NOTICE: We’ve created an archive of all major developments related to the Samsung Galaxy S10 lineup. We are continuously updating that page with latest S10e/S10/S10+ news so that you don’t need to search for information related to the device on a daily basis. Head here to access that page.

Thanks to the public beta testing initiative taken by Google, a bunch of non-Pixel phones got the chance to taste both Android Pie (then known as simply ‘P’) and Android Q builds long before official release.

The Mountain View giant is trying hard to increase the number of phones in each year, so that more and more companies and users can be a part of the whole ecosystem.

android_q_beta_oems
Besides Google, 12 other OEMs participated in 2019’s Android Q beta testing

While companies like Nokia and Essential use almost vanilla Android on their phones, others have their own skinned distribution. That does not prevent them to enroll their phones in the early adoption program to help the developers as well as regular users to explore Android Q.

realme_3_pro_android_q_beta
Realme 3 Pro running Android Q Beta

Interestingly, Samsung did not take part in this program. Last year, they were actually quite busy to make the transition from the legacy Samsung Experience interface to the brand new One UI on top of Android Pie.

Samsung-OneUI
The distinct design language of One UI

While the 10th anniversary Galaxy S10 phone are the first to get the One UI treatment out of the box, several pre-release builds were leaked for older Galaxy series phones. Samsung did start a public beta, so that developers could test their apps on the new platform before the wider rollout.

According to a news published by SamMobile, the next iteration of the Samsung skin should be called One UI 2.0 and the base should be Android Q. Moreover, upcoming Galaxy S11 might come with One UI 2.1.

galaxy_s10_white_front_back
Galaxy S10 runs One UI 1.1, a minor update over regular first gen One UI

Thanks to a group of Samsung OTA trackers, we now have some concrete proofs about the existence of Android Q based One UI builds. Little backstory first: remember when we talked about the unreleased July update builds for international Galaxy S10?

s10_asf4_asg1_hash_xda

As a matter of fact, Samsung is now putting MD5-hashed value of a build tag in their public FOTA servers for the Galaxy S10 lineup. For example, the human-readable result of Galaxy Note 9 update query looks as follows for the test builds:

galaxy_note_9_samsung_fota_xda

But a similar query for Galaxy S10 returns the following bunch of strings:

galaxy_s10_samsung_fota_xda

I request our readers to notice carefully: although the build tag is hashed, the primary Android build identifier is still readable. In case of Galaxy Note 9, it is 9, i.e. Android Pie. But the Galaxy S10 series is marked with 10 – aka Android Q!

Max Weinbach from XDA was able to decipher the hash values for the Snapdragon variants of Galaxy S10 lineup. According to him, the current build number of the test binaries is G97XUSQU2CSG1.

s10_snapdragon_android_q_max_tweet
Source

SamMobile also hinted the internal beta testing of Android Q based One UI for Galaxy S10e/S10/S10+, although they did not post any kind of evidence to back their claims.

Are you looking forward to the Android Q update for your Galaxy S10? Let us know by commenting below.

PiunikaWeb is a unique initiative that mainly focuses on investigative journalism. This means we do a lot of hard work to come up with news stories that are either ‘exclusive,’ ‘breaking,’ or ‘curated’ in nature. Perhaps that’s the reason our work has been picked by the likes of Forbes, Foxnews, Gizmodo, TechCrunch, Engadget, The Verge, Macrumors, and more. Do take a tour of our website to get a feel of our work. And if you like what we do, stay connected with us on Twitter (@PiunikaWeb) and other social media channels to receive timely updates on stories we publish.

Tags

One UI S10

Kingshuk De
896 Posts

I came from a mixed background of Statistics and Computer Science. My research domains included embedded computer systems, mobile computing and delay tolerant networks in post-disaster scenarios. Apart from tinkering with gadgets or building hackintosh, I like to hop on various subreddits and forums like MyDigitalLife and XDA.

Next article View Article

[April 10: Official acknowledgement for recommended videos bug] YouTube Library tab broken and sidebar missing, users say

This story is being continuously updated…. New updates are being added at the bottom….. Original story (from 2019) follows: Incoming are reports related to two separate YouTube-related issues. The...
Apr 10, 2020 0 Min Read