Smartphone

Samsung Galaxy Note 20 Ultra - FULL Review (after 2 months of use)

I’ve been using the Samsung Galaxy Note 20 Ultra for almost two months now and during this time, I’ve tested it to its fullest and now I am finally ready to give you guys the full, in-depth ZONEofTECH Review.

As you probably know, I test my devices for about a month, sometimes even more, before publishing our Review. So, even-though we’re never the first, we do try to make our Reviews as comprehensive as possible.

Therefore, this Review contains nine different sections:

  • Lineup 

  • Design

  • Display

  • Camera

  • Performance

  • Special Features

  • Software

  • Battery Life

  • Value

Spoiler alert, the Note 20 Ultra is literally the highest-end, non-foldable Smartphone that you can buy right now, but it does have some issues. Get all those snacks ready, drinks as well, sit back and relax as this is going to be quite the Review. 


Line-up

Starting off with the line-up and just like last year, where Samsung had two models of the Galaxy Note (the Note 10 & the Note 10+), Samsung now has the Note 20 and the Note 20 Ultra, with the ‘Ultra’ being the new ‘Plus’. This year, there are far more differences between the two models than in 2019.

Not quite iPhone 12 levels of barebones, but the box contents have been slimmed down.

Not quite iPhone 12 levels of barebones, but the box contents have been slimmed down.

The regular Note 20 comes with a 1080p Display with a 60Hz Refresh Rate, an inferior Camera, a higher latency for the S-Pen and, more importantly, it comes with a Plastic back. All this for $1,000. It is pretty safe to say, do not buy the Note 20. I feel like the only reason why that Phone exists, is to push consumers to buy the Note 20 Ultra, which offers so much more, for $300 more. 

Unfortunately, this year, Samsung has cut down on the stuff you get inside the box by quite a lot. Even with the Note 20 Ultra, there are no S-Pen tips in the box anymore, which I find quite odd. There are also no Headphones if you live in the US. You do still get headphones everywhere else though.  You don’t get the case in Europe and the US, but you do actually get it in some other regions. Definitely keep this in mind, that Samsung is offering different things for different versions of this Phone, as it will be a recurring theme throughout the Review.


Design

Design wise, I was a massive fan of the Note 10+ from last year. That squared-off look and those sharp corners made it, in my eyes, the most beautiful Phone ever made. The Note 20 Ultra is even better now.

Gone is that super shiny and finger-printy Glass on the back and instead we get a Frosted Glass back, just like the iPhone 11 Pro’s, the Pixel 4, the OnePlus Phones and some others as well. The Samsung text on the back is engraved and it has a different texture than the rest of the Phone. For some reason, there is actually an engraved PO Number on the back of the Phone, which is quite interesting and funny at the same time.  Unfortunately, we only get this Frosted Glass back on the Mystic Bronze colour. If you get the Black or the White one, they still come with regular Glass, which is a bummer for me as those would have been my personal colour choices. 

Samsung has changed the position of the S-Pen, it is now on the left rather than on the right-hand side, which is quite inconvenient if you’re right handed so I’m actually not a fan of this at all. What I am a massive fan of though, is having both the Power and the Volume Buttons on the right-hand side. This way you avoid taking accidental screenshots, like you do on the iPhone, I can’t believe they still haven’t fixed that. 

Not that it was small to begin with, but the Display size has increased.

Not that it was small to begin with, but the Display size has increased.

Aside from the texture on the back of the Mystic Bronze unit, Samsung has also updated the Camera Module’s Design. We get a similar style to what the S20 Ultra came with, more about the Camera once we get to that section, but now we also get these beautiful metal rings that surround the Modules which also match the colour of the Phone. Something else that I like about this Camera Module, which is just humongous in terms of both the size and the thickness, is that I can actually rest my finger underneath it and kinda use it as a pop-socket. This makes the entire Phone much more comfortable and easier to use. I’m not sure if this was intended by Samsung or not, but it is definitely a welcome ‘feature’.

Now, I have to say, if you’re not into big Phones, then this is not the Phone for you by any means. With a massive 6.9” Display, up from the already big 6.8” Panel of the Note 10+ from last year, a 0.2mm increase in thickness as well as a 12g increase in weight, the Note 20 Ultra is noticeably bulkier than the Note 10+. This is without me even taking that super thick Camera Module into consideration. Speaking of that Module, the Note 20 Ultra now wobbles on the table like crazy, because of it. So, if you’re the kind of person that uses their Phone flat on the table a lot, you still can on the Note 20 Ultra, it’s just that it is going to be super frustrating because of that wobble. 

Also, when you compare the Note 20 Ultra against some of the other big Smartphones on the market, such as the iPhone 11 Pro Max, the S20 Ultra and the Huawei P40 Pro, the Note 20 Ultra is still the big boy here. Also, whilst I am indeed a big fan of the squared-off form factor, it did end up hurting my palms after using it.

Overall, I do think that this is the most beautiful Phone on the market right now. Both from the front, with that full screen Bezel-less Display, as well as from the back, with that new Frosted Glass look. 

My only complaints Design wise are, firstly, the fact that the Frosted Glass look can only be found on the Mystic Bronze colour and also, with it so big and having those squared-off edges, it is honestly the most uncomfortable Phone I’ve ever held in my hands.


Display

So, what about the actual Display? Well, just like with the Design, I do consider this to be the most impressive Display on any Smartphone at the moment. Not only is it larger now, but it is also taller, meaning that it can display more vertical content as well as being brighter. Samsung claims that it can go up to 1,500 Nits of peak Brightness, as opposed to about 1,250 Nits on the Note 10+.

We’ve used our professional XRite Display calibration & measure tool, measuring a peak Brightness on a 100% White Window of 977 compared to 530 on the Note 10+, or 780 on the iPhone 11 Pro Max. This is similar to what you would get outdoors, when browsing a website, as those do usually have a white background. DisplayMatte measured this Display up to 1,609 Nits of Brightness on a 10% White Window. Outdoors, I haven’t really been able to notice that much of an improvement over my iPhone 11 Pro Max. The Note 20 Ultra was perfectly visible outdoors though, even in direct sunlight, but it wasn’t noticeably brighter over any of the previous Phones that I’ve used before, at least not to my eyes.

The Note 20 Ultra, same as the Galaxy S20 series, now has a 120Hz Refresh Rate. As with the S20 series, you have to turn down the Resolution to 1080p if you want to use 120Hz. It still cannot do full Resolution at 120Hz, like the OnePlus 8 Pro (and many other Smartphones) can, which is a bit of a bummer. The good news however, is that I wasn’t able to see that much of a downgrade in Sharpness when using this in 1080p mode. Text is indeed a bit blurrier but not by as much as I was expecting.

The Z Fold 2 is the only other Smartphone to have this quality of Display.

The Z Fold 2 is the only other Smartphone to have this quality of Display.

Something new with the Note 20 Ultra, is the LTPO Panel, making this and the Galaxy Z Fold 2 the only two Smartphones out right now that come with a 120Hz OLED LTPO Display. What this means is that the Note 20 Ultra can dynamically adjust its Refresh Rate from 1Hz, all the way up to 120Hz, based on the content that you’re watching, which does help preserve the Battery.

I also love how the Display is still curved here too. I know that some people prefer having a flat Display, like we got on the regular Note 20 or the S20 Ultra, but personally I really do like the way this Display looks. Also, I haven’t really had any accidental touch rejection issues with the Note 20 Ultra, maybe just a few when watching videos on YouTube, but nothing major. Let me know in the comments if you prefer having a flat or a curved Display.

The colours on this are absolutely outstanding. The fact that we get an even higher brightness really shows the most when you’re playing back HDR content, HDR video on this simply looks breath-taking. Overall, I would very confidently say that this is the best screen on any Smartphone out right now. It’s very bright, colours are incredible and the viewing angles are superb on this. HDR content is noticeably better than the same content being played back on the iPhone 11 Pro Max or even the S20 Ultra from just a few months ago.

Now, something that this Display comes with, is Gorilla Glass 7, aka Gorilla Glass Victus. This provides up to a 2m drop resistance, up from 1.6m, as well as double the scratch resistance of Gorilla Glass 6. It’s not perfect, it’s not scratch-proof, but it is a noticeable improvement over anything that I’ve used in the past. My only complaint regarding the Display is the fact that we still don’t have 120Hz at Native Resolution. Other than that, this is the best Display that I’ve seen on a Phone. 


Camera

So, what about the Camera? Well, buckle up because I have a lot to say here.

The Camera on the Note 20 Ultra is mostly identical to the one on the S20 Ultra, and that’s a good thing, right? If you’re aware of the S20 Ultra, you’re probably also aware of the very negative Reviews that this Phone received. There were two reasons for why that was. Firstly, the price. At a starting price of $1,400 and with promises such as a 108MP Resolution camera, 100X Space Zoom, 8K Video Recording and more, this Phone seemed like it was going to be the god of all Phones. Especially the Camera. Unfortunately, it had a lot of issues, with the main one being the Camera.

That 108MP Module was very poor in Low Light, it had focusing issues, 100x Space Zoom was basically unusable at 100x Zoom as everything looked like water-paint and 8K Video Recording was nice, but it was choppy. Not even to mention the pretty serious HDR Processing issues that it had to the point here the Galaxy Note 10 and S10 from a year prior, actually had a better Dynamic Range with many other Reviewers complaining about this too. 

With all of this, you would expect Samsung to just completely revamp the Camera in the Note 20 Ultra, but it turns out, this is mostly the exact same Camera that the S20 Ultra had. Luckily though, Samsung has actually fixed most of the issues this time. The Main Module is literally the exact same 108MP Sensor that we got with the S20 Ultra. Night Mode has been significantly improved, even photos of the Moon have a gigantic improvement from where the S20 Ultra was, at launch. Even when it comes to Low Light video, the Note 20 Ultra does indeed look better than the S20 Ultra did, 8K Video Recording is about the same, it’s sharp but still choppy, so I wouldn’t really be using this myself. 

There are a lot of similarities to the S20 Camera, but it’s not all bad news.

There are a lot of similarities to the S20 Camera, but it’s not all bad news.

HDR Processing has also been significantly improved. The Dynamic Range still isn’t as good as on the iPhone 11 Pro Max or the Pixel 4 XL, but it is a major improvement over the S20 Ultra. My main issue was really that Dynamic Range, so I’m glad to see that this has gotten a big improvement over the S20 Ultra’s Processing. 

Something that I also absolutely love about this 108MP Main Module is that you get a natural Depth of Field, pretty much Portrait Mode but fully done through hardware, rather than through software. Photos taken on this Phone literally look like photos taken on a DSLR or Mirrorless Camera, they’re that good. You can also take photos in 108MP Resolution, which results in some insanely sharp photos. 

Unfortunately, the CPU isn’t fast enough to process the 108MP photos that quick and also do all the machine learning required to make them look better. So, you’ll notice that all the 108MP photos will lack that HDR Processing all together, the shadows will often be crushed and the highlights overexposed. The regular 12MP photos, which are actually using an 8:1 Pixel Binning method to combine eight pixels into one, don’t have this issue.

Another issue that the S20 Ultra had, was Focusing. That massive 108MP Sensor lacks the Dual Pixel Autofocus that made Samsung Phones the fastest on the market, in terms of Focusing, since the Galaxy S7 from 2016. We still don’t have Dual Pixel Autofocus now, but Samsung has indeed added a Laser Module for Focusing that has fixed most of the Focusing issues. The only time when it still struggles to Focus, is when you zoom in as the Laser would not be able to be used if you’re that far away from the subject. But it does work pretty well for anything that’s around 2-5m away from you. Overall, definitely a noticeable improvement in Focusing Speed, over the S20 Ultra. 

When it comes to the Telephoto Module, this one sees the biggest changes from the S20 Ultra Module. Resolution wise, this used to be a 48MP Module, but it is now a 12MP Module, meaning that it is much better in Low Light. But you do lose a lot of that Digital Zoom capability. Optically, the S20 Ultra had a 4x Zoom Module, while the Note 20 Ultra now has a 5x. What this means is that photos taken at 5x Zoom, and even at 10x, should actually look sharper than on the S20 Ultra. 

However, the S20 Ultra seemed to consistently take better zoom photos, which I was not expecting. My only guess is that maybe that 48MP Resolution on the S20 Ultra’s Telephoto Module actually matters more than the 1x increase in the Optical Zoom that the Note 20 Ultra brought to the table. 

Interestingly enough, Samsung has actually removed the 100x Zoom capability from the Note 20 Ultra, so the highest you can do now is 50x. I almost never used the 50x Zoom, at least not for photos as they’re not usable at that zoom level. But, I did use them once to see what some food vans had on their menu from my flat, which I couldn’t see with my naked eye. This is a much better use case for that 50x Zoom, being able to read signs from far away. 

The Front Camera is unchanged from the Note 10+ from last year, but it can do 4K60.

The Front Camera is unchanged from the Note 10+ from last year, but it can do 4K60.

Finally, the third Module on the back is the Ultra Wide Angle Module, which is identical to the one on the S20 Ultra. It’s 12MP in Resolution, with an f/2.2 Aperture Lens. Combined with the new and improved Image Processing, we get the most impressive Ultra-Wide Angle shots that I’ve ever seen on a Phone, even more impressive than on the iPhone 11 Pro Max. Aside from this, I absolutely love the fact that you can take Night Mode shots using any of the Lenses. 

Samsung has now added a Pro Video Mode, which is amazing for Mobile Video Shooters, but you can only use it with the Main Module and not the Telephoto or the Ultra-Wide for whatever reason. The same thing applies to the Pro Photo Mode.

That’s a big issue for me and then another big issue is that you cannot record 4K60 Video from any of the other Modules, you can only do 4K60 from the Main Module on the back. What’s worse is that not only can you not switch between Lenses when shooting Video, but even when you’re not recording, if you want to see all three Lens options, you need to go into the Camera Settings and drop the FPS to 30. Samsung, please just release an update where we can still see all three Modules and if we select the Ultra-Wide or the Telephoto, the Frame Rate gets automatically capped to 30. I hate having to go into the Settings.

As long as I have to disable 4K60 for all but one of the three Lenses on this Phone, I cannot call this a 4K60 device. I ended up just leaving it set to 4K30, which is of course not ideal. 

The Front Camera is good, it has too dropped in Resolution to a 10MP Sensor, the same Module as on the Note 10+ from last year as opposed to the 40MP Module that the S20 Ultra got. The Front Camera Cut-out is now smaller than on the Note 10+, so I do really like that. Selfies are still sharp, very well exposed and HDR Processing on the front is surprisingly well done. Additionally, the Front Camera can actually do 4K60. 

Overall, the Main Camera Module is very good, only suffering from some occasional Dynamic Range issues, but nothing as severe as what the S20 Ultra had. The Zoom Module is the best I’ve seen on any Smartphone so far and the same goes for the Ultra-Wide Angle Module. My only major complaints here are not being able to use the Pro Modes on any of the non-Main Lenses and not being able to do 4K60 Video on all the Lenses on the back. Oh, and 8K Video Recording is still a gimmick, as it’s still capped at 24FPS.


Performance

Moving on to the Performance, this is where I have some pretty unfortunate news. As you may be aware, there are different configurations of this Phone, which depend on which region you’re in. 

Some units come with the Exynos 990 Processor, mainly the ones made for the International market, while some units come with the much better Snapdragon 865+ Processor. This not only gives you 20% better Performance, which is a very gigantic difference, but it also runs cooler while giving you a better Battery Life. That’s absolutely nuts! 

The drop in Frames between the two models (credit: XEETECHCARE)

The drop in Frames between the two models (credit: XEETECHCARE)

Even with the S20 line, there was a lot of backlash from consumers on the fact that the Exynos 990 models were slower, ran hotter and had a worse Battery Life than the Snapdragon 865 models. But now with the Note 20 Ultra, Samsung has bridged that gap even more by including the even more powerful Snapdragon 865+ variant in the US variants, while keeping the international models with the same Exynos 990. Not only that, but JerryRigEverything and iFixIt have both found that Samsung even uses two different cooling systems in the Note 20 Ultra’s, some copper based and others Graphite based. Probably the worst part is that in some regions, like India or Pakistan, you actually get less RAM (8GB compared to 12GB), while in the US you only get 128GB of base Storage, as opposed to 256GB like you get everywhere else. Long story short, it’s a mess!

The Note 20 Ultra is the Frankenstein of all Phones and depending on where you buy itfrom, you’ll end up with some very different components, some of which are inferior. Our model is the Exynos 990 version, with 12GB of RAM and 256GB of Storage. Personally, I haven’t really had any Performance issues on this, it’s been running perfectly smooth, but what I have indeed had issues with, was overheating.

On a number of occasions, I’ve found that my Note 20 Ultra was running so hot that I could barely even hold it in my hand. At one point, it was just sitting in my hiking back, I took it out and because it was constantly searching for a signal, it got so hot that I had to literally put it back in my backpack as I couldn’t even have it in my jeans pocket. This overheating, combined with the already weaker Performance of the Exynos 990, results in games getting up to 20FPS less on the Exynos variants, when compared to the Snapdragon 865+ model.

Luckily, I’m not a big gamer myself, but it is very frustrating knowing that you can get an inferior Note 20 Ultra depending on the region that you’re based in, while not necessarily paying less for it.


Special Features

Moving on to Special Features, the Note 20 Ultra is literally packed to its teeth with features. You cannot get a Phone that’s more equipped than this.

Water Resistance, Wireless Charging, Reverse Wireless Charging, 5G and a Haptic Engine that now seems even better than the one on the Note 10+ from last year, resulting in one of the best typing experiences on a Smartphone. It also has some great, powerful Speakers. The Note 20 Ultra offers basically anything that you can think of.

The S-Pen is a major selling point for the Note 20 Ultra

The S-Pen is a major selling point for the Note 20 Ultra

But the main reason why you would want to get a Note over a standard Galaxy S Phone, or any other Phone for that matter, is the S-Pen. Samsung offers the best stylus experience on a Phone and the Note 20 Ultra is now even better than the Note 10+. The latency is now lower, at just 9ms down from 45ms, so everything feels incredibly smooth and pretty much just like writing on a piece of paper. There’s also a predictive algorithm now to make things even smoother, but I have noticed that sometimes it does indeed make the line jump, so I do think that it needs a bit more tweaking. There are a few new air gestures that the S-Pen supports now, allowing you to go back, go home and open up the multi-tasking menu just by using the S-Pen in the air, which is pretty cool.

I’m not a big hand-written notes taker myself, but where I have found myself using the S-Pen a lot was when using Photoshop or Lightroom. Being able to just use it as a brush or even as a small pointer to adjust the tools and brush size was absolutely amazing. However, because of that massive Camera Module, you cannot really use the S-Pen while the Note is flat on the table because of how much it will wobble, which I think is a massive downgrade to the S-Pen experience overall.

But something that is actually a big upgrade, is in terms of DeX. DeX being this Desktop UI that Samsung Phones will boot in once you connect them to an External Monitor. It’s an extremely underrated feature. Now, the Note 20 Ultra supports Wireless Dex, meaning that if you have a TV that supports the latest version of MiraCast, you can cast directly to your TV and then use your Samsung Phone as a Trackpad and Keyboard. You could also hook up external peripherals and kinda use this as your Desktop replacement to some extent.

You can run the Desktop version of Chrome as well as Microsoft Office so for some people, DeX can indeed replace their Computer. You can also open up all of your Android Apps in windowed and full-screen. I am a big fan of DeX, even though I don’t personally use it as much. 


Software

When it comes to the Software Experience, the Note 20 Ultra runs on Android 10, with Samsung’s OneUI 2.5 Skin. I have to say, TouchWiz from back in the Galaxy S4 and S5 era was the most infamous Skin on any Android Phone, it was slow and laggy. OneUI 2.5 is for me at least, the best Skin on any Smartphone right now.

This is one of the best skins we’ve seen on any Android Phone.

This is one of the best skins we’ve seen on any Android Phone.

It’s very fast, very fluid. The design is great and the reason why it is called OneUI is because you can use it with one hand, to some extent at least. My favourite part about OneUI is that you can have App Folders in the App Drawer too. This way, you can have a very minimalist Home-Screen while also having App Folders easily accessible for when you need them.

Also, Samsung allows you to run three Apps at the same time, with one being a picture-in-picture overlay, which makes this Phone, in combination with the S-Pen, one of the best Smartphones for productivity work. You can lock Apps in memory, you can have YouTube Player in the background in a tiny pop-up window if you have YouTube Premium, it’s just so good.

But…it’s not perfect. It does have some occasional Frame Rate drops when it comes to animations and I’m not a fan of the way Notifications are displayed at all. Some end up being in non-chronological order. In my case, where I get hundreds of Notifications per day, which I cannot really disable, it ends up being a complete mess and really difficult finding what I’m looking for. 


Battery Life

Battery Life is not a strong point for the Note 2 Ultra

Battery Life is not a strong point for the Note 2 Ultra

The Note 20 Ultra come with a 4500mAh Battery, this is 500mAh less than the S20 Ultra came with. But, we do have that LTPO Display, which does indeed save some Battery Life. From my usage, it was just about the same as on the S20 Ultra. But that doesn’t mean it was great.

I was getting about 3-4 hours of screen-on time, which was pretty bad, even after multiple weeks of use. On my Fold 2 for example, I’m easily getting around eight hours or so. I do have the Exynos variant and have heard that the Snapdragon variant isn’t quite as bad, but the Exynos variant is just not as good as it should be. Luckily, we still have Fast Charging but this has now dropped to 25W from 45W, like we had on the S20 Ultra. The good news is that it still charges to around 50% in just 30 minutes, so I don’t have any complaints in terms of that. 


Value

So in the end, is the Note 20 Ultra actually worth it? Well, I can confidently say that if you’re looking for a non-foldable Smartphone, this is the best one that you can buy. You get an outstanding Display, an incredible Design, great Cameras and all the features that you can think of. 

But, you will have to pay for all of that. At a starting price of $1,300 or £1,180, the Note 20 Ultra costs as much as a pretty good Laptop and it isn’t that far off from the Galaxy Z Flip, which costs £1,300. You can even find the original Galaxy Fold for about £600-£800 or so, on eBay.

At that point you’ll have to decide. Do you want the ultimate standard Smartphone experience or do you pay a bit more and get into the Foldable Smartphone market? If you do decide to go for the Note 20 Ultra, try to get the Snapdragon 865+ variant as you’ll get a better Battery Life, more Performance, a better Gaming experience as well as a cooler device.

Note 20 Ultra & Galaxy Buds Live – Some Unexpected Findings!

The Samsung Galaxy Note 20 Ultra is finally here. It is Samsung’s highest-end Smartphone for 2020. They do have the Fold 2 as well, but the Camera system is said to be inferior to the one on the Note 20 Ultra and it won’t have an S-Pen, so as a whole package, the Note 20 Ultra is the most equipped Samsung phone of 2020.

Samsung has sent both the Note 20 Ultra and the Buds Live in some really nice packaging, so massive thanks to Samsung for that. I’ll talk about the Note 20 Ultra first and then I’ll move onto the Galaxy Buds Live as well.  I’ve been using the Note 20 Ultra for over a week now, and the Galaxy Buds Live for about three days, so here’s some of interesting things that I’ve discovered!


Design

If you liked the Design of the Note 10+, you’ll love the Note 20 Ultra.

If you liked the Design of the Note 10+, you’ll love the Note 20 Ultra.

The unit that I have right here is the European model, which comes with the Exynos 990 Processor, but something to point out is that there are no extra S-Pen tips in the box anymore. We do get the Fast Charger, Headphones and the Charging Cable, but nothing else.

Design-wise, I was a massive fan of the Note 10+. That was, in my opinion, the best designed Phone ever…until now. The Note 20 Ultra’s Design is actually even better. First of all, it is just a bit bigger than the Note 10+, the Bezels are about the same size and we still have the curved screen, which I’m honestly a big fan of. I love how it looks and I personally haven’t had any accidental touch issues since the S9, please do keep that curved Display in, Samsung. I also love the new back. 

I’ve been wanting Samsung to add a Frosted Glass back for years now, just like what Google, Apple, OnePlus and many others already have. They’ve finally done it, but only for the Mystic Bronze colour. If you buy the Black or the White colours, those would still be regular Glass. Usually, I’m not a fan of Gold colours on Smartphones, I think they’re just too tacky, but this one’s actually quite nice. It’s a very pale Gold that doesn’t stand out as much. Still, I would’ve loved to see a Black Frosted Glass back on this.

The Camera Module itself is very similar to the S20 Ultra’s Module, I’ll talk more about the Camera in just a bit, but Samsung has actually changed the way it looks. It sticks out even more now, but it’s also sharper, which means that I can almost use it as a pop-socket and hold the Phone from there. Also, I’m big fan of the metallic circles that Samsung has added to the Lenses themselves. 


Display

We do get 120Hz, but not at Native Resolution.

We do get 120Hz, but not at Native Resolution.

With the Display, we do get 120Hz, but this is still stuck at 1080p Resolution. If you want to use this Display at its native 3088x1440 Resolution, you can only use it at 60Hz. This is a bit disappointing as the OnePlus 8 Pro, which costs significantly less, can indeed do 120Hz at Native Resolution. I’m quite disappointed that this still hasn’t been fixed, even though we do have a Dynamically Adjustable Refresh Rate, which can go from 120Hz, all the way down to 1Hz, in order to save Battery Life.

Now, Samsung has made this Display brighter by 25%. I can’t say that I’ve noticed any improvements, but we’ll actually measure the Brightness using our professional display measuring tool and tell you all about that in the Full Review, so definitely subscribe so that you don’t miss out. The Note 20 Ultra also comes with Gorilla Glass Victus. Again, I’ll be testing that more over the next few weeks and let you guys know how it holds up.


Camera

Right, the Camera. We still have the same 108MP Sensor from the S20 Ultra, but Samsung has now added a Laser Focusing Module to help fix some of the focusing issues. I can definitely say that focusing feels faster, but if you zoom in, the Laser won’t be able to reach and it’s still going to be just about as slow as it was on the S20 Ultra. Dual Pixel Autofocus would’ve been great, but unfortunately, this 108MP Sensor does not have it. As long as you don’t zoom in, the Focus is pretty good. 

The Camera is definitely an improvement on the S20 Ultra.

The Camera is definitely an improvement on the S20 Ultra.

Speaking of zooming in, Samsung has now improved the Optical Zoom to 5x, from the 4x we had on the S20 Ultra. However, they have decreased the Digital Zoom Level from 100x, to 50x. I honestly don’t mind that, I think it’s a great change as that 10x Zoom Factor was really the best place to be, on the S20 Ultra anyway, and that’s now even better. Low-Light Performance is actually better now, Samsung has improved their Night Mode considerably since the S20 Ultra came out and I’m impressed. Is it as good as on the Pixel or the iPhone? The full comparison will be in the Full Review.

Something that hasn’t changed though, is the HDR Processing. While the Shadows are not as crushed as they originally were on the S20 Ultra, they’re still darker than what we’re used to, compared to the HDR modes on the iPhone or the Pixel, which makes me think that this is actually a look that Samsung has intentionally decided to go for. The Front-Facing Camera has dropped in Resolution, from the S20 Ultra. It is now the same 10MP Camera that the Note 10+ used, as opposed to a gigantic 40MP Sensor. I don’t mind that. The smaller the Resolution, the bigger the Pixels on the Sensor are and the better the Camera is in Low-Light. 


Performance

Maybe it would have been better to make the UK version better, than to make the US one worse? (Source: Samsung)

Maybe it would have been better to make the UK version better, than to make the US one worse? (Source: Samsung)

Now, when it comes to the Performance, this Phone is fast. That 120Hz Display, Exynos 990 Processor and 12GB of RAM make it feel like one of the fastest Phones I’ve ever used. The OnePlus 8 Pro did feel faster as the animations were simpler and more fluid, but after using it, the Note 20 Ultra definitely feels amazing. Unfortunately, if you live in Europe, you would get the Exynos 990 Processor inside, rather than the Snapdragon 865+ Processor. Whilst this might not matter that much, because you do get a very fast and fluid Phone anyway, it still matters as in the US, you pay as much as in the UK, even less actually, and you get a more powerful Processor. It also gets better Battery Life, which is very unfair for the European customers.

However, Samsung has now limited the US variants of the Note 20 Ultra to 128GB of Storage, while you do get 256GB in the UK, so they have crippled the US version in that regard. Fun fact, the Note 10+ from last year came with 256GB of Storage in all regions. 

Something that I do want to point out is that my Note 20 Ultra overheats pretty heavily after about 5-10 minutes of use, I did a full restore and I’m still having this issue. I’m not sure if it’s still indexing the files, so I’ll keep an eye on this and tell you guys my findings in the Full Review.


Special Features

The Haptic Feedback is as good, if not better, than you’d expect.

The Haptic Feedback is as good, if not better, than you’d expect.

When it comes to Special Features, the S-Pen now features a 9ms Response Time, which definitely shows when compared to the 42ms we previously had. Writing and drawing feels so much more realistic now, I’m a big fan of this. There are also a few new gestures that you can now do with the S-Pen. I’m not really into those myself, as I can control my Phone much quicker by just…touching the actual Display. Unfortunately, Samsung did move the S-Pen to the left, meaning that it’s just a bit tricky to take it out now, since I’m right-handed myself. 

The Haptic Engine feels a bit stronger now, the Note 10+ already had an incredible Haptic Engine, so I do like that. I’m not sure if it’s a new Engine or if it’s literally the same one with a software tweak that makes it feel stronger. Regardless, the Haptics on the Note 20 Ultra have been improved. 


Battery Life

Not a world-beating Battery Life, but you can get the most out of it at 60Hz.

Not a world-beating Battery Life, but you can get the most out of it at 60Hz.

What about the Battery Life? Well, I do have the Exynos model here and it’s been…fine. I was getting about 4-5 hours of screen-on time, which is what Tomi/GadgetsBoy was getting as well. It’s good, but it could’ve been so much better. I’m pretty sure that the Battery is better on the Snapdragon model, just like it was with the S20’s. On the Exynos model, if you do want to improve the Battery Life, your best bet is to drop the Refresh Rate to 60Hz.


Price

Finally, this is a very expensive Phone at $1,300, or £1,180 in the UK, it is one of the most expensive non-folding Phones that you can buy. But, I think that, if you’re looking for the ultimate Smartphone experience, the Note 20 Ultra packs everything that you could wish for and more! 


Galaxy Buds Live

Onto the Galaxy Buds Live. To start off, they are comfortable, but they do take some time getting used to. They’re very different to any other Headphones that I’ve used as they don’t have a stem and they just slide in. Once you get the fitting right, they’re the most comfortable Headphones that I’ve ever used.

Design-wise, these things look like jewellery. In my opinion, they’re the most elegant Earbuds on the market right now. I’m not a fan of the Mystic Bronze ones though, I think they look too tacky and are a bit too much for my taste, but you can indeed grab these in Black and White too, if you wish. 

The Buds Live are some of the best all-round Earbuds you can get.

The Buds Live are some of the best all-round Earbuds you can get.

The Sound Quality is good, not as good as the AirPods Pro, but these are also significantly less expensive than the AirPods Pro. If you need an outstanding sounding pair of Earbuds, with a very good ANC, then get the AirPods Pro or the Sony WF’s, as these are just not as good. But, considering that they cost $170/£180, they’re actually a very good competitor to the original AirPods. Compared to those, the Buds Live simply blow them out of the water. 

The case is incredibly small as well, while still offering a 29 hour Battery Life. So, if you’re looking for Earbuds that don’t seal you in and you can still hear what’s happening around you, these are by far the best choice on the market. Anyway, I feel like I want to talk about these more, so I’ll use them for a few weeks as I’ve only been using them for about three days at this point, and either do the review of the Buds Live in the Review of the Note 20 Ultra, or I’ll do a separate, even more detailed Review in a different video. Which one you would prefer?

Definitely Subscribe & Enable Notifications for both of these In-Depth Reviews  as they’re both going to be insanely detailed and thorough, just as you came to expect from our videos.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 - 30 Things You Didn't Know!

The Samsung Galaxy Fold 2 has now officially been unveiled by Samsung. This is by far the Phone that I’m most excited for this year so, without any further ado, here are 30 things you probably didn’t know about it! 


1) New Hinge Mechanism 

There is a brand new Hinge mechanism that now allows the Fold to stay open at pretty much any angle that you want, just like the Z Flip did. This means that you can actually prop it up and take a selfie or a group photo using the Front, or even the Back-Facing Camera Module. There are over 60 individual components in this new Hinge and Samsung said that they’ve tried over 100 different prototypes and approaches to make this possible. 


2) Video Controls 

Something else that you can do with this, is keep it semi-open and have certain video controls on the bottom screen while you’re watching a video on the top screen. This could easily be updated for Games as well so that you get the controls on the bottom and the Game itself on the top Display. 


3) Personalise the Hinge

Speaking of the Hinge, when you order your Galaxy Fold 2, you can now customise it. This isn’t live on 'samsung.com' just yet, but you will be able to change the colour of the Hinge when you order your Fold 2 through their website. 


4) Dust Protection

The technology in the Hinge has been massively updated in the Z Fold2 (Source: Samsung)

The technology in the Hinge has been massively updated in the Z Fold2 (Source: Samsung)

Something that I was hoping to be improved with the Fold 2, and it finally has, is Dust Protection. Samsung is calling this the most advanced Hinge design ever, even more so than the mechanism that the Z Flip introduced, with the whole structure of the Phone reinforced to make the Fold more durable to drops and dust.

In fact, they even showed ‘JerryRigEverything’s’ dust and dirt test for the original Fold to point out that they’re now using smaller sweepers in the Hinge, similar to the ones used by Dyson Vacuum Cleaners to keep the debris out. 


5) Water Resistance 

Water Resistance is here too, to some extent at least. Even-though Samsung has not confirmed this directly, Max Weinbach says that the Fold 2 has an Anti-Erosion Waterproof Coating on the main internal components of the Motherboard. It’s not waterproof per se, but it will help survive a quick drop in water or possibly even withstand rain, if you get caught in it.


6) No Wireless Earbuds

Unfortunately, if you were a fan of the free Galaxy Buds that came in the box of the Fold 1, Samsung would not be including any free Headphones inside the box of the Fold 2. Personally, I was hoping of some free Galaxy Buds Live this time, but it seems like this won’t be the case. 


7) Free Galaxy Buds Live 

Or is it? Speaking of the Buds Live, if you pre-order a Galaxy Note 20 Ultra, you do get a pair of Galaxy Buds Live for free. Samsung hasn’t said if they will be doing the same thing for the Fold 2, but I would expect them to do so.

If you do get your Fold after the pre-order window has closed, you would not be able to claim the free Galaxy Buds Live anymore. 


8) Premium Box

However, the box that the Fold 2 comes in is still as premium as before. It’s a gigantic box, which makes me think that Samsung has bundled a few things inside, possibly a free case again. The box itself opens in a unique way so the unboxing experience itself is indeed very premium.


9) Thinner 

Now, one of my main complaints with the Fold 1 was that it was quite thick, especially when closed down. Luckily, Samsung has made some massive improvements here.

First, the entire device is thinner when unfolded. It was still pretty thin before at just 6.9mm, but now it is just 6mm when unfolded.

When folded or closed down, Samsung has managed to make the Hinge close flatter, so the gap that was previously quite big is now noticeably smaller, making the device thinner when closed due to both of these improvements. 


10) Heavier 

Unfortunately, there is no way of making so many improvements to a device without increasing its weight. The Fold 2 is now heavier at 279g, compared to the 263g of the Fold 1. 


11) Camera System

This is very similar to what we saw on the S20’s, but it’s hard to complain at that.

This is very similar to what we saw on the S20’s, but it’s hard to complain at that.

Speaking of improvements, I’m a bit disappointed when it comes to the Camera Module. Rather than this being the Note 20 Ultra’s Camera System, it is actually the same Camera Module as on the Galaxy S20, for the most part. We have a Main 12MP, f/1.8 Aperture Module, which is the same exact one as on the S20’s, with larger Pixels and a larger Sensor overall. I’m very happy with this, as that was an incredible Camera.

The second Module is a 12MP, f/2.2 Aperture, Ultra-Wide Angle Module, the same as on the S20’s. However, the Telephoto Module is not quite as good. 


12) No 64MP

On the S20’s, we have a 64MP Telephoto Module with which you can have 30x Digital Zoom. Unfortunately, the Fold 2 only has a 12MP Module, which gives you a 2x Optical Zoom and 10x Digital. 


13) No 8K

Not only that, but because there is no 64MP Module, there is also no 8K Video Recording on the Fold 2. This is something that we’ve had on all the S20’s as well as both Galaxy Note 20’s. 


14) Why No S-Pen?

Now, one of the early rumors was that the Fold 2 will include an S-Pen, this was one of my main requests as well. I’m not a massive user of the S-Pen myself, but I do have to say that having it on a device as big as the Fold 2 would make a lot of sense.  Unfortunately, there is no S-Pen at all.

Samsung did actually make an official statement on this, saying that they engineered the Fold 2 to have its own special qualities that are suited for Foldables, which makes me think that they couldn’t do it as of yet. My initial guess was that they couldn’t do it, as they would need to make the tip of the S-Pen extremely soft in order for it not to damage the Display. But, if it is really soft, it would flex when you press harder and then the plastic body of the S-Pen itself could touch the Display, which would easily damage it. 

It could also be a case where Samsung wanted to make a thinner Fold 2 and they just couldn’t have done that if they had the S-Pen inside.


15) 120Hz 

Now, one of the big improvements that the Fold 2 gets is a 120Hz Refresh Rate Display, which is absolutely nuts on such a massive Display. 

This jump in Refresh Rate is definitely something you’ll notice.

This jump in Refresh Rate is definitely something you’ll notice.

We don’t yet know if the Display will be able to run at Native Resolution whilst also running at 120Hz.The S20’s can only run at 120Hz if you turn down the Resolution to 1080p and the exact same applies to the Note 20’s, including the Note 20 Ultra. Now, the Fold 2 has a much larger Display, it’s pretty much a compact Tablet really, so we definitely do need this Display to run in Native Resolution as even the text on the Galaxy S20 Ultra was a bit blurry when running the Display in 1080p. We don’t know if Samsung will allow us to do this, but the good news is that the Resolution on the Fold 1 was fixed, you couldn’t change it. So, I’m keeping my fingers crossed for a Native Resolution at 120Hz. 


16) One CPU Model

Now, what gives me hope in terms of this, is the fact that the Fold 2 would only come with one CPU model, as opposed to the Galaxy S20’s or even the Note 20’s. These come with either an Exynos 990 Processor, if you buy the International Version of those Phones, or the Snapdragon 865.

The Fold 2, same as the US Version of the Note 20 Ultra, will feature the Snapdragon 865+ Processor. Since there’s no Exynos at all, and the Snapdragon is around 20-30% more powerful, we could see 120Hz at Native Resolution. 


17) Inner 60Hz 

The Inner Display would still be a 60Hz Panel. 


18) Outer Display Improvements

However, this Display has received some massive improvements, with the biggest one being in terms of the size.The Fold 1 had a tiny 4.6” Display with gigantic Bezels that I was almost never using, but this time we have a 6.23” Bezel-less Display with just a single Punch-Hole Camera Cutout, making this Panel fully usable now. 


19) Inner Display Improvements

The Inner Display is now bigger, more fluid and has that Notch is now gone (Source: Samsung).

The Inner Display is now bigger, more fluid and has that Notch is now gone (Source: Samsung).

But, there are also big changes are on the Inner Display. 

Aside from the 120Hz Refresh Rate, this Display is also getting larger from 7.3”, to 7.6”. Not only that, but that massive Notch has been replaced by a single Camera Cutout, just like on the front, and Samsung has also made this Display way more durable. Just like on the Z Flip, Samsung is using UTG (Ultra-Thin Glass). 

So, the Display assembly is now: a Plastic Layer, then the UTG underneath that, then the Display Panel itself and then the UMC (Under-Metal Cushion). All of these make the Display much more durable than ever before. 


20) LTPO

Speaking of the Display, the Inner Display is also an LTPO Panel, meaning that it can dynamically adjust the Refresh Rate based on the content that you’re watching. It can go from 120Hz, all the way down to 60Hz, 30Hz or even 1Hz, in order to improve Battery Life.


21) Battery 

In terms of the Battery, this is now a larger 4500mAh Battery, compared to the 4235mAh that we had on the original Fold. 


22) Faster Charging

Speaking of the Battery, Fast Charging has also been improved with support of up to 25W Charging, compared to the 15W we had on the Fold One. 


23) Storage Dropped

The amount of Storage that you get has been dropped to 256GB from 512GB, which I think that’s fine. But there are rumors that this wasn’t made to decrease the price, but rather to be able to keep the price the same as before. The price itself is not known yet.


24) SD Support

Speaking of Storage, there is no SD Card Support on the Fold 2 and since 256GB is apparently the only capacity that Samsung will be offering, you will be stuck with that amount of Storage. 


25) Fingerprint Reader 

No In-Display Fingerprint Reader, but we do have the next best thing (Source: Samsung).

No In-Display Fingerprint Reader, but we do have the next best thing (Source: Samsung).

Now, in case you’re wondering if we’re getting an In-Display Fingerprint Reader this time, the answer is no. This is still a Side-Mounted Fingerprint Reader. But, Samsung have indeed mounted it onto the Power Button, as opposed to having a Power Button and then a separate Fingerprint Reader Sensor next to it, like they did with the Fold 1. 


26) Frosted Back

Source: Samsung

Source: Samsung

The back of the Fold does indeed have a Frosted Glass texture, but we don’t yet know if this is just on the Gold Model or the Black one as well. The press images seem to show the Black Model as being Frosted as well, while Samsung’s own 3D Viewer on their own website seems to show this as Regular Glass. 


27) New Leather Case

Apparently, there is a new Leather Case that is now made out of a single piece, rather than two pieces, and I believe it stretches over the Hinge rather than leaving it open, like we had with the Fold 1’s Leather Case. 


28) Thom Browne Edition

As with the Z Flip, the Z Fold2 is part of a Limited Edition ‘Thom Browne’ set (Credit: Samsung).

As with the Z Flip, the Z Fold2 is part of a Limited Edition ‘Thom Browne’ set (Credit: Samsung).

Just like the Z Flip, Samsung will be selling a more exclusive Thom Browne version of it, which will be more expensive. But, you also get a Thom Browne Edition Galaxy Watch 3, as well as Thom Browne Galaxy Buds Live, included in that gigantic box. 


29) 2011

Samsung has stated that work on their first Fold started in 2011, which is the same year that Samsung demoed their Flexible Displays at CES 2011 for the very first time. 


30) 5G and Foldables 

Moving forward, Samsung has confirmed that their main focus would be on Foldable devices, as well as 5G, with more more Foldables being released in the future. 


31) Updates for Three Generations

Finally, interestingly enough, Samsung has also confirmed that you would be getting software updates for the next three Generations moving forward, which is an incredible move.

Google Pixel 4a - My First Impressions!

Google sent over their brand new Pixel 4a in what is a pretty soft launch for a Smartphone. If you want to see the live Unboxing, you can check out the video above. For now, we’re going to focus on my First Impressions after spending a day with it. So, let’s get into it.


Design

Design-wise, I absolutely love it. It’s very tiny at 5.8” and is almost identical to an iPhone X, XS or an iPhone 11 Pro and around the same size as the iPhone SE 2020. This is a very small Smartphone, which is easily usable with just one hand. The back is made out of Plastic, so there is no Glass here as this is only a £350 device. We also have a Fingerprint Reader on the back with no In-Display Fingerprint Reader at all. Additionally, I also really love how the Camera Module looks, it’s so tiny and cute. The Pixel 4a just looks like a baby Pixel 4.

A nice inclusion for their target market.

A nice inclusion for their target market.

On the right-hand side we have a coloured Power Button, as well as the Volume Slider. On the top, we have a Microphone and a Headphone Jack, I haven’t seen this in ages! I guess that, because of the lower price, Google assumes that the market that they are targeting this at would not have Wireless Headphones. This is a good option for just giving people more options as you can, of course, still use Wireless Headphones on this if you want. We don’t have anything on the left-hand side and finally on the bottom we have the Speaker, a USB C Charging Port as well as the other Microphone. Speaking of Speakers, we do have Stereo Speakers on this, which is fairly rare to see on low-to-mid range Smartphones. 

Moving on to the Display and like I said before, this is a 5.8” Panel but what I haven’t said is that this is actually an outstanding Panel, especially at this price. It is an OLED Display with a Resolution of 2340x1080 and a PPI of 443. It supports HDR as well as Google’s ‘Now Playing’ feature, which shows you the exact song that’s playing in the background, even when you’re not connected to the internet, which I think is just insane. It is a 60Hz Panel but it does support Always-On functionality. The fact that we have no Notch or thick Bezels, but rather a single small cut-out for the Front Camera, makes this the best looking Pixel Phone that Google has ever released, in my opinion.


Camera

The Pixel 4a can still do 4K60 Video Recording.

The Pixel 4a can still do 4K60 Video Recording.

So what about the Camera? Most of the people that would buy a Pixel Smartphone, would buy it for that amazing Camera. Well, I’m pleased to say that the Camera on the Pixel 4a is identical to the main Camera on the Pixel 4. That means that this is a 12.2MP Sensor with 1.4μm Pixels and an f/1.7 Aperture. The Front Camera is also identical to the one on the Pixel 4, an 8MP Sensor with 1.22μm Pixels and an f/2.0 Aperture. We have 4K Video Recording with the Back-Facing Camera but only at 30 FPS. Again, this is the same as on the Pixel 4.

We even get Optical Image Stabilisation and Dual Pixel Phase Detection Autofocus, which is something that you usually only see on high-end Smartphones. You even get the insane Astrophotography Mode, which is still the best way to take photos of the night sky on any Smartphone. We got this with the Pixel 4 first and now we also have it on the 4a.The Pixel 4 had one of the best Cameras ever, on a Smartphone, and we’re getting that on a Phone that costs £350, which is pretty incredible.


Specs

The Processor is not the fastest, but Google do a great job of optimising what they do have.

The Processor is not the fastest, but Google do a great job of optimising what they do have.

 Then, we come to the Specs? Well, CPU wise, we get the Snapdragon 730G Processor, which from these ‘Geekbench’ results, is significantly less powerful than a Pixel 4’s Snapdragon 855 or not even to mention the iPhone SE”s Apple A13 Chip. But, using the Pixel 4a seems to be just fine. It’s very fast, very responsive, so it looks like Google has done an outstanding job when it comes to optimising the software for this lower-end hardware. The only place where I’ve definitely noticed a Performance downgrade, over the Pixel 4, was when processing photos, but that’s was it. We also get 6GB of LPDDR4X RAM, the same as on the Pixel 4, as well as 128GB of storage, which is again the same as on the Pixel 4. 


Special Features

So what about the Special Features? Is there anything we’re missing out on, from the Pixel 4? Well, we don’t get Wireless Charging or Water Resistance. That 3D Depth Sensing Array on the front is gone and so is the FaceUnlock.The Speakers are a bit worse but other than that, we get most of the features. Even Fast Charging is just as fast as on the Pixel 4, up to 18W, and we do get a Fast Charger bundled in the box, which is great. 

The Haptic Engine on this feels amazing and I’m not talking about a Vibration Motor, I’m literally talking about the Haptic Engine. This is actually a first for a Phone of this price to include. It feels pretty much as good as the one on the Pixel 4, meaning that the typing experience is absolutely incredible.

So, what’s the catch then? Well, it only comes in one size and only in this one single black colour but other than that, this is just an outstanding Smartphone. Now, is it better than the iPhone SE, or the OnePlus Nord or the Samsung A71?

Samsung Galaxy Z Flip – 30 Things You Didn’t Know!

Samsung has now released another foldable phone, right after the Galaxy Fold, and it’s called the Galaxy Z Flip.  We had a chance to go to the Unpacked Event ourselves and use it for a while, so here are 30 Interesting things you probably didn’t know about the Galaxy Z Flip!

We did a similar video & article, covering 40 things you didn’t know about the Galaxy S20’s. So feel free to check those out in case you’re curious about the S20’s, as this article is solely focused on the Z Flip!


1 - Crease 

So, since the Z Flip is a folding phone, albeit a vertical folding one rather than the horizontal style, it will have a crease in the middle. Now, is the crease noticeable? We would say no. We’ve used it for probably around 20-30 minutes at the event and while yes, you can see it from certain angles, we didn’t really notice it until we intentionally looked for it, so nothing to worry about.


2 - UTG

Also, unlike the Galaxy Fold, which just like all the other foldable devices that use plastic screens, such as the Royole Flexpai, the Huawei Mate X and the Moto Razr. The Galaxy Z Flip is the world’s first foldable phone to actually use a glass display.

It’s using Samsung’s brand new UTG (Ultra-Thin Glass) technology. We’re extremely curious to learn how on earth they managed to make this fold. Long story short, Corning did this, not Samsung. Samsung’s simply using Corning’s Flexible Gorilla Glass but regardless, this results in a much more durable screen, compared to the plastic display that you could literally destroy by just pressing a bit harder with your fingernail.


3 - Aspect Ratio

Something pretty awesome that Samsung didn’t really talk that much about, is the aspect ratio of this display. On TV’s and Computer Monitors, we usually have a 16:9 aspect ratio. The S10’s from last year had a 19:9 aspect ratio, a much taller and much more cinematic display.

Screenshot 2020-03-13 at 12.15.19.png

The S20’s from this year have a 20:9 aspect ratio, even taller than the 19:9 on the S10. The Z Flip has a 22:9 (well, 21.9:9 to be more precise) aspect ratio display which is actually the tallest display on any smartphone. This is even taller than the Sony Xperia 1 which had a 21:9 aspect ratio and was known to have an extremely cinematic display.


4 - No High Refresh

Unfortunately, the display on the  Z Flip does not have the high 120Hz refresh rate display that the S20’s get, or even a 90Hz refresh rate. Instead, we get a 60Hz refresh rate panel, same as what the S10’s had last year and similar to what we already have on most other smartphones today.


5 - Resolution

Next up, even though the Z Flip has a pretty large 6.7” display, the same size as the S20+, the Z Flip is actually taller than the S20+ by quite a bit because of that 22:9 aspect ratio. Also, the resolution itself is lower than on the regular S20’s. We have a 2636x1080 resolution vs 3200x1440 on the S20’s. This translates to 425 PPI vs over 500, which is what we get on the S20’s.


6 - Bezels

If you do care about Bezels, the Z Flip has thicker bezels than the S20. It’s essentially this uniform border that surrounds the phone, sort of like the border on the iPhone 11 Pro’s, just with no notch.


7 - microSD

Something pretty interesting is that, unlike all the S20’s which do have a microSD card slot. The Z Flip does not, so you’ll be forever stuck with the base storage.


8 - Storage

Speaking of the storage, we do get 256GB as the baseline on the Z Flip which is pretty good. It’s pretty much double of what we get on the S20’s, which only come with 128GB But like I said before, this storage is fixed and you cannot expand it, whereas you can on the S20’s.

Also, the Z Flip now features the new UFS 3.0 storage, just like the S20’s, which gives you double the read and write speeds, compared to the S10. This translates to just over a 1GB/s read which is pretty insane on a smartphone. 


9 - New Hinge

Now, one of the most important things about a foldable phone, is the hinge. Luckily, Samsung has learned a lot from their Fold and the Z Flip now has their latest hinge design. It features synthetic fibres on the inside to protect it from any dust or dirt getting into the hinge but, my favourite part of it is that you can stop it at different angles. 


10 - Split-Screen 

If you stop at a 90 degree angle, the Z Flip will use this split-screen mode, where certain apps will use the two sections of the display as two separate displays. To give you guys a better idea, you can use this in the camera app and prop it up on a table and take a selfie, which is pretty cool. You can also use it in the gallery app and have a preview window of your photos on the bottom section of the display and the main photos on the top. It’s pretty much just a gimmick but at least they are making some good use of it even when the phone is half folded. Really good job Samsung. 


11 - Secondary Display

On the back of the Z Flip we do have a small secondary display, which is very small actually. It’s a 1.1” AMOLED display, with a resolution of 300x112. It’s mostly there to show you the time and the date.


12 - Selfie Display

However, if you close the Flip down, and press the power button, you can actually use this display as a viewfinder and take a selfie with the main camera module – which is pretty cool! The display is indeed extremely small, so it’s quite hard to position yourself, but at least it’s something. 


13 - VS Razr

How does the Z Flip match up to it’s main competitor?

How does the Z Flip match up to it’s main competitor?

Now, in case you’re wondering how the Z Flip compares to the Motorola Razr, which is really the only other vertically foldable phone on the market right now, the Z Flip is better in almost every single way.

It has much better specs, much better cameras and it has a glass display vs the plastic display on the Razr. The display is bigger, 6.7” vs 6.2”, it has a higher resolution as well, you get 4K60 video recording vs 4k30 on the back. You get 4K30 on the front vs 1080p 30 on the Razr and you get Android 10 vs Android 9 on the Razr. The Razr has a gigantic chin too so the Z Flip is the foldable phone to get, in case you’re looking for one that folds vertically.


14 - Fingerprint

Next up, compared to the S20’s, there are a few areas in which the Z Flip is a downgrade, aside from just the Display. For example, while the S20’s have an in-display fingerprint reader, the Z-Flip does not and instead it uses a fingerprint reader that’s embedded into another button.


15 - No 8K

Also, unlike the S20’s which can all record 8K video, the Z Flip maxes out at 4K30.


16 - S10 Cameras

Speaking of the cameras, the Z Flip actually uses the same exact main camera as the S10 did, from last year. The means a 12MP main module, with 1.4 µm pixels. 


17 - Goodbye Variable Aperture 

Unfortunately, we no longer get that f/1.5-f/2.4 variable aperture lens that the S9 and S10 had. Instead, we now get a fixed f/1.8 aperture, so low light performance on the Z Flip is actually worse than on the S10 from last year. The S20’s all get brand new sensors which larger pixels, but the Z Flip does not.


18 - S20 Wide

But luckily, we at least get the very same 12MP ultra-wide angle module that we have on the S20. 


19 - No Zoom

However, since we only get two camera modules on the back, both with 12MP of resolution, we cannot really get the same level of zoom that we get on the other three S20 models. In fact, we don’t really get any Optical Zoom at all, so even the 2x or 5x “zoom” that we’ll get will be purely digital. 


20 - Front Camera

Also, the front facing camera is very similar to the one on the S10. It’s a 10MP sensor, only with a smaller f/2.4 aperture, down from the f/1.9 aperture that we had on the S10. It’s actually a bit worse than the S10 one, however, the front facing camera cutout is actually smaller than on the S10 and Note 10, so at least that’s a plus.


21 - Water Resistance

In case you’re thinking of taking the Z Flip to the pool, don’t even think about it! That’s because the Z Flip doesn’t have any water resistance whatsoever. So avoid using it in rain as well.


22 - CPU

While the CPU is actually a flag-ship level CPU, unlike the Moto Razr, the Z Flip still uses the Snapdragon 855+ processor. Interesting enough, there is no Exynos version of the Z Flip at all. The 855+ is actually just a slightly overclocked 855 so the CPU performance is very similar to the S10’s from last year. The S20’s all get brand new 2020 processors with the Snapdragon 865 for the US & Canada versions and the Exynos 990 for the international version.


23 - RAM

Another downgrade of the Z Flip over the S20’s is in terms of the RAM. While the S20’s come with 12GB and even 16GB of RAM, on the highest end 512GB version of the S20 Ultra, the Z Flip comes with 8GB of RAM and that is the only option that you can get.


24 - Free Case

Screenshot 2020-03-13 at 12.22.18.png

Back to some positives for a bit, the Z Flip does come with a free case in the box, which is pretty useful considering that cases for foldable phones are definitely not the easiest thing to find.

Credit: Samsung (left)


25 - WiFi

If you recently bought a brand new WiFi 6 router, you’re out of luck because the Z Flip doesn’t actually support WiFi 6, or Wifi 802.11ax like the S20’s and even the S10’s do, so that’s quite strange.


26 - Slow Charging 

Something else that you’re missing out on, is fast charging. The Z Flip supports 15W charging which his still pretty good, but comparing this to the 25W charging that we have on the S20’s or the 45W charging that we have on the Note 10 and the S20 Ultra, you can see that the Z Flip is lacking behind again.


27 - Battery Life

Speaking of the battery, I’m a bit concerned when it comes to the battery life of this phone. It has a massive 6.7” display but the battery size is only 3300mAh, which is actually smaller than the 3400mAh that the regular Galaxy S10, that had a much smaller 6.1” display, had last year. So I’m quite concerned in terms of how long this phone will actually last. 


28 - Goodbye DeX?

We’ve tried finding any notes about DeX support on the Z Flip and we haven’t found a single thing that mentions that DeX is supported on the Z Flip. In fact, even on the S20’s, DeX support isn’t listed anywhere on the Specs sheet. You have to go on the main web-page and it is indeed listed there in the Galaxy Essentials app list. 


29 - Concierge

Now, since the Z Flip is a very expensive phone, and I’ll get to that in my last point, it actually does come with a Premium Support service. It is called the Galaxy Concierge and you get 24/7 customer support, 7 days a week plus 1 year extra of free accidental damage cover. This is something that the Galaxy Fold also features.


30 - Screen Replacement

Also, in case you do need to get your screen replaced, it would cost you £99 in the UK for the Z Flip or £115 for the Galaxy Fold which is crazy low. I wasn’t expecting Samsung to only charge this much, considering that Apple chargers £326 for the iPhone 11 Pro Max’s display replacement, which has a more standard, non foldable display. 


31 - Don’t buy it 

And finally, the last thing that we want to mention is that you really shouldn’t buy the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip. That’s because it’s very expensive. At a price of $1400 or £1300, it costs more than your laptop probably does and it’s still just a smartphone.

In many ways, the S10 from last year is actually a better phone. You get a zoom module as well as a better front facing camera and also a better main camera module, alongside a larger battery. Sure, it doesn’t fold in half but the thing is, this is the only reason why the Z Flip is so expensive. It’s because it folds in half and it’s still a brand new technology that’s very expensive to manufacture. If you took all the folding away, what you would be left with would be a Samsung Galaxy S10e, with a larger 6.7” display and that’s it. 

Sure, if you do have some cash to burn and you just want a cool phone and you don’t really care about having the best specs and the best camera, then go for it. Otherwise, either go for a regular phone or go for the Galaxy Fold as that’s essentially a tablet that folds in half, so it’s actually much more useful than the Z Flip is.

Google Pixel 4 XL - The ZONEofTECH Review!


This is the Google Pixel 4 XL and you see, although the Google Pixel isn’t that popular of a phone, at least not when compared to Samsung, Apple or even OnePlus or Huawei, it’s actually one of the most interesting smartphones on the market right now.

You see, the reason why iPhones are so successful, why the UI is so smooth, why they get day one updates, and why they integrate so well in Apple’s ecosystem is that Apple makes both the hardware and the software. Then on the Android side it’s pretty much impossible for anyone to do that aside from Google because they make Android, and if Google made their own hardware they would be the only direct competitor to Apple’s crown.

And they have been making their own hardware for the past three years now, with their Pixel phones. This is their brand new fourth generation of Pixel phones that just came out in October, and this is my full in-depth review, and I have mixed feelings about this. You’ll see why in just a second!


DESIGN

Ok, so starting off with the design, let’s be honest. Google hasn’t really been the best at designing things.

The Pixel 1 which came in 2016, looked like an iPhone 7 did, but we did have a massive on-screen navigation bar, which actually made the bottom bezel look even bigger so it wasn’t the best looking phone. Then back was equally as bad as we had a dual tone metal and glass back, but it was all dark grey and looked very odd. I was never a fan of the first Pixel’s design.

Then the Pixel 2 came out in 2017, and this was the year when smartphones drastically changed their designs, with the iPhone X and Samsung Galaxy S8, which removed the home button and shrunk down the bezel considerably, in favour of a full-screen display design that we were all wishing for. But rather than doing that, Google gave the Pixel 2 massive bezels again, it was an improvement over the Pixel 1 but still pretty outdated when compared to the competition. However, I did really like the Pixel 2’s Panda look, I think that back was one of the best backs on any smartphone but the front was still outdated.

The design of the Pixel 1 (Left) 2 (Middle) and 3 (Right)

The design of the Pixel 1 (Left) 2 (Middle) and 3 (Right)

When the Pixel 3 then came out in 2018 we had that very deep notch, which was even uglier and deeper than the iPhone’s. But the Pixel 3 didn’t really have any smart tech inside of that notch, aside from a more powerful speaker and a wide angle camera module, which was just a single module. The back was improved again, so now it had a dual tone look, but all of it was glass. The top portion was standard glass, whilst the bottom portion was now frosted glass which had a really nice touch to it. The frame had a ceramic feel even though it was just polished metal, but overall the Pixel 3 had the most amazing back I’ve ever felt on any smartphone. Design wise and feeling wise, from the back at least, the Pixel 3 was just amazing. So things were getting better.

Now we have the Pixel 4, which is pretty much the same recipe as the previous Pixels. From the front it reminds me a lot of the Pixel 2XL from 2017, which wasn’t a bad design by any means, but we’re in 2019 now and phones have very thin bezels, and large and bright displays, but the Pixel 4 still looks like it came out three years ago, from the front at least. When you remember that the Pixel 5 will come out in October of 2020 which will make the Pixel 4 look even worse and even more outdated in the meantime.

So that’s the front, but the back is a completely different story. We now get a much bigger camera module than on the other Pixels, but don’t be fooled because even if this camera module looks extremely similar to the ones on the iPhone, the Pixel 4 only has a dual camera module rather than the triple one that, most other smartphones received in 2019. So Google’s again behind the competition in terms of the number of camera modules, more about that in the camera section of this video.

The Clearly White Pixel 4XL and the Oh So Orange Pixel 4

The Clearly White Pixel 4XL and the Oh So Orange Pixel 4

But I have to say, if the Pixel 3 had the best back on any phone for me, the Pixel 4 is even better! We now have a single smooth piece of glass, so no more dual tone this year, which is a bit unfortunate, but this glass is again frosted glass which feels absolutely amazing. You see, it leaves no fingerprints, yet it still has that glass feel to it. Then the frame of the phone has a matte plastic-like texture to it, but it’s not plastic it’s actually metal. It is hard to describe it, but in a way, it feel like paper. So overall, this is by far the best looking and feeling back I’ve ever seen and felt on a phone. The power button is also made of a different colour, which adds a very nice touch to it.

The Pixel 4 now comes in three colours. We have ‘Just Black’, which I’ve personally never held in my hands or even seen one in person, but that’s the only one that has a glossy back. The others, ‘Clearly White’ and ‘Oh So Orange’ have the same matte texture on the back, and yes, I’m absolutely in love with how the phone looks from the back. It’s got that Nintendo feel and look to it so to say, love it!

DISPLAY

Moving on to the display, the Pixel 4 comes with a 6.3” 3040x1440 resolution OLED display, which is actually pretty good. It’s very sharp at 537 PPI, it’s got a 100% DCI-P3 coverage, so it’s actually very colour accurate.

A colour comparison between the Note 10+ (Left) and Pixel 4XL (Right)

A colour comparison between the Note 10+ (Left) and Pixel 4XL (Right)

Now I do have two complaints regarding this display. The first being that the colours are a bit dull when compared to the Galaxy Note 10+ for example, but that’s more to do with Google’s colour profile than the display itself. Then my second complaint is the brightness of this display. So it’s just over 400 nits which is ok, it’s actually brighter than the OnePlus 7T Pro’s display by a tiny bit, but noticeably dimmer than the Samsung Galaxy S10, Note 10 or the iPhone 11 Pro Max. Now this is not necessarily a big issue, but if you use your phone outdoors a lot in bright sunlight, then this is something to consider.

However, my favourite part about this display is that just like on the OnePlus 7 Pro and 7T’s, we now have a 90Hz refresh rate! The means that everything you do on this phone, the UI, and all the animations are 50% faster and more fluid than on any other phone with a standard 60Hz refresh rate display. Also, after a recent software update, the Pixel 4 is pretty much at 90Hz all the time, compared to just when it had over 60% brightness, like it was when it was released.

Then something else that I really like about the Pixel, is that they’re are pretty much the only phones that come with an Always-On Display, aside from Samsung and some LG phones. For me, being able to see the time and notifications all the time, is a huge plus.

So overall, while the display is pretty good, I would’ve loved to see thinner bezels alongside a slightly brighter display.

 

CAMERA

The camera is an interesting one, because you see, Pixel phones have always been considered as one of the best if not even the best device, for mobile photography.

The Pixel 4, just like the 3 and 2 before it, has an incredible camera, but not as good as I would’ve hoped. You see, firstly the main back camera uses the exact same sensor as on the Pixel 3. It does however have a larger f/1.7 aperture compared to f/1.8 on the Pixel 3, so it does let more light into the sensor, but other than that it’s the same camera from the Pixel 3, which is quite disappointing. I was hoping Google to make some big changes with the Pixel 4’s main camera.

An example of the SuperRes zoom from the Pixels (Source: Slash Gear)

An example of the SuperRes zoom from the Pixels (Source: Slash Gear)

So whilst they haven’t changed the main camera they have added a second module. However, rather than Google adding a wide angle module, like everyone else is doing in 2019, Google decided to finally add a telephoto module, like everyone else was doing in 2017! Now, I’m not implying that Google should be up to date with the latest trends here, no. My point here is that the wide angle module is technically more useful than a telephoto module. You see, whilst you can zoom in digitally, you cannot take a wide angle photo without a wide angle lens. Google even had their SuperRes zoom before, which actually did a very good job, for a digital zoom, even rivalling some high end smartphones that had a dedicated zoom module. But what’s worse is that it’s not even a 5x telephoto module, it’s just a regular 2x optical zoom.

Also, I’m very disappointed with the video on this phone. The Pixel 4 still cannot do 4K60 video recording, which the iPhone added in 2017, again two years ago. All the major smartphones can do 4K60 now, even most of the mid-ranged ones can.

The front camera is good but Google has now removed that wide angle module, meaning that you cannot take group selfies anymore, since the front camera isn’t as wide. However, they have made the regular lens wider than the previous regular one, meaning that you still get an overall wider field of view, which is good! But what’s not good is that the front camera can only shoot 1080p 30fps, which compared to the iPhone 11 Pro’s 4K60 or the Note 10’s 4K30, is just terrible.

An example of the Astrophotography capabilities of the Pixel 4 (Source: Google AI Blog)

An example of the Astrophotography capabilities of the Pixel 4 (Source: Google AI Blog)

Night mode is great, same exact one as we have on the Pixel 3, however I did find the Pixels to add a lot of noise in some of the shots, so overall I actually ended up preferring the iPhone 11 Pro’s night mode and the OnePlus 7T Pro’s night mode, over the Pixel’s. But what Google has added with the Pixel 4, is a brand new Astrophotography mode, which is huge! You can now take photos of the night sky, similar to what you can take with a DSLR camera.

But that’s pretty much it. Aside from the Astrophotography mode, the camera is pretty much the same as before, even a downgrade on the front. I’m genuinely disappointed, and because of those issues I just cannot recommend the Pixel 4’s camera, as the competition offers a much better camera overall, with significantly better video, a significantly better front camera and a wide angle lens on the back.

 

PERFORMANCE

Performance wise, the Pixel 4 is ok. It’s very fast and fluid, I give it that. In our Ultimate Speed test between the Pixel 4 and the Note 10+, the Pixel 4 loaded apps just as fast as the Note, even-though the Pixel 4 has a much slower UFS 2.1 storage, compared to the twice as fast UFS 3.0, like the OnePlus 7T & 7T Pro or the Note 10+.

CPU wise, we don’t get the Snapdragon 855+, just the 855 which is almost a year old at this point. The 865 is now official, so Google’s already a year behind in terms of the CPU. This is down to their weird release cycle, where they release their phones in October, whereas Qualcomm announces a new CPU in December.

RAM wise, we do get a bump to 6GB of RAM from the Pixel 3’s 4GB of RAM, but even that’s still half of the 12GB of RAM that Samsung or OnePlus offer and that definitely shows. RAM management is pretty poor on this phone, it could barely keep any apps open in the background when compared to the Note 10+.

However, we do get day one updates and software support for around three years. The Pixel 1 from 2016 is still fully supported which is great. You cannot really get this level of customer support, unless you go with an iPhone. OnePlus is another great option, but they don’t offer you day one updates, you do have to wait a few weeks or months in order to get those.

SPECIAL FEATURES

Face Unlock is now available on the Pixel 4 XL

Face Unlock is now available on the Pixel 4 XL

Now, when it comes to the Special Features, we do get one that stands out from the competition, and that is FaceUnlock. This is actually the reason for that big forehead, since that’s where all the 3D depth mapping sensors are housed. It’s essentially the same system that Apple uses for FaceID on their iPhone X and newer. But the difference is that Google also added a small Radar chip, which is from their Project Soli, that can detect your movement much more accurately than a camera could. This chip works in conjunction with the FaceUnlock system, in order to make the FaceUnlock process insanely fast. Literally, from the moment you pick up the phone, the Pixel lights up the display and in less than a second, it’s already unlocked. Which is pretty nuts! It’s noticeably faster than the iPhone’s FaceID system but it’s far from perfect. You see, third party app support is non existent at this point, so if you’re thinking of using your face to access your banking apps or anything like that, you cannot do it yet. Another slight issue is that it also works when your eyes are closed, which Google said that they will fix but we just don’t know when that’s going to be.

Now that Soli Radar chip I mentioned also allows you to control your music and interact with the Pixel by using your hand gestures, which is a really cool party trick, but in practice it just doesn’t work. It’s the Samsung Galaxy S4 from 2013 all over again and it just does not work the way it should, and the way maybe Google was hoping it would work. While you can indeed swipe left and right to go back now, it seems like Google forgot about the case where some apps use swipe gestures to bring the Menu up and the new Pixel Gestures are messing up with app menus because of this.

The speakers are no longer front facing, like on the Pixel 3, they do sound good, not as good as on the iPhone 11 Pro Max or the Note 10+, but still pretty good.

Apart from that, we don’t have WiFi 6, or reverse wireless charging, or a microSD card slot, or even more than 128GB of storage, which is the maximum amount that you can get on this phone. In fact Google has even removed some of the features that the Pixel 3 used to come with, such as the unlimited photo and video storage at full resolution for free, with Google Photos. That was one of the key selling features of the Pixel phone and Google removed it! What are you doing Google?

 

BATTERY

So you have probably seen a pattern so far in terms of how I feel about each section of the Pixel 4, and the battery is the same, it’s decent.

It is far from what the competition offers, and that’s because the battery itself is quite small, at just 3700mAh on the XL and 2800mAh on the regular Pixel 4. When you take into account that 90Hz turn on, it’s noticeably worse than on the OnePlus 7T Pro, which wasn’t that great already. So overall the Pixel 4 XL has an ok battery life with a decent fast charge of up to 50% in just 34 minutes, which is right on par with the competition, so there’s that at least.

 

VALUE

So the final question, is the Pixel 4 worth it? Sorry Google, but it’s a no from me.

It costs £830 or $900 which is cheaper than the Note 10+ which costs £1000 ($1100) and the iPhone 11 Pro which costs £1150 ($1150), but if you compare the Pixel 4 to the OnePlus 7T Pro which costs £700 or $550 for the OnePlus 7 Pro in the US there’s no competition, they are much better phones! The 7T Pro for example has better performance with the Snapdragon 855+, up to 12GB of RAM, up to 256GB of Storage, a more modern design, a larger display, a larger battery.

The cameras are worse on the OnePlus but not really by that much, and you can even install the Google Camera apk and get a much more improved camera that way. I was honestly bored with the Pixel, so much so that I just could not use it as my daily driver, because it was a downgrade from my iPhone, my Note and even my OnePlus.

So Google, I’m guessing fifth time’s the charm?

OnePlus 7T Pro Review - The PERFECT Android Phone of 2019!


This is the OnePlus 7T Pro. It’s definitely not the best name in a smartphone, but hey I’ve seen worst. Before I get into this I do want to say that the Samsung Galaxy Note 10+ is the best Android phone of 2019 in terms of the amount of features that you get, there’s absolutely no denying that. We did a full review video after over two months of use. So feel free to check that out here.

But the OnePlus 7T Pro is the best Android Phone of 2019 in terms of value. You get pretty much everything you could ask for in a phone, at a much much lower price than the Galaxy Note 10+.

So without any further adieu, here is my full review covering my final thoughts on the OnePlus 7T Pro!


DESIGN

Ok, so most of you reading this are probably familiar with OnePlus as a company and what their vision stands for. In case you’re not, they’re basically trying to make flagship smartphones at affordable prices.

A design comparison between the OnePlus 7T Pro (Top) and the OnePlus 7 Pro (Bottom)

A design comparison between the OnePlus 7T Pro (Top) and the OnePlus 7 Pro (Bottom)

Now they do have to cut some corners in order to achieve that, which I’ll talk about in this review. To give you one example the OnePlus 7T Pro pretty much takes the crown when it comes to the least amount of changes from the previous generation ever. The OnePlus 7T Pro which came out in October is almost an identical copy of the OnePlus 7 Pro that we got back in May.

But it is still an incredible phone, and that’s because the 7T Pro is still one of the only phones in 2019 that does not have a notch or even a camera cutout at all. We get is a full screen display with zero interruptions for you to watch your content, which is just incredible! 

Now, the screen-bezels, or should I say the frame of the phone, is indeed thicker than on other phones such as the iPhone 11 Pro Max or the Samsung Galaxy Note 10+, but considering that you don’t get any cutouts in the display itself, I’m very happy with this tiny trade-off. The 7T Pro simply looks like a phone that came from the future, 2020 or even 2021, where smartphones are just a full-screen display. It looks incredible and I’m absolutely in love with the design of this phone!

The back is made out of glass, but it does have this frosted glass texture, same as the iPhone 11 Pro’s or the Google Pixel 4, so it’s this very soft glass that doesn’t catch any fingerprints at all. This is therefore another plus for the OnePlus.

The 7T Pro only come in Haze Blue, and then also has a McLaren edition

The 7T Pro only come in Haze Blue, and then also has a McLaren edition

Now, unlike the OnePlus 7 Pro which came in Mirror Grey, Almond & Nebula Blue, the OnePlus 7T Pro only comes in Haze Blue and then there’s also the McLaren Edition which has a more unique look to it on the back, which I do like a lot. However, if you’re looking for just a standard black or even the gold, you’re out of luck. I have to say, I actually do prefer the old Nebula Blue over the 7T’s Haze Blue, since it is a bit darker and feels more mature than the Haze Blue, to me at least.

The sides are made out of polished aluminium so they do look very premium but something that I don’t like about the 7T Pro design wise is just how bulky and big it feels in the hand. You see, at 8.8mm thick the 7T Pro is noticeably thicker than the 7.9mm thick Note 10+ and the 8.1mm iPhone 11 Pro Max. So overall this is a pretty chunky phone. Luckily the sides do curve, so it doesn’t feel that fat, but it does feel thick when holding it in the hand. When you also consider that the display is also quite large, at 6.67”, you can tell that the 7T Pro is definitely not a phone that you can easily use with one hand. 

Finally, even-though the 7 Pro and the 7T Pro basically look identical, aside from the different blue colour, there is one visual identifier and that is the Laser Autofocus is now outside of the camera module rather than inside of it, like it is on the 7 Pro. Also, the ring surrounding the camera module is now shinier and the megapixel count is now gone, but other than that, these phones are identical. 

 

DISPLAY

Moving on to the display and it’s good. Overall I would say that this is the best display on a smartphone but it doesn’t nail that in every single category and you’ll see why in just a second.

The 7T Pro has the exact same display as the 7 Pro did. So that’s a 6.67” Samsung made AMOLED display panel, with a resolution of 3120x1440 which translates to a PPI of 516. It’s a very sharp display, the black levels are perfect, the colours pop. It features a DCI P3 colors gamut with 100% coverage, so if you’re into photo or video editing on the go this is a amazing choice for that. Also, if you’re into consuming media, the 7T Pro does support HDR 10+ content. In addition, since there is no notch or display cutout, I actually crown the OnePlus 7T Pro the best phone for watching and viewing content!

But wait there’s more!

The 7T Pro comes with a 90Hz refresh rate panel, meaning that everything you do on this phone is 50% more fluid than on any other smartphone on the market right now that come with a standard 60Hz panel.

When you put the 7T Pro next to the Note 10+, or even the iPhone 11 Pro Max, you can see how much smoother the animations and UI really are. To see this in the video jump to 6 Minutes and 21 Seconds 

Games can also run at a much higher frame-rate, which they already do on other phones, but you would not be able to see frame-rates higher than 60. Whereas on the OnePlus 7T Pro, you can see up to 90fps.

A brightness comparison between the Note 10+, 11 Pro Max, Pixel 4XL and 7T Pro

A brightness comparison between the Note 10+, 11 Pro Max, Pixel 4XL and 7T Pro

So, the display on the 7T Pro seems like the best display ever on any smartphone and so far. But you see there is one complaint that I have, which might be a big issue for some users, and that is the brightness. We’ve actually used a professional colour and brightness measuring tool and on a pure white full-screen window, the OnePlus 7T Pro only achieved a maximum brightness of 457 nits, which whilst still higher than the Pixel 4 Xl’s 443 nits, it was significantly lower than the 723 nits on the Note 10+ or the 785 nits on the iPhone 11 Pro Max.

CAMERA

This is where the OnePlus 7T Pro gets really interesting, because you see, when I said that OnePlus had to make some trade-offs to keep the price low, the camera is usually the biggest trade-off in pretty much every single OnePlus phone.

But then, the OnePlus 7 Pro came out in May and it was OnePlus’s first premium smartphone, so to say. It had many innovative features from the design, to the popup front camera module, to the 90Hz refresh rate display and it also had a triple lens camera module, which was supposed to be great. But in the end it was only okay. It was better than the OnePlus 7’s camera but still nothing close to an iPhone’s camera, or a Samsung Galaxy S, Note, or even a Google Pixel. It was just a better mid-range camera, that was it.

And the 7T Pro has the exact same camera for the most part that the 7 Pro does. So does this mean that the camera is bad? Well, actually since the 7 Pro launched in May OnePlus has just slammed us with constant updates and improvements to their camera app, to the point where now, in our latest Blind Camera Test between the 7T Pro, the Pixel 4 XL, the iPhone 11 Pro Max and the Samsung Galaxy Note 10+, the OnePlus 7T Pro got 2nd place, after the iPhone 11 Pro Max! I gave it the same score as the Pixel 4 XL and an even higher score than the Samsung Galaxy Note 10+.

In a lot of cases, it had the best night mode out of all 4 phones. Stabilisation was great, HDR was very good. So OnePlus have managed to turn mid-range camera hardware into pretty much a flagship level camera and I’m very surprised. The pop-up front camera module was very good as well, with perfect exposure, a wide viewing angle, and even the low light shots with the front camera were very good and my favourite out of all these 4 phones!

So what’s the catch? Well, the front camera can only do 1080p video at 30fps compared to 4K30 on the S10 and Note 10, or even 4K60 on the iPhone 11 Pro Max. Also the wide-angle lens isn’t as wide as on the iPhone or the Note and it’s also fairly soft and pretty bad in low light. But aside from that it’s very good, especially after the recent software updates.

The 7T Pro does have a Macro mode now, which is actually a hardware feature where a mechanism inside the phone adjusts the focus motor to focus up close. You can actually see how much of a difference this makes. If you take a look at the image you can see how sharp the coin is on the 7T compared to all the other phones which don’t have a macro mode. So, that’s pretty awesome and this is something that we didn’t have on the 7 Pro before.

 

PERFORMANCE

If you’re not yet convinced on getting the 7T Pro, this is the section that will definitely convince you. The OnePlus 7T Pro is by far the fastest and most fluid phone that I’ve ever used. Faster than the iPhone 11 Pro Max, faster than the Note 10+, the Pixel 4 or anything else.

But what do I mean by this? Well, spec wise, we get the Snapdragon 855+ processor, which is an overclocked version of the 855 that we got in the 7 Pro a few months before. The GPU is now 15% faster than on the 855 and the CPU is about 5-8% faster, so you should see a few extra frames in games, but nothing major.

But where it gets interesting is when we look at the RAM. You see the OnePlus 7 Pro came in 6GB, 8GB and 12GB of RAM options, however the 7T Pro only comes in 8GB. This is also a reason why the price has actually gone up by quite a bit now. However, if you do get the McLaren edition of the 7T Pro, that’s when you get 12GB of RAM.

But the reason why this phone feels so fast is because of that 90Hz refresh rate display and that UFS 3.0 storage, which neither the S10 or Pixel 4 have. The Note 10+ does have UFS 3.0 but it doesn’t have a 90Hz refresh rate display, same goes for the iPhone which has NVMe flash but no 90Hz. So the 7T Pro just flies through everything and OnePlus also has their Oxygen OS skin which is an extremely light skin. Pretty much stock android with just a few nice modifications, such as the ability to change the background colour of your UI, the accent colour of your buttons, you can re-order the menu buttons as well, and things like that that just give you more customisation options compared to a Pixel 4 for example.

Also OnePlus is the 2nd manufacturer, right after Google in terms of releasing software updates and it’s not that they’re fast with updates but they’re also supporting their devices for a really long time. Take the OnePlus 3 that came out in 2016 for example, that device is still receiving updates from OnePlus, and the OnePlus 5 & 5T which came out in 2017 will both be receiving an update to Android 10 in Q2 2020. 

So yeah great performance, day 1 updates and years of software support. Pretty happy so far! 

 

SPECIAL FEATURES

Like I mentioned at the beginning, the 7T Pro takes the crown when it comes to the least amount of changes from the previous generation ever, but unfortunately that means a lack of special features that make this phone stand out.

The 7T Pro still lacks wireless charging, which is something that all of OnePlus’s competitors have put into their flagships. OnePlus did say that the reason why they didn’t add wireless charging is because it’s not fast enough yet but that’s not strictly correct. The Note 10+ supports up to 15W wireless charging speeds, which is 3 times faster than the stock 5W iPhone charger.

In addition to the lack of wireless charging, there is no official IP water resistance rating or even dust resistance. OnePlus did add a rubber seal to unofficially add water resistance but they haven’t paid for the rating itself. I have seen cases where people submerged their OnePlus 7 Pro in water and it survived but at the same time, I’ve also seen cases where it didn’t. Considering the fact that we have that pop-up camera module now I wouldn’t submerge this in any way!

The 7T Pro follows the trend of other smartphones by no longer having a headphone jack

The 7T Pro follows the trend of other smartphones by no longer having a headphone jack

The headphone jack is also gone now. The speakers are good but not great.

There’s no microSD card slot, no crazy features like an S-Pen or anything like that, so yeah, it doesn’t look that great so far. 

But I do have two very positive things to say here. The first is that the in-display fingerprint reader on the 7T Pro is the fastest in-display fingerprint reader on any phone. It’s crazy fast. Then the second thing is that the 7T Pro has a haptic engine, similar to the one inside the iPhone 11 Pro Max, which brings haptics to the entire UI and it’s one of the best on any android phone, right on par with the Note 10+ and the Pixel 4XL. 

BATTERY LIFE

Now, when it comes to the Battery Life it’s good but not great. The 7T Pro comes with a 4085mAh battery, which is slightly larger than the 4000mAh battery that the 7 Pro had. However, now that we have a large 6.67” display that’s also 90Hz, the battery lasts noticeably less than on the Note 10+, the iPhone 11 Pro Max or even the Samsung Galaxy S10+. 

You can switch to 60Hz refresh rate to improve battery life

You can switch to 60Hz refresh rate to improve battery life

You can indeed switch to 60Hz on the display, which will improve the battery life but considering that 90Hz is one of the main key selling points of this phone I don’t think the trade-off is worth it really.

You do get a 30W charger inside the box, which is 6 times more powerful than what Apple used to ship until the iPhone 11 Pro’s. In our fast charging speed test, the 7T Pro charged to 50% in just 24 minute and up to 100% in just 1 hour and 7 minute. Insanely fast for a 4085mAh battery!

But, like I mentioned in the last section it doesn’t have wireless charging. 

 

VALUE

Now we finally come to value. Is the OnePlus 7T Pro worth it?

Well, the OnePlus One used to cost $300 back in 2014. The 7T Pro now costs £700, or $910 if you convert, because interesting enough it is not available in the US this time around. 

So whilst the 7T Pro is 3 times more expensive than what the first OnePlus phone used to cost, it’s still cheaper than the Note 10+ which costs £1000, and the iPhone 11 Pro Max which costs £1150.

And for the most part, you get the same experience. Just no wireless charging, no official water or dust resistance rating and a slightly worse camera. But considering that you do get faster performance, a full-screen display, a pop-up front camera module which is a great party trick, I do think that the 7T Pro is worth it so much more than any of the competition. The only exception being the non-Pro OnePlus 7T, which actually offers the exact same specs, same exact camera, just a slightly older looking design that still looks great and that starts at £550. So I do think that that phone is actually worth it even more than the 7T Pro is.

The 4 New iPhones for 2020!


The iPhone 11’s are now out, the reviews are in ours included and the iPhone 11 Pro Max that I’ve been using since September has been very good. The battery life has just been outstanding, the camera is great. I really don’t have any complaints at all, aside for the fact that we have the same design as on the 2018 iPhone XS and 2017 iPhone X.

This is the iPhone that we’ll have until September 2020, meaning that for the past 3 years, Apple hasn’t made any design changes to their iPhones at all, at least not from the front.

But the 2020 iPhones will be one of the biggest changes yet and they will feature a brand new design this time, so considering that I haven’t talked about the 2020 iPhones in a while now, here’s everything new you need to know!


The report on CNBC by JPMorgan Analyst, Samik Chatterjee where they predicted four new iPhones (Source: CNBC)

The report on CNBC by JPMorgan Analyst, Samik Chatterjee where they predicted four new iPhones (Source: CNBC)

So the biggest leak in terms of the 2020 iPhone 12 (that’s just what we will call them for now) comes from JPMorgan analyst Samik Chatterjee, who claims based on information from supply chain sources, that Apple will be releasing four new iPhones in 2020, rather than three like they did in 2019 and 2018.

The smallest model would be a 5.4” iPhone, then we would have not one but two 6.1” iPhones and finally a massive 6.7” one. But which models would be the Pro’s? Well, Samik does report that one of the 6.1” models and that 6.7” model would both be Pro’s, while the 5.4” one and the other 6.1” iPhone would be lower entry models.

But then we have reports from Ming-Chi-Kuo, who’s had an outstanding track-record in the past, saying that Apple would only be releasing three iPhones in 2020. There would be one 5.4” model, one 6.1” model instead of two, and 1 6.7”. And the Pro models, according to Ming-Chi-Kuo, would be the 5.4” and the 6.7” variant.

Personally, I do think that the best approach for Apple would be to stick to just three models and offer the smaller and the bigger variants as Pro’s. This way, people who want to the performance and features of the biggest and most expensive iPhone that Apple offers can still get all of that in a much smaller form factor.

But according to pretty much every other report that we’ve seen, all four 2020 iPhones will now come with OLED displays. After so many years, we’ll finally get OLED on the entire lineup. However, the Pro models are still said to have a slightly more superior display, which is very likely to be the Pro-XDR display that Apple introduced with the iPhone 11 Pro’s, while the lower end models will likely have the iPhone XS’s display panel, which is still an OLED just not a bright and the 11 Pro’s display. 

Samik also said that all the four iPhone models in 2020 will support 5G, which has also been confirmed by Nikkei. Qualcomm’s President Cristiano Amon, did say earlier this week at their conference that their number one priority of their Apple relationship is launching their 5G phone as fast as they can. So 5G will definitely be one of the main focuses of the 2020 iPhones. However, it seems like the 5G speeds would not be equal on all these iPhones, Smik did say in his JPMorgan report that the lower end non-Pro iPhones will be limited to sub-6GHz 5G networks, which would not support the mmWave 5G which is the fastest 5G available at the moment. Personally I don’t really see this as an issue at all, since 5G is still very limited to just a few cities and you need to have a 5G phone plan as well. 

The new 0.25mm capacitors being produced by Murata Manufacturing (Source: MacRumors)

The new 0.25mm capacitors being produced by Murata Manufacturing (Source: MacRumors)

Also, speaking of 5G Nikkei reports that Murata Manufacturing, which is already a supplier for Apple, will start mass producing new tiny capacitors that take one fifth of the space of the current capacitors but offer ten times the electrical storage capacity. They’re absolutely tiny, at 0.25mm and by Apple using these capacitors it would allow them to free up some more space inside their iPhones, for those 5G antennas, which would indeed require some extra space.

Ok, what else? Well, Barclays analyst Blayne Curtis reported that he and his associates travelled to Asia recently to meet with manufacturers within Apple's supply chain and based on the information that he received it seems that both the iPhone 12 Pro and the 12 Pro Max will feature 6GB of RAM, up from the 4GB that the iPhone 11 Pro’s had, while the lower end models are still expected to come with 4GB of RAM. This is a bit disappointing because I’ve personally had RAM management issues with the iPhone 11 Pro Max, so that one should have definitely been upgraded to 6GB of RAM and then 8GB in the 2020 iPhones, but it seems like Apple will once again be behind in terms of RAM.

Some Android phones like the Note 10+ come with 12GB of RAM compared to the proposed 6 for the 2020 iPhones

Some Android phones like the Note 10+ come with 12GB of RAM compared to the proposed 6 for the 2020 iPhones

Some Android phones today even have 12GB of RAM and yes, it’s not about the amount of RAM, it’s about how optimised a phone is to deal with that amount of RAM. Like I said, with 4GB of RAM I am having issues with my 11 Pro Max, even after the recent updates. Hopefully 6GB will solve that, but why not give it 8 Apple, just to be safe?

Barclays also reports that the two Pro models of the iPhone 12 will indeed feature a 3D time-of-flight camera. This is something that we’ve seen reported before by Ming-Chi-Kuo, back in July 2019. A TOF camera is essentially two small extra modules that include an IR receiver and an IR transmitter. The IR transmitter will beam a ray of IR light which will reach and object, bounce back and the IR receiver will calculate the distance between the camera and the object, based on the amount of time it takes for the IR light to be reflected back. This will allow the camera to map 3D objects in real time. This is actually how the FaceID camera maps your face as the FaceID camera on the front is already a TOF camera. 

So we’ll pretty much be getting the same thing on the back, which will have a noticeable benefit in AR apps. This means, significantly improved tracking which is already very good, and also the ability to scan objects or even small rooms possibly in 3D. It is likely to be something similar to what the Samsung Galaxy Note 10+ can already do. Mark Gurman from Bloomberg has indeed detailed a road map of Apple’s AR and VR future, saying that they will be releasing a new iPad Pro in the first half of 2020, with this new 3D sensor followed by new high ends iPhones in late 2020 with the exact same cameras. 

Also, speaking of the new iPad Pro 2020, Sony Dickson sent over a model of that upcoming iPad and we’ve even made a separate hands-on video with that, which you can watch here.

Ok, so we’re getting 5G, the camera is getting another module with 3D TOF capabilities, we’re getting more RAM and possibly four rather than just three models. But what changes are we getting design wise?

Well, we’ve had many contradictory reports on this, from all the major sources. Some are saying that Apple will remove the notch entirely, and switch to an In-Display fingerprint reader, some are saying that they will actually use both, and that FaceID will now be included into the top bezel, so no notch, just a thicker bezels surround the phone, and some are saying that we’re still getting FaceID, just with a smaller notch.

The ZONEofTECH Concept for the 2020 iPhone

The ZONEofTECH Concept for the 2020 iPhone

Personally, I don’t see Apple removing FaceID that quick. They’ve spent so much time perfecting it, and we also have Animoji’s and apps that are using the 3D depth tracking capabilities of the FaceID camera on the iPhones. I do believe the reports however, that are pointing towards the notch being made thinner and smaller and that is how we’ve actually modelled our concepts, which I actually think look really good!

Now, the second design change which is something you’ve probably already noticed from our concept, is the frame of these iPhones.

Rather than this being that rounded shape that iPhones have had since the iPhone 6 in 2014, the 2020 iPhones are rumoured to bring back that old iPhone 4 look, with a more square off frame. The iPad Pro 2018 brought this design back, so we’ve actually modelled our concepts based on the iPad Pro 2018’s frame and I’m absolutely in love with how it looks! The iPhone 4 was by far my favourite design of any phone and this seems to top even that. 

And Korean website TheElec, reports that Apple will be using LTPO displays for the 2020 iPhones. The same technology that Apple is now using in the Apple Watch. This will allow to iPhones to have a variable refresh rate, which could go down to even 1Hz, again, just like on the Apple Watch Series 5. This means that the 2020 iPhones could finally be getting an Always-On Display, something that we’ve had on Android phones for many years now and this has been one of my favourite feature ever in a phone. Being able to see the time and your notifications on screen all the time without having to unlock the phone is just amazing! Apple did add wireless charging to the iPhone X and 8, again a feature that was available on Android phones for years, and now there’s finally a very likely possibility that they’ll also add an always on display.

But this display could be more than just what the Apple Watch Series 5’s display is, which can go from 60Hz, to as low as 1Hz. You see, the iPad Pro’s have something that’s a bit better. They have 60Hz panels that can go as high as 120Hz and as low as 24Hz. They’re called a ProMotion display and I believe that this is what Apple would be including in the 2020 iPhones, at least on the Pro’s. Many smartphones today have started including 90Hz refresh rate displays, some even 120Hz, which make the entire UI experience 50-100% more fluid than what we currently have now.  IceUniverse, a very well known leaker at this point, reported that Apple is actually considering a switchable 60/120Hz refresh rate screen, for the 2020 iPhones and that they’re currently in discussion with Samsung and LG for this. 

Apple Patents hinting towards a full-screen fingerprint reader (Source: AppleInsider)

Apple Patents hinting towards a full-screen fingerprint reader (Source: AppleInsider)

And speaking of the display, here’s something interesting. Economic Daily News Taiwan, who do have a good track record, reported that Apple will be holding meetings with Qualcomm to discuss adding an in-display fingerprint reader to at least one of their iPhones. The reason this is interesting is because when we look back at Apple’s patents they show an iPhone using full screen TouchID, which is something that we do not currently have. Now Qualcomm has recently shown us their new generation of In-Display fingerprint reader, which is 17 times larger than the one on the Galaxy S10 and the Note 10. So it’s likely that they’re in talks with Apple, to turn that into possibly a full-screen fingerprint reader.

Then finally a very surprising report from DigiTimes Taiwan which was picked up by MacRumors, claims that Apple is actually considering bundling AirPods inside the box of the 2020 iPhones. Now, I’m a bit skeptical about this report but when the iPhone X came out, I even said in my full review, that for how much it costs, $1000, Apple should definitely bundle AirPods with this phone, but of course that they didn’t and the prices went up even more. With the introduction of the iPhone XS Max and 11 Pro Max and AirPods became even more expensive, with the 2nd gen and the AirPods Pro. So because of that, it seems to me like Apple’s prime motive is again, to make as much profit as possible, so bundling free AirPods inside the box? I just don’t see them doing that.

Now, this DigiTimes report did claim that smartphone vendors, including Samsung and Xiaomi, so not just Apple, are all considering bundling truly wireless headphones in the box of their upcoming phones. And I do see Samsung doing this, I really do. But Apple? I don’t think so. If they do do it, I don’t see them being the first ones on the market to do it. Probably in about two years time but maybe not even then.

THIS is the Samsung Galaxy S11!


The Samsung Galaxy S11 has been leaked and it is going to have that massive Penta camera module on the back which seems to be even bigger than the on the iPhone 11 Pro Max. So without further adieu, these are all the latest Leaks & Rumors on the Samsung Galaxy S11!


The S11 has been leaked quite heavily and we even did a full video and article about two weeks ago, covering everything we knew up until that point. That video and article was split into eight different sections covering everything from; Display, Display, Battery, Special Features, Camera & more. So if you want to get a very detailed look at the S11, do check those out first, since this one is mostly focused on just the more recent leaks.

Recently the biggest leaks have been coming from OnLeaks. OnLeaks has had some pretty outstanding track record in the past, up to the point where if does post a leak or especially a full render, we can probably bet that that’s exactly how that phone will look like, and the S11 is no exception. 

A concept render of the S11e (Source: OnLeaks & Pricebaba)

A concept render of the S11e (Source: OnLeaks & Pricebaba)

On November the 23rd, OnLeaks teamed up with Pricebaba to give us a first look at the Samsung Galaxy S11e, the lowest end model of the S11 lineup. As you can probably tell, the S11e is a gigantic departure from the S10e that we got last year. We no longer get thicker bezels and a flat display, but instead, some very thin bezels and a curved display as well. Then on the line of the display, the size of it got a pretty big bump, from 5.8 inches to 6.2, making the S11e even bigger than the regular Galaxy S10 was last year. The aspect ratio has also been increased to 20:9, from the previous 19:9. This means that it will be noticeably taller than the S10e. In addition, the camera cutout is now in the middle, similar to how it is on the Note 10, rather than to the right like the S10’s had it. We also seem to be getting a triple lens camera module, from the dual lens one that we had before. The Bixby button has been removed, so the only buttons that we now have are the power button and the volume buttons. Now, on the S10e we did have an fingerprint reader built into the power button, rather than the in-display fingerprint reader that the more expensive S10 and S10+ had. But I cannot see any fingerprint reader embedded into the power button, which means that the S11e will very likely get an in-display fingerprint reader. 

Also, I really really love this blue colour from OnLeaks’s render. Considering that it’s in the render itself, it’s very likely that this will indeed be one of the colour options that Samsung will have for the S11e. Personally, I actually think that that is my favourite shade of blue that I’ve ever seen on a smartphone. But of course that is just a render, so that shade of blue will most certainly look a bit different in real life.

So, the S11e looks pretty stunning. If Samsung prices this well, then this will be one of the best selling smartphones of 2020, because it just nails everything so so well.

Now, on November the 22nd, OnLeaks teamed up with another tech website, in this case 91mobiles and showed us the Galaxy S11, which would be the second offering in the S11 lineup. This is actually the one that we based our own concept on, and the S11 does have a few changes from the S11e. 

A concept render of the S11 (Source: OnLeaks & 91Mobiles)

A concept render of the S11 (Source: OnLeaks & 91Mobiles)

First, the bezels do appear to be thinner than on the S11e. Especially if you take a look at the side bezels, there seems to be a very noticeable difference there. In addition, the top and bottom bezels also appear to be a bit thinner than on the S11e. The edges do seem to be a bit more curved on the S11 compared to the S11e. Overall, while I think the S11e still looks amazing, design wise the S11 does have a slightly more modern design. 

Like the S11e we also get a larger display now with the S11. We get a 6.7” panel up from the 6.1” that the S10 came with, so that’s a gigantic increase in the display size. This makes the S11 even bigger than the S10+ was last year and actually the exact same display size as the gigantic S10 5G had. 

But then on the back is where we get the even bigger changes. Rather than three camera modules, we get five modules as the one on the bottom right is actually for the microphone. This means we get a penta camera module, and a microphone, and a flash all in that gigantic camera set up on the back. Personally, I don’t really have a problem with this as long as the camera quality is improved, and the good news is that it will actually be significantly improved! So the main camera module would be upgraded from the S10’s 12MP module to an insane 108MP one! This is Samsung’s latest and greatest smartphone camera sensor, at least in terms of resolution. This new sensor is quite massive not just in terms of the resolution but also in terms of its physical size. Compared to the previous sensor which measured in at 1cm diagonally, this one is 1.91cm, so pretty much double the size which could easily be the reason as to why Samsung has such a gigantic camera module on the back of the S11. But as most of you know, or at least hopefully know, that megapixels don’t means quality. They just mean more resolution so you can zoom in more, that’s it.

Think of a sensor as a chess board, a grid where the size of the board is the size of the sensor and each squares inside are actually the pixels. If you increase the number of pixels, you need to make them smaller, otherwise they won’t fit on the board. But here’s the thing, pixels capture photons or light particles and the larger the pixels are the more photons or light they can capture. Therefore, if you want a sensor to be good in low light you need to have a few mega pixels as possible, otherwise the pixels would be so small that they would barely be able to capture any light and the images would be extremely soft and blurry in low light. This is why high end phones such as the iPhones, the Samsung Galaxy phones, even the Google pixels have always had a 12MP camera, and why mid-range phones from Xiaomi, OnePlus, Oppo added 48MP, 64MP and now even 108MP modules with the Xiaomi Mi Note 10, because just having a larger mega-pixel count does make it sound better which is extremely important to have in the mid-range category, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that it is better.

So I am a bit worried in terms of the low light performance on the S11, considering that the Xiaomi Mi Note 10, which has the exact same 108MP sensor by the way, didn’t really have the best results in low light or even day light. What I mean by this is that if it was slightly cloudy, the results weren’t that great. So I do hope that Samsung optimises this heavily in software.

We’re also getting 8K video recording in up to 30 fps. Yes, 8K video on a phone, we barely even have any professional cameras that can do 8K and Samsung will be the first to support it on a phone! I guess that this is also a way for Samsung to promote and sell their new 8K TV’s now that they also have a phone that can film content for that TV.

Now, so far I’ve only talked about the main module, but we do have a few more modules. So the top and bottom ones would be the zoom and the ultra wide angle modules. The zoom module is actually expected to offer a 10x optical zoom, or lossless zoom, in combination with that 108MP sensor which is pretty impressive. We would then have a digital zoom of up to 50x, so this camera would be very similar to the zoom capabilities that we got with the Huawei P30 Pro. Then we also have two more modules which we don’t yet know what they are for. Some of you might think that they’re TOF, or time-of-flight sensors, similar to what the Note 10+ had, but you’ll see why that’s very likely not the case in just a bit.

So I personally think that one of them is a Macro lens, as quite a lot of mid-range smartphones did include a macro module in 2019, so I do see Samsung including one in the S11 as well and then the second one could be a depth sensor, for improving portrait mode photography with the back facing camera. So that’s what I think, and the reason why I believe that these are not TOF sensors is because OneLeaks also leaked the big S11+.

With the S11+ we get the same design on the front as the regular S11, just with an even larger 6.9” display, making this even bigger than the Note 10+, so this will be a mammoth of a phone.

A concept render of the S11+ (Source: OnLeaks & CashKaro.com)

A concept render of the S11+ (Source: OnLeaks & CashKaro.com)

Then on the back, the camera module itself will be even bigger than on the regular S11 and the camera modules themselves are arranged in a very different way than they are on the S11. We get five main modules, just like on the S11, but then we also get two dots which to me look to be either dual microphones or two TOF sensors. They’re a bit small to be time of flight sensors, but at the same time, there is no cutout in the glass itself for them to be microphones, so they could be either or. Now, when it comes to the front facing camera, this will very likely be upgraded to a 4K 60fps camera so that it matches frame-rate that the iPhone 11 Pro can do, as at the moment the S10 can only do 4K 30fps with the front camera.

The headphone jack will also be removed from the S11’s, just like with the Note 10+. This means that if you want to used wired headphones you would either have to use a dongle, which will probably not come bundled in the box, or you can also use wireless headphones such as the Galaxy Buds 2, which will also be launching alongside the S11. 

Speaking of sound, the top speaker grill is expected to be even thinner than on the Note 10+, which was absolutely minuscule. It was so thin you could barely see it and since the headphone jack is being removed we might be getting dual speakers on the bottom. However, on OnLeaks’s render we only have one speaker grill and one microphone port. In our render, we did add a second speaker grill though. 

Now as a complete 180 on all of that, IceUniverse who’s also a pretty well known leaker at this point, did say that OneLeaks’s rendeers are not 100% correct. He says that the final version will be more beautiful than this so we’ll have to wait and see. OnLeaks has had a very good track record in the past, so my guess is that it will the final design, it’s just that Samsung will be making some more tweaks here and there, until February, shrinking down the camera module a bit for example, or maybe even re-ordering the camera lenses, but the main idea of its design should be very similar to the one we’ve seen.

THIS is the Samsung Galaxy Fold 2!


Samsung is leading the innovation game when it comes to smartphones right now. The Galaxy Fold was one of the most innovative smartphones of the past 10 years, I’d actually go as far as to say that the Galaxy Fold is the most innovative smartphone since the iPhone came out back in 2007.

This is the first actual foldable phone, that came from a major smartphone manufacturer. A phone that’s technically a tablet and then folds in half into something that’s much more portable. Now, yes the Huawei Mate X is in many ways even more innovative but that’s not out just yet, so Samsung Galaxy Fold was and still is one of the most unique phones to ever see the light of day.

In fact, Samsung’s already working on the second generation Fold, the Fold 2 for a release in 2020, so get those snacks ready and here’s everything we know so far, about the Fold 2!


Ok, so the first Galaxy Fold was not a flawless product. It was first teased at Samsung’s Developers Conference, back in November 2018 and back then, we couldn’t really see much.

When it was first shown off, the design of the Fold was hard to determine thanks to the darkened stage

When it was first shown off, the design of the Fold was hard to determine thanks to the darkened stage

All that Samsung showed us was a phone that had a very small outer display that unfolded into a larger tablet. The issue with it was that you couldn’t really see anything in terms of its design, since I believe the Fold was in a case and the scene was made dark on purpose, so that you couldn’t really tell what Samsung’s new innovative phone was.

But this was something that was leaked and rumoured and hyped so much! We even made videos on this back in 2017, on the Foldable Galaxy X, and back then our concepts weren’t that great, but I think we’ve evolved a ton since. 

Anyway, a few months later and in February 2019, the  Fold was officially unveiled by Samsung. Full design, full specs and shortly after, reviewers have gotten their hands on it and they found out that it broke extremely easily. You see, since the display was made out of plastic, any dust or debris that got under the display, killed it off instantly. So Samsung cancelled the release, in order to redesign the Fold and they’ve made a few tweaks, they’ve tested it thoroughly and finally re-released it in September 2019, almost an entire year since the November 2018 tease. 

And the reviews have now been quite positive.  I mean, you could literally kill the display with your fingernail, since the display was still made out of plastic, but at least it now as more difficult for dust and debris to get under the display. This is thanks to that screen-protector layer that a lot of reviewers ended up removing, now being attached under the frame of the phone.

So so far so good, but now we’re in November 2019, just in time for Samsung’s 2019 Developers Conference and they’ve actually released a video titled “A New Form Factor for Foldable Smartphones”. This video is pretty much pointing at the next thing to come after the Galaxy Fold. The video starts with the Galaxy Fold but then they increase the display size and turn it into what looks to be a similar to our Galaxy S11 concept, where we have that very tall 20:9 aspect ratio display and just a central camera cutout. But what’s really interesting about this folding phone is that instead of folding horizontally like the Galaxy Fold does, it actually folds vertically. 

But probably one of the biggest differences is that instead of being a foldable tablet that folds into a phone, this is essentially a regular phone that folds in half, like those old clam shell phones did back in the days of OG cellphones. Now, this is a pretty interesting approach, because I personally find foldable tablets to more way more useful than foldable phones. I mean what would the point of the Fold 2 be, if it’s just a regular smartphone that folds in half? I guess the fact that you can hang up on phone-calls in a really cool way but aside from that, a foldable phone is actually worse from a functional standpoint than a non foldable phone. The reason I say this is because when you fold it in half, whilst you do decrease the height of it by half, but you also increase the thickness of it by two. So rather than having a long thin sheet of metal in your pocket, you would have a short and fat piece of meal and I’m personally not into that. 

However, it seems like there might just be a market for these types of devices.

The new Moto Razr of 2019 (Source: TechRadar)

The new Moto Razr of 2019 (Source: TechRadar)

Do you guys remember the famous Motorola Razr phone? That iconic clam shell smartphone that had a colour display on the back and an extremely thin form factor, for its time at least back in 2005. I never had one myself but I was in middle school back then and one classmate had one and I was always so interested in it, but my parents couldn’t afford buying me one so I never had one. This was back when Motorola was one of the best and most popular cell phone manufacturers. 

Well last week Motorola unveiled the new Moto Razr 2019 which is still a clam shell phone but with a more modern twist to it. So it now has a full-screen display and that’s the one that also folds now, pretty nuts when you realise how far we’ve come since. 

In my opinion, the Moto Razr 2019 is very close to what the Galaxy Fold 2 will look like. It will be a clamshell style foldable phone, rather than a foldable tablet like the Fold 1 was. However I actually do believe that this Fold 2 will not be called Fold 2 and instead something else. The Fold E or something along those lines. The reason for this is mainly because if you look back at Samsung’s teaser video, towards the end, they show both the Galaxy Fold 1 and the unreleased one as well, making me think that it won’t replace the current Fold but rather add onto the lineup.

I do think that this is a great choice! You see, by having two foldable devices, or even more if Samsung decides to expand on the lineup in the future, customers get even more choice at different price-levels as well. We all know that the Galaxy Fold is crazy expensive, at close to £2000 in the UK there’s not many people buying this. However, the Fold E or whatever this new fold will be called, should start at a much more reasonable price. The Moto Razr 2019 would cost $1500, compared to $2000 and even £2000 that the Galaxy Fold 1 costs. Therefore it would make a lot of sense for this Fold E to start from $1500 or so. 

News website, TheBell from South Korea which had some fairly good track record in the past when it comes to unreleased products, reports that the Galaxy Fold 2 is currently in development and uses the code name Bloom and that it will actually be released in April 2020.

And considering that the Fold that Samsung has teased looks pretty much identical to the S11 leaks, this could even be a variant of the S11. The S11 Fold? I think that’s a very plausible scenario, but that’s just my personal prediction but we’ll see if that turns out to be true.

Also the S11 event will be in late February, which will point to a March release for the S11, so April for the Fold E/S11 Fold doesn’t seem that unlikely either. 

Our concept of the Galaxy Fold 2 showing the clam shell hinge idea

Our concept of the Galaxy Fold 2 showing the clam shell hinge idea

Now, we’ve actually made our very own concept of the Galaxy Fold 2, based on all the leaks that we’ve had and even one of Samsung’s patents that does shows a foldable clam shell style smartphone. We’ve based this off of the Galaxy S11+ design, that comes with a gigantic 6.9” display size, with that single camera cutout in the middle. We have new Quad-Camera module on the back, which now adds the brand new 108MP sensor, just like on the S11, and we’ve modelled the hinge in quite a unique way.

Rather than doing it like Samsung has done it with the Fold 1, we’ve done it in a similar way to how Motorola has done it with the 2019 Razr, where the mechanism is actually on the inside, and then it’s protected and sealed by this rubber hinge on the outside. This means that the phone still preserves its water and dust resistance, unlike the Fold 1 which lacked both of those. Also, this is the same style hinge that Samsung has in one of their Galaxy Fold patents that do show a smartphone that folds vertically. 

Now, comparing that design to the Moto Razr 2019, the Moto Razr does have a more usable design, as we do have another display on the back. Even though it’s a very small display, which is just being used for seeing incoming notifications and reading quick messages, at least you do have that. From the looks of it, the new version of the Galaxy Fold will not have any display on its back, however there are a few Samsung patents that do show this display folding both ways and that would be quite cool, being able to fold the fold on its back and have two mini-displays in this case. However, I dont see this having any major functionality for me at least, as I still prefer the idea of a foldable tablet, than a modern clam shell phone. 

Now, interesting enough, there is a second patent that shows something completely different. This one was found by tech website LetsGoDigital and it shows what appears to be a foldable Galaxy Tab S rather than a Galaxy Fold 2. We have what looks to be a very big tablet sized display, with a fairly thick frame all across it, but I genuinely would pick this over the gigantic side notch that the Galaxy Fold 1 has, and we also seem to have a large display on the front to go with that.

The fold patents as seen on Letsgodigital (Source: Letsgodigital)

The fold patents as seen on Letsgodigital (Source: Letsgodigital)

We also have two more patents , also found by LetsGoDigital that show something similar to the Galaxy Fold 1. Just with a thinner notch, and even a massive display that would actually fold vertically, rather than having mostly the same functionality as the Fold 1 does. So judging by all of these patents, it seems like Samsung is experimenting with different approaches to folding phones. A foldable Galaxy S11, a foldable Galaxy Tab S, a Galaxy Fold that folds vertically and possibly some even more form factors that we haven’t yet seen leaked.

So I’m really looking forward to seeing more foldable devices. I do hope however that the industry doesn’t start making “cool” foldable phones like a clam shell phone is rather than truly useful foldable devices, like a foldable tablet would be.

Samsung Galaxy S11 - FULL Leaks and Rumors!


The Samsung Galaxy S11 is coming out in just three months, so we’re not that far away for the official release, and luckily the S11 will actually be one of the biggest changes that Samsung has ever made to their products! 

We’re getting some gigantic camera improvements, the displays are getting even better, alongside some unique and exclusive features.

So get that popcorn ready and here’s everything we know so far about the S11, on the Design, Display, Camera, Performance, Special Features, Battery, Release Date & Price!


DESIGN

Ok, so starting off with the design, unlike Apple Samsung is actually updates the design of their phones, every single year.

The big redesign is usually every two years, but we still get some small changes with every new generation. For example the S6 was the first Galaxy S smartphone that came with a premium build of glass on the front and back, and a metal frame. The S7 was a more refined version of the S6, the S8 had a brand new design, the S9 was a more refined version of the S8’s design with slightly thinner bezels, and the S10 was a brand new design once again. Therefore it makes sense for the S11 to be a more refined version of the S10, rather than a completely new design.

IceUniverse reported on the 27th of October that the design and configuration of the Galaxy S11 has been finalised and the leak season will now begin. 

BenGeskin’s S11 renders (Back) compared to the S10’s (Front)

BenGeskin’s S11 renders (Back) compared to the S10’s (Front)

BenGeskin posted a render of how the S11’s will compare to the S10, and as you can see, they’re taller than the S10’s and all of them have a single central camera module now, rather than the module to the right, that the S10’s had, and the dual camera module to the right that the S10+ had.

In terms of the models there will be three S11’s. So just like with the S10’s we would have the S11e, the S11 and the S11+. MySmartPrice reports, based on information received by leakster Ishan Agarwal, that the S11 and S11+ will come in Black, Grey and Blue, while the S11e will come in Blue, Grey and Pink. These are some very interesting choices. I’m quite surprised to see Samsung remove White from their offering, as White and Black have always been the default colours. Grey would probably be the one that would be the equivalent to the White colour the most. So I’m guessing that it would have some sort of shine to it, similar to the back colours of the Note 10, where if you look at it from an angle, it would turn into a different colour. I personally believe that all the colours on the S11’s would come with that glowing shimmer effect that changes based on how the light hits it. 

But that’s pretty much it when it comes to the design. We’ll have a very similar look to the S10’s, just longer, with a central camera module and no more headphone jack, but a 2nd speaker grill on the bottom instead. The microSD card slot will still be there as well.

 

DISPLAY

Moving on to the display, EvLeaks, one of the original leakers has posted some details about these.

Apparently, the S11e will come with a 6.4” display, the S11 will come with a 6.7” display, while the S11+ will come with a gigantic 6.9” panel. Now these are actually a very big jump from the S10’s, that came with a 5.8” in the case of the S10e, a 6.1” display in the case of the S10, and a 6.4” display in the case of the S10+. So it seems like the smallest S11, the S11e, will actually be bigger than the S10+.

Our renders of the S11 showing the new screen sizes

Our renders of the S11 showing the new screen sizes

Now, there are a few contradictory reports on the S11e’s display size, where some reports are saying that it will come with a 6.4” display, and some are saying that it would be a 6.2”. Evleaks even mentioned that himself. My guess is that it will be a 6.2” panel, otherwise the jump in the display size would be just too dramatic and people who just preferred having a smaller display, would be out of luck if that’s the case.

Now, the good news is that the phones will not be getting any wider, instead they will be getting taller. Luckily Samsung’s OneUI is actually optimised for one finger use, and having all the UI elements accessible from the middle of the display will help in making these gigantic S11 phones more easily usable. 

Now, because of that taller display, we will also be getting a wider aspect ratio of 20:9 compared to 19:9 which was what we had on the S10 and the Note 10. It won’t be as wide as the Sony Xperia 1, which has a 21:9 aspect ratio, but it will be close. This will make it much better for watching wide aspect ratio videos and movies, so I wouldn’t be surprised if Samsung launches their own Galaxy Movies store or something along those lines. 

The patent granted to Samsung for SAMOLED found by LetsGoDigital

The patent granted to Samsung for SAMOLED found by LetsGoDigital

But regardless of that, Samsung will very likely call this display AMOLED Cinema or something along those lines. Now, LetsGoDigital actually found a patent that Samsung had just been granted this week, on a display called SAMOLED. Samsung already has their Super AMOLED branding, so this could either be a new branding, or it could just be Samsung next generation of displays. We’ve seen the current generation being introduced with the S10, and this generation featured a much higher brightness of over 1000 nits alongside a physical cutout in their display, for the camera module. The Note 10+ featured the Samsung generation of AMOLED panel that the S10 had and even the iPhone 11 Pro’s had the exact same panel.

Now, EvLeaks has also stated that all three models will have curved-edge displays, unlike the S10e from last year which was the only one with a flat panel. And the bezels are also getting thinner this year, even thinner than the ones we had on the S10. The S11e will probably have thicker bezels, at least when it comes to the top and the bottom ones, just so that it looks more inferior to the S11’s considering the lower price that the S11e will have. 

CAMERA

Now, when it comes to the camera this is actually where the biggest change will be. 

In our Samsung Galaxy Note 10+ Review, I did mention an interesting fact that not a lot of people seem to have been aware of, which was that the fact that Samsung has actually had the exact same sensor specs, since the Galaxy S7. Yes, Samsung did indeed have the switchable aperture with the S9, and the dual and triple lens camera module with the S9 and the S10, but the main module has actually remained the same since the S7 from 2016.

The headline from Samsung’s Newsroom reporting the 108MP sensor (Source: Samsung)

The headline from Samsung’s Newsroom reporting the 108MP sensor (Source: Samsung)

However, in August 2019, Samsung has unveiled their brand new 108MP smartphone sensor which is actually a very big deal. Not only does this have some insanely high level of detail with nine times more resolution than the current 12MP sensor, but the sensor itself it 1.91cm In size, compared to the 1cm sensor that we had before. So this sensor is almost twice the size of the current one and it does need to be bigger, because otherwise the pixels would be so small in that 108MP sensor, that low light shots would look unusable. 

This is actually pretty much confirmed at this point. XDA developers have even found code in the OneUI 2.0 beta, specifically in the Samsung camera app itself that shows support for a resolution of 12000x9000 photos, or 108MP photos if you do the math, and also support for that 20:9 aspect ratio that I was talking about before.

Now the only question that remains is, is Samsung going to use this 108MP module as the main module, or are they going to use it as a secondary module? Well, realistically they will probably use it as the main module, but I’m keeping my hopes high that Samsung will actually just use it as a secondary module and still keep a 12MP main module for low light shots. I only say this because the 108MP sensor will be noticeably worse in low light than even the Galaxy S7, unless of course Samsung does some magic in software and they release a new night mode, specifically designed for this new 108MP sensor. 

Our concept showing the 108MP sensor integrated into the 4 camera module set up

Our concept showing the 108MP sensor integrated into the 4 camera module set up

On our concept, we actually added the 108MP module as an extra module, meaning we’d have four modules; the 12MP night mode module, the zoom module, the wide angle module, and the 108MP module

Also, just so that you’re aware, you won’t be taking 108MP photos with this camera. You will very likely be able to do that in the Pro-Mode, but regular shots will just use that massive sensor to capture more detail and the final image would still be around 12-16MP. Otherwise, taking 108MP photos will just murder your storage. 

But apart from that, now would also be a really good time for Samsung to add 6K or even 8K video recording to this, as the CPU does indeed support that. This would definitely the biggest camera change that we’ve ever had in a Samsung phone.

And we have seen some reports that the zoom capabilities would be greatly improved as well, with possibly a 3x optical zoom camera from the 2, and the remaining zoom would be achieved with that 108MP sensor, which means you will have around a 10X lossless zoom and even up to 30-50X with digital zoom, so very similar to what Huawei did with the P30 Pro.

When it comes to the Front Camera, if you’re worried about the lack of a depth sensor that the S10+ had, you don’t need to worry about that, since the Note 10+ had pretty much the same quality front portrait mode shots as the S10+ did, with just a single camera.

 

PERFORMANCE

Now, when it comes to the Performance, same as before, we’ll be getting two different CPU modules.

The US & Canada variants will come with the new Snapdragon 865, while the International models will come with the Exynos 990.

The Snapdragon 865 hasn’t been officially unveiled just yet, it’s expected to be unveiled in early December, but according to the leaks the CPU performance will be increased by 20%, while the GPU will get a 17% to 20% bump from the 855, so that’s an even smaller jump from the 855+.

The Exynos 990 is essentially the 9830, just with a different name. Now this one has been officially unveiled and it does support up to a 108MP camera, up to 8K30 video recording, as well as LPDDR5 memory. 

Now, Samsung will be dropping their custom Exynos cores from future Exynos processors, but that’s a story for a whole different article.

RAM wise, 12MP of RAM is pretty much what the S11+ will come with and then 8GB and 6GB are expected on the S11 and S11e.

SPECIAL FEATURES

So aside from the camera and display, there’s not a lot else in terms of special features.

We are getting 5G once again and EvLeaks reports that the S11e and S11 will come in both 4G and 5G variants, while the S11+ will only come with 5G. This means that the S11+ will be one crazy expensive phone.

The headphone jack is likely to be removed from the S11, but that will mean an extra speaker grill

The headphone jack is likely to be removed from the S11, but that will mean an extra speaker grill

The headphone jack is being removed, just like on the Note 10. Unfortunately, with the Note 10, we didn’t get any headphone jack adapter in the box. I really do hope that Samsung does include one with the S11, especially since the Galaxy S series is more popular. Otherwise, you’ll have to buy a separate adapter yourself, or stick to wireless headphones. Speaking of wireless headphones, Ishan Agarwal reported for mysmartprice that the Galaxy Buds 2, with the codename R175, are in development and that they will come in Blue, Pink, Black and White. I do hope that Samsung adds Active Noise cancellation to the Galaxy Buds 2, so that they can compete with the AirPods Pro’s, fingers crossed that they also keep the same price, in that case they would be by far the best wireless headphones on the market. 

Even if we do lose the headphone jack, we do get an extra speaker grill, so the sound quality would be further improved with the S11.

And finally we haven’t included this in our concept but the S11’s will very likely feature the same TOF depth sensor on the back, just like the Note 10+ did. This is for improving the portrait mode photography with the back camera and for AR.

 

BATTERY

The battery likely for the new S11 (Source: SafetyKorea)

The battery likely for the new S11 (Source: SafetyKorea)

It does seem like we would be getting some very big improvements to the battery. GalaxyClub found a listing on SafetyKorea of a few unreleased Samsung smartphone batteries, and they have the model number ‘EB-GB980ABY L’, which could really be any Samsung phone to be honest. However, when you consider the S10 model numbers, these were SM-G970, 973 and 975. So it would make a lot of sense for the S11e’s model number to be SM-G980, and in that case this battery leak would be for the S11e.

And this appears to be a 4000mAh battery, which would be a gigantic leap from the 3100mAh battery that the S10e had, which means that the S11+ should approach 5000mAh. 

Now another improvement that’s we’ll see here is the SuperFast charge that the Note 10 got. The 45W fast charging which is the fastest fast charge on any smartphone to date.

 

RELEASE DATE

In regards to the release date, the unveil would be as usual in Mid-Late February, while the delivery and the in-store release would be in early March. This has been confirmed by EvLeaks as well.

PRICE

And finally, when it comes to the price, these would not be cheap phones by any means. 

The S11+ should cost around the same as the Note 10+ does now, so $1100 if not even $1200. While the S11 should be around the same price as the S10+, so $999 and the S11e should be around $650, $100 more than what the S10e costs. The prices haven’t been leaked, these are my personal predictions based on what Samsung has priced their phones in the past. 

So if you don’t care about the camera that much, and you don’t need that insane new 108MP sensor, then picking up an S10 or an S10+ is actually a very good idea. They have the same design, mostly the same display and an even smaller form factor. 

Huawei nova 5T - The £399 Flagship?


This article is about the Huawei nova 5T, and in case you haven’t heard of this phone it is a £399 smartphone that comes with some truly flagship specs.

We have the Huawei Kirin 980 octa-core processor, which is actually the exact same processor that you can find in the Huawei P30 Pro, arguably the best smartphone that Huawei has even made, as the Mate 30 Pro isn’t out in all regions just yet. Aside from this we have 6GB of RAM and 128GB of storage. We also get a massive 3750mAh battery with SuperCharge, which is Huawei’s fast charging technology, with which you can charge this up to 50% in just 30 minutes.

We have a massive 6.26 inch display with a resolution of 2340x1080, with some very thin bezels and no notch aside from just the front camera cutout which is an insane 32MP sensor. But the back camera is even more impressive. We have a quad-camera module, with a regular 48MP sensor on the main module, a 16mp wide angle module, a 2MP macro module and then another 2MP module that’s used for portrait mode. 

The colours of the nova 5T (Black, Crush Blue, and Midsummer Purple)

The colours of the nova 5T (Black, Crush Blue, and Midsummer Purple)

It also has a side mounted fingerprint reader, and probably one of the craziest colours that I’ve seen on the back of any phone! It comes in a very vibrant Midsummer Purple, a Crush Blue variant, and finally the classic black colour that we have.

So as you can probably tell, this is a truly unique device! Huawei was kind enough to not only send one over but also sponsor this entire project. So what I did was use the nova 5T for an entire day, took it out, took some photos, and used it as I would when I’m on holiday because that’s when I’m using my phone the most, and see how a £399 phone with flagship specs actually performs! 


Before I even set off, I installed all of the apps that I use in a regular basis, so everything; from Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, Creator Studio, Gmail, Hootsuite for scheduling my social media posts, and I’ll be keeping track of the battery life and performance through-out the entire day.

The first thing that I did was to go around the the city centre area and test out the camera. Unfortunately, it was a rainy day and it was also quite cold, but nonetheless the shots ended up being very impressive, and you’ll see what I mean in just a bit.

So whilst on the tram to the city center, I took a few selfies and the way those have turned out, blew me away.

An example shot from the nova 5T’s front facing camera

An example shot from the nova 5T’s front facing camera

This is a 32MP selfie and it’s the sharpest photo with a front facing camera that I have ever seen coming from a phone. All of that is thanks to the massive 32MP sensor, my hair is unbelievably sharp and you can zoom in a considerable amount, without seeing any noticeable pixelation at all, something that is not at all possible with a regular smartphone. 

So when seeing these on my computer, I was blown away. But it gets even better. I then took a few regular photos with the regular module on the back and they were pretty good. They had a great exposure, great colour, pretty much a perfect white balance and they were generally good shots, too bad the weather wasn’t on our side. 

But you see, this phone actually has four camera modules on the back and I wanted to put every single one of them to the test. 

So starting with some zoom photos, thanks to that massive 48MP sensor, we can zoom in up to 10x times digitally. Here’s an example of before and after the 10x zoom.

An example of the 10x zoom

An example of the 10x zoom

We then have the two fun lenses. The Wide and the Macro Lens. 

The wide-angle is something that we’ve started seeing on pretty much every flagship smartphone today, with a few exceptions, so I’m very glad to see Huawei adding a wide angle lens to a mid-range phone. Now I was expecting the wide angle modules to be just okay since even on high end phones the wide angle module is usually the one that’s noticeable worse than the other two. But take a look at this shot.

This was the shot taken with 2x zoom, I have also put in the same shot taken with regular lens, and the wide angle lens. Not only do we get much much more in the scene but I don’t really see any severe softness that wide angle modules usually have.

We took some more wide angle shots of the Manchester Cathedral and what we did next is that we actually went inside of the cathedral to test out the night mode and see how the lenses perform in a fairly dim environment. I think the results speak for themselves, dont you? The nightmode shot is one of the best night mode shots that I’ve seen on a smartphone. It’s extremely sharp but what’s probably even more impressive is that I actually took this with the wide angle module! Just take a look at the picture below, perfect exposure, perfect sharpness, the colours are very accurate as well so I’m very impressed so far.

A wide angle nightmode shot taken in Manchester Cathedral

A wide angle nightmode shot taken in Manchester Cathedral

Ok, next up I wanted to test out that Macro Module. This is actually something that we don’t really have on many other smartphones out there, so it’s a very new and unique feature and I could get extremely close to a leaf with water on, I was about 4cm or even closer than that, and the leaf was still perfectly in focus.

An example Macro Lens shot

An example Macro Lens shot

Back Portrait mode also works surprisingly well and has good background separation, although it does work better outdoors than indoors, since you do need a fair bit of light. 

IMG_20191104_145233.jpg

The nova 5T can also shoot 4K video, up to 30fps. The footage itself is pretty sharp and well exposed. So again, good marks for Huawei on this.

So those were the four modules of this phone and I’m very impressed, especially when you consider that this is a £399 phone, less than half of what a flagship smartphone costs and the results were still very impressive. 

But there’s actually a very special feature that this phone has. So the main module is actually a 48MP sensor. But you see taking 48MP photos will eat up your storage four times faster than what a regular phone’s 12MP camera would. So what the nova 5T does is that it actually uses just the 12MP area of the sensor to take the photos and then it uses the remaining area of the sensor, to improve the clarity. But if you go into the settings menu, there’s actually a secret 48MP mode that allows you to take full 48MP photos and here’s an example. 

A comparison shot between the 12MP Camera and the 48MP secret option

A comparison shot between the 12MP Camera and the 48MP secret option

You can probably see that weirdly enough the 48MP shot is a bit softer, and that’s because in the 12MP mode it’s actually doing that sharpening that I was talking about before. But the real difference between the two lies if you zoom in. When digitally zoomed in the 12MP one starts to look pixely, while the 48MP shot is noticeably sharper. If we had had a bright day with lots of sunlight, the results would’ve been even sharper on the 48MP mode since you do need to be in a well light environment, for the very best results.

So after taking all those photos, Connor and I decided to go and get something to eat. We went to this Italian restaurant where we took some more indoor shots. This was another dimly lit area, so I’ve been using night mode for pretty much all the shots. Now, something that I haven’t mentioned yet, is that the nova 5T also has an AI camera. This means that the camera can detect what it actually shoots and it will automatically adjust based on that.

Above are a couple of examples of the AI Camera. Number one is a picture that I took. Picture one is of my pizza, and you can probably see how sharp the pizza is, and how vibrant the nova 5T made the colours of it look.

Picture two is a photo of a water bottle and same story here, you can see how the AI camera made it stand out from the background, even though this was actually not taken with portrait mode but with the regular photo mode instead.

And finally picture three is a selfie that I took in the restaurant, and whilst it is a bit softer than the outdoor one, it’s still very sharp for low light indoor selfies. 

Ok, so we did get quite a bunch of shots and what we wanted to do was to find a place to sit down, transfer these shots and do some work. In my case, start scripting the main part of the video and drafting this article. We did go to the Central Library but ended up at a coffee shop after I had transferred all the shots. Speaking of, this was a very easy and quick process, thanks to that USB C port that the Huawei nova 5T has, so I had zero issues getting the shots off of the phone.

Many users guessed the images posted on Twitter and Instagram were from the iPhone 11

Many users guessed the images posted on Twitter and Instagram were from the iPhone 11

I wanted to take a few more indoors shots with night mode enabled to see how they would turn out, and like before we got some very impressive shots, especially the one with the floor lamp where the nova 5T made a fantastic job of separating the shadows from one and another. I even posted some of the images that I’d taken with the nova 5T on Twitter and Instagram as stories. Now I did this to to see how many of you got the name of the phone right and pretty much everyone either said that it was an iPhone 11 Pro or a Pixel 4. So from your own thoughts this clearly measures up to flagship quality photography at its £399 price point!

After I had done my first drafts I started watching Marques’s Pixel 4 review, read some news articles, browsed the web. I haven’t really talked about the display, but it’s great. We haven’t really had a sunny day to fully test it outdoors, but in the overcast weather that we had an indoors, it was very easily viewable.

Now you may be wondering how the battery was doing by this point in the day. Well, it was at 80%, however when I was transferring the photos before, I did have it connected to my laptop and the battery charged from 70% up to 90% during that time, in about 30 minutes or so which was quite impressive. 

By this point, since the days are quite short towards the end of the year, it was getting quite dark, so I took a few actual night time shots in some very low light conditions and below are a few of them. They actually have that Pixel style look which I really like! They’re very processed but overall, they’re good, especially when you consider how little this phone costs! 

When we finally got back into the office, the battery was at 75%, but do keep in mind that it did charge 20% while transferring the photos, so the real number would be around 50-55% which is pretty good, considering that I took loads of photos with it all day. 

I wanted to put it on charge and see how fast it would charge. Now, as I mentioned at start, the nova 5T does support Huawei’s SuperCharge which lets you charge up to 50% in just 30 minutes, but what I want to see here, is how fast it would charge from 75%, up to 100%. Charging from closer to 100% is always very slow as the phone tries to preserve the heal of the battery life, by trickle charging or slow charging, the closer they get to 100%, and this was pretty much the case here as well. It took close to a full hour to charge the remaining 25%, but charging up to the first 50% can indeed be done in just 30 minutes. 

 

CONCLUSION

In conclusion I am pretty impressed. This is a £399 phone and the night mode on this camera and the daytime selfies left me saying “wow” the moment I opened them on my computer, they’re really that good!

You also have the wide angle module which one famous flagship smartphone that costs more than double than this one does, lacks! And we have the macro module which turned out to be quite useful!

The performance was very good. I haven’t noticed any lag or any slowdown whatsoever, and that’s thanks to the Kirin 980 processor and 6GB of RAM on this unit. 

The Side Mounted fingerprint unlock is insanely fast. Literally the moment you rest your finger on it to unlock the phone, since that’s also the power button, it instantly unlocks.

Something I didn’t mention was that it also has an LED notification light inside the top speaker grill. Pretty cool! 

At £399 you get the perfect blend of performance, features, battery life and camera. It comes out on the 8th of November and you can purchase it on all major carriers here in the UK.

iPhone 11 Pro Max Review - The COMPLETE Review!


This is the iPhone 11 Pro Max, definitely not the best name for a phone. Apple should’ve really called this the iPhone Pro, which would then come in two sizes, 5.8” and 6.5”, so that they have the same naming scheme on the iPhone as they do on the iPad and MacBooks. We don’t have a MacBook Pro 5 Max or iPad Pro 3 Max on those so why do we have iPhone 11 Pro Max?

But leaving the bad naming scheme aside, this is by far the best iPhone Apple has ever released, like it should be because it’s the newest one, but actually this one fixes all the major issues that the iPhones have had for years, and I’m pretty impressed!

I’ve been using this as my daily driver since it came out in mid-September, and this is my full in-depth review of the iPhone 11 Pro Max, covering my final thoughts on the Design, Display, Camera, Performance, Special Features, Battery & Value!


DESIGN

A design front on design comparison between the iPhone 11 Pro Max (Left) and XS Max (Right)

A design front on design comparison between the iPhone 11 Pro Max (Left) and XS Max (Right)

Starting off with the Design, from the front, the iPhone 11 Pro Max looks very disappointing. It’s got the exact same design as the iPhone XS Max from 2018, which is the same design as the iPhone X from 2017. That means we still have that massive notch, which does have some high end tech inside for mapping your Face in 3D and unlocking the phone, so there is an actual reason why it is this big.

But when you compare it to the Note 10’s design, the Samsung Galaxy S10’s or especially the OnePlus 7 Pro and the 7T Pro, both of which have no notch and no camera cutout at all, you can probably see where I’m going with this. The iPhone 11 Pro Max just has a very boring look to it, that will in fact change next year luckily, but until then we’re stuck with this two year old design until late 2020. 

However, there are a few things that have changed design wise. The back now has that famous triple lens camera module which I’ll get into more detail in the camera section of this article.  But Apple has also changed the back glass now. It is now a frosted glass rather than the traditional glass back that we had on the XS, which means that it won’t leave any fingerprints, and it’s also much smoother to the touch so your finger glides much easier, whereas before you would have a tiny bit of resistance. So this does make the iPhone 11 Pro Max the best feeling iPhone that I have held in my hands, but at the same time it also makes it the slipperiest.

Luckily, Apple did say that they’ve added the most durable glass in smartphone into this, which is very likely a slightly modified version of Gorilla Glass 6. And there have been quite a few drop tests done by other tech outlets and channels and long story short, it’s still glass so it will break. It’s just that it won’t break as easily as the previous iPhones did. But you see, the way glass works is that if you want it to be more durable to drops, you need to add more plastic into it to make it more flexible, which also decreases the scratch resistance. So I don’t know if you’ve seen my twitter post, which I’ll link here, but I actually managed to get my iPhone 11 Pro Max scratched very heavily, and I ended up having that replaced because of it. 

Now, there are a few more design changes that Apple has made, such as moving the Apple Logo towards the middle now, which I do believe looks better now than ever before. We also have no more iPhone branding on the back, and no regulatory information either, unless you have the European model which still has those unfortunately. But other than that, you get an extremely clean look on the back. Now something that I do like is that the inside of the camera module now matches the colour of the iPhone, unlike the mock-ups that we had, where it was entirely black so I do think that it looks better this way. Something else that I like about this is that Apple has actually made the inside of the camera module glossy, while on the regular iPhone 11, we have the exact opposite, a glossy back and a frosted glass camera module. 

Also the iPhone 11 Pro & Pro Max are still one of the only ones on the market that come with a stainless steel frame. All the other ones come with either an aluminium, magnesium, or polished aluminium frame in the case of the Galaxy Note 10+ for example.

A slight design change with this years models is thickness. At 8.1mm thick, these iPhones are one of the thickest flagships on the market right now. The regular iPhone 11 is a bit thicker at 8.3mm, but aside from that the only iPhone thicker than those is the iPhone 4 from 2010.  Ever since then, Apple kept making their iPhones thinner and thinner to the point where batteries also had to be made thinner, and the battery life ended up being affected. But in the more recent years, Apple has decided to do quite the opposite. Make their iPhones thicker and thicker every single year and also extend the battery life as a result. I’ll talk more about the battery life once we get to the battery section of this article, but when it comes to how the 11 Pro Max feels in the hand, the moment I got it, I could definitely tell that it was bulkier than my XS Max, was which was already bulkier than my X was, and so on. It’s not a fat phone by any means but it does give you that solid feel in the hand when you hold it, because of its thickness and that premium stainless steel frame.

The colours of the iPhone 11 Pro Max

The colours of the iPhone 11 Pro Max

Now, the final design change when it comes to these new iPhones are the colours. We get four colours this year; the regular Space Grey, Silver, Gold, and now we also get a brand new Midnight Green colour. The Space Grey has a very clean and matte black look now which I absolutely love! The silver now has a frosted white look, where the Apple logo is barely visible at all, and if I’m being honest there’s something about the White model that kind of makes me regret going for the Space Grey for my personal one. The Midnight Green one looked good but extremely similar to the Space Grey one, aside from the stainless steel frame which was indeed dark green. The gold one looks ok, but I do think that the previous gold XS looked much better.

 

DISPLAY

Moving on to the Display, we have the same 5.8” and 6.5” sizes as last year with a resolution of 2688x1242 on the 11 Pro Max and 2436x1125 on the 11 Pro, and both at 458PPI.

Apple has this weird thing where they adjust the resolution in order to keep the same PPI number. They do this so that they can keep the app scaling consistent across their devices and to make it easier for developers to optimise their apps.

We still have the True Tone Display from the years before but we no longer have 3D Touch. Apple added 3D touch with the iPhone 6S and it let you have a secondary tap, a right click so to say, when you applied pressure to certain elements of the UI. The problem with 3D touch was that it wasn’t clear which elements supported 3D touch and it also increased the thickness of the device by quite a bit, space which they could’ve been used for stuff like a larger battery. So instead of 3D touch, you now have to hold for longer and then you get a vibration to let you know that it worked. This means that with the new iPhones and iOS13 you have to do a long hold on the apps and then you get the 3D touch options, and then if you hold for longer they will wiggle and then you can move them around. Previously this was pressure based and I honestly prefer it this way. Before, if I just wanted to arrange the apps I had to press soft enough for the icons to jiggle, since if I pressed harder, 3D touch would activate and I had to repeat the process until I got the icons to jiggle. 

A brightness comparison between the iPhone 11 Pro Max (Top) and XS Max (Bottom)

A brightness comparison between the iPhone 11 Pro Max (Top) and XS Max (Bottom)

Now, when it comes to the actual display quality Apple has actually made some improvements. We now have what they’re calling the Super Retina XDR display, again another horrible overly complicated name. Essentially this phone has a Samsung panel and it’s Samsung newest generation of AMOLED displays. Part of the same generation that they’re using in the S10 and the Note 10 from a few months ago. This means that when compared to the XS Max from last year, the display can get up to 1200 nits when playing back HDR content compared to around 1000 nits. When you use it outdoors, it can now go up to 800 nits from 625, so it’s easier to view when outdoors. I also found this display to actually be brighter than the Note 10’s in both outdoor and manual brightness. 

We’ve actually bought a professional display colour calibration tool and here are the results that we got out of the 11 Pro Max’s display. So on a white surface with a maxed out manual brightness, we got 524 nits, while on the exact same image the Note 10+ for comparison got 349 nits.

So while this is overall the best display on any smartphone, I do actually prefer the Note 10’s display, just because of the lack of a notch, and the even more vibrant colours. I wish Apple would allow you to change the colour profiles like Samsung does, since I do personally prefer punchier colours rather than the more natural one that Apple has. But if you’re into editing photos and videos on the go, than the iPhone 11 Pro is perfect for this. With a DCI-P3 coverage and iOS, this is the best platform to post your Instagram photos and stories from.

Aside from the Notch, the only thing that I really dislike about this display is that you cannot watch videos on YouTube higher than 1080p. Even though we have a close to 3K display on this. This is because Apple doesn’t support Google’s VPN codec, and Google doesn’t support h.265 which Apple does. This is a current issue with all of Apple’s products. iPads cannot play 4K YouTube videos, not even the 4K Apple TV can which is quite ironic! The only way to watch 4K YouTube videos on an Apple product is to use a Mac and download Chrome.

So because of this whilst the iPhone 11 Pro’s display is the best display for editing photo and videos, scrolling through your social media feed, and just reading content, it is not the best display for watching content on YouTube, because of the notch and the resolution limit on videos to just 1080p. 

 

CAMERA

Now remember when I said that the iPhone 11 Pro fixes all the major issues that the previous iPhone’s had? Well, I was actually referring to two major issues, and the first one was the camera.

You see, back in the days of the iPhone 5S and the iPhone 6, the iPhone had the best camera in a smartphone! But then, with the more recent releases, the camera quality started falling behind the competition. Manufacturers like Huawei included a 10x optical zoom camera, Samsung added a wide angle lens, and Google added a night mode which Apple was still missing. Samsung even had 4K video recording on the front, a wider angle module, and QHD recording on the front ever since the Galaxy S6 which launched in 2015. Apple was still lacking all of these on the iPhone XS Max from 2018 which was quite ridiculous at that point. 

But luckily, Apple has now fixed all of their camera issues, and ironically the iPhone 11 Pro & Pro Max now have the best camera on any smartphone at the moment!

So, what changed?

A sample of the wide front facing camera, the iPhone 11 Pro Max on the Left and the Pixel 4XL on the right

A sample of the wide front facing camera, the iPhone 11 Pro Max on the Left and the Pixel 4XL on the right

Well, the front camera did get a resolution bump to 12MP from the 7PM that we have had since the iPhone 7. But instead of Apple just giving you all that resolution, the selfies are still 7MP in resolution, but you can now zoom out and use the entire resolution of the sensor to capture more in the scene. So with this technique we actually get a wide angle front facing camera, which now happens to be the widest one on any smartphone of 2019, just on par with the Pixel 4. 

Then, we also get significantly improved video on the front. Before the iPhone 11’s we only had 1080p 60fps max, but now we can record in up to 4K 60 on the front! Which is just nuts! No other smartphone can do this! Apple went from behind in last place to literally being first just like that! And I’m really impressed with the quality of the front facing camera on the 11 Pro! Colours are natural, the image is still very sharp and the exposure and dynamic range is just incredible! 

My only complaint regarding the front camera is that we don’t have a Night Mode like we do have on the Pixel. So light low shots with the front camera aren’t great but daytime ones are very very good.

Astrophotography on the iPhone 11 Pro Max (Top Left), the Note 10+ (Top Right), the OnePlus 7T Pro (Bottom Left) and Pixel 4 XL (Bottom Right)

Astrophotography on the iPhone 11 Pro Max (Top Left), the Note 10+ (Top Right), the OnePlus 7T Pro (Bottom Left) and Pixel 4 XL (Bottom Right)

Speaking of Night Mode, whilst we don’t have it on the front, we do have it on the back! And unlike the one on the Google Pixel which can be enabled manually, the iPhone one is automatic. This means that once you’re in a low light scenario, the night mode indicator will appear and then from there you can adjust the duration of the exposure. I found Night Mode to actually work very well, even better than on the Pixel 4 in a lot of cases. The only case where it wasn’t as good was in tripod mode, which is Apple’s automatic long exposure mode which activates when it detects that it’s on a tripod. It was still better than on the OnePlus 7T Pro and the Samsung Galaxy Note 10+, but the Astrophotography mode on the Pixel 4 is just on another level. But aside from that, Night Mode on the 11 Pro is extremely good! Also, it works with both the main and telephoto lens. It doesn’t work with the wide-angle lens unfortunately, for that you’d have to use a 3rd party app such as NeuralCam. 

Now in terms of day to day shots, because we now have that third wide angle module, which Apple is calling an ultra-wide, but in my eyes that’s wide. We can take some very wide angle shots now. We can even take wide angle panoramas, and portrait with both the telephoto and regular modules now. 

So with these three cameras, we can take a zoomed in shot, a regular shot, and then also a wide angle shot. We can capture so much more in the scene and by having this wide angle module and I have the perfect combo of lenses right in my pocket. Now Apple were not the first to have three lenses on a phone, they were one of the latest ones to the party, but at least we finally have a wide angle on the iPhone as well now. And what I really like about Apple’s implementation is that all modules are very similar. They’re all 12MP sensors, different sensor sizes unfortunately, but they can all record 4K 60 video which is something that no other smartphone can do with the wide angle lens. In addition, they all try to match the colour and exposure between them so that you can have a consistent shot when switching through the lenses.

There will be a big new feature coming in iOS 13.2 called Deep Fusion, which will take multiple photos at different exposure levels even before you tapped the shutter button and then merge them, for an even sharper image. What this will do is noticeably improve low light shots that are taken when night mode isn’t yet available. So indoor dimly lit photos would get the biggest bump here. 

Here are a few samples of Deep Fusion from twitter user Tyler Stalman (@stalman)

So overall, the camera is a very big improvement from the XS from last year, but the thing is aside from the wide angle lens which is a hardware feature, things such as Deep Fusion and Night Mode can, in theory, be enabled on older iPhones easily, but for whatever reason Apple won’t enable them. It’s likely that they are doing this so that people just buy the iPhone 11’s instead.

Now, if you do want to learn more about the camera do watch our ultimate camera comparison at the link here, where we compared the iPhone 11 Pro Max against the Note 10+, the Pixel 4 XL and the OnePlus 7T Pro. There are 30 Individual Test Categories, most of them with multiple samples, so you can get a very good idea of how good these cameras really are! But like I said, overall the iPhone 11 Pro Max does have the best camera in any smartphone thanks to its industry leading video capabilities and very good HDR and Night Mode processing as well.

 

PERFORMANCE

When it comes to the iPhone 11 Pro Max’ performance I have mixed feelings. It comes with Apple’s newest A13 processor which is still around one to two years ahead in terms of raw performance, when compared to the competition. Long story shot this means that your low light photos will get processed much faster than on something like a Pixel 4. High frame rates such as 4K 120fps are indeed something that this chip can handle in real time, which is just insane! 4K 120? Yes, the iPhone 11’s all record in 4K 120fps and then the final 4K 60fps output is actually a processed HDR video with wide dynamic range.

Benchmark scores for the iPhone 11 Pro Max and the 2019 15” MacBook Pro

Benchmark scores for the iPhone 11 Pro Max and the 2019 15” MacBook Pro

So the RAW performance is definitely there but unfortunately it is not being used as much as I wanted. Yes, you can edit 4K videos on your iPhone and export them noticeably faster than any other smartphone out there but I kind of want more. I would love it if Apple had something similar to Samsung’s DeX, where you connect your smartphone to a monitor and it loads up a desktop UI on the monitor. If you then added a mouse and keyboard, you’re pretty much turning your smartphone into a full desktop PC. The iPhone definitely has the power to do that as single core wise it is actually more powerful than a top of the line 15” 2019 8-core i9 MacBook Pro, which is just unbelievable on a smartphone! 

So Apple’s definitely in the lead when it comes to smartphone processors, it’s just that I would prefer to see them used more. Hopefully that changes in the future.

Speaking of change, we unfortunately did not get any RAM upgrades. We still have 4GB of RAM on both the 11 Pro and the 11 Pro Max which is at least two times less, if not even three times less than what other manufacturers use. The Note 10+ for example comes with 12GB of RAM. Now, iOS is more efficient than Android when it comes to system resources so less RAM may not seem a big issue, but I’ve actually had some pretty bad experience with RAM management on my 11 Pro Max, where YouTube for example would not be kept in the background most of the time. I’ve had this issue with multiple apps, hopefully this will get better with future software updates, but the issue here is Apple sticking to 4GB of RAM in 2019 where even low to mid range phones today have 6GB of RAM or even 8GB.

 

SPECIAL FEATURES

When it comes to the special features, there’s not a lot of new features in this iPhone.

We do get an improved water resistance, up to 4M up to 30 minutes, which is the highest level of water resistance on any phone. Aside from this, we do have WiFi 6 or WiFI 802.11 ax support which is the next generation of WiFi. It not only supports top speeds of up to 9.6Gb/s from around 7Gb/s of WiFi 5, but it will also eliminate network congestion almost entirely, as long as you have a WiFI 6 enabled router and multiple WiFI 6 devices as well. So this is more of like a future-proofing feature.

Now, something that I was not expecting to see with the iPhone 11 Pro’s was improved speakers. Not only are they louder now but they also support something called Spatial Audio, as well as Dolby Atmos. Essentially whenever you’re watching movies that support Dolby Atmos, which are mostly the ones from iTunes and AppleTV, you would get this virtual 3D sound effect. It does work nicely, but don’t expect anything like a theatre quality experience, since this is still a smartphone speaker. I do like the fact that they’re louder now, since I always listen to podcasts while taking a shower, and I actually need a very powerful speaker in that case. So I could easily tell that my 11 Pro Max was louder than my XS Max. The regular 11 Pro is not as loud as the 11 Pro Max is, but it’s still very good for a smartphone.

There’s also a brand new U1 chip that improves AirDrop file sharing and precisely locating the iPhone. But aside from this we don’t really get anything new. 

At the moment only Huawei and Samsung have phones that support reverse wireless charging

At the moment only Huawei and Samsung have phones that support reverse wireless charging

We have the same haptic engine as before, the same USB 2.0 lightning port, which is pretty bad in the first place. By not having USB C transferring files via an SD card from your camera is horribly slow, on what’s supposed to be a Pro phone. 

There’s still no always on display and still no reverse wireless charging like it was rumoured and leaked to come with, so this means that if you have the new second generation AirPods with the wireless charging case, you’ll need a Samsung phone ironically to charge the AirPods from the back of the phone, as you cannot do that with an iPhone yet. 

There’s also no 90Hz refresh rate display, and nothing else that really makes the 11 Pro stand out feature wise over the competition. 

 

BATTERY

The second issue that was fixed with the 11 Pro was the battery life, and I can’t believe I’m saying this, but the iPhone 11 Pro Max has the best battery life in any smartphone that I’ve used!

This thing can finally last me for an entire day of use easily and even 2 days. Last weekend I was out pretty much all day and using my iPhone constantly to take photos and at the end of the day I still had 40% battery life, so this thing it just insane! 

This is thanks to the larger 3969mAh battery up from the 3174mAh one that the XS Max, which was made possible thanks to the removal of 3D touch, the thicker body, and thanks to the Apple A13 chip which is also much more power efficient with up to 40% less power consumption for the GPU.

We also get a fast charger inside the box at last! This is an 18W Charger compared to the 5W one that we got before, which can now charge your iPhone to 50% in just 30 minutes!

So I’m very glad and quite surprised to have an iPhone that lasts longer than the Note 10+ or any other android phone on the market, since the iPhone has always been a meme because of its poor battery life.  Also, pro tip, if you do use dark mode on iOS 13, battery life would be noticeably better. Phonebuff did an amazing video on that, which I’ll leave linked here.

 

VALUE

Ok, so in the end what are my thoughts on the iPhone 11 Pro Max? Is it worth it’s huge £1,150 starting price tag?

Well, aside from its name which is straight up stupid and it makes no sense because, let’s be honest, this is not a Pro phone. The camera is very good but it’s not a pro camera, otherwise we would have custom luts, first party mounts, and at least the ability to change the resolution and frame-rate from the camera app. But the camera is noticeably better than last year and the battery life is the best one there has been on any iPhone and any phone for that matter! 

In addition there’s no 90Hz refresh rate display like other ”Pro” phones have, and there’s no USB 3.0 or especially USB C on this.

However, if you do want those 2 features, the regular iPhone 11 has pretty much everything that the Pro and Pro Max do, aside from an OLED display and a zoom camera. And that’s honestly worth it so much more!

Check out the review of it here!

Note 10 Plus FULL REVIEW - The Best Tech Product of 2019!


Every few years there’s this one product that comes out that changes my perspective on tech entirely. You see tech today, mostly smartphones, are quite boring. They all look almost the same, they do the same things, and after using so many smartphones over the years, it’s become quite rare for me to get excited and truly enjoy using a new smartphone, like I used to when I got my first iPhone the 3G, or my Galaxy S4 or my 2013 Retina MacBook Pro. Those were devices that I’ve enjoyed using so much.

But nowadays it’s very hard for me to get excited and hyped about new smartphones, since nothing really changes. However the Note 10+ is a bit of a different story. This has been for me, by far the most enjoyable smartphone I’ve used in years and the second most enjoyable piece of tech of 2019 for me, right after the Oculus Quest.

So, get some popcorn and drinks ready and here’s my full in-depth review of the Galaxy Note 10+, after two months of use, as my daily driver.


DESIGN

Ok, so starting with the design, the Note 10+ is by far my favourite looking phone ever! I’ve enjoyed using the S10+ a lot, and even that was my daily driver for around 2-3 months, until the OnePlus 7 Pro came out but the Note 10 for me at least, looks so much better.

A design comparison between the Note 10+ (Left) and S10+ (Right)

A design comparison between the Note 10+ (Left) and S10+ (Right)

It’s got a more squared off design when compared to the S10+, even thinner bezels, and a smaller camera cutout. It just looks about a year ahead of the S10+ in terms of the looks, even though it only came out five months after. 

Then if you compare it side by side to the iPhone 11 Pro Max, the Note looks about two years ahead in terms of the design! There’s no notch, much thinner bezels on the sides and the top, and the bottom ones are almost identical as well. 

I would say that the only phone on the market right now that might look better than the Note, at least for me, is the OnePlus 7 Pro and the OnePlus 7T Pro. These phones have no camera cutout at all, but they do have slightly thicker bezels all around the phone. 

So design wise, I’m very much into this phone. It is a bit uncomfortable to hold and use, I can definitely say that. You see, because of the squared off shape the corners of the phone will feel a bit sharp in your palm, when compared to the corners of the S10+ for example, which are more rounded.

Add that massive 6.8” display to this and you can probably tell that the Note 10+ is closer to a small tablet in size. It’s definitely the biggest phone that I have ever used and I actually love it! Clearly not a one-handed smartphone but for viewing content and productivity, this is the best one there is.

 

DISPLAY

Speaking of viewing content, let's talk about the display.

The Note 10+ comes with a gigantic 6.8” display, which is also Samsung’s latest generation of AMOLED panels for smartphones, which is actually the same display generation that the iPhone 11 Pro Max also uses. It’s a 3040x1440 resolution panel, with a 498 PPI so it’s very sharp. It supports HDR10+ and full DCI-P3 coverage, and it’s honestly the most gorgeous smartphone display that I’ve ever seen.

Outdoor screen brightness comparison between the iPhone 11 Pro Max (Left) and Note 10+ (Right)

Outdoor screen brightness comparison between the iPhone 11 Pro Max (Left) and Note 10+ (Right)

Now displaymatte actually gave the crown to the iPhone 11 Pro’s display, which does indeed get brighter outdoors in direct sunlight, when compared to the Note. And same goes for manual brightness you can bump the iPhone 11 Pro higher than you can with the Note. But they both go up to around 1200 nits when playing HDR content, so that’s all good. 

However, I can honestly tell you when seeing both in person, indoors at least, the Note 10+’s display does look better. The colours are punchier, and whilst the brightness is lower than on the iPhone it’s not that noticeable indoors as it is outdoors. When you also add in the fact that you can watch videos on YouTube in higher than 1080p, which you cannot do on the iPhone, makes the Note 10+’s display for me at least, the best display on any smartphone for watching videos and reading content. 

We’ve actually bought a professional display colour calibration tool and here are the results that we got out of the Note 10+’s display. On a white surface with a maxed out manual brightness, we got 349 nits, while on the exact same image on the iPhone 11 Pro Max, maxed out brightness again, we got 524 nits.

When it comes to the camera punch hole, I honestly forgot that it was even there after about 10 minutes or so of use, so honestly don’t worry about it. I even like it more than on my S10+ since it’s smaller and also centred and Samsung and the Community have made some amazing wallpapers just for Note 10!

CAMERA

Now, when it comes to the camera it’s pretty good! It’s definitely in the top 3, right after the iPhone 11 Pro’s camera.

So it’s got three lenses on the back; a regular module, a zoom module, and a wide angle module. As well as some extra features which I’ll cover in the Special Features section of this video. I won’t go into too much detail here as we’ve already done two insanely detailed camera comparisons between the Note 10+ and the Pixel 4, the iPhone 11 Pro Max and the OnePlus 7T Pro, the most recent of which I’ll link right here.

And those include thirty individual test categories, each with multiple camera samples ranging from; macro Shots, to HDR front and back, stabilization in 4K, stabilisation with the wide angle, portrait mode, slow motion, timelapse, panorama, night mode, night mode with zoom and night mode with telephoto and many more. So if you do want to see how this camera performs, do check those videos out!

But long story short, it’s got the second best video recording capabilities in the phone, right after the iPhone 11 Pro Max. So It cannot do 4K 60 with the wide angle lens or 4K 60 with the front, but other than that, this is an amazing camera.

The wide angle is even better than on the iPhone, mostly because it bumps the highlights, shadows, and the vibrancy even more and for me at least, the images were slightly more pleasing to the eye. Night mode shots were very good, not as good as on the Pixel 4 or iPhone 11 Pro but pretty close. It definitely has the best portrait mode when it comes to the background separation, thanks to the extra TOF sensors, which I’ll cover more in just a bit. Where the Note 10+ excels is really just regular photos. HDR shots taken indoors and outdoors are just stunning, so if you care a lot about the camera the Note 10+ will not disappoint.

You can see an example of each of these below:

The only disappointment that I do have with this camera is that it’s very similar to the S10. Aside from the zoom module which now has an f/2.1 aperture from the f/2.4, the main camera is the exact same camera as on the S10, which fun fact, was the exact same camera as on the S9, and the S8, and the S7. I mean yes, Samsung has released brand new image sensors for these phones and they have improved the image processing over the years, so the pictures have improved from each generation, but the sensor specs have remained exactly the same since the S7. We have the same 12MP resolution 1/2.55 inch sensor with 1.4 micron sized pixels, with dual pixel technology on the sensor for focusing.

However there are rumors that are suggesting that Samsung may release a new generation of cameras with the Galaxy S11. Therefore if you’re holding off getting a new phone, and camera is your number one focus, the S11 will be a pretty big jump in camera quality from the Note and you should wait for that.

 

PERFORMANCE

Ok, so now, what about the performance? Well, it’s pretty good for the most part.

The Exynos 9825 chip is new to the Galaxy line, as the S10 came with the 9820 (Source: Digital Trends)

The Exynos 9825 chip is new to the Galaxy line, as the S10 came with the 9820 (Source: Digital Trends)

We have pretty much the best specs you can have on an android phone today. We have the Exynos 9825, which is actually a brand new processor from the 9820 that we got with the Galaxy S10 just five months before. So this is now based on a new 7nm process now and in benchmarks at least, this is the processor that scores the highest, in an android phone at least.

Now, if you get the US variant of the Note 10, it will come with Snapdragon 855 and interestingly enough not the 855+ like it was rumoured to come with, and like what the OnePlus 7T & 7T Pro come with, which is a bit of a let down. But the 855+ is just an overclocked 855 anyways, so you’re not really missing out on much.

We also get 256GB of storage as the baseline model and 12GB of RAM by default which is just nuts on a phone! RAM management on this has just been incredible. In a lot of cases, I opened an app that I had open a few days before and it was still there perfectly loaded in the background and perfectly usable!

So I’m very impressed with the RAM management and overall performance on the Note 10, however it’s not perfect. I did have quite a few stutters and app crashes on my Note, definitely way more than I’ve had on my iPhone or Pixel, but the thing is that this phone comes with so many features, that a few crashes and slow downs here are there, are passable for me at least.

SPECIAL FEATURES

Apps Edge on the Note 10+ allows you to quickly access your choice of apps

Apps Edge on the Note 10+ allows you to quickly access your choice of apps

First off, Samsung’s skin OneUI is just amazing! Design-wise, I like it the most out of any other Android Skins, even more than OnePlus’s OxygenOS or the Pixel Launcher. The reason for this is mostly because it looks very clean and it also offers a lot of customisation. Aside from changing the icons, the text font, the wallpaper to an actual video, and even the always on display style, something that as far as I’m aware no other launcher can do, is having app folders inside of Apps Edge. This means that you can essentially have an iPhone style home-screen in the app drawer, while keeping your home-screen very very clean.  And you also have this edge panel which allows you to easily access apps and tools, with a swipe from the right side of your screen. Some people might call this a gimmick but personally, I actually ended up using this feature a lot, keeping most of my delivery apps there, my alarm, and the apps that I use quite frequently that I just don’t want to have on my home-screen. Samsung has also sped up their update cycle quite a bit. OneUI 2.0 is coming very soon, with Android 10 support, and the Beta is already out on the S10. This means that the S10 and the Note 10 will then be the world’s third manufacturers to release Android 10, right after Google and OnePlus, which is pretty amazing to hear, especially when it comes to a Samsung phone.

But it’s not just that, we also get a ton of special features that we don’t really get on many other phones.

We do have an always on display which Apple still lacks on the iPhone, and this is also noticeably better than Google’s always on display, since it does give you a ton of more customisation options. 

We also have a microSD card slot for adding even 1TB of extra storage to this, for a total of 1.5TB which is just a complete overkill on a phone but hey, if you store a ton of games and have all of your movies locally, then the Note is the perfect phone for this.

The Note also comes with reverse wireless charging, which allows you to now only charge another phone from the back of it but also charge wireless accessories such as the Samsung Galaxy Buds, or even the AirPods, from the back of the Note 10. What’s ironic is that you cannot do this if you have AirPods and the newest iPhone 11 Pro. 

Speaking of wireless, one of the new features that the Note 10+ comes with is WiFi 802.11ax, also known as WiFi 6, which is pretty huge. WiFi 5 or 802.11 ac, which is the current standard that most devices use, launched back in 2014, so there’s a 5 year technology leap in between the two. WiFi 6 gives you a theoretical speed of up to 9.6Gb/s or 1.2GB/s which is just incredible! But the best part about WiFi 6 is that if you have a lot of WiFi 6 enabled devices, and a WiFi 6 router as well, they will manage themselves much better than WiFi 5 could and pretty much get rid of any traffic congestion entirely.

Along with improved speaker quality, the water resistance is still here, with IP68 certification for up to a 1.5m submersion up to 30 min. I’ve taken multiple Samsung phones with me to the seaside and the pool and I’ve never had an issue with any of them breaking but if they do break from water damage, do keep in mind that this isn’t covered under warranty. 

Now aside from these features, there are three more that are unique to the Note and these three are the features that truly make the Note a one-of-a-kind phone.

The S-Pen is certainly a useful tool but may go unused after a while by some consumers

The S-Pen is certainly a useful tool but may go unused after a while by some consumers

The first one being of course the S-Pen. This is the built-in stylus that Samsung has in their Note line of smartphones, and this year it gets an accelerometer and gyroscope so that you can control some apps, such as the camera app, with gestures in the air, which is pretty cool. But honestly, I found myself not using the S-Pen after the first few days, mostly because of the app support. Don’t get me wrong, it’s not bad but if you want to use the S-Pen to its fullest you need to use Samsung Notes. The problem here is that it only works on Android, so no desktop or cloud app for your laptop or tablet, and it only works on Samsung devices. Which kinda turns the Note 10 into a physical notebook, where you only have your notes on that specific device. You can still use the S-Pen in OneNotes or Google Keep, but it’s just not as fluid and the functionality is still far better with Samsung Notes. Also since I’m always much faster at taking notes with a keyboard than I am with a pen, I found myself avoiding to use the S-Pen unless I was editing photos. For me, this has been by far the best functionality of the S-Pen. If you use it in Lightroom and Photoshop Express for masking things, making a selection, or even just adjusting the highlights dial for example it is such an amazing thing to have right in your pocket! 

The second big new features is that TOF (time-of-flight) sensor right next to the camera, which allows the Note to not only take some amazing portrait mode shots, like I mentioned before, of both people and objects, but you can also use it to 3D scan objects. This is a very cool thing to do but it doesn’t really work that well, and same as the S-Pen, I only found myself using this once or twice and never used it again since. 

But the third unique feature is pretty big, and that is DeX! When you connect your Note 10 to a monitor via USB C, it will actually boot into a desktop UI mode, and then you can connect a mouse and keyboard and literally use this similar to how you would use a Windows PC. You have full access to desktop apps such as Microsoft Office and Google Chrome so that’s pretty amazing! So if you’re the kind of person that mostly uses their smartphone and doesn’t really need a full laptop or a desktop PC, then getting a Samsung phone with DeX is a pretty good option. All Samsung phones from the S8 onwards do support DeX, although the S8 and Note 8 do need a separate dock.

But the Note 10 can actually do an extra thing that previous Samsung phones couldn’t. You can now connect it to your laptop as well, and open up the DeX UI on your laptop. Personally, I don’t really get the point of you doing that since one, you do need a cable and two, the whole point of DeX is to turn your smartphone into a PC. But if you’re already carrying a PC then what’s the point? But if you do care about this feature, the S10 did get a recent update to support this as well! 

So as you can see, the Note 10+ is packed with features! There’s not a single smartphone on the market that has more features than this phone does, and while some of them are indeed gimmicks, like drawing with the S-Pen in AR, at least you do get a ton for what you’re paying for! 

Now Samsung has actually removed the headphones jack from the Note 10, making this their first major smartphone to lack the 3.5mm jack. For me this hasn’t really been an issue at all, since I do use wireless headphones all the time, but I do see why some people might be outraged especially when Samsung didn’t include a 3.5mm to USB-C adapter in the box, meaning you do have to buy it separately now. 

BATTERY LIFE

So with all those special features in mind, the huge display on this thing, and the internals, how is the battery?

Well it is actually pretty great! The Note 10+ comes with a 4300mAh battery and it can easily last me through a full day of use, unless I’m travelling. When I’m travelling I’m always on my phone and I haven’t found a phone yet that can last me a whole day in that case. But for my day to day use, the Note 10+ can even last me two days, so it’s been pretty amazing for me.

We also have a much faster fast charging of up to 45 Watts! Yes, the Note 10+ has the fastest charge on any smartphone on the market right now! Now out of the box, we do not get that 45W charger, so you need to buy that separately from Samsung, but we do get a 25W fast charger which can charge the Note up to 50% is just about 30min which is pretty amazing. You can get a full charge in around an hour and twenty minutes or so. With that 45W charger you get a full charge in around forty five minutes or so from what I’ve seen.

 

VALUE

So in the end is the Note 10+ worth it?

Well, the Note 10+ costs £1000 or $1100 in the US, which is actually the exact same price than the iPhone 11 Pro Max starts at. However you get so much more with the Note, the 256GB compared to the 64GB of storage, as well as microSD card expansion. 12GB of RAM compared to 4GB. A larger display, and the ability to play 4K videos on YouTube compared to just 1080p. The S-Pen, reverse wireless charging and so much more, the Note 10 is the true Swiss army knife of smartphones, and I would recommend this to anyone who wants the ultimate experience in a smartphone! 

Samsung does have the smaller Note 10 variant which I didn’t really talk about since the true new Note this year is the Note 10+.

Pixel 4XL vs iPhone 11 Pro Max vs Samsung Galaxy Note 10+ vs OnePlus 7T Pro - Blind Camera Comparison!


The Google Pixel 3 had some of the best camera abilities on a smartphone at the time of its release. Now the Google Pixel 4 has an additional lens on the back and one less on the front.

We compared it to the most recent releases from Apple, Samsung, and OnePlus to see how it would compare. You can check out our full blind camera comparison above, but here are a few of the shots from the test. Let us know which ones you prefer and why in the comments!

Also, the order of the phones in this article are not the order of the phones in the blind comparison.


FRONT CAMERA - WIDE SELFIE

OnePlus 7T Pro

OnePlus 7T Pro

Samsung Galaxy Note 10+

Samsung Galaxy Note 10+

Pixel 4XL

Pixel 4XL

iPhone 11 Pro Max

iPhone 11 Pro Max

 

REAR CAMERA - PORTRAIT MODE

OnePlus 7T Pro

OnePlus 7T Pro

Samsung Galaxy Note 10+

Samsung Galaxy Note 10+

Pixel 4XL

Pixel 4XL

iPhone 11 Pro Max

iPhone 11 Pro Max

REAR CAMERA - HDR (High Dynamic Range)

OnePlus 7T Pro

OnePlus 7T Pro

Samsung Galaxy Note 10+

Samsung Galaxy Note 10+

Pixel 4XL

Pixel 4XL

iPhone 11 Pro Max

iPhone 11 Pro Max

 

REAR CAMERA - ZOOM

OnePlus 7T Pro

OnePlus 7T Pro

Samsung Galaxy Note 10+

Samsung Galaxy Note 10+

Pixel 4XL

Pixel 4XL

iPhone 11 Pro Max

iPhone 11 Pro Max

REAR CAMERA - FOOD

OnePlus 7T Pro

OnePlus 7T Pro

Samsung Galaxy Note 10+

Samsung Galaxy Note 10+

Pixel 4XL

Pixel 4XL

iPhone 11 Pro Max

iPhone 11 Pro Max

 

REAR CAMERA - ASTROPHOTOGRAPHY

OnePlus 7T Pro

OnePlus 7T Pro

Samsung Galaxy Note 10+

Samsung Galaxy Note 10+

Pixel 4XL

Pixel 4XL

iPhone 11 Pro Max

iPhone 11 Pro Max

 

So which one did you like overall? Don’t forget to watch the full camera comparison to make your full decision, as there are 30 different tests for each camera!

Google Pixel 4 - Announced!


Google's October 2019 Event is over, and being a Pixel 3XL owner I was hoping for some improvements on what I felt was a pretty decent phone. There had been many many leaks on this phone and basically all of them were right. You can check out our article on the Final Leaks and Rumors surrounding the Pixel 4 if you like to see for yourself. If not, let me give you the rundown. 

Also check out Daniels live reaction unboxing at the video above.


DESIGN

The limited edition ‘Oh So Orange’ Pixel 4 (Source: Rabbit TV)

The limited edition ‘Oh So Orange’ Pixel 4 (Source: Rabbit TV)

The design is exactly as we had seen, block colour body rather than the dual tone, with a black camera module on the back, no large notch on the front for the XL, but instead a larger forehead which house some of the newer features to the Pixel of the Soli Radar chip and the Face Unlock Flood Illuminator. It is also coming in the colours that we thought it would do; ‘Just Black’, ‘Clearly White’ and the limited edition ‘Oh So Orange’.

In terms of the screen we are getting a 90Hz refresh rate OLED display on both, with the Pixel 4 having a 5.7” display, up 0.2” from the 3, and the Pixel 4XL will have the same size screen as the 3 XL with 6.3”. Both the phones are going to be slightly larger than their predecessors, with the 4 being 1.5mm taller than the 3 and the 4XL being 2.4mm larger than the 3XL.

 

CAMERA

So we are getting minor changes to both the actual build of the phone and the screen on the phone. But what I personally look for in a phone is a good camera, and with the Pixel 3XL having an extremely good camera, I was excited to see what improvements were going to be made. Unfortunately I was let down.

The hardware on this is no huge improvement over my current Pixel. Whilst we are getting a new camera module on the back, with a 16MP main camera and a 12.2MP secondary camera, we still have no Wide Angle but a new telephoto lens! That’s right, we hoped they wouldn’t do it, we didn’t want to believe the leaks but they were right. Come on Google, why do we still not have one? We touched on this in our Leaks and Rumors Article but you can always zoom in post, but you cannot take a wide angle image without a wide angle lens! In addition, we were right in thinking that there was going to be a single camera on the front, which is only 8MP, so no real improvements here, and it can only do 1080p at 30FPS. The Pixel 3 could do that, so why Google isnt trying to match both Samsung and Apple, who are able to do 4K on the front facing cameras, I don’t know. In terms of the rest of the video capabilities here you are, they are pretty much the same as the 3 but some are locked to specific FPSs:

Rear Camera

  • 4K @ 30FPS

  • 720P @ 240FPS

  • 1080P @ 30, 60 and 120 FPS

Front Camera

  • 1080P @ 30FPS

I am hoping that there are some major improvements when it comes to the software of the Pixel 4’s camera that would make up for the lack of improvement in the hardware. But whether those software improvements will come to the 3’s as well, we will have to wait and see.

Something new that is coming with the camera though is the Astrophotography, which was further shown off at the event. What this appears to be is an extended Night Sight of soughts but this astrophotography requires a 4 minute exposure time in order to take the image, so unless you want to stand perfectly still while it takes the picture, I’d suggest getting a tripod for it, unless you want to be in the picture, in which case you will have to stand still for the entire exposure time. Personally I see this as quite a gimmick but I could be surprised.

An example image of the Astrophotography from the Pixel 4 (Source: 9to5Google)

An example image of the Astrophotography from the Pixel 4 (Source: 9to5Google)

CPU & RAM

So whilst all the leaks have been right so far there was something that we did get wrong, the CPU. We thought that these were going to come with the Snapdragon 855+, which is essentially an overclocked 855. However, we are not getting any overclock at all, and are instead getting the Snapdragon 855 regular, which is the same processor you find in an S10. However, although that sounds great, the S10 had the best CPU at the time seeing as the S10 was released in March and the 855 was released in December of last year, but the Pixel could have had the 855+ which was released in July.

But we did get the RAM correct, with 6GB up from 4 on the 3XL. This is another questionable move, seeing as many phones come with 12GB of RAM nowadays.

 

PRICE

We also got the prices wrong, and in a good way this time. So from the leaks it looked like we were going to have to spend £730 for the 4 and £1,000 for the XL, but luckily those were overestimated prices and instead the Pixel 4 will start at £669, and the XL at £829. But whether that makes up for the lack of improvements, we will have to get one and find out!

The Pre-Order prices the for 4 and 4XL (Source: Google)

The Pre-Order prices the for 4 and 4XL (Source: Google)

 

CONCLUSION

So in the end I am not massively impressed. The design to me isn’t great, we are getting no huge improvements in performance or camera, and the only large camera update to me seems gimmicky but I am interested to see what kind of pictures it produces.

Until I have seen one for myself and had a go with it, I personally wouldn’t look to upgrade from my 3XL as there simply isn’t enough to make me want to upgrade, and if anything now could be the time to get a Pixel 3 if you’ve been wanting one as the price is sure to drop.

iPhone 11 (2019) - FULL Review!


Apple used to release just a single new iPhone every year. But then in 2014 everything changed when Apple released two, rather than just one. We had the iPhone 6 and the much larger iPhone 6 Plus, for those that wanted a larger display size. From there on that’s what the lineup looked like, until 2018 when Apple added a third model, an iPhone “Lite”. This was a lower end iPhone for those that still wanted the latest specs and camera but don’t want to spend a ton on a new phone. That was the iPhone XR from 2018 which launched alongside the iPhone XS and the XS Max. 

This year Apple has done the same thing, they’ve released the iPhone 11 Pro and the 11 Pro Max which are the successors to the XS and XS Max from last year, and the iPhone 11 which is the successor to the iPhone XR from last year. As it turns out this is actually a very good iPhone and this is my full review with my final thoughts on Apple’s lowest end iPhone for 2019 which just like the Nintedo Switch Lite, ended up being better than the more expensive models. 

This article contains 7 different sections with my full thoughts on the Design, Display, Camera, Performance, Special Features, Battery Life & Value, so get all those snacks and drinks ready and enjoy!


DESIGN

Despite being the more recent model, the 11 (Right) has thicker bezels than the X (Left)

Despite being the more recent model, the 11 (Right) has thicker bezels than the X (Left)

Lets start off with the design the iPhone 11 which is a bit of a mix between the iPhone 8 and the iPhone X. What I mean by this is that it has the aluminium frame of the iPhone 8 rather than the stainless steel frame that the iPhone X and the Pro’s have, so it feels a bit less premium, but you still have that iPhone 8, 7, 6 feel in your hand. You also have the iPhone X style design on the front with the notch, however the bezels are thicker than on the iPhone X, and interesting enough the side bezels are actually thicker than on the iPhone 8. This is why this phone is a mix between the old iPhone 8 style design and the new iPhone X style design, and I have to be honest, I’m not a huge fan of this design.

The iPhone 11 Pro’s already look outdated as they are still using the exact same design from 2017 with the X so all look identical from the front, and the regular iPhone 11 looks just as outdated. This looks to me like an early 2017 design, considering that the iPhone X came out in late 2017 and already had a more modern design, when compared to the 11. Which is such a shame seeing as competitor devices like the Galaxy S10, the Note 10, the OnePlus 7 Pro and 7T Pro and many other smartphones already look so much more futuristic than the iPhones do. Just because of the lack of a notch and the full screen displays. 

Measuring 8.3mm in thickness, this is the thickest iPhone since the 4S (Left)

Measuring 8.3mm in thickness, this is the thickest iPhone since the 4S (Left)

Also the iPhone 11 is quite thick. At 8.3mm this is the thickest iPhone that Apple has released since the iPhone 4S in 2011, 8 years ago. Taking a look at the bottom of the phone, you’ll not only find a lightning port but you might also notice that the lightning port is not aligned perfectly with the screws and the speaker grill, like they are on the Pro’s for example.

Apple used to be the company that payed a lot of attention to detail, but unfortunately that hasn’t been the case for quite a few years now. 

The back however, does look better than I expected. On the mock-ups that we had it just look horrendous, but seeing it in person, on the final unit I think it looks pretty decent. I definitely prefer having the Apple logo in the middle, just like on the iPads and the MacBooks, and the camera module doesn’t look that bad either.

I do like how the inside of the camera module has the same colour as the back of the phone does, rather than being full black like it was on the mock-ups, and the glass inside the module is matte, whereas the glass on the rest of the back is glossy. Fun Fact, the iPhone 11 Pro has these reversed with a matte glass back and a glossy camera module.

But overall I’m not a big fan of this design. It’s the same one as the iPhone XR from 2018 which already had an outdated design compared to the iPhone X from 2017 and the colours are just not as vibrant as last year.

 

DISPLAY

Moving on to the Display, this is a bit of an odd one, since Apple gave the low end iPhone a medium sized display, rather than giving it the smallest display. We have a 6.1” display on the 11 compared to the 5.8” on the 11 Pro, and 6.5” on the 11 Pro.

To be fair it actually does make sense for it to be this way. People who want the smallest iPhone possible, still get all the features from the Pro, while people who want a cheaper iPhone still get a fairly big display, and at 6.1” this is a very good size display. It’s small enough for me to almost use it in one hand and large enough to comfortably view your content. When you compare it side by side to the 11 Pro Max, you can tell that the 11 isn’t that much shorter than the Pro Max is but it’s definitely not as wide, meaning that it’s much more comfortable to hold.

The LCD Panel on the iPhone 11 compared to the OLED panel on the Samsung Galaxy S10

The LCD Panel on the iPhone 11 compared to the OLED panel on the Samsung Galaxy S10

Now, the display on the 11 is actually the main downgrade that you’re getting from the Pro. With the 11 we get an LCD display compared to the OLED displays that we get on the Pro’s. LCD is what Apple was using before the iPhone X. In LCD displays the pixels only provide the colour and not the light source. So you need a separate back light to light the pixels up. This means that when you are displaying a scene with black in it, the back light will still be on for the other pixels and the black would have this blue-ish grey-ish look. With OLED displays, there is no back light because the pixels are the light source themselves. This means that when you’re displaying black, the pixels are actually turned off entirely for that section, and therefore you get true blacks.

Also, if you’re using Dark Mode on iOS 13 the battery life would be improved by having an OLED panel, again because the display will be turned off for the sections where black is displayed. Aside from this, thanks to the OLED display, the Pro’s have a much better contrast of 2 million to 1, vs 1400:1 on the 11. 

Colours look more vibrant as well, with the display being brighter on the Pro, up to 1200 nits in HDR content compared to 625 nits, and yes the 11 Pro’s can actually display HDR 10 content natively. The viewing angles are also better on the Pro’s thanks to that OLED display, and the resolution is also higher as well.

We have 326PPI or pixel density on the iPhone 11 compared to 458 on the 11 Pro Max. Compare that to the 550 PPI that the Samsung Galaxy S10 has, and yes there is a pretty big difference especially with the 11.

Now realistically you would not be able to tell the difference unless you look at the phones very closely. However if you watch a lot of YouTube content, then I have some bad news for you. The iPhone 11 only has a 1792 x 828 resolution display, which is actually lower than 1080p. Which means that you would not be able to play 1080p videos on YouTube. Yes, the YouTube player does let you select 1080p but that doesn’t really mean anything since the display itself is sub 1080p. Also on iOS you cannot play any YouTube videos higher than 1080p anyways, even if you have an iPhone 11 Pro Max for example. 

But comparing the Video Quality on YouTube on the 11 to the 11 Pro, you cannot really that much of a difference between the two. However, when you compare this to the regular Galaxy S10 which actually costs less than the iPhone 11 now, there is a gigantic difference between the two displays in every single way. 

So I’m not saying that this is a bad display, it’s just that it’s nowhere near as good as the iPhone Pros, or pretty much any of the android competition at this price point.

 

CAMERA

So so far it doesn’t look good for the iPhone 11. It comes with an outdated design and a fairly downgraded display for its price, but the good news is that that is where all the downsides end, because everything else is very good on this phone.

The camera for example is mostly the exact same one that we get on the iPhone 11 Pro’s, which is overall the best smartphone camera on the market right now.

An example Night Mode photo from the 11

An example Night Mode photo from the 11

We have full 4K 60 video recording with the front camera, which no other smartphone can do at the moment. We have a wider field of view on the front as well, so whenever you’re taking photos you can zoom out to get more into the shot which you couldn’t do before.

HDR photography has been improved and so has night shots have been improved dramatically, with a dedicated night mode that kicks in automatically.

So this is a gigantic improvement from the XS.

We also have that ultra-wide angle module which lets you capture so much more in the scene. You can even record 4K 60 video with that module, which again no other smartphone can do at the moment.

You can smoothly transition between all 3 lenses, so this is overall the best smartphone camera on the market right now.

The Note 10 also has a very good camera, even a bit better in terms of the wide angle photography but video is much better on the iPhone, and I’m very glad that the 11 got mostly the same camera as the Pro’s did. I say mostly because it is lacking the zoom or the telephoto module which is not really a big downgrade since you can always zoom in digitally, it’s just that the zoomed in photos won’t be as sharp. 

 

PERFORMANCE

Performance wise this is a champion as well. No really, it has the exact same Apple A13 processor that the iPhone 11 Pro’s get, which is still the fastest processor in any smartphone, and is at least an entire year ahead of the competition, if not even more than that.

In addition we now have 4GB of RAM up from 3GB, matching the amount of RAM we have on the iPhone 11 Pro’s.

In fact, because of that lower resolution display, the performance on this iPhone will actually be even better than on the Pros! And performance has been very good on my 11 Pro Max, for example the only issue that I’ve had and I still have this every now and then is RAM management. Sometimes apps keep refreshing in the background which is quite frustrating. I don’t have this issue at all on my Note 10+, but that also has 12GB of RAM compared to 4.

Make sure to watch our ultimate speed test of the iPhone 11 Pro Max versus the Note 10+, as the iPhone 11 will perform very similar to the iPhone 11 Pro Max. 

 

SPECIAL FEATURES

Moving on to the special features, we do actually get quite a few new ones.

Despite being the strongest glass on an iPhone, they are still susceptible to scratches

Despite being the strongest glass on an iPhone, they are still susceptible to scratches

For example, we get what Apple’s calling the strongest glass in a smartphone, which is what they have been saying for a few years now. We get this on both the Pro’s and the 11.  I already have scratches on mine and I actually ended up having my 11 Pro Max replaced because of this, but that’s actually how glass works. If you want to make a glass durable to drops you have to also make it flexible, and if you make it flexible it means that you add plastic which will make it scratch easier.

So yes, while the glass on the iPhone 11’s is way more durable to drops than older iPhones, they will still scratch. So do keep that in mind, I would consider buying a screen-protector if you haven’t already.

The water resistance has been improved on the iPhone 11’s

The water resistance has been improved on the iPhone 11’s

Aside from the improved glass, water resistance has also been improved on the 11. We now have up to 2m of depth up to 30min, from 1m for 30min which was what we had on the XR. This means that the iPhone 11 is now as water resistant as the iPhone XS was, and even more water resistant that the 8 and the X. The 11 Pro’s now have up to 4m of depth resistance, but personally I’ve submerged all of the iPhones from the 7 to the 11 Pro in swimming pools and even sea water and they were all fine. Do keep in mind that water damage is not covered under warranty. 

As well as those we also get the improved speakers that we got with the iPhone 11 Pro’s. So we get special audio playback and Dolby atmos support as well. 

But something that we do not get is a fast charger. Apple finally bundled one in the box of the iPhone 11 Pro’s but the 11 still gets that very slow 5W charger which is so annoying.

 

BATTERY LIFE

Speaking of chargers, let’s talk about the battery life.

So last year, ironically the iPhone XR had a better battery life than the XS & XS Max had, even though those actually had an OLED display, which was also more power efficient. The effect of this was that many people actually picked the iPhone XR over the XS’s, just because they wanted more battery life.

Well this year, things have changes.

Apple has now removed 3D touch from the iPhone 11 Pro’s and increased the battery size. Alongside the more power efficient Apple A13 chip, we get four more hours of battery life on the 11 Pro compared to the XS, and five more hours on the 11 Pro Max compared to the XS Max when playing back video. So that’s a massive improvement. But the iPhone 11 also get an improvement of one extra hour, over the XR from last year.

So while it’s not as good as the 11 Pro or Pro Max, it’s actually even better than the XR from last year which was already known to have the best battery life in any iPhone yet.

 

VALUE

So in the end. What are my final thoughts on the iPhone 11? 

Well, this lower end iPhone has the exact camera, aside from the zoom module, and the exact same performance that the much more expensive iPhone 11 Pro’s do. Those are the two things that are what most people care about the most in a phone; speed and camera.

So if you can look past the outdated design and lower end display I can assure you that you’ll absolutely love this phone! And at $700, $300 less than the iPhone 11 Pro and $400 less than the Pro Max, this is in my opinion the iPhone that’s worth it the most in 2019.

But is it the smartphone that’s worth it the most in 2019?

Well no, that would be the regular Galaxy S10, which offers a much better display, a more modern design than even the iPhone 11 Pro’s, and a triple lens camera module that is on par with the iPhone 11 Pro Max.

But if you’re an iPhone user this is the one that I would recommend to most people, and then you’ll have $300-$400 left to spend on AirPods or an Apple Watch.

OnePlus 7T Pro Unboxing - The Best Android Smartphone of 2019?


OnePlus has sent over this special mystery package and I have a pretty good idea of one thing that’s inside of this but this package is huge so there’s probably quite a few things inside.

So without any further ado, here’s my unboxing and my first impressions of the OnePlus 7T Pro!


UNBOXING

Ok, so we get this big red box, this is the OnePlus 7T Pro Media Pack, which means that if you’re just buying the 7T Pro from the Store, you wouldn’t really be getting this unfortunately,as this is something that only the reviewers get.

Now when you compare the 7T Pro Media Pack to the one that we got just a few months ago with the 7 Pro, you can see how much bigger this one really is. It’s significantly larger and thicker as well and I think that it also looks better, with that full on red look.

So OnePlus logo on the front and nothing else really on the sides and the back.

Taking off the sleeve takes us to the actual box. Now I think that this one’s really cool, it’s got the ‘Never Settle’ logo on the front, but the front also slides away in this butterfly like style and the contents of the box are revealed.

An example of the drawing styles in the Media Pack that comes in this box

An example of the drawing styles in the Media Pack that comes in this box

The first thing here is this black OnePlus sleeve which seems to contains the OnePlus 7 Pro booklet. This is essentially a guide made for reviewers, so that they get accustomed with all the new features that the OnePlus 7T Pro comes with, and they’ve actually changed the style significantly, from the one that the OnePlus 7 Pro used to come with. There’s no actual images of the phone itself, just drawings and graphics, which I do like! Whoever designed it should get a promotion! This is just a brilliant job and the whole booklet is made out the same cardboard like paper that the box is also made from. So it’s a much thicker and textured paper, than what we got before with the 7 Pro reviewers guide. Also inside the booklet we get a OnePlus branded cleaning cloth - which I don’t think I’ll ever open. This is way too precious to open. This has also had a design change as we now have this landscape cloth rather than the portrait style one that we had before.

Removing that and we get 2 compartments. I opened the one on the right first, since the one on the left seems to be the box for the 7T Pro. Inside of that we get 3 cases for the OnePlus 7 Pro. So we get a Sandstone case and 2 which from the outside look pretty much the same, but they’re actually quite different. They’re both part of the Karbon series of cases, but one is the Karbon Protective Case while the other is the Karbon Bumper case, which does offer more protection to the frame of the phone. I just love both, the feeling on the back is just incredible, but I prefer the Bumper One. It’s a bit weird to explain as it’s made from one piece of plastic, however, the back is more solid while the edge is made from rubber, but there’s no seam line or anything. It’s all just made from one block or at least merged together in a perfect manner.

The size difference between the OnePlus 7T Pro Box (Left) and the 7 Pro (Right)

The size difference between the OnePlus 7T Pro Box (Left) and the 7 Pro (Right)

Then finally we get to the actual OnePlus 7T Pro box. The first thing I noticed about this box is that it’s very tall. Comparing this to the OnePlus 7 Pro box, this is about 25% taller, however it’s also not as wide or as thick as the 7 Pro box. Now, I actually prefer this design, it’s much sleeker, not just in terms of the form factor but also in terms of the style of the box. We have a red box with the message “This is the OnePlus 7T Pro. It is the culmination of all our design and engineering efforts and crafted for those, who like us, always strive for the very best”.

On the sides we get the OnePlus 7T Pro branding, nothing on the top and bottom and on the back we get color (Haze Blue), the Capacity (256GB) as well as the RAM (8GB). Then on the bottom of this box we have ‘Never Settle’.

So once we have removed the phone what else do we get? Well, we get this very long booklet that says OnePlus on it, and inside that we get quite a few things; another card that says invitation on it, which has a message from Pete Lau, the Founder & CEO of OnePlus. We then get three OnePlus stickers, all different. We then get two manuals, one being a quick start guide that also shows you the layout of the phone, and the other one being the warranty and the safety guide. 

There is also another cases in here too, a silicone case just like with the 7 Pro which is really nice to see OnePlus including this in the box, giving day 1 protection!

We then get another card with the sim eject tool, the charging cable which is the same iconic OnePlus red and white cable, definitely the best looking charging cable out there, and we finally get the Warp Charge 30T charger which actually looks identical to the 7 Pro charger, same design, same size, even the exact same specifications and the exact same model number, yet the 7T Pro can charge 23% faster than the 7 Pro could. It seems like the reason for this speed increase is actually some optimisations done in software or it could be thanks to the new processor which I’ll talk about just in a minute. 

Ok, so that’s pretty much it when it comes to the MediaPack. The box was indeed bigger but we actually got less stuff than with the 7 Pro MediaPack, which also included the Bullet Wireless 2 Headphones as well as a OnePlus Car Charger. However, we did get 3 cases this time round, rather than just 2.

THE PHONE

Ok, so now let’s remove the plastic wrap from the 7T Pro and take a look at the actual phone!

Design wise, it looks pretty much identical to the 7 Pro from just a few months ago. We have the same exact bezel sizes, the same display, the same display resolution at 3120x1440, the same 516 PPI. It also has the same 90Hz refresh rate, as well as the same camera system, the same haptic engine and I’ll promise that this is the last time I’ll say “the same” in this article.

Holding these in my hand it’s pretty much impossible to tell which is which from the front.

But in that case, what’s different?

The new Haze Blue 7T Pro, the small black mark next to the camera is the Macro shot assistant

The new Haze Blue 7T Pro, the small black mark next to the camera is the Macro shot assistant

Well, 7 things really.

First off we do get a new colour called the Haze Blue which replaces the Nebula Blue that the 7 Pro came in. It’s a bit lighter than the Nebula Blue and it also reflects more light so it’s a bit shinier. Personally I like both. 

Then the second change is the processor. We now have the Snapdragon 855+ compared to the 855 that the 7 Pro had. The GPU is now 15% faster which means slightly higher FPS in some more demanding games like Call of Duty mobile for example. 

Thirdly there is a new addition next to the camera module, which is for the new Macro mode that this phone now has. Essentially you can get as close as 2.5cm from an object and it will still focus, where most phones will fail. Here’s an example of how close the 7T Pro can focus vs the iPhone 11 Pro that’s all blurry here so this is perfect for photographing insects or plants or just textures in general. 

Then the fourth edition is that the battery is slightly larger at 4085mAh compared to 4000mAh, mostly for that 855+ chip which is essentially an overclocked 855 in the end.

Fifth. If you ever used the Reading Mode on the 7 Pro, on the 7T Pro now allows you to use it in Full Colour mode rather than just Black & White.

Sixth. The 7T Pro comes with Android 10 right out of the box. The 7 Pro will also be getting Android 10 soon, I don’t have it on my unit just yet, but it should be here by the end of the month.

And finally seventh we actually do get a faster fast charge with Warp Charge 30T, which like I said before is 23% faster than on the 7 Pro.

 

CONCLUSION

So in the end, the OnePlus 7T Pro is a very small upgrade over the 7 Pro that we got back at the end of May, just four and a bit months ago. However, I don’t think that that’s necessarily a bad thing. 

The 7 Pro was already an amazing smartphone. Pretty much the best android phone overall, especially considering the price and the 7T Pro is now an even better version of that. Yes, it still doesn’t have a camera that’s as good as the Note 10’s or the iPhone 11 Pro’s, but it does have a very usable and good camera for the price which by the way OnePlus has improved a ton with software updates which they’ve been slamming in a few times a month. 

If you add that to the insanely fast UI, with the near stock android experience, day two updates right after Pixel phones, that 90Hz refresh rate display, and no notch or display cutouts at all, all for $670 or £650 less than what the regular iPhone 11 costs! Well, you guys have what’s probably the best all round android phone of 2019!

Google Pixel 4 - Final Leaks & Rumors!


The Google Pixel 4 is coming out this month! This will be one of the best smartphones to get in 2019, and it might have the best camera in a smartphone for 2019, alongside some very unique features. Personally I’m very excited for the Pixel 4 and here’s everything you need to know about the soon to be device from Google.

This article contains 8 sections: Design, Display, Camera, Performance, Special Features, Battery, Release Data & Price, so you’ll definitely need some popcorn and drinks for this one!


DESIGN

Ok, so Pixel phones are mostly known for 3 things; the amazing camera, the pure stock android experience with no bloatware and day one updates, and the not so pretty design.

The Pixel 1 looked like an iPhone with no home button, but it did have on screen buttons which made the bezels horrendously thick. The Pixel 2 which was released in 2017 already had an outdated design, when compared to the competition, such as the Galaxy S8 or the iPhone X. The Pixel 3 from 2018 had the famous notch which was even bigger and more noticeable than the one on the iPhone X, while lacking any 3D Depth Sensing technology or Face Unlock like the iPhones had. 

And now the Pixel 4 will have another questionable design. Google has tweeted about this and even posted a few teasers. There are so many leaks for this phone that I think its the most leaked phone ever!

A hands on showing the forehead of the new Pixel 4 (Soure: 9to5Google)

A hands on showing the forehead of the new Pixel 4 (Soure: 9to5Google)

First off, the Pixel 4 no longer has that huge notch. Instead we have a fairly noticeable forehead that resembles the one that we had on the Pixel 2XL, back in 2017.  But this year Google is actually packing some serious tech inside that forehead which I’ll cover soon, so it’s not just there without any purpose. The side bezels are fairly thin, they do look to be about the same thickness as on the iPhone 11 Pro and Pro Max, and finally the bottom chin does appear to be thicker than on most phones today, but this one might also have its own purpose.

Moving on to the back we no longer have that iconic dual tone look that Pixel phones were known for, instead we have a single colour glass panel, which is again said to have the same frosted material that the Pixel 3 had and that the iPhone 11 Pro’s now have. 

Google’s ad in Times Square showing the new ‘Oh So Orange’ colour and new camera module. (Source: Reddit)

Google’s ad in Times Square showing the new ‘Oh So Orange’ colour and new camera module. (Source: Reddit)

The leaked colours at least, are black, orange and white. Google even had a massive Time Square poster, teasing the Pixel 4 which featured the orange model, so orange is definitely confirmed at this point. Evan Blass (@evleaks) also confirmed this colours, with their names apparently being “Just Black”, “Clearly White” and “Oh So Orange”! 

Finally, and probably the most noticeable thing on the back, is that camera module which looks so different to how it looked on the previous Pixels. It looks very similar to the iPhone 11 Pro’s module the only differences is that it’s black on the inside rather than matching the colour of the back of the phone. In a way it does look very similar to the camera module on the iPhone 11 Pro mock-ups that we had. It’s not a triple lens camera module unfortunately it’s just a dual one but I’ll be covering that more in the camera section of this article.

Also, the fingerprint reader is now gone and it has now been replaced by something even better. This means that the back has quite a clean look and I overall I do think that Google’s moving into the right direction when it comes to the design. It’s still not as sleek as the S10 is, or the OnePlus 7 & 7T Pro but it will come with some very unique features which I’ll cover later on. 

 

DISPLAY

Moving on to the display, the regular Pixel 4 will come with a 5.7” FullHD+ display, at 2160x1080 resolution and 424 PPI, whereas the Pixel 4 XL will come with a 6.3” QuadHD+ panel, so 3040x1440 resolution at 534PPI. 

These will both be OLED displays, with Gorilla Glass 6, HDR support, 100% DCI-P3 coverage so they will be very good panels but they will also feature something quite special, a 90Hz refresh rate display! A high refresh rate display such as this, is something that we already have on phones such as the OnePlus 7 Pro, the 7T’s, the Asus ROG gaming phones, and the Razer phones. What this means is that all the animations would be 50% more fluid than on a regular phone which has a 60Hz refresh rate panel. Your laptop, your computer, your monitor, most of them also have 60Hz. So the Pixel 4 will be more fluid than those.

CAMERA

Now the Pixels are known for having amazing cameras but the thing is the camera hardware itself was never anything ground-breaking. Instead, Google’s machine learning has been by far the best in the industry and they’ve been able to deliver some amazing results.

The Pixel 3 introduced a dual front facing camera set up (Source: Google)

The Pixel 3 introduced a dual front facing camera set up (Source: Google)

Where all the other manufactures have had dual, triple, even quad camera modules, Google has only had one module. In 2018 with the Pixel 3, we did get a dual front facing camera module, which was one of the first in any smartphone. We had a wide-angle lens for group selfies which was actually a very useful thing to have, but literally nothing extra on the back.

So this year we are getting a dual camera module on the back, which means that Google would still be a year behind the competition. Smartphones in 2017 and 2018 got a second telephoto or a zoom camera module, then a wide angle in 2019. Unfortunately, according to all the leaks that we’ve seen the second module on the Pixel 4 will actually be a zoom module rather than a wide angle module, which is pretty disappointing. You can always zoom in digitally but you cannot take a wide angle shot, without a wide angle lens. 

What’s even more disappointing is that Google already has a very good digital zoom. Google calls it SuperRes zoom, and while it’s nowhere near the quality of an actual zoom module, it’s very very close. So whilst all the leaks seem to be pointing to a zoom module, I’m still holding out for it to be a wide angle.

From the looks of the leaked designs, the Pixel 4 wont have the same dual front facing camera module that we have seen previously (Source: Genk.vn)

From the looks of the leaked designs, the Pixel 4 wont have the same dual front facing camera module that we have seen previously (Source: Genk.vn)

Now, speaking of the modules, it seems like we won’t be getting a dual camera module on the front anymore. From the official images that Google posted there is only one camera module there, I’ll talk about all the other sensors once we get to the special features section. However, this is expected to be a wide angle lens, or ultrawide as everyone’s calling it now, which means that Google will probably take all photos zoomed in digitally at a lower resolution and them zoom out for that wider field of view, when you need to. A similar technique to what Apple is now doing with the iPhone 11 Pro’s.

In terms of the camera specs the selfie camera is reported to be an 8MP sensor, f/2.0 aperture with 1080p video recording at 30fps. This is quite a big downgrade from the 4K60 that the iPhone 11 Pro for example can do. The back camera is reported to be a 12.2MP sensor with f.1.6 aperture. Same 1 / 2.55” sensor like we had on the Pixel 3 but with that f/1.6 aperture from f/1.8, which means we will be getting more light to the sensor, which in turn means better low light photography. 

Video recording with the back facing camera will finally be bumped to 4K60, as the Pixel 3 could only do 4K30 and we’ve had 4K since on phones since 2017 with the iPhone 8.

In addition this camera will actually have two brand new features. The first one being called the ‘Pixel Neural Core’. This is essentially the next gen version of the Pixel Visual Core which was the imaging chip found in the Pixel 3. This was also the chip responsible for processing the data required for the Night Sight photography. Speaking of Night Sight probably the most impressive camera features for me at least, we are getting a brand new Astral Photography mode which seems to be an even more improved version of Night Sight.

We do now have full leaked images from the Pixel 4 thanks to 9to5Google, which you can check out below.

They’re definitely coming from a Pixel, I can tell that by looking at the portrait mode shot in the first image, where the subjects are clearly separated from the background, so they look as if they were added in photoshop.

That portrait mode of the dog looks incredible (Image 2). That’s some very good background separation right there, were the image becomes blurrier the further away you get from the lens, and that 2nd camera module is definitely helping make that portrait mode look realistic. 

There’s also a Night Sight shot (Image 3) that look very good and has that signature Pixel look, where the colours are quite vibrant and cool compared to the warmer tint that we get with Samsung phones and iPhones.

Image 4 is a sample of the Astral photography mode which just look mind-blowing! I can’t believe that these were taken on a phone.

And then we a leaked Macro shot (Image 4) which just looks stunning, look at that detail!

Then we also have samples of food (Image 5) which seems to be very sharp and very colour accurate. 

 

PERFORMANCE

Now, when it comes to the Performance, Pixel phones have never been that impressive. I mean sure, they were smooth and fluid and got day one updates but raw performance wise, they were quite weak when compared to the competition. This is because Pixel phones get released in October and they are one of the last smartphones to be released in the year. Whereas Qualcomm announces their new processors in December, so Pixel phones only get two months until they are already outdated.

In terms of the CPU, the Pixel 4 will come with the Snapdragon 855+. This is actually a fairly new CPU, being launched back in August, however it is just an overclocked 855 and not anything like the 865 will be, which will be announced around December. Still, the 855+ is a very good processor and a pretty big bump from the 845 that the Pixel 3 had.

Aside from the CPU, Pixel phones were also lacking RAM. The Pixel 3’s only come with 4GB of RAM which for an iPhone that’s quite normal but for an Android phone, 4GB of RAM is usually what you now find on low end handsets. Google stated that they don’t need more RAM since they optimise their Pixels very well which unfortunately hasn’t been the case. They were lots of complaints with the RAM management on the Pixel 2 & 3, which Google could easily fix by just adding more RAM in the Pixel 4. And they will, it’s just that the leaks suggest a bump to 6GB of RAM from 4, which isn’t that much. Today we have Android smartphones that come with 12GB and many more than come with 8 as standard. So even 6GB would be slightly outdated.

SPECIAL FEATURES

Ok, now aside from the camera upgrades, and the performance improvements, what are the features that make the Pixel 4 unique? Well, this is where we get the biggest improvements!

A leaked tear down of the forehead showing the implementation of the Soli Radar Chip (Source: Genk.vn)

A leaked tear down of the forehead showing the implementation of the Soli Radar Chip (Source: Genk.vn)

First off, we get the brand new Soli chip. So this is essentially a miniaturised radar that can detect and measure movement much better than a camera can. In fact, Google had a special team just working on this Soli chip. What this chip allows you to do is control your Pixel 4 using Air Gestures. Now this isn’t anything new. We’ve had this with the Galaxy S4 and some other smartphones as well, and while you will be able to just wave at your Pixel to stop an alarm or skip to the next song, I still find this to be a gimmick.

Leaks suggest that Face Unlock will be coming to the Pixel 4 (Source: Genk.vn)

Leaks suggest that Face Unlock will be coming to the Pixel 4 (Source: Genk.vn)

But the good news is that It will work in conjunction with the other sensors in that forehead, to enable the second big new special feature, Face Unlock. Just like we have on the iPhone X and newer, the Pixel 4 will have a full 3D Depth sensing camera. At the moment, no one apart from Apple, Huawei and now Google, are using this tech, mostly because it’s quite expensive. But, Google Face Unlock might be even better than Apple’s, thanks to that Soli Radar chip. Reportedly, the Pixel 4 lights up the display as soon as it sees your face, and unlocks the phone. This is will make it so much faster than Apple’s approach, where you have to lift the phone or tap the display, for the display to even light up. Also, if you take a look at the entire list of sensors that Google has inside that forehead, they’re actually using 2 Face unlock IR cameras, rather than just 1 like Apple uses. This could mean that Google will be using those for even better 3D depth mapping or even faster and more secure unlock.

The 3rd new feature will be UFS 3.0 storage. So just like the OnePlus 7 Pro and the Samsung Galaxy Note 10, the Pixel 4 will have the fastest storage on the market, with Read speeds of just over 1GB/s, which is really impressive to have on a smartphone! This will go really well with that 90Hz refresh rate panel. 

The 4th, and final, new feature is 8x zoom with the back facing camera. We’ve seen some hands-on videos with the final retain unit of the Pixel 4. Unfortunately it seems like it will have a telephoto module rather than an ultra wide angle module, like I am hoping. And that 8X zoom would be digital instead of optical but hey, at least it’s there.

 

BATTERY

In terms of the battery, this is reported to be 2800mAh for the Pixel 4 and 3700mAh for the Pixel 4 XL.

Interesting enough, this is actually a downgrade on the Pixel 4, from the 2915mAh that the Pixel 3 had, but it is however an upgrade on the Pixel 4XL from the 3430mAh that we had on the Pixel 3XL. 

No updates on the fast charging as to whether it is going to be improved in any way. 

RELEASE DATE

So the actual Pixel 4 event is happening on October the 15th, which is just next week! This will be when Google will unveil the Pixel 4, the new Pixel Buds and possibly some brand new Google Home’s as well. 

In terms of when the Pixel 4 would actually be released, this should also be on the 15th. Usually it’s about a week or two after the unveil but considering the amount of leaks that we’ve had, including people making videos with the actual retail unit of the Pixel, months before release, seems like Google already has the Pixel 4’s ready to ship.

 

PRICE

Price-wise we’ve only had one leak from a website called Elara, which was discovered by 9to5Google and according to this leak the prices for the Pixel 4’s would be 820 euros (£730) and 1126 euros for the XL (£1,000). Now although this is quite the price increase from the Pixel 3’s, I wouldn’t be surprised if that’s the case. The Soli radar chip and Face Unlock are indeed some very expensive components which will increase the manufacturing cost of the Pixel 4. But at the same time, Google didn’t sell a lot of Pixel 3’s so they really shouldn’t be bumping up the price.

Leaks from Elara appear to show the prices of the yet to be released Pixel 4s (Source: Elara & 9to5Google)

Leaks from Elara appear to show the prices of the yet to be released Pixel 4s (Source: Elara & 9to5Google)

Also we’ve had a leaked listing of what we get inside the box, posted by 9to5Google, and it seems that we get a USB c to USB C charging cable, the power adapter, which is actually the same 18W charger that we got with the Pixel 3, the sim eject tool and the quick start guide. So no headphones again, which to me is another reason why Google should drop the price, since all the other smartphones at this price point do include headphones and more accessories, especially when it comes to Samsung.

 

CONCLUSION

Ok, so in the end, what do I think about the Pixel 4? Well, it’s not out just yet so I’ll reserve my final thoughts until then but based on all the leaks that we’ve seen, it’s going to be a very strong phone. Basically a OnePlus 7T Pro, with a much worse design but with Face Unlock, Air Gestures, a much better camera and even more stock OS with literally day 1 updates.

It won’t be the prettiest but it might just be the best android phone of 2019.

iPhone 11 Unboxing - This is the iPhone to get!


In yesterday’s article, I took a first look at the iPhone 11 Pro & the Pro Max so if you haven’t read it, you should certainly check it out! 

But in this article I’ll be unboxing and taking a first look at the regular iPhone 11 and telling you why I think that this is the iPhone to get, for most people!


BOX

Ok, so first off the iPhone 11 comes in 6 colors. We have the standard White & Black. We have Green, Purple, Red, as well as Yellow. Last year we had the blue XR and this year we got the yellow one as I think that’s the 2nd best color after Red. 

Like previous models, the iPhone 11 comes in a white box, with an image of the phone on the front

Like previous models, the iPhone 11 comes in a white box, with an image of the phone on the front

And taking a look at the box, the iPhone 11 comes in the same white box that we have seen in previous years. On the front we have a picture of the actual iPhone that you’ll find inside, the yellow one in this case. Some of the elements of the box are actually raised or indented, for example the camera modules are raised, the aluminium frame and so on. It’s a really nice touch!

Then on the sides we have the iPhone logo, there’s no number or anything on this at all, and it does shine in the color of iPhone that you bought, so yellow in this case. Another thing that shines is the Apple logo on the top and bottom of the box which also has that yellow glow to it. Finally on the back of the box, we have the capacity, along with a list of what is included inside.

Now, I do find it quite odd how the iPhone 11 box is noticeably thicker than the 11 Pro’s box, even though we get the exact same accessories inside. So we get the standard booklet, which includes the quick start guide, the sim eject tool, the warranty and the safety guide as well as a pair of Apple stickers. It would’ve been so nice if the stickers actually matched the color of iPhone, like it does on the 12” MacBook but we only have white stickers, just like we have on the iPhone 11 Pro’s. Aside from this, we get a pair of lightning headphones, a USB type A to lightning cable. With the Pro’s we do get a USB type C to lightning cable but both iPhone still have a lightning port. Finally we get the same 5W charger that we have seen in previous years, but the regular iPhone 11 does support fast charging, so you’ll have to buy a fast charger separately, like the 18W one that comes as standard with the Pro’s.

IMPRESSIONS

The new design of the iPhone 11 appears to be a blend of the X and the 6

The new design of the iPhone 11 appears to be a blend of the X and the 6

First off I’ve got to be honest, I’m not really a fan of this design. It’s basically a merge between the iPhone 6’s design from 2014, that the iPhone 6S, 7 and 8 all had, and the brand new iPhone X’s design. The bezels are still as big as on the XR which looks pretty bad on a 2019 phone, especially if you add a case to this.

Now if you thought that the iPhone  11 Pro’s were thick, coming in at 0.5mm thicker than the XS from last year, well the 11 is even thicker than the Pro’s, measuring in at 8.3mm, so it does feel very bulky in the hand.

The colours and the brightness on the Pro’s (Left) are significantly better than on the 11 (Right)

The colours and the brightness on the Pro’s (Left) are significantly better than on the 11 (Right)

The display on this is still an LCD display which again is very odd to see on a phone that still costs $700 or £730, so it’s not a cheap device by any means. So comparing the display to the 11 Pro’s display there is a noticeable difference between the two. The 11 Pros’ display has significantly better contrast, and colors just pop instantly. Everything is also sharper since we have a QHD+ display compared to not even a 1080p panel on the regular iPhone 11. It’s not necessarily a bad display but on a $700 phone this should’ve been OLED. I’m sorry Apple but the Pixel 3a which costs $400 comes with a much higher resolution display, that’s also an OLED panel. 

But those are pretty much all the negatives I have to say about this phone. The outdated design and the display.

Aside from that, it’s actually very very good.

It’s got the same A13 Chip processor as the iPhone 11 Pro’s. We also have 4GB of RAM on this, again, just like on the Pro’s. 4GB has now been officially confirmed on the Pro’s, unfortunately it’s not 6 or 4+2 where 2GB would be dedicated to the camera. So I find it so interesting how Apple promotes the performance on the Pro’s so much when the regular 11 has exactly the same level of performance, which is great! You get the same performance on the entry level iPhone 11 as you do with the much more expensive iPhone 11 Pro’s.

It also comes with fast charging support,even though we don’t have that fast charger included the the box, as I mentioned earlier.

As well as all those we get new and improved speakers, with special audio and dolby vision support, just like the iPhone 11 Pro’s do.  Now, when comparing the 11 and the Pro’s sound quality. They’re actually very very similar. The Pro Max is definitely the best one but between the smaller Pro and the 11, I couldn’t really tell the difference.

Haptic touch is also the same one as on the 11 Pro’s, now that 3D touch got removed from the Pro’s and not only that, but the regular iPhone 11 also come with WiFi 6, just like the iPhone Pro’s.

 

CAMERA

When it comes to the camera system, we now get a dual camera module, one more than the single module that we had on the XR.

The 11 (Right) is missing the Zoom Module that we get on the Pro’s (Right)

The 11 (Right) is missing the Zoom Module that we get on the Pro’s (Right)

Now, on the Pro’s we have triple lens camera module, up from the dual one that we had on the XS’s. So we have the regular module, which Apple’s calling the wide, we have the zoom module and we have the wide angle module, which Apple’s calling the ultra wide.

On the 11 we’re missing the zoom module. Now, we did have a lot of leaks in the past, that suggested the 11 would be missing the wide-angle and getting the zoom instead. However, the way we have it now is just perfect. Zoom can always be simulated through software and digital zoom, but a wide angle shot is impossible to simulate through software, unless you take a panorama but even that won’t be as zoomed out as a wide angle shot would be.

So for the most part we get the exact same camera we have on the iPhone 11 Pro’s, we have the exact same regular module and the exact same wide angle camera.

In addition, most of the camera features are also there as well, such as the Night Mode, the ability to take portrait mode shots on pets and objects, so not just people. 

We have the same brighter True Tone flash as well as the exact same improved SmartHDR processing that the 11 Pro got over the XS, thanks to that Apple A13 processor.

The front facing camera is very impressive as well. We now have a 12MP sensor, up from the 7MP one that we had before. This not only means that we can now shoot 4K video at 60fps, which is a first not just in an iPhone but in any smartphone on the front camera. But not only does the front facing video just looks stunning, but it’s also wider when compared to the XS and yes, we have the exact same front camera here, as on the 11 Pro.

Turning the phone landscape whilst in the Selfie camera will trigger wide selfie

Turning the phone landscape whilst in the Selfie camera will trigger wide selfie

Something else that’s cool is when you rotate your phone in landscape, it switches to the full resolution of the sensor, and lets you take some even wider shots, thanks to that extra 5MP resolution.

Now normally your selfies would be 7MP in resolution so they will be automatically cropped from that 12MP resolution that the front camera has. However you don’t get any image distortion, like you get on something like Pixel 3XL that does have a wide angle lens on the front. 

So really, the only feature that you’re missing on the 11, camera wise, is the lack of that zoom module. But you can still zoom in digitally, your shots won’t be as good of course. Apart from they’re the exact same cameras as on the Pro’s.

PRO VS REGULAR

So both the Pro and the Regular 11 are pretty similar, but one big difference is the price. The 11 costs $700, while the 11 Pro costs $1000, a significant $300 difference between the two, with which you could buy an Apple Watch Series 4, or the Series 3 which now costs $200, or even save towards a Series 5 which costs $400.

But in that case, why does the Pro even exist, and what extras does it offer over the regular 11?

Well, just 4 things really.

A comparison between the frames of the 11 (Left) and the Pro (Right)

A comparison between the frames of the 11 (Left) and the Pro (Right)

The 1st one is a more premium design. We still get the glass on the front and back which Apple is still calling the toughest glass in a smartphone. The only difference here is that with the 11 Pro’s we get a matte glass back and a glossy camera cutout, whereas on the 11 we get a glossy glass back and a matte camera cutout - so quite the opposite here. Also the frame of the phone is made out of aluminum on the 11 compared to stainless steel on the 11 Pro’s.

The 2nd improvement that you’re getting with the 11 Pro’s is that display that I mentioned before which is in my opinion the biggest improvement. High resolution, brighter 800 nit vs 625 nit panel when outdoors, better color reproduction, better HDR content playback and of course OLED versus LCD.  But the 11’s display still supports DCI-P3 color gamut, just like the MacBook Pro’s do, so it’s still a very good display for an LCD panel.

Unfortunately YouTube still doesn’t allow you to view videos in higher than 1080p on Apple devices, due to Apple’s lack of support for Google’s VP9 codec, which means that you’re not really missing out on as much as you would think. 

The 3rd reason to get the 11 Pro would be for that zoom or telephoto lens which, personally, I don’t think is a strong enough reason to upgrade.

Finally, the 4th reason is the battery life. The iPhone XR already had an amazing battery life last year. In fact, it even lasted more than the more expensive iPhone XS & XS Max did. In fact lot of people, even other tech reviewers that I know, chose the iPhone XR over the XS Max, just because of that improved battery life.

But this year the iPhone 11 offers 1 hour more than the XR did last year, so it’s even better. However, the 11 Pro gives you 1 extra hour over the 11 does when playing back video, and the 11 Pro Max offers you 2 extra hours over the regular 11 , again when playing back video. So if you need the best possible battery life that would now be the 11 Pro Max. 

A breakdown of the battery lives of each of the new iPhones

A breakdown of the battery lives of each of the new iPhones

Now there are a few more differences between the two, like the improved water resistance up to 4M compared 2M on the iPhone 11 Pro’s, or up to 512GB of storage on the Pros, but these 4 categories; design, display, zoom camera and battery are the biggest ones.

 

CONCLUSION

So whilst the Pro does have a few benefits over the Regular, I’m not sure if it’s enough. If you just need a new iPhone and you don’t want to spend $1000 on a new phone the regular iPhone 11 does the majority of the things that the Pro does.

But if you are looking for a new phone and you’re open minded about Android, there are many other options that are even better than the 11 is, like the Galaxy S10e or the S10, which now costs even less than the 11 does and offers you a triple lens camera module that’s very similar in quality, a much better OLED display with no notch and an in-display fingerprint reader. I think that’s the best deal for a smartphone today. Of course you also have phones such as the OnePlus 7 Pro which for the same price offer you an even better display with a 90Hz refresh rate, no bloatware, and a full-screen display with no notches or cutouts at all.

But if you’re looking for just a new iPhone the iPhone 11 is certainly the most worth it over its counterparts!