MobileNews

Samsung pushes stable Android 10 update to more European Galaxy S10+ phones

Samsung has been expanding its One UI 2 interface to plenty of countries since the beginning of the month. Beta testers have been able to switch to Stable updates, but now reports from the European countries of Slovakia, Greece, and United Kingdom revealed regular users that have purchased the device from a retailer are receiving the glorious notification about an incoming software update.

Samsung Galaxy S10+ update log in Slovak
Samsung Galaxy S10+ update log in Slovak

Originally, Samsung was expected to begin pushing the update to One UI 2 and Android 10 in January 2020, but now this looks more like the end date of the Galaxy S10+ update. According to our Slovak colleagues at , the phones purchased from a carrier are likely to wait a little bit more, because there might be additional security patches the telecoms need to make. For now, only phones purchased from Samsung Store or other third-party resellers will be getting the package.

Samsung Galaxy S10+ update log in greek
Samsung Galaxy S10+ update log in Greek

Speaking about the update, it is 1979 MB in size and has the model number G975FXXU3BSKO/G975FOXM3BSKO/G975FXXU3BSKL with a security patch dated December 2019. The new interface brings slimmed-down notification pop-ups, more dark mode for even more apps and UX elements and a better high contrast keyboard.

Via 1 • Via 2

Check out the latest Samsung phones at great prices from Gizmofashion – our recommended retail partner.


Author: Yordan
Source: GSMArena

Related posts
AI & RoboticsNews

Remaining Windsurf team and tech acquired by Cognition, makers of Devin: ‘We’re friends with Anthropic again’

AI & RoboticsNews

Anthropic launches finance-specific Claude with built-in data connectors, higher limits and prompt libraries

AI & RoboticsNews

Finally, a dev kit for designing on-device, mobile AI apps is here: Liquid AI’s LEAP

AI & RoboticsNews

Salesforce used AI to cut support load by 5% — but the real win was teaching bots to say ‘I’m sorry’

Sign up for our Newsletter and
stay informed!