› UKTH forums › π± Mobile › π¬ Android Phones › Samsung Galaxy S20 5G Ultra
- This topic has 0 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 5 years, 3 months ago by
UK Sentinel.
-
AuthorPosts
-
February 13, 2020 at 8:35 pm #6009
Samsung Galaxy S20 5G Ultra review
Samsungβs best camera phone β at an ultra-high asking price
Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra release date and price
The Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra release date is Friday, March 6 in the US, Australia and UAE, or March 13 in the UK, alongside the S20 and S20 Plus. So you have a bit of time to save up, although Australian and UAE pre-orders open right away on February 12 and in US shortly after that on February 21, a few days before the MWC 2020 mobile extravaganza.The extra time might not mean anything if you canβt come up with the funds though. The S20 Ultra costs a staggering $1,399 / Β£1,199 / AU$1,999 / AED 4,499 β and thatβs just for the version with 128GB of internal storage and 12GB of RAM.
If you feel like you may need 512GB of onboard storage and a mind boggling 16GB of RAM it’ll be $1,599 / Β£1,399 / AU$2,249 / AED 5,399.
Some good news though: youβre probably not going to need to max-out the storage, given our move to the cloud and, as the 5G becomes available, the inclusion of 5G connectivity to easily pull down remotely stored data. Plus, all models of the S20 have a microSD slot for expandable storage up to 1TB in case you do hit the 128GB capacity.
Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra two-minute takeaway
The Galaxy S20 Ultra is Samsungβs biggest Android phone, and its most daring sales pitch: you can own the worldβs most advanced 5G phone, with the companyβs best camera to date β if, that is, youβre prepared to spend more money than ever on a non-foldable smartphone.The Ultra is all about three things: a massive 6.9-inch 120Hz display that will stretch your hand, a quad-lens rear camera array offering insane zoom levels and 8K video recording, and 5G antennas that enable higher peak speeds than even the new Galaxy S20.
We tested the S20 Ultraβs 108MP camera for an hour, and were left impressed for several reasons. It captured so much detail in good light that we could crop in on images without losing quality β at least not as much quality as weβd lose cropping a photo from last yearβs 12MP Galaxy S10 and S10 Plus cameras.
Read our hands on: Samsung Galaxy S20 review
Read our hands on: Samsung Galaxy S20 Plus review
And one for luck – read our hands on: Galaxy Z Flip review
The 48MP telephoto lens allowed us to get up close and personal with far away subjects thanks to a 10x optical and 100x digital zoom. For context, it far surpasses the 2x optical and 10x digital zoom of previous Samsung phones, and the limited 6x digital zoom on the iPhone 11 Pro. At 100x, we were able to examine our videographerβs nostrils from 50 feet away β yes, it gets really close.Donβt get fooled by the numbers game: the βlesserβ S20 and S20 Plus use a superior-sounding 64MP telephoto camera and have larger individual pixels, but the Ultraβs main and telephoto cameras use bigger sensors, and thatβs more important for absorbing more light. Its 12MP ultra-wide camera is the same across the board on the S20 series, but it too has a larger sensor than the 16MP Galaxy S10 telephoto lenses. More on this in the Cameras section below.
Samsung continues to offer the most robust camera app of all the big camera phone brands, and with the S20 series it answers that everyday question: should I take photos or a video? Take both. Its new βsingle-take modeβ captures a variety of shots over a 10-second span: photos, ultra-wides, portraits, hyperlapse video, regular video, etc. It kept us out of the settings menus and in the moment.
The S20 Ultraβs specs rival those of laptops, meaning itβs more than youβll ever need: up to 16GB of RAM, a 7nm chipset, and up to 512GB of internal storage. Thereβs also a hulking 5,000mAh battery for pulling down battery-intensive 5G signal and an in-screen fingerprint sensor carried over from last yearβs phones. However, the S20 series also have the dubious honor of being the first S phones without a headphone jack.
Itβs impossible to justify the Galaxy S20 Ultra price for everyone β even those who bought the S9 Plus or S10 Plus, and intended to get the next βbig oneβ from Samsung. The S20 Plus is more than enough phone for most upgraders, and even that gets a price hike over the S10 Plus.
For others, though, the word βupgradeβ means a completely different thing: they want a phone that pushes new boundaries, and they donβt mind if that pushes the price tag further into Galaxy Fold territory. Itβs Samsungβs own version of Teslaβs βLudicrous Modeβ in its electric cars, and theyβll love showing off how its cameras go from 0.5x to 100x zoom real quick.
Design
The Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra is made of glass and aluminum β thereβs no ceramic version this year β and comes in just two colors: Cosmic Gray and Cosmic Black.The Galaxy S20 and S20 Plus come in Cloud Pink or Cloud Blue, but these shades aren’t available on the S20 Ultra. Thereβs still a curve on the right and left edges of the screens, but itβs much less pronounced this time, which should mean fewer accidental presses of the screen.
Weβve talked about the tall-not-wide dimensions (166.9mm x 76mm), so now letβs talk about the girth and weight. At 8.8mm, the Ultra is noticeably thicker than the other S20 phones and all of the S10 phones (those range from 7.8mm to 7.9mm), and it has a sizable rear camera bump on top of that. Both are completely okay with us.
Itβs also heavier at 220g (roughly in between the S10 Plus at 175g and the Galaxy Fold at 276g). But again, to us, this is a completely favorable trade-off given the fast 5G mmWave technology, 108MP camera, and 5,000mAh battery that are packed into this cutting-edge smartphone.
Too many times, camera team leads from various phone makers have told TechRadar βwe wouldβve fit in a better camera, but the design team wonβ β thatβs a direct quote from one of them. The Galaxy S20 Ultra, thankfully, doesnβt sacrifice camera quality in order to look extra chic. Itβs big, but it looks stylish enough β and more people will see your glorious 108MP photos than your phone anyway.
Five cameras
Β
We could write a whole review of the Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultraβs cameras, thereβs so much to say about them β and thatβs good news if you want something fresh out of your smartphoneβs photos. But this is just a hands-on review, and thereβs so much more to test before we publish our full review. Wish us luck.The S20 Ultra has a 108MP f/1.8 main camera (with 0.8-micron pixels), a 48MP f/3.5 telephoto camera (0.8 microns), and a 12MP f/2.2 ultra-wide camera (1.4 microns). Thereβs also a time-of-flight (ToF) depth camera on back aiding portrait photos and 3D scans, and a 40MP selfie camera on the front. Itβs Samsungβs biggest camera sensor upgrade since the Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge.
Wondering why you suddenly need a 108MP camera? It makes sense for the same reason that recording 8K video is often a good idea, even if you donβt own anything more than a 4K TV: it makes it much easier to crop into a photo or video without sacrificing detail. It gives you latitude when youβre editing your creations, even if you ultimately output to 12MP and 1080p.
Thereβs a downside to inflated megapixel counts though: the individual pixels are often smaller. Weβve seen that on plenty of cheap Android phones that tout 48MP and 64MP cameras with deceptive marketing, only to perform poorly in low light.
The S20 Ultra does have smaller pixels at 0.8 microns, whereas the S20 and S20 Plus push the pixel size to 1.8 microns (up from the S10 seriesβ 1.4 microns). But there are two things going for the Ultra that should make up for those smaller microns.
First, Samsung is employing something called nona-binning technology, which combines nine pixels into one to increase the pixel size to 2.4 microns in low-light situations, and leaves you with 12MP photos (the 9-to-1 math on a 108MP camera checks out).
Weβre eager to test this out in the example scenario Samsung describes: youβd be able to shoot stunning 108MP landscape photos outdoors in sunny Egypt, but head inside the pyramids and youβll get pixel-binded 12MP photos. Stay tuned for our full review, while we try to persuade our boss to sign off on our trip.
Second, the S20 Ultra has a chance to wow us with its physically larger camera sensors, especially from that 1/1.33-inch main sensor and 1/2-inch telephoto sensor. Weβre likely to see less noise from nighttime photos on account of these physically bigger sensors that can absorb more light. But thatβs going to require more testing in our full S20 Ultra review.
Another thing that will need further testing is the 100x zoom we’ve spoken about at the top of this review. You can see an example of how the zoom works below:
5G, battery life, specs and software
For most people buying the Galaxy S20 Ultra itβs likely to be their first 5G smartphone β just 1% of phones that shipped in 2019 were 5G devices, so itβs still very new tech. Like the S20 Plus, the Ultra combines sub-6 and mmWave technology to offer the fastest peak download speeds. The S20 is outfitted with just sub-6, and it wonβt be sold by Verizon, an mmWave-exclusive carrier in the US, for this reason.
So how fast will 5G be on the S20 Ultra? Our 5G speed test using the Galaxy S10 5G on Verizon in May 2019 returned download speeds of 1.4Gbps β but we did have to be outdoors and close to a 5G node on top of a lampost to make that happen. mmWave is extremely fast but incredibly limited in range, whereas sub-6 is slower (ranging from 200Mbps to 500Mbps) but has a wider range, offers a more reliable connection and works indoors.
The S20 Ultra and S20 Plus combine these two technologies, which futureproofs your access to 5G. The main advantage in terms of 5G that see from the S20 Ultra is the 5,000mAh battery, versus the 4,500mAh battery in the S20 Plus, as 5G hogs battery life.
The rest of the internal specs are all top-of-the-line: a 7nm chipset (Qualcommβs Snapdragon 865 in the US or Samsungβs Exynos 990 in the UK and Europe), 12GB or 16GB or RAM, 128GB or 512GB of internal storage, and a microSD card slot for expandable storage.
Samsungβs βSuper Fastβ charging returns on the S20 Ultra, up to 45W with an optional charger and 25W with the charger included in the box. That mirrors what we saw on the Galaxy Note 10 Plus, as does the Ultraβs fast wireless charging prowess of up to 15W.
We did dive into Samsungβs One UI 2.0 software long enough to find Google Duo integrated directly into the dialer app. Youβll be able to make Full HD video calls and chat with up to eight people. Weβll continue to explore Samsungβs reskinned Android 10 interface when we get the phone back in for our full review.
Early verdict
Youβre going to see a lot of reviewers chastise the S20 Ultra for being big, heavy and expensive β and it is all of those things. But Samsung has also designed the Ultra to be an absolute powerhouse, without compromise β and itβs shaping up to be just that.
So hereβs some wise advice: you shouldnβt buy the Galaxy S20 Ultra if itβs too big for your hand or you canβt afford it, and that may be true for most people. However, itβs nice to see a phone that doesnβt hold back.
Samsung is offering something new that pushes the boundaries of smartphone camera and connectivity technology like weβve never seen before. Weβre eager to test out the 108MP camera to see how big of a difference it makes, and burn through gobs of data on 5G using both mmWave and sub-6-capable networks.
This is poised to be the superior smartphone of early 2020, at least when it comes to our technical (not value) rankings.
Ref: https://www.techradar.com/uk/reviews/samsung-galaxy-s20-ultra
In a completely sane world, madness is the only freedom (J.G.Ballard).
You need to login in order to vote
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.