Close Menu

    Subscribe to our newsletter

    Get the latest Geekhub updates.

    Monday, January 12
    Geekhub
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • About us
    • News
    • Technology

      Apple Claims Number One Spot in Global Smartphone Shipments for 2025

      12 January 2026

      LEGO’s New Smart Bricks Add Sensors and Sound — But Do They Change What LEGO Is Meant to Be?

      12 January 2026

      Be The Ultimate Holiday Hero With Sony’s Festive Gift Guide

      8 December 2025

      Sony Launches Alpha 7 V and FE 28-70mm F3.5-5.6 OSS II – Just In Time For Christmas

      8 December 2025

      InstaPay Gini offers South Africans a way to stay ahead of inflation

      26 November 2025
    • Opinion

      AI in 2026: Power,Control, and The Risk

      7 January 2026

      Is Customer Service Becoming a Thing of the Past?

      5 January 2026

      Writing With AI – We Need To Stop Pretending

      19 November 2025

      Hollywood 2.0: Now With Extra Algorithms and Mild Identity Crisis

      6 November 2025

      ChatGPT Atlas : The Browser Wars Are Back, and Google’s in the Crosshairs

      23 October 2025
    • Movies & TV

      X-Men Join the MCU in Avengers: Doomsday 

      7 January 2026

      The Batman Part II Just Got More Interesting With Sebastian Stan

      7 January 2026

      2026’s Movie Release Schedule Is Big, Bold, and Hopeful

      5 January 2026

      Ready or Not 2: A New Level Of Chaos Ignites In Sequel

      3 December 2025

      Avatar: Fire and Ash – A Bold, Immersive Cinematic Experience

      2 December 2025
    • Hardware

      And Then ASUS Did This: The Zephyrus Duo Comes Back and Refuses to Be Sensible

      6 January 2026

      New ASUS Zephyrus G14 and G16 (2026): RTX 50-Series Gaming Power in Ultra-Thin Laptops

      6 January 2026

      The HONOR Magic V5: Flirtation With Perfection

      10 December 2025

      Smartphone of the Year 2025: OPPO Find X9 Pro

      10 December 2025

      Review: vivo V60 Lite 5G. A Big Battery and Even Bigger Promises

      17 November 2025
    • Get In Touch
    Geekhub
    Home»Featured»Google Dumps Samsung for TSMC: What It Means for the Pixel 10
    Featured

    Google Dumps Samsung for TSMC: What It Means for the Pixel 10

    Staff WriterBy Staff Writer19 June 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email WhatsApp

    So here’s the scoop. Google is done with Samsung — at least when it comes to making the brains of the Pixel. After three generations of using Samsung to manufacture its custom Tensor chips, Google is switching to TSMC for the upcoming Pixel 10’s Tensor G5. And yeah, it’s a big deal.

    Samsung didn’t see it coming. Internally, they’re calling it the “Google incident,” and the fallout is already prompting serious soul-searching in their semiconductor division.

    But let’s break down why Google made the move, what it means for you (and your next phone), and why this could shake up the chip wars in 2025 and beyond.

    The Problem with Samsung’s Chips

    Samsung’s been Google’s foundry partner since the original Tensor chip launched in the Pixel 6. But real talk? It’s been a mixed bag.

    • Hot and power-hungry: Pixels using Samsung-made Tensor chips have had a reputation for running warm and draining batteries faster than they should.
    • Inconsistent performance: Benchmarks aside, real-world usage often showed lags under heavy AI or camera processing loads.
    • Low yields: Samsung’s 3 nm chip process reportedly has yield rates around 50 percent. Compare that to TSMC’s 90 percent, and you start to see why Google made the switch.

    Bottom line? Google needed more efficiency, more consistency, and more control. Samsung wasn’t delivering.

    Enter TSMC — the Silicon Kingpin

    TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company) is the same chipmaker behind Apple’s A-series and M-series silicon, Qualcomm’s Snapdragon flagships, and even some AMD processors. In other words, they’re top-tier.

    By moving to TSMC, Google gets:

    • Better thermal performance — cooler chips, longer battery life
    • More consistent production — higher yields mean lower costs and fewer duds
    • A solid future roadmap — TSMC’s already gearing up for 2 nm and beyond

    Leaked Pixel 10 Pro prototypes suggest the Tensor G5 will be built on TSMC’s 3 nm node, paired with the Exynos 5400 modem, and up to 16 GB of RAM. Expect smoother performance without that toaster-in-your-pocket heat.

    What This Means for Samsung

    Losing Google is more than just a financial hit. It’s a reputation blow. Samsung has been trying to position itself as a serious foundry rival to TSMC, and this public rejection from a high-profile partner stings.

    Insiders say Samsung is rethinking how it structures its chip business. We might see parts of its System LSI division spun off, or renewed focus on chips for cars, robotics, and AI rather than smartphones.

    And unless they fix their 3 nm (and soon 2 nm) process issues, they’ll keep bleeding customers.

    Read: Huawei’s New Foldable Laptop Is Part Transformer, Part Flex

    Long-Term Tensor Plans? Locked and Loaded

    This isn’t a one-time fling. Google has reportedly signed a multi-year deal with TSMC that could extend to the Pixel 14— taking us all the way to 2030. That kind of commitment tells you Google is serious about building its own Apple-style ecosystem, with silicon designed to work perfectly with its hardware and AI stack.

    The move also signals a deeper play: better AI performance, more efficient on-device processing, and less reliance on third-party chipmakers like Qualcomm.

    So Should You Care?

    Absolutely. If you’re in the market for a Pixel 10, although Pixel devices are not officially available in South Africa (or just follow the smartphone space), here’s what this shift could mean for real-world users:

    ✅ Cooler phones that don’t overheat during video calls, gaming, or recording
    ✅ Improved battery life, especially under heavy AI or camera use
    ✅ Faster updates and better optimization, since Google now controls more of the stack
    ✅ More competition — and that’s always good for innovation

    Final Word

    Google ditching Samsung for TSMC is more than a factory swap. It’s a strategic power move that tells us a lot about where Pixel is going and how serious Google is about controlling its tech destiny.

    And for Samsung? It’s a wake-up call. If they want to stay relevant in the foundry game, they’ve got serious catching up to do.

    We’ll be watching closely as the Pixel 10 and Tensor G5 go head-to-head with Qualcomm, Apple, and MediaTek later this year.

    Source: 9to5google

    Google Pixel Pixel 10 Samsung Tensor G5 TSMC
    subscribe to Geekhub
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp
    Staff Writer

    Related Posts

    Apple Claims Number One Spot in Global Smartphone Shipments for 2025

    12 January 2026

    AI in 2026: Power,Control, and The Risk

    7 January 2026

    And Then ASUS Did This: The Zephyrus Duo Comes Back and Refuses to Be Sensible

    6 January 2026
    Opinion

    AI in 2026: Power,Control, and The Risk

    7 January 2026

    Is Customer Service Becoming a Thing of the Past?

    5 January 2026

    Writing With AI – We Need To Stop Pretending

    19 November 2025

    Hollywood 2.0: Now With Extra Algorithms and Mild Identity Crisis

    6 November 2025
    Don't Miss
    News

    Apple Claims Number One Spot in Global Smartphone Shipments for 2025

    By Staff Writer12 January 2026

    Apple became the world’s top smartphone brand in 2025, overtaking Samsung as iPhone shipments surged despite a slowing global smartphone market.

    LEGO’s New Smart Bricks Add Sensors and Sound — But Do They Change What LEGO Is Meant to Be?

    12 January 2026

    X-Men Join the MCU in Avengers: Doomsday 

    7 January 2026

    The Batman Part II Just Got More Interesting With Sebastian Stan

    7 January 2026
    About Us
    About Us

    Geekhub was not created as a business and we are not journalists, we are just a bunch of geeks that love what we do and we share our collective passion with you, our valued readers.

    Contact: +27 83 346 2178

    Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn
    Our Picks

    Apple Claims Number One Spot in Global Smartphone Shipments for 2025

    12 January 2026

    LEGO’s New Smart Bricks Add Sensors and Sound — But Do They Change What LEGO Is Meant to Be?

    12 January 2026

    X-Men Join the MCU in Avengers: Doomsday 

    7 January 2026
    Most Popular

    AI and The Cost Of Convenience: What are we really giving up?

    27 November 2025

    OPPO Reno 12Pro 5G- A beautiful Mid-range Contender

    14 August 2024

    Huawei’s AI Chip Challenge: A David vs. Goliath Showdown?

    15 August 2024
    • Home
    • About us
    • News
    • Technology
    • Opinion
    • Wacky Stories
    • Get In Touch
    © 2026 Geekhub.co.za All Rights Reserved!

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.