Samsung Galaxy S25 series has support for seamless updates
The rumors were true - Samsung's flagship smartphone line finally supports seamless updates, with the release of the Galaxy S25, Galaxy S25+, and Galaxy S25 Ultra. The Korean company has been a holdout for many, many years, and finally implemented the functionality in the Galaxy A55 last year.
We assume that was meant to test the waters, and apparently everything has been fine with the A55, so now the feature finally made its way to the S line. What "seamless updates" means is that your device will be unavailable to use for less time when it's updating.
That's because the update is applied while the device is on, and it's installed on a different partition than the one the OS is currently using. Then, when installation is complete, you are prompted to reboot the device, at which point it boots from the newly updated software. This means the reboot process itself is much quicker, as it's basically just a tad longer than a normal reboot.
Whereas before, without seamless updates, you'd need to wait for the software to be installed without being able to use your phone while it was doing that. So this is one of those small quality-of-life improvements that won't be front and center on any store display, but are welcome nevertheless. The only weird thing about this is how it took Samsung more than eight years to hop on the bandwagon (Google introduced seamless updates in Android in 2016).
Samsung Galaxy S25
Samsung Galaxy S25+
Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra
Reader comments
I don't think so. I'm sure it's technically doable, but since it involves creating a new partition on a system level, it might probably have to delete user data, which Samsung would probably not do to avoid consumer complaints.
- 1 hour ago
- XZ8
Seamless update is not useless. It reduces the risk of bricking if there's something wrong with the update as the old OS installation is still there on the other partition. So I'm all for it.
- 1 hour ago
- XZ8
Can this be brought to the S24 series via an update or is it hardware based?
- 1 hour ago
- KIC