• Home
  • Phones
  • Samsung employee shared Galaxy S26 video back in October
Image

Samsung employee shared Galaxy S26 video back in October


Samsung Galaxy Unpacked Summer 2023 Seoul

C. Scott Brown / Android Authority

TL;DR

  • Last October, a Samsung employee filed a bug report to Google’s Chromium Issue Tracker. 
  • In addition to describing their problem, the employee also attached a video of a handset demoing the issue. 
  • The employee identified this hardware as an “S26.”

This week is Galaxy Unpacked week, and we are a mere two days away from Samsung introducing its latest smartphone lineup. At this late date, the upcoming Galaxy S26 family already feels like a known quantity, having been so thoroughly detailed across months and months of rumors and leaks. But even now we’re still coming up with new finds, and today we’re looking at one that’s surfaced in an unexpectedly public place.

Don’t want to miss the best from Android Authority?

google preferred source badge light@2xgoogle preferred source badge dark@2x

Samsung may be trying to plug up the leaks in its organization, at least when it comes to the intentional disclosure of trade secrets, but there are still plenty of ways that employees can accidentally reveal details of upcoming devices while performing their official duties.

Back in October, someone with a Samsung email address submitted a bug report posted on Google’s Chromium issue tracker. They complained of inconsistent frame rates in split-screen view, and attached a video to illustrate. And then there’s one little note, mentioned under Additional Comments: “device is S26.”

Admittedly, we don’t get to see much of the hardware at all, but if you had any doubts, that watermark at the bottom of the screen should be hitting you over the head with the idea that this is an internal device not meant for the public.

The bug report itself doesn’t seem to have actually gone anywhere. The Googlers responding appear a bit perplexed as to why the Firefox browser is being used in this demo to show off what’s supposed to be a Chromium bug, and suggest that any fluctuating frame rate is more a system issue with the way Samsung handles touch input than anything to do with Chromium. 

We’re still very much looking forward to everyone getting their formal, official first look at the Galaxy S26 series this Wednesday, but it’s fun to think that an S26 video from Samsung itself has been sitting under our noses this whole time.

Check back with us on Wednesday for full coverage of Samsung’s Galaxy Unpacked launch event. 

Thank you for being part of our community. Read our Comment Policy before posting.



Source link

Releated Posts

Apple is starting to test secure RCS between iPhone and Android

Ryan Haines / Android Authority TL;DR Apple is testing end-to-end encryption (E2EE) for RCS chats between iOS and…

ByByTDSNEWS999 Feb 23, 2026

Some of you are about to lose your free HBO Max perk

Ryan Haines / Android Authority TL;DR DoorDash’s DashPass will no longer include free HBO Max upon renewal. Current…

ByByTDSNEWS999 Feb 23, 2026

Samsung’s Galaxy Book 6 series will get a US launch next month

TL;DR The Samsung Galaxy Book 6 series offers three new models and a complete redesign that includes the…

ByByTDSNEWS999 Feb 23, 2026

iOS 26.4 beta 2 adds support for testing encrypted RCS between iPhone and Android

iOS 26.4 beta 2 is now rolling out for developers, and it expands support for testing encrypted RCS…

ByByTDSNEWS999 Feb 23, 2026