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From November Samsung Galaxy S22 series will go into mass production

 Mass production of the upcoming Galaxy S22 from South Korean company Samsung is scheduled to start from next November.



From November Samsung Galaxy S22 series will go into mass production 

Some information is being leaked before this device is made public.


According to recent progress, the Samsung Galaxy S22 series will go into mass production from November.


In addition, the smartphone lineup will be available for purchase from next January, all of these sets will be Qualcomm's latest Snapdragon 898 chipset. The lineup will be officially unveiled in December.


Samsung's smartphone series will be the world's first phone with Snapdragon 898 chipset.


In this case, Samsung will surpass the Chinese company Xiaomi, which is bringing the first smartphone with this chipset.


According to an earlier report, the Qualcomm Snapdragon 898 chipset will also be built at Samsung's foundry, so its efficiency is expected to increase by 20 percent.


The plus variant of this chipset is said to be manufactured by TSMC of Taiwan.


The smartphone is also expected to have Samsung's Exynos 2200 chip and will perform better by coordinating with AMD's GPU.


Its top-end model Galaxy S22 Ultra will also have a 108-megapixel camera.

In China, children can now play online games for only one hour a day



The Chinese government has banned children from playing online games for more than an hour a day.

China's National Press and Publication Administration told the state-run Xinhua news agency that children would only be able to play online games for one hour every day from 8 to 9 p.m.

The government has also instructed gaming companies to prevent children from playing games outside of this time. Earlier this month, a government newspaper described the online game as "spiritual opium."

The government will also increase inspections of online gaming companies to monitor compliance with the deadline, the regulator said.

Earlier, the regulator had fixed 1 hour 30 minutes for children to play online games on other days and 3 hours on holidays.

The decision comes amid concerns that children may be exposed to the negative effects of playing online games too often.

A month before the law was introduced, the Economic Information Daily, a state-run newspaper, claimed that many teenagers were addicted to online gaming and that it was having a negative effect on them.


The article also caused the share prices of various online gaming companies to fall.


Last July, Chinese gaming giant Tencent announced plans to introduce a facial recognition system to ban children from playing games between 10pm and 8am.

source BBC

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