Samsung is expected to announce new Galaxy A phones such as Galaxy A10, Galaxy A20 and Galaxy A30 in the first quarter of this year. It is speculated that the company may release Galaxy A50 phone in the second quarter of the year. The smartphone has been certified by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in the U.S. through which some of its key details have been revealed. Moreover, a fresh Geekbench listing has revealed that there will be an Android Go version of the Galaxy A20 smartphone.

Samsung Galaxy A50

The FCC documents have revealed that the Galaxy A50 will be equipped with a 6.22-inch display. The smartphone measures 158.5 x 74.5mm which suggests that it could be featuring a waterdrop notch screen. It will carry support for connectivity features such as Wi-Fi 802.11ac, Bluetooth 5.0 LE, LTE and ANT+. In the previous month, the Galaxy A50 was certified by Bluetooth SIG and Wi-Fi Alliance bodies.

Previous reports have revealed that the Galaxy A50 will be sporting a triple camera setup with 24-megapixel primary sensor. For shooting selfies, it may house a 24-megapixel frontal camera. The smartphone is expected to come equipped with an in-display fingerprint reader. Its Geekbench appearance has revealed that it will be powered by Exynos 9610 chipset and 4 GB of RAM. It may arrive in 64 GB and 128 GB storage editions. The device may include a 4,000mAh battery. It may release in colors like black, white, silver, blue and pink.

Samsung Galaxy A20 Android Go

A new Samsung phone with model number SM-A260F has appeared on Geekbench. The upcoming Galaxy A20 has a model number of SM-A205F, but it is believed that the SM-A260F that is packed with low-end specs like 1 GB of RAM could be its Android Go edition. Moreover, the Geekbench listing shows that the Exynos 7870 that powers it has a “go” tag.

The smartphone is running on Android 8.1 Oreo OS. In the single-core test, it has scored 728 and it has recorded 2984 in multi-core test. There is no confirmation on the launch date of the Galaxy A20 Android Go edition.

(source 1, 2|via 2)