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T-Mobile likely to begin shutdown process for Sprint by 2022

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T-Mobile and Sprint were the two different network service providers of the United States until they got merged on April 02, 2020, and then Sprint became a subsidiary of T-Mobile. And now plans of T-Mobile for shutting down Sprint in the US have been coming from the last couple of days.

However the CEO of T-Mobile, Mike Sievert said that the company will begin the shutdown process as soon as at the start of 2022, after transferring the considerable amount of customers of Sprint to its own network.

The officials of T-Mobile have said that the company will soon start the migration process and will try to complete it in such a way that will reduce the number of users to migrate to any other service providers.

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In addition, the company is working to increase the number of new customers to shift to T-Mobile by building a cutting edge 5G network with Sprint’s 2.5GHz spectrum that will be capable to support a speed of up to 1GB/s.

Furthermore, Seivert said that T-Mobile is working to cover 100 million people with 5G in 2.5GHz by the end of 2020 and also expects to reach 200 million at the end of next year.

Read more: Samsung Galaxy S21 will equip Snapdragon 888 SoC, confirms FCC certification

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Chanakya Shrutam is the lead writer and Editor-in-chief at Sammyfans.com. He is experienced in the field of App development for Android, Machine learning, and graphics designing. Most of the time he writes news articles and stays in front of his computer but he also takes some time off to practice calligraphy with new fountain pens.

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Samsung and Arm partner on parallel processing for 6G

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Samsung R&D wing partners with Arm on the research of parallel processing for 6G. Samsung’s leading research and development organization collaborating with semiconductor and software design company Arm to research parallel packet processing.

SIMD, known as Single Instruction Multiple Data, is one of the key software technologies in next-gen communications. Samsung Research and Arm plans to introduce an open-source project to develop and refine parallel processing for 6G.

“This technical partnership with Arm is a significant step towards revolutionizing parallel technology,” said Jinguk Jeong, Executive Vice President at Samsung Research’s Advanced Communications Research Center.

Arm also announced leveraging its expertise in high-performance, low-power and flexible computing by collaborating with Samsung Research to accelerate the 6G software development and enable the AI infrastructure to run as efficiently as possible.

Since SIMD processes vast quantities of communication data, Samsung Research’s work with Arm seeks to significantly accelerate the research and development timeline ahead of the surge of data driven by 6G environments.

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Young Hyun Jun will lead Samsung’s semiconductor business

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Samsung GAA Semiconductor

Young Hyun Jun will now lead Samsung’s semiconductor business. The company today revealed that it named Young Hyun Jun as the new Head of Device Solutions (DS) Division.

President Kyehyun Kyung, who has been leading the DS Division, will become the Head of the Future Business Division as well as the Head of Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology (SAIT).

Young Hyun Jun will focus on the DS Division and strengthen Samsung’s position amid an uncertain global business environment. Notably, Jun has extensive experience in the semiconductor and battery businesses.

Samsung hired Jun in 2000 for DRAM and Flash memory development. Later, he became Head of the Memory Business in 2014 and CEO of Samsung SDI in 2017, before leading the Future Business Division in 2024.

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Android’s hot Circle to Search arriving on iOS

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Circle to Search in-line translation support

Circle to Search feature may be available on the iOS platform this year. In an exciting development, folks over at the Mac Observer discovered that Google is preparing to upgrade Chrome for iOS with Android’s awesome Circle to Search feature.

Chrome for iOS silently added a new “Lens Circle to Search” flag. When enabled, it will likely bring the feature to Apple’s iOS devices. Well, it is expected to be a Lens-powered feature available within the application itself, rather than system-wide integration.

Circle to Search debuted earlier this year with the Galaxy S24 series. It’s developed by Google for Galaxy and Pixel devices. As of now, a number of Samsung and Google devices have access to it. Meanwhile, the expansion may take place to more Android vendors and iOS too.

This feature is literally powered by Google Lens. Thanks to system-wide integration, it feels like a core feature of the Android operating system. Through an app update, Google seems to be planning Circle to Search beyond Android devices.

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