5G networks and porn parody moviessmartphones haven't even properly arrived yet, but Samsung is already working on the next generation of cellular network technology.
The Korea Herald reported Tuesday that Samsung has launched a new research center, focusing, among other things, on 6G research.
SEE ALSO: Here are the cities where you can get mobile 5G service from major carriers in the U.S.The new center is called the Advanced Communications Research Center and it's a part of Samsung's main research and development organization in Seoul -- Samsung Research.
“The current team on telecommunications technology standards has been expanded to start leading research on the 6G network,” an unnamed Samsung official told the outlet.
Given that 5G -- at least the consumer-ready portion of it -- is still in its infancy, most people (except a certain president) are probably wondering what does 6G stand for at this point, and the answer is: not much. It's a probable name for cellular network tech that comes after 5G, but it's very early in its development, and it probably won't turn into anything sold for at least a couple more years.
On its Samsung Research website, Samsung doesn't say much about 6G. "Already in Europe, China, and the United States, there are open discussions on the need for research on 6G, the next generation after 5G, and the first research projects are already underway across the globe," the website states.
Unsurprisingly, The Korea Herald's report is thin on details as well, besides saying that the new research center will also work on artificial intelligence and robotics.
Topics Samsung
'Rye Lane' review: Lovable losers romIdentify Twitter Blue subscribers with these four browser extensionsBumble launches new features to help you date during quarantineTom Hardy returns with bedtime stories in our hour of needHow to cheer up your loved ones from a distance'Paddington 3' is officially happeningSex tips for people with endometriosis'Tetris' review: This video gameWrestleMania 39: A guide to all storylines heading into the WWE showHow to have a socially distanced 420Blue Ivy's PSA video has the internet praising the budding scientist'Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves' features a sneaky Critical Role Easter eggEverything to know from 'Barbie' character postersSurprise Google Drive file limit policy leaves some users feeling shortchanged'Doctor Who' adds the incredible Jinkx Monsoon to the castThis bus plays voice messages from loved ones outside people's homesBBC weatherman kills the channel's theme song on drums after delivering the forecastHow to look at past images in Google Maps Street ViewTwitter's biggest users say they won't be paying for Twitter Blue checkmarks'Animal Crossing' fans recreate iconic album covers with K.K. Slider The Value of “Witness Art” Under You An Exhibition of Early Photographs Suggests an Unencumbered Medium SimCity 2000 is the Most Important Game I've Ever Played Marcy Dermansky Revisits Van Gogh’s Flowers A Meeting of the Fern Society John Ashbery’s Collages Are the Perfect Complement to His Poems The Last Days of Foamhenge ‘Chasing Amy’ and the Toxic “Nerd Masculinity” of the 90s Jonathan Lethem’s Collection of Vomiting Cats Willa Kim’s Sixty Radical Flâneuserie: Reimagining the Aimlessly Wandering Woman La Mode Retrouvée: Looking for Proust’s Muse in Paris I Work for a Shipping Company—I’ve Been Sick for Over a Year Don’t Trust the Golfers—Especially Not the Golfer Saint of Saints: Barry the Saint Bernard’s Heroic Life Evaluating My Interest in “Escapist” Literature Dave Tompkins on a Year of Listening and Hearing Sitting Up: A Brief History of Chairs Antonio di Benedetto’s Zama As the Great American Novel Dying on the Toilet: On Francis Bacon’s “Triptych May–June 1973”
3.4817s , 8206.203125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【porn parody movies】,Openness Information Network