The Samsung Galaxy S10 Will Be Updated to Android 11 with Some Delay

Samsung continues to work tirelessly to be able to offer the new version of One UI to its users. It is an important update of the operating system, which has to be worked from scratch and adapted to all the new features that Samsung will implement in One UI 3.0. The beta phase has begun to arrive for some devices, and it is precisely for this reason that One UI 3.0 could arrive somewhat later on the Samsung Galaxy S10.

The beta phases are a necessary test path, to be able to launch stable versions free of serious errors. We have seen examples in some brands, whose race to be the first has led them on many occasions to launch very “green” versions and with incomprehensible errors. Samsung is well above this aspect so that something like this does not happen, as the beta of One UI 3.0 demonstrates.

One UI 3.0 beta for the Galaxy S10

Recall that the Galaxy S20 and Galaxy Note 20 are already testing the One UI 3.0 beta based on Android 11. After these terminals, the Galaxy Note 10 were the next to join this beta with the Galaxy S10 queued to be the next. Now, Samsung has preferred to “pull” caution and postpone the launch of the beta in the Galaxy S10, due to some errors detected in the Galaxy Note 10.

He has been the Beta operations manager of the Samsung community in South Korea, who has explained that some bugs detected in the beta of the Galaxy Note 10, make postpone its update in the Galaxy S10, Galaxy S10 + and Galaxy S10e, in addition other terminals such as the Galaxy Z Flip, Galaxy Z Fold 2 and their 5G variants. The decision may mean a small delay in the chain that ends with the stable version of Android 11 to these terminals.

beta operations manager samsung

Why is it good news?

The beta development phases serve precisely this. Users who are encouraged to try the beta phases are a minority, compared to those who receive the final stable version. Being in a hurry in this regard does not make sense, so Samsung’s decision is totally correct and says a lot about its way of doing things well. The race to upgrade before a rival does not make sense if a version full of bugs is released, as we have seen in other manufacturers. This commitment has been reinforced in Samsung in recent times, as we remember that the firm has confirmed three years of operating system updates for its flagships from the Galaxy S10 series, and many other terminals of the Galaxy A or Galaxy M families.

Source>Tizen Help