[ad_1]
The phone itself comes with a 6.7-inch Super AMOLED Infinity-O display with Full HD resolution and an on-screen fingerprint reader. A rear quad camera setup includes a 64-megapixel main camera, a 12-megapixel ultra-wide-angle camera, a five-megapixel macro camera, and a five-megapixel depth sensor. There is a 32 megapixel camera on the front.
The entire device runs on an Exynos 980 processor, runs Android 10 with One UI 2.0, and comes with 8GB of RAM and 128GB of storage. Plus, it offers the full set of connectivity features, including WiFi, GPS, 5G, LTE, Bluetooth 5.0, NFC, a USB-C port, a microSD card, and that important 3.5mm headphone jack. So while its USP is certainly the QRNG chipset, the device itself is a decent versatile power source. It will be available in black, blue and silver and will go on sale in Korea from May 22 for KRW 649,000 (which is around $ 530).
This is not the first time that Samsung and SK Telecom have partnered for the first time in the world. In September last year, the couple announced that they would be teaming up to develop the first 8K television with 5G speeds. Since then, Samsung has continued its quantum crusade in a variety of other applications, although this is the first time we’ve seen it applied to smartphone technology. It certainly won’t be the last.