Eric Zeman / Android Authority
💌 Good morning! Happy Valentine’s Day!
S22 tech oops?
Tristan Rayner / Android Authority
Here’s something odd. Samsung has changed its specs table for the S22 series a few days after launch. A simple mistake or something more?
What’s happened:
- When Samsung announced the Galaxy S22 series, it announced display specs for each device, as you’d expect.
- All three were billed as supporting 120Hz variable refresh rate.
- The S22 Ultra was announced with a refresh rate between 1Hz and 120Hz.
- The S22 and S22 Plus were listed as having the displays vary between 10Hz and 120Hz, seemingly using slightly less aggressive technology to deliver a cheaper overall device. (See the infographic above)
- But …then Samsung in the US did something odd, which was to quietly update the Galaxy S22 and S22 Plus specs to note that their screens actually vary between 48Hz and 120Hz. Again, here’s the old infographic via the Wayback Machine (which I screenshotted and marked up where to look). Here’s the current infographic.
- I’ve also seen a reviewer in Germany note their own device, an S22 Plus, goes down to 24Hz, which is lower than what Samsung is reporting, so it’s all strange.
- Regional variation? European devices get the Exynos 2200 chipset which could be the difference maker? Chip shortages meaning different display components in some cases or in some regions?
- It’s also possible the devices are completely identical.
- The full story is here, and my colleagues have asked Samsung for answers.
What it means:
- It’s unusual Samsung got this wrong and is quietly adjusting its specs sheets.
- But what is actually going on is that this may impact the battery life of the S22 and S22 Plus.
- Running your phone at a higher refresh rate when it isn’t needed, for instance while reading something that’s not moving, is worse for the battery.
- Lower refresh rates help deliver that longer battery lifespan by not using what isn’t needed.
- The S22 series having variable refresh down to 48Hz or so is still better than the S21 and S21 Plus, which only went down to 60Hz.
- But it’s not 10Hz as originally announced.
- So, what happened where one part of Samsung published one number, and then had to change it?
- You might argue this is a small detail. But this is both something small and something massive.
- While we’re here, perhaps that 10Hz refresh number would’ve been useful? There are very early, limited, unverifiedreports mostly on Twitter that battery life of the S22 isn’t looking great. Not terrible, not great.
- There’s truly a lot of testing to do before that becomes a story, though.
Roundup:
🤔 You can run Windows 11 on your phone thanks to Android 13. Also, you can run Android apps on Windows 11. Things are getting weird. (Android Authority).
💰 FTC warns the public not to let online romance scammers turn them into “money mules” (Gizmodo).
📺 “What YouTube channel best fits the definition “quality over quantity“?” (r/askreddit).
Monday Meme
In previous years the Super Bowl halftime show would be throwing up memes galore.
But aside from people surprised at how good Eminem was despite being 50 years old or whatever, the predominant meme I’ve seen is about the Crypto Super Bowl, mostly focused on Coinbase (Knowyourmeme).
Tristan Rayner / Android Authority
- The crypto platform spent a reported $14 million on its Super Bowl ad featuring a bouncing QR code (like the old bouncing DVD logo) that you could scan to get some Bitcoin if you signed up.
- But Coinbase absolutely didn’t spend enough to prepare for the traffic as people scrambled to get the $15 free Bitcoin and a chance to win more cash, and the app completely crashed.
- Anyway, this tweet was pretty great.
Cheers,
Tristan Rayner, Senior Editor