Note that this will be dependent on how the app’s developers have set up notifications for that app. If you wish to change the colour for a particular app, you will need to open that app and go into its settings. If your device is blinking a colour that you don’t recognise and is not one of the Samsung notification colours, it is likely to be one of your apps. Your Samsung device has the above colour notifications, but it may blink other colours (such as white, purple or pink) if you have installed third-party apps that include LED notifications. Green – Glowing: connected to a charger and fully charged.Blinking: connected to a charger but not charging, or when low on battery. Red – Glowing: connected to a charger and charging.Blinking: there is an unread notification (missed call, message etc) or during voice recording. Blue – Pulsing: the device is turning on or off.These colours are for standard notifications and functions of your device. It can display various colours such as blue, red and green. If it is there it is located at the top left of the front of your device. It will probably also have a lot in common with the Samsung Galaxy S22, so once that phone launches (probably in January) we’ll be able to say more.Have you ever wondered what the LED notification light colours mean on your Samsung Galaxy? Well, read on and find out.įirstly, it should be pointed out that not all Galaxy’s have an LED light. That’s typically what happens with this range.īeyond that, there’s a chance that it will have an under-display camera, now that Samsung has equipped the Galaxy Z Fold 3 with one, but we’re less sure of that. We’d also expect the Samsung Galaxy Note 22 to have top-end power, probably packing the best available Snapdragon chipset in some regions (including the US), and the best available Exynos one in others (including the UK). For one thing, it’s obviously going to have an S Pen stylus, and unlike the Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra and Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 – which also have stylus support – the Note 22 is sure to come with the stylus as standard, and have a built-in slot to store it. There are some things that we can be quite confident of though if the Note 22 does launch. So far we don’t know anything about the Samsung Galaxy Note 22, with all the leaks and rumors so far simply being focused on whether or not there will even be such a phone. If there is a Samsung Galaxy Note 22, there may or may not also be a Samsung Galaxy Note 22 Ultra, but for any models that do launch, those prices seem a likely ballpark. That’s for the standard Samsung Galaxy Note 20 though, opt for a Samsung Galaxy Note 20 Ultra and at launch it would have cost you upwards of $1,299 / £1,179 / AU$1,849. ![]() That started at £849 / AU$1,499 for a 4G model (with the US not getting that version) and $999 / £949 / AU$1,649 for a 5G version. So, how much will the Samsung Galaxy Note 22 cost if it does launch? This far away from its likely launch timing there unsurprisingly aren’t any price rumors yet, but it might cost a similar amount to the Samsung Galaxy Note 20 range. There hasn't been a new Note since 2020's Note 20 range (Image credit: TechRadar) Samsung Galaxy Note 22 price Leaks aside, with Samsung adding S Pen support to the Galaxy S and Galaxy Fold ranges, and with the S22 Ultra rumored to even have an S Pen slot, the Note has somewhat lost its main selling point, which suggests there might not be any more of them – and that if there are, the range’s days are probably at least numbered. So will there be a Samsung Galaxy Note 22? We doubt it. Plus, a leaker claimed in September 2021 (so more recently than many of the rumors) that a supply chain source has seen evidence of the Samsung Galaxy Note 22.īut even more recently a source has claimed that there's no new Note models in Samsung's 2022 product roadmap. That claim predates the conflicting reports above, but coming direct from Samsung it carries a lot of weight. Elsewhere we've similarly heard that the Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra could instead launch as the Samsung Galaxy Note 22 Ultra.Īll that said, not renewing a trademark right now doesn’t mean Samsung won’t in future, and the company itself has previously said that it’s expected that the Samsung Galaxy Note range will continue in 2022. Or at least, there apparently won’t be any more of them in the form we’ve come to expect, though this source claims that Samsung internally thinks of the Galaxy Z Fold range as the ‘Note Z’, so it’s possible a future foldable will have Note branding. Most of the recent news and leaks suggest there won’t be one, with Samsung not renewing the Galaxy Note trademark while it renewed those for the Galaxy S, Galaxy Z, Galaxy M and Galaxy A series, and with at least one source flat out saying there won’t be any more Samsung Galaxy Note phones.
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