Samsung's Galaxy S10013 Archivesstill likely months away, but rumors about the phone just keep on coming.
The latest among them comes courtesy of Gizmodo UK, which says a source at a "major tech retailer" gave them the exact launch date, release date, storage and screen sizes and even prices in the UK for all variants of the phone.
SEE ALSO: Samsung's new A8s smartphone doesn't have a headphone jackAccording to the report, the Galaxy S10 will be announced on February 20, a week before the start of Mobile World Congress 2019. That's also when the pre-orders will start, with the release date being March 8.
The phone will come in three screen basic variants, with three screen sizes: The S10 Lite will have a 5.8-inch screen, the S10 will have a 6.1-inch screen, and the S10+ will have a 6.4-inch screen. Note that leaker Evan Blass published the exact same screen sizes and variants a few days ago. Also note that these names aren't set in stone yet; Samsung internally calls the device "Beyond."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The most important bits from the new report are UK prices and storage sizes. The Galaxy S10 Lite will come with 128GB storage, with the price of £669. The S10 variant with 128GB of storage will cost £799, while the version with 512GB of storage will cost £999.
Finally, the biggest and most powerful device in this bunch, the S10+, will start at £899 for the 128GB version, £1099 for the 512GB version, and an astonishing £1,399 for the version with 1TB of storage.
These prices would look horrendous if converted into U.S. dollars, but prices in the UK for Samsung phones are typically higher than the prices in the U.S.
Gizmodo's report has a few more details about the phone(s). The S10 won't support 5G at launch, but support for the technology might arrive by mid-2019. It also confirmed earlier reports that all of the phones will have Samsung's new Infinity-O, punch-hole display, as well as an in-display ultrasonic fingerprint scanner.
Topics Samsung
A herd of cows stampeding into this guy's garden is hilariously shockingEveryone is pretty grossed out by a Twitter executive desperately wooing TrumpThis guy's cleverly placed sign got him a new car... sort of11 forgotten anime series from the '90s that still hold up todayModel who posed nude at sacred Maori site says they're not IndigenousThe AI meme generator is better at making memes than humansTaika Waititi will write and direct a new Star Wars movieTeens used their AP English exams to completely roast TrumpApple makes it (slightly) less annoying to unlock your iPhone with a mask onPharmacies become safe spaces for domestic abuse survivors during coronavirus pandemicDonald Trump Jr. accuses Twitter of censorship over 'Obamacare' tweetThat Dakota Access Pipeline leak isn't the builder's only problemThe best sports animeThe Office of Government Ethics is now trolling Trump on TwitterWatch Will Ferrell serenade graduates with 'I Will Always Love You'How to fake a frozen videoTrumpniks have no defense for the James Comey mess, so duh, they're blaming the mediaApple makes it (slightly) less annoying to unlock your iPhone with a mask onHow to be a better ally to women on Zoom11 forgotten anime series from the '90s that still hold up today “Bankspeak”: Your New Least Favorite Language In Which George du Maurier Feels Neglected By His Mom P. G. Wodehouse Will Squash You Like a Bug My Latest Phobia: Contact Lenses Interviewing Philip Levine: A Remembrance “Readers Make Their Mark”: Marginalia Collected Remembering SimCity and Seeing Cities As Characters Gary Indiana’s Art Recasts Voyeurism as Wonder Staff Picks: Adam Phillips, Steven Church, and More Ghostly Beauty: Anna Atkins, the First Woman to Take a Photo Herman Melville, Master of the Literary Hoax When Should a Series End? What’s the Emotional Value of a Word? Tuesday. March 10: Lorin Stein and Paul Beatty in Conversation How a Tchotchke Became a Family Heirloom, of Sorts Stevie Smith’s Eccentric Reading Style Watch Anthony Burgess on the Dick Cavett Show, 1971 The Great Bottle Conjuror Hoax of 1749 In Which St. Patrick Drives the Gummy Snakes Into the Sea The Plain, Inescapable There
2.2874s , 10108.484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【2013 Archives】,New Knowledge Information Network