Verizon uncovered toward the beginning of today that Samsung’s Galaxy S20 setup will be the first Samsung telephones to get Android 11 and Samsung’s One UI 3.0 in the US, and now the product has just begun streaming out to clients, as per Droid Life. One UI 3.0 has been in open beta throughout the previous two months, yet this denotes the official arrival of the last software.

One UI 3.0 has the messaging, notifications and security highlights of Android 11, alongside some additional items explicit to One UI. Samsung has added simpler approaches to get to gadgets, take screenshots, and double-tap the screen to take care of your telephone, to give some examples, yet on the off chance that you need a more thorough rundown of the entirety of the One UI 3.0 changes, you can look at this roundup at Android Police.

Outside the US, the worldwide dispatch of One UI 3.0 is by all accounts turning up too. Android Police says that Samsung sent a full timetable of delivery dates to clients in Egypt, with the lead S20 line getting Android 11 and One UI 3.0 some time in December, however after the US.

As indicated by the timetable, the following telephones to get the update will be the Note 20, Z Fold, Note 10, and S10 telephones in January 2021. The update will set aside some effort to hit each Samsung telephone that upholds it you’re utilizing a Galaxy A10, A20 or A30S, don’t anticipate seeing it before August.

At the point when we explored Android 11 in September, we valued all its additional highlights for dealing with the complexity of current Android telephones, however noticed the opportunities for fragmentation, as Google and Samsung’s takes on Android have begun to wander once more.

Samsung was known for setting aside a long effort to deliver updates, similar to when it took five entire months to convey Android Pie. Yet, that is changed throughout the years as it’s improved at dealing with its timetable. A year ago’s Android 10 update took three months to hit the primary telephones, and that is what we’re seeing with Android 11 this year as well.

Issues like fragmentation are significant on the grounds that Samsung is the biggest cell phone vendor internationally, and the biggest maker of Android telephones in the US.

That implies the widespread selection of new highlights generally depends on the company deciding to remember them for new forms of One UI. From our initial see, it seems like the main pieces of Android 11 have made it into One UI 3.0; however with regards to Google’s other Android ventures, Samsung probably won’t have as a lot to pick up.

Topics #Android 11 #Galaxy S20 #One UI 3.0