragon 855 SoC.
We expect US variant launches of the Galaxy S10 5G in the next few weeks on Verizon – this version being a Snapdragon 855 variant offering the X50 modem. What will be extremely interesting for the industry watchers is to compare the RF systems of both phones and to see exactly how they differ to each other, particularly on the part of mmWave antenna implementations, giving a unique perspective on the design choices for the new generation cellular standard.
Related Reading
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- Samsung Announces The Galaxy S10: 10th Anniversary Trio
- Hands on with the Samsung S10+, S10, and S10e: Which Witch is Which?
- Samsung Galaxy S10: First Exynos 9820 vs Snapdragon 855 Scores
Source: Samsung Newsroom
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ksec - Monday, April 1, 2019 - link
That is what Something I wish Anandtech to dig into. The mmWave Antenna is massive, and requires quite lot of spaces in all sides, giving Muti Gigabit speed in Direct Line of Sight under very specific conditions.I am still not convinced in the trade offs, and whether in real world it offer any benefits. Not to mention much more complex decoding and die space required, and higher energy usage. ( Although it should be slightly offset by higher transfer speed )
dwhipp22 - Monday, April 1, 2019 - link
There's conflicting reports whether or not this phone will have SD card support? Does anyone have any answers to that?KevinDaGoat - Monday, April 1, 2019 - link
It will not have SD support. It'll come with 256gb storage use Samsung's new UFS 3.0 technologySydneyBlue120d - Wednesday, April 3, 2019 - link
Do You have any reference proving that it will use UFS 3.0 ?jlbora23 - Friday, May 3, 2019 - link
I'm also looking for supporting info whether it will ship in U.S. with 2.1 or 3.0 ufs? Anyone know forsure this info?