Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Business
  5. Mobile
  6. News

These 19 companies will offer 5G devices by 2019. Where’s Apple?

Add as a preferred source on Google

Qualcomm is on a mission to bring 5G to the world, and a major part of it is implementing 5G tech into the next-gen devices. The company today announced it has partnered with a whopping 19 device manufacturers, and all will be using the company’s new X50 5G-compatible modem in at least one of their 2019 devices. Other partnerships include carriers around the globe, which will also be using the X50 modem for 5G trials this year.

What all this means is as soon as next year, you could be enjoying super-fast 5G speeds on your phone — provided you’re in an area where 5G networks have started rolling out. All four major U.S. networks said they will begin rolling out 5G networks by the end of 2018, with nationwide access expected by 2020.

Recommended Videos

The X50 modem itself is capable of supporting data connections of up to a massive 5 gigabits per second. While it’s unlikely you’ll ever experience such a speed in the real world, we’re still looking at connections of at least hundreds of megabits per second — perhaps even a gigabit — which is a major improvement over speeds on a modern 4G LTE network.

So which companies are Qualcomm working with? Included in today’s announcement are the likes of HTC, LG, Sony, Oppo, and ZTE, and on a different occasion, Qualcomm and Samsung already announced a partnership that will see the two working together on the future of 5G. When it comes to carriers, the company is working with AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon in the U.S., as well as other carriers around the world, like Australia’s Telstra and China Mobile.

There are some big names missing from the list. Apple is one example, though it’s unsurprising considering the tumultuous relationship between the two. Huawei is also not on the list of partners, which is understandable as the Chinese company has continued its focus on developing its own chips.

Qualcomm is in a good position in the race to 5G. The company has been working with most Android manufacturers for years now, and those partnerships will almost certainly continue into the next generation of chipsets and modems. We also expect Qualcomm to eventually announce a second-generation 5G modem, which will add backward compatibility for 4G networks. Devices that use the X50 modem, for example, still need another modem, like Qualcomm’s X20, to connect to 4G and 3G.

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
iOS 27: Everything we know about the new features landing on your iPhone
Your iPhone is getting iOS 27, and Apple packed in more than just Siri AI
ios-27-compatible-iphone-models

Apple has officially announced iOS 27, and this year’s iPhone update is doing two things at once. While all eyes were on the big Siri AI release that Apple has been building towards for years, there were plenty of polishing updates, design tweaks, and changes underneath that. The company has made plenty of small quality-of-life fixes that should improve the way you interact with your iPhone.

iOS updates can live or die in the boring places, and whether your old iPhone still feels usable after installing the new version. So here's everything important coming with iOS 27.

Read more
OnePlus 15 joins the tiny Android club that can AirDrop with iPhones
Quick Share brings easier Android-to-iPhone file transfers to the OnePlus 15
Camera island on OnePlus 15.

The OnePlus 15 is now joining the small group of Android phones that can share files directly with Apple devices through AirDrop.

As reported by Android Authority, AirDrop support through Quick Share is now live on the OnePlus 15. The feature was also spotted in a OnePlus Community post, where a user reported that the phone could now send files to iPhones, iPads, and Macs through Apple’s sharing system. That means OnePlus 15 users should be able to send files to nearby iPhones and receive files from them without the need for any workarounds like Google Drive links, Bluetooth, or third-party file-sharing apps.

Read more
iOS 27 could make battery saving less of a settings scavenger hunt
Apple appears to be testing Dormancy, a feature that flags unused options and suggests turning them off to preserve battery life.
watchOS 27

iOS 27 could make battery saving feel less like detective work. Developer Steve Moser spotted references in iOS 27 Beta 1 and watchOS that point to a feature called Dormancy, which appears designed to recommend disabling settings or features that haven't been used.

https://twitter.com/SteveMoser/status/2064332094608748671

Read more