City
Epaper

Samsung releases Galaxy S20 update to fix camera issues

By IANS | Published: March 22, 2020 6:30 PM

South Korean giant Samsung has started rolling out a new update for its flagship Galaxy S20, which apparently focuses on camera and autofocus qualms.

Open in App

Seoul, March 22 South Korean giant Samsung has started rolling out a new update for its flagship Galaxy S20, which apparently focuses on camera and autofocus qualms.

The update is rolling out in international regions at the moment and to Exynos variants of the Galaxy S20, S20+, and S20 Ultra, reports SamMobile.

The biggest change within this Galaxy S20 update is a new version of Samsung's Camera app "10.0.01.98" which apparently addresses autofocus issues and one can download the update from Settings > Software Update > Download and install.

Earlier, Galaxy S20 Ultra reviews found issues with autofocus, specifically the device had a lot of trouble locking in on its subject.

Samsung is in the process to fix the autofocus issue in S20 Ultra.

The company last month released a pre-launch software update that cites camera improvements.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: samsung
Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyIndia’s Smartphone Market Flat in 2023, Apple Surpasses 10-Million-Unit Mark

TechnologySamsung Galaxy S24 Series Pre-Booking Begins for Locally Manufactured Models in India - See Specification

InternationalMan jailed for 3 years for leaking Samsung's edge panel tech to China

InternationalMan jailed for 3 years for leaking Samsung's edge panel tech to China

TechnologySamsung techie in B'luru agrees to pay extra Rs 15K after landlord hikes rent

टेकमेनिया Realted Stories

TechnologyResearchers discover new genetic mutation for congenital thyroid condition

TechnologyGoogle launches Pixel 8a with industry-first AI features in India

TechnologyApple launches iPad Pro with M4 chip and AI capabilities

TechnologyPB Fintech sees 62 per cent profit surge to Rs 60 crore in Q4

TechnologyDoT in action against cybercrime: Mobile number disconnected, handsets blocked after techie reports fraud