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Samsung develops the first 1TB storage chip for phones

In the future, Samsung's phones will have a whopping one terabyte storage capacity... and that time might come sooner than you expect. The tech giant has started mass producing what it says is the industry's first one terabyte embedded Universal Flash Storage (eUFS) technology for smartphones. It will give the company's mobile devices PC-like storage without the need for large-capacity micoSD cards. And it'll probably be the best thing since sliced bread if you use your phone to take tons of photos and HD videos -- Samsung says it's enough to store 260 10-minute videos in 4K UHD.

"The 1TB eUFS is expected to play a critical role in bringing a more notebook-like user experience to the next generation of mobile devices," said Cheol Choi, EVP of Memory Sales & Marketing at Samsung Electronics. As ZDNet notes, Samsung's upcoming flagship devices, such as the S10, will most likely come with a 1TB option thanks to the new eUFS if you look at the tech giant's history. Samsung also started mass producing its 512GB storage technology back in December 2017 and then debuted it with its new phones the next year.

In addition to offering massive storage, the new eUFS was also designed to be faster than typical SSDs, microSDs and previous versions. It has a 1,000-megabyte-per-second sequential read speed, twice that of the usual SSD and faster than its 512GB predecessor. Despite all those, Samsung says it'll come in the same package size as its 512GB flash memory, so it doesn't have to make its big phones even bigger.

Source: Samsung


via engadget.com

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