Android 10 samsung galaxy s10 availability att sprint t mobile verizon xfinity mobile one ui
Android 10 is rolling out to Galaxy S10 phones on Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon.
It has a refreshed version of Samsung’s One UI
If you use a Samsung Galaxy S10 on Sprint, T-Mobile, or Verizon, you might be able to download Android 10 to your device right now.
9to5Google surfaced reports on Reddit earlier
today that Android 10 was rolling out to Galaxy S10 phones in the US, so we
asked each of the big four wireless carriers if they could tell us more about
their plans for the rollout. They’re the ones who have the final call to allow
the software update to go through on these phones. Here’s the state of the
Android 10 rollout for Samsung Galaxy phones on each carrier.
- AT&T: AT&T had no information to share.
- Sprint: Sprint confirmed to The Verge that Android 10 is rolling out to the Galaxy S10 today and that Android 10 will roll out to the Note 10, Note 10 Plus, and S10 5G “soon.”
- T-Mobile: T-Mobile did not respond, but a support doc on the company’s the website says Android 10 was released to Galaxy S10 devices on December 15th.
- Verizon: Verizon confirmed to The Verge that Android 10 is available for Galaxy S10 phones starting today, though you might have to check for the update in your settings to get it manually (which is advice that may apply to Sprint and T-Mobile customers as well).
And in another Reddit thread,
users on Sprint, T-Mobile, Verizon, and Xfinity Mobile have been reporting
throughout the day that they have the update.
For most Android releases, users on non-Google
phones often have to wait for their carriers to bring the new Android software
To their devices. 2018’s Android Pie didn’t arrive on Samsung devices
until this past January,
for example, so it’s nice to see Android 10 come a month sooner than Android
Pie did, by comparison. (Android 10 first rolled out for Google Pixel phones in
the US in early September.)
In addition to the many new updates in Android 10,
Samsung users will also get a refreshed version of its One UI, dubbed One UI
2. My colleague Dieter Bohn found the original One UI to
be pretty good, and One UI 2 looks to have a lot of small improvements to make
things more consistent and efficient across the software:
After you install the update, head over to the
gestures section of settings to see how they work now in Android 10 — and where
You can tweak them a bit if you like. And as with any update, there’s always
the potential for bugs or UI weirdness, so if you see something weird, check the question and bugs thread on
the Galaxy S10 subreddit.
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