Every spring,
Samsung introduces a new Galaxy phone; every fall, Apple (AAPL)
counter-punches with a new iPhone.
At the moment, we find ourselves in mid-cycle: Samsung has just released its Galaxy S8, and the iPhone 8 will soon be in circulation.
The S8 is a gorgeous phone. It’s a hardware masterpiece, it’s
getting rave reviews, and—hey!—so far, nobody’s battery has exploded.
It’s also so crammed with features, it’s amazing the thing doesn’t
weigh 20 pounds. That’s the Samsung way: Pile on features to see what
sticks. Unfortunately, some of it’s garbage.
So here, as a public service, is a peculiar kind of review: A
master list of features that the new Samsung has and the iPhone doesn’t—along
with an assessment of which ones are actually useful.
1. The wraparound screen
Samsung’s S8 design goal was, “the most screen in the
smallest space.” And sure enough: the side margins of the screen are gone
completely—the screen image actually begins to curve around the side
edges—and the top and bottom margins have been halved.
The result: Samsung’s screen shows 40% more than the iPhone
7’s—but the phones are the same width. (The screen is 5.8 inches
diagonal on the S8, vs. 4.7 on the iPhone.)
That’s a little misleading, of course—the Samsung gets some of
that extra screen area by being taller than the iPhone (.4 inches taller). In
other words, it’s a weird shape—tall and skinny—that leaves you with black bars
beside your videos.
Here’s what else is misleading: Samsung advertises a resolution
of 2960 by 1440 pixels—much higher than the iPhone’s 1334 by 750. But in hopes
of saving battery life, Samsung hides much of that high-res goodness. Out of
the box, the phone comes set to 1080p resolution—only one-quarter of its
potential sharpness. You have to fiddle with Settings if you want all the
clarity you paid for.
But no question: it’s great to have so much screen. And such a great screen! Bright, colorful,
gorgeous OLED.
·
Usefulness grade: A
2. Edge display
On the right edge, you can set up something called the Edge
display. It’s a vertical bar, hugging the curved edge, that you can swipe
inward to reveal a skinny pane of icons. You choose which icons appear
here—favorite apps, speed-dial icons for your friends, news, and so on. Because
this bar is available from within any app, it’s like an ever-present dock. Once
you try it, you’ll use it constantly. It spares you all the trips to the Home
screens. It’s really great.
·
Usefulness: A+
3. Video enhancer
The S8’s Video Enhancer mode gooses the contrast and brightness
in video apps like Netflix (NFLX) and YouTube (GOOG, GOOGL).
Honestly? Without seeing two S8’s side-by-side, it’s hard to see a difference.
(It comes turned off, because it’s a battery drainer.)
·
Usefulness: B+
4. Gigabit LTE
The S8 and S8+ are the first phones that can tap into Gigabit
LTE—a cellular network that’ssupposed to give you much
faster internet speeds.
It probably won’t affect you. Only T-Mobile (TMUS)
has started upgrading its network to Gigabit LTE, and only in 300 towns.
Sprint (S),
Verizon (VZ),
and AT&T (T) say they’re working on it.
(Gigabit LTE isn’t the same thing—nor as fast—as 5G, which will
take a few more years to arrive.)
·
Usefulness: B
5. Iris recognition
You can now unlock your S8 by gazing into its camera lens;
it recognizes the irises of your eyes, even if you have glasses on.
Most people don’t wind up using this feature, though, because it
requires that you bring the phone up to eye level and hold it about
10 inches from your face; it’s just goofy and awkward. It also doesn’t
work in bright sunlight.
ight.
That’s if you can unlock it—the scanner
is a tall rectangle (not a circle, as on the iPhone), and you have to cover the
entire thing to make it work. A design disaster all the way around.
·
Usefulness: C
6. Face recognition
The Galaxy can also unlock itself by recognizing your face. It’s
fast, and doesn’t involve holding the phone like you’re trying to mind-meld
with it.
Unfortunately, face recognition is neither reliable (it often
doesn’t work) nor secure; for example, Samsung doesn’t consider it secure
enough to use for Samsung Pay. People report being able to fool it with a
photo.
You can’t use both iris and face recognition; you must choose
one or the other.
Usefulness: B
7. Longer battery
lifetime
Samsung says that the new S8 battery will last longer—not in
hours per charge, but in overall lifetime of usefulness. After a year, the battery will maintain 95% of its charging capacity—up from
80%, on the Galaxy S7.
There’s no way to test Samsung’s claim without waiting a year or
two, so we’ll have to take their word for it.
·
Usefulness: B+
8. Portrait mode
The S8’s main camera hasn’t been improved since the S7 came
along—it’s a wicked great camera—but its software has.
For example, when you’re photographing a face, you can turn on a
Portrait mode, which simulates the blurry-background effect you usually see only
in pro photos.
This is not an optical effect; it’s basically a filter, and the
phone sometimes gets it wrong. The blurring sometimes spills into your person.
(On the iPhone 7 Plus, the similar Portrait featurerelies on the phone’s two camera
lenses, and is therefore more reliable.)
What’s cool, though, is that you can adjust the blur after
shooting the picture. You can even blur the foreground, leaving the background sharp.
9. Snapchat-style
overlays
The Camera app can now add goofy, Snapchat-style animated
costumes to your head. They’re pretty awful. Stick to Snapchat (SNAP) or MSQRD.
Usefulness: D
10. “Virtual” photos
Within the Camera app, there’s a new option: You can walk around
an object, “filming” it. Later, you can “play it back” by swiveling the phone
around in space, changing your angle on the subject. Convenient if you’re
shopping for sculptures, I guess.
11. HDR certified
The S8 is the first smartphone with an HDR-compatible screen.
That’s high dynamic range, and it means that, if you can find an HDR movie to
watch, you’ll see it with more vivid colors and a greater range of brights to
darks.
So far, there’s not much to watch. Netlix’s HDR movies don’t yet play on the S8 (and would require a more expensive
streaming plan if they did). Amazon Prime’s HDR movies do, but there are only a
handful of them.
Usefulness: D
12.
Enhanced front-facing camera
The camera above the screen now captures 8-megapixel photos with
an f/1.7 lens, and can autofocus now. Good stuff, though not an
earth-shattering improvement over the iPhone 7’s front camera (7 megapixels,
f/2.2 aperture).
Usefulness: B
13. Bluetooth 5
Bluetooth 5 has four times the range and twice the data rates of
Bluetooth 4—but you get those benefits only if you’ve upgraded your Bluetooth
stuff (speakers, Fitbits, headphones, etc.) to Bluetooth 5 gear.
Even now, though, the S8 lets you pair with two existing
Bluetooth headphones, so you and a friend can listen simultaneously.
Usefulness: B+
14. Split screen
The S8 introduces “multi window,” a feature that lets you split the screen
between two apps, side-by-side (or top-and-bottom). At that point,
you can adjust their relative sizes, or copy between them.
Usefulness: B–
15. Bixby voice control
Bixby is Samsung’s version of Siri or Google Assistant. It’s so
important, it gets its own dedicated button on the left edge of the phone—which
you can’t reassign to another function.
Which is too bad, because at the moment, Bixby doesn’t do
anything. It doesn’t take spoken questions, like Siri or Assistant does.
Samsung says that’s coming soon. (Meanwhile, you can always use Google
Assistant, which is still there.)
Samsung says that
once Bixby is activated, it’ll be much smarter than Siri or Assistant—that
you’ll be able to give it far more complex commands. For example, if you’re
looking at a map, you can say, “Capture this and send it to mom.”
Samsung also says, though, that apps must be rewritten to
respond to Bixby commands—and only 10 apps will be controllable in this way
when Bixby goes live.
Content
is currently unavailable.
Usefulness: Unknown
16. Bixby Home
A second feature, confusingly also called Bixby, is a nearly
perfect copycat of Google Now: A scrolling list of “cards” that present
information you might find useful right now, based on the time and your
location: weather, appointments, headlines. Why is it necessary for a phone to
have two copies of the same thing?
Usefulness: D
17. Bixby Vision
Yes, there’s a third feature called Bixby. This one
is built into the Camera app. You can point the phone at a landmark and see
details about it, supplied by Foursquare; at a product to get shopping
information, supplied by Amazon (AMZN);
at any image to be shown similar ones, from Pinterest; at a wine-bottle
label for ratings and details, from Vivino; or at
foreign-language writing for a translation, supplied by Google Translate.
·
Usefuness: B
18. Samsung Health
This new, surprisingly complete app automatically tracks your
steps, workouts, and (if you have a Samsung smartwatch that you wear at night)
sleep; it also offers places to manually record your weight, food, blood
glucose, water, caffeine, and so on.
In a novel twist, the app also lets you have an instant video
conference with an actual, board-certified doctor for $60 (courtesy of American
Well), which your insurance may or may not cover—great for getting immediate
help or refilling a prescription.
·
Usefulness: A–, if you’re into that
sort of thing
19. Dex Station
For $150, you can buy a special dock that lets you connect your
phone to a big monitor, mouse, and keyboard. Your phone becomes the CPU of a
PC!
·
Usefulness: C
Older Features
Many of Galaxy’s features aren’t new in the S8, but are still
unmatched by the iPhone. A few examples:
20. Cool gestures
The Galaxy phone is the shortcut lover’s idea of heaven. You can
turn on all kinds of super cool gesture-based shortcuts, like these:
·
Swipe the fingerprint reader to open Notifications
·
Smart Stay (the screen stays on as long as you’re looking at it)
·
Press the Power button twice to fire up the camera
·
Wipe the edge of your hand across the screen to take a
screenshot (which you can then annotate or crop)
·
Direct Call (hold the phone to ear to auto-dial the person whose
card is on screen)
·
Smart Alert (when you pick up the phone, it vibrates if
notifications are waiting)
·
Easy Mute (silence the ringer by placing the phone face down—in
a meeting, say)
·
Send an SOS to designated contacts (press the Power button three
times)
·
Answer a call by pressing the Volume Up key
·
During video playback, drag up/down for volume adjustments,
left/right for brightness. Double-tap to pause.
These gestures erase a lot of the fussiness of trying to get
things done on a tiny, no-mouse device.
·
Usefulness: A+
21. Quicker charging
The S8’s quick-charging technology (unchanged
since last year’s model) gives you a full charge in about 1.5 hours, as long as the screen isn’t on. That’s about half the time of
an iPhone 7 Plus.
·
Usefulness: A+
22. “Wireless” pad
charger
You can charge your S8 by setting it onto a Qi charging pad
(under $15). It takes twice as long to charge that way, but saves you the
plugging and unplugging of a cable. Grab and go.
23. Samsung Pay
Loop Pay was a phone dongle that could trick a credit-card
reader into thinking that you’d actually swiped a card through it. In 2015,
Samsung bought Loop and built its technology into its Galaxy phones.
It’s hard to believe. You wave the phone near the card-reader
slot, up to a couple of inches away, and — beep! — you’ve
just paid.
This is nothing like Apple Pay and Android Pay,
which work only at checkout terminals that have been upgraded to work with
them. In the big picture, there just aren’t very many places to use Apple Pay
and Android Pay.
But Samsung Pay works almost everywhere that fine credit cards
are swiped—90% of all checkout counters.
·
Usefulness: A
24. Always-on screen
The phone’s screen never goes fully dark. When it’s “asleep,”
you still see the current time, battery charge, and notification summaries.
·
Usefulness: A
25. Smart Unlock
This is an Android
feature, not a Samsung
feature, but it’s cool: You can set things up so that as long as the phone is
in a certain place (like your home), within range of a certain Bluetooth device
(like your Fitbit [FIT]),
or on your person (based on your body motion), it won’t keep locking. You won’t
need a password, fingerprint, or whatever to unlock it.
Obviously, you won’t turn this on if you work at, you know, the
NSA. But when you’re alone at home, why shouldn’t you enjoy a little
convenience?
·
Usefulness: A
26. Headphone jack
Yep. Samsung managed to create a waterproof phone without
sacrificing the headphone jack. So much for Apple’s “courage.”
·
Usefulness: A
27. Expansion slot
You can outfit your S8 with a tiny micro SD card for
additional storage—lucky, since there’s only one S8 model (with 64 gigs of
memory). The memory-card thing isn’t quite as good as built-in storage,
because the phone treats it as an external drive, and it’s up to you to manage
which data and apps get stored in which place, and some apps can’t be on the card.
But for photo and video storage—awesome.
·
Usefulness: A–
The counterpunch
Of course, the iPhone has a long list of its own exclusives, like stereo
speakers, a pressure-sensitive screen (press harder for more options), an
optical zoom on the camera (on the Plus), built-in storage options up to 256
gigabytes, and twice the storage (128 gb) for the same price.
Above all, there’s the software—iOS 10—and
the Apple ecosystem. Apple’s gotten more feature-happy of late, but it’s still
the world leader in simplicity and coherence. You would never catch Apple
bloating up your screens with duplicate apps and junkware. Apple’s apps are far
more consistent in design and operation. You’ve got the Apple Stores to visit
for on-the-spot fixes and help. You’ve got the glorious flexibility of sending
iMessages instead of short, limited texts.
And then there’s the tight integration between Macs and iPhones.
You know: Copy some text on your phone, paste it one second later on your
laptop. Read a web article on the subway on your phone, sit down at your Mac at
home to see the same site. That kind of thing.
In a way, then, all of these comparison articles (including this
one) are missing a key point. They’re interesting for monitoring the state of
the art, but they shouldn’t be called, “Which one should you buy?” Moving from
the Apple ecosystem to the Google/Samsung ecosystem, or vice versa is a big,
expensive hassle that not many people undertake. You have to re-buy all your
apps. You have to buy all new chargers. You have to do a lot of relearning.
But clearly, the Galaxy S8’s hardware is a beast. A huge
leap beyond the iPhone 7. So the ultimate experience would be the hardware
features of the Galaxy S8, running the software and ecosystem of the iPhone.
Well, who knows? If the rumors are right, we’ll be getting
something like that in the iPhone 8.
This was originally posted in www.yahoo.com/news/new-samsung-galaxy-28-things-iphone-doesnt-161349303.html
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