MobileNews

Samsung’s Exynos team is ‘humiliated’ that the Galaxy S20 uses Snapdragon in Korea

Samsung’s in-house Exynos chipset is used in the Galaxy S20 series in some regions, much to the chagrin of some users. Now, a report from Korea reveals that Samsung’s Exynos team is “humiliated” that the S20 doesn’t use an Exynos processor in Samsung’s home country.

According to Korean media (via ), the decision to ship the South Korean variant of the Galaxy S20 series with Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 865 processor came as a “surprise” to everyone. Why did Samsung make the decision? Apparently, the Exynos 990 chipset didn’t meet performance expectations after “multiple evaluations.” Samsung’s push for 5G connectivity also influenced the decision.

Rumors from within Samsung claim that the company’s System LSI Division felt “humiliated” by this choice, even trying to reverse the decision before the phones were finalized. The Exynos 990 was designed and produced in South Korea, so it must have been a matter of pride for the engineers that the chip was used in Samsung’s Galaxy S20 flagship in the country. Understandably, the outcome had to have hurt.

Still, it seems like Samsung has no plans to ditch Exynos in the future. The chip is still an alternative Samsung can turn to in the event it decides not to use Qualcomm. There’s an example of this in the Galaxy S6 which used an Exynos chipset since Qualcomm’s flagship chips at the time were plagued with issues. Exynos also gives Samsung negotiating leverage over Qualcomm.

More on Samsung:

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


Author: Ben Schoon.
Source: 9TO5Google

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!

Worth reading...
Samsung Galaxy A51 5G right around the corner, gets Wi-Fi certification