Samsung’s Galaxy S9 and S9+ upcoming flagship devices pass through the FCC. Both devices have been certified by FCC on December 27th. Rumours have it that the device is most likely to launch early January 2018 having been certified but we’ve also heard that Samsung will be launching the devices at MWC in late February.
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Samsung’s Galaxy S9 and S9+ Gets Certification At FCC
The Samsung Galaxy S9 and S9+ FCC documentation did not reveal any details about the model or specs of the device. However, it did show the device international model number to be SM-G960F and SM-G965F respectively.
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The Samsung devices are expected to run the latest Android 8.0 Oreo and the company’s newest processor, the Exynos 9810 and Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 chip. The Galaxy S9 and S9+ wouldn’t get much of an upgrade in the design, but a noticeable change on the back, a 12MP dual camera and a repositioned fingerprint sensor. Still, it’ll have the same look as the Galaxy S8 and S8+ but slimmer bezels.
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Other upgrades which we expect to see in the upcoming flagship includes an increase in the internal storage all the way up to 512GB which may lead to not seeing a micro SD card slot in the Galaxy S9 and S9+, that’s not for sure though.