Samsung has started rolling out its first software update for the Galaxy S10+, bundling a number of miscellaneous bug fixes and stability improvements, as well as the option to remap the Bixby button to launch any stock or aftermarket application — like Facebook, Google Maps, Instagram and Netflix.
The upgrade also includes the fixes for five critical and more than a dozen high-risk vulnerabilities in the Android OS, as well as twelve unique to Samsung’s own firmware — a couple of which have been classified as critical — as per this month’s routine Security Maintenance Release.
Here’s the full changelog:
- The stability of Camera has been improved.
- The performance of Fingerprint Recognition has been improved.
- Added feature to set the application or function which runs when the Bixby key is pressed.
Right now, the number of devices the update has to reach will be somewhat marginal (in comparison to what Samsung will have to cope with next month) as it’s confined to a small selection of influencers, investors and media outlets, who were invited to use the handset ahead of its launch.
For that reason, those wanting to install the release shouldn’t have to wait too long. We received it one of our units in the Netherlands this morning, and there’s been some chatter of it reaching handsets in France and the United Kingdom since then, so it’s clearly making the rounds in Europe.
The one market it’s yet to reach, however, is the United States.
The post Galaxy S10+ now receiving its first software update appeared first on SamMobile.
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