Skip to main content

Software updates for cheap Samsung phones may soon get a lot better

The Samsung Galaxy A35 and Galaxy A55's screens.
The Samsung Galaxy A35 (left) and Galaxy A55 Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The Samsung Galaxy A16 5G is expected to launch in India at the end of September. TheTechOutlook first reported the leak, sharing an interesting tidbit of information: The A16 5G will get six years of guaranteed software updates.

Samsung started offering seven years of updates with the launch of the Galaxy S24 (a much more expensive device) earlier this year, a stark upgrade from the four years of updates offered with the S23.

Recommended Videos

Note that this is six years of security updates and six major OS updates. With the Galaxy S24 getting seven years of updates, this might not seem like a big deal — but budget phones traditionally have much less support from manufacturers. Many only receive two years of updates after launch.

Continued support could mark the start of a tremendously beneficial trend. Right now, the rest of the Galaxy A lineup will receive four years of updates. If Samsung begins offering a minimum of six years of support to all of its cheaper handsets, that would be a huge step forward.

The Samsung Galaxy A35 and Galaxy A55's rear panels.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The Galaxy A16 5G is expected to have a 6.7-inch FHD+ screen with a 90Hz refresh rate. It will also include two potential chips: the Exynos 1330 and the MediaTek Dimensity 6300. The MediaTek is slightly larger at 6 nanometers, but that’s the biggest difference between the two.

Depending on your taste, you should be able to get the phone in light green, blue, black, or gold.

Sure, the Galaxy A16 5G doesn’t have all the bells and whistles that its higher-end cousins do, but there are a huge number of people who don’t need those features. For someone who just wants a phone to check social media, stay in touch with friends, and maybe play a game here and there, the A16 5G looks like a great choice. And if its six years of updates is a sign of what’s to come to other budget Samsung phones, we really can’t wait.

Patrick Hearn
Patrick has written about tech for more than 15 years and isn't slowing down anytime soon. With previous clients ranging from…
Samsung aped iPhone filters, but served it better on the Galaxy S25
Using filters on the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra.

With the arrival of the Galaxy S25 series, Samsung introduced a bevy of camera-centric changes. Take for example the Galaxy S25 Ultra, which upgrades to a 50-megapixel ultrawide sensor, a new Spatio Temporal filter for blur reduction, 8K capture across all lenses, default 10-bit HDR recording, and more. But the company silently gave a massive boost to filters.

So far, users have only been able to pick a filter and capture media with the effect applied on top. There was no scope for fine-tuning the filter characteristics in real time. That limitation has finally gone to the grave with the Galaxy S25 series.

Read more
Mystery upcoming phone may see Asus copy Samsung’s playbook
A person holding the Asus ROG Phone 9 Pro.

In an odd development, Asus may be taking some naming inspiration from Samsung for an unexpected upcoming release. A phone named the ROG Phone 9 FE has been spotted in benchmarking tests, combining the familiar Asus ROG Phone 9 name with Samsung’s “FE” suffix, which stands for Fan Edition.

Asus only recently released the ROG Phone 9 and ROG Phone 9 Pro, and there was no mention of a third model at the time. While we may have expected an “Ultimate” version to arrive at some point, given how the company approached the ROG Phone 7 series, the FE model may be a step down in spec from the ROG Phone 9.

Read more
Future Samsung phones may get a wireless charging upgrade we’ve waited years for
A benchmarking test running on the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra.

Samsung may be giving its future phones a wireless charging upgrade that will help charge their phones a lot faster, and it comes in the form of a new chip.

In a blog post that was published during last week, the company said the new wireless charging chip, called the S2MIW06, is a Power Management Integrated Circuit (PMIC) that will help improve wireless charging by giving Samsung phones access to up to 50W of power. The S2MIW06 chip will support both the Qi and Qi 2.2 wireless charging standards, the latter of which is set to debut later this year.

Read more