There is very little time left for the arrival of the Android 4.4 KitKat update for the Samsung Galaxy S4. A few months ago a rumor appeared that the Galaxy S4 would receive Android 4.4 very soon, but at that time there was no official confirmation that gave truth to the news. This time a screenshot has appeared on the net that shows the latest version of this operating system running under the Galaxy S4, so it is officially confirmed that this terminal is about to receive the official Android 4.4 KitKat update.
And what else is revealed in this capture? In principle it is only an image that shows the Galaxy S4's lock screen and attaches a snapshot of the AnTuTu application. Beforehand, you can see that the icons in the notification bar look much sharper and even the battery icon is now white for easy viewing. The clock format does not seem to suffer any changes compared to Android 4.3. At the bottom right of the screen there is also a very simple icon that would allow access to the phone's camera directly from the lock screen. For its part, the capture of the AnTuTu application(an application that is used to measure the specifications of mobile phones) certainly does not seem to reveal any striking news beyond confirming that it is really a capture of the Samsung Galaxy S4.
Recall that the Galaxy S4 is a smartphone from the South Korean company Samsung which features a five - inch screen with 1920 x 1080 pixels. Inside the phone we can find an eight - core processor running at a clock speed of 1.6 GHz (in some markets it is a quad - core processor running at 1.9 GHz) accompanied by a memory RAM of two gigabytes. The main camera of the phone is 13 megapixels, and the battery has a capacity of 2600 mAh.
Obviously for now very little or practically nothing is known about the performance of the Galaxy S4 running under Android 4.4 KitKat, something that is more important if possible than the actual aspect of the update. To date, the only version of this phone that has already received this update is the Google Play edition, that is, the version that Google sells with a completely clean Android interface without any modification of those made by companies when they put it on the market. their mobiles.
In principle, it seems that there is no general complaint about any specific problem that may appear after updating the phone, so we hope that Spanish users will begin to receive this update on their mobile phones in the coming weeks. It is important to remember that each operator is going to make its own adaptation of this Android update, so the mobiles purchased under a company will be the ones that will take the longest to receive the Android 4.4 KitKat update.