Samsung Could Stick With the Snapdragon 865 Plus When Launching the Galaxy Note 20 in Its Home Market

Samsung Could Stick With the Snapdragon 865 Plus When Launching the Galaxy Note 20 in Its Home Market

4 years ago
Anonymous $qOHwDUKgAF

https://wccftech.com/samsung-galaxy-note-20-using-snapdragon-865-plus-in-south-korea-market/

Samsung has always chosen its Exynos chipsets when launching either the Galaxy S or Galaxy Note family of smartphones in South Korea. This year was different, as Samsung’s chip division chose to sell the Snapdragon 865 variants of the Galaxy S20 family and was later humiliated for this decision. However, according to a new report, Samsung isn’t going to change its stance on these matters and is expected to sell the Snapdragon 865 Plus version of the Galaxy Note 20 on its home turf.

The report comes from South Korean media DDaily, claiming that sticking with the Snapdragon 865 Plus for the Galaxy Note 20 is just a part of a more intricate strategy that Samsung has in mind. That strategy concerns more to do with Samsung releasing more Snapdragon-fueled flagships in South Korea, a market where consumers have always experienced Exynos SoCs in their handsets.

Samsung Could Stick With the Snapdragon 865 Plus When Launching the Galaxy Note 20 in Its Home Market

Jul 15, 2020, 10:27am UTC
https://wccftech.com/samsung-galaxy-note-20-using-snapdragon-865-plus-in-south-korea-market/ > Samsung has always chosen its Exynos chipsets when launching either the Galaxy S or Galaxy Note family of smartphones in South Korea. This year was different, as Samsung’s chip division chose to sell the Snapdragon 865 variants of the Galaxy S20 family and was later humiliated for this decision. However, according to a new report, Samsung isn’t going to change its stance on these matters and is expected to sell the Snapdragon 865 Plus version of the Galaxy Note 20 on its home turf. > The report comes from South Korean media DDaily, claiming that sticking with the Snapdragon 865 Plus for the Galaxy Note 20 is just a part of a more intricate strategy that Samsung has in mind. That strategy concerns more to do with Samsung releasing more Snapdragon-fueled flagships in South Korea, a market where consumers have always experienced Exynos SoCs in their handsets.