Digital Web Review

Motorola P40 to Feature Samsung Exynos 9610 Processor – Specifications and Color Options

| By DWR Editor

A few days ago, it was reported that Motorola’s next phones might feature Samsung’s Exynos processor. The report further hinted that phones would use the Exynos 7 Series 9610 processor. However, there was no mention on the name of the Motorola devices that would be powered by the Exynos processor. Now, according to a report by 91Mobiles, one of the Motorola devices to feature Samsung’s Exynos 9610 processor would be the Motorola P40.

Motorola P40 Leaked Spec Sheet

Rumors are that the Motorola P40 could launch in at least two color variants– Blue and Gold. Motorola P40 will have 3GB RAM and 32GB storage version and 4GB RAM and 64GB storage model, and 4GB RAM and 128GB storage. According to leaks, the Motorola P40 will feature NFC support, unlike its predecessor.

On the camera front, the Moto P40 is expected to come with punch-hole selfie camera. The rear of the smartphone houses the fingerprint sensor, Dual camera setup. As for the battery, the phone will house 3500mAh. Just like other Moto smartphones, the Motorola P40 also will be the part of Android One family.

There is still no word on the launch timeline of the Motorola P40 or its pricing details, but we can expect Motorola to launch the phones in the next months. Also, there is also no word on the Motorola P40 India launch as of yet.

We’ll confirm all the details once the device goes officially, therefore keep watching the space.

To recall, Samsung has announced the Exynos 9610 SoC last year which is a part of the Exynos 7 series, which generally powers upper mid-range smartphones such as company’s A lineup.

The new Exynos 9610 has an octa-core processor with 4x Cortex-A73 cores running at 2.3GHz and 4x Cortex-A53 ones clocked at 1.6GHz. The GPU in charge of graphics is Mali-G72MP3, a good upgrade over the Mali-G71MP2 in the previous Series 7 chip. The Exynos 9610 has a new ISP with support for 4K @ 120fps video recording and Full HD @ 480fps slow-mo capturing.

Via