Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra Camera Review - Beta testing - Android

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Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra Camera Review - Beta testing - Android

S20 Ultra camera

The post Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra Camera Review: Beta testing appeared first on MobileSyrup.

S20 Ultra camera


Samsung likes to experiment with its phones’ cameras, but what isn’t always obvious to the average user is that they’re the beta testers. The Galaxy S20 Ultra is yet another example.

By now, the company’s annual iterative cycle sees new camera features come in the Galaxy S line, which are then augmented, one way or another, in the Galaxy Note line. So, being the flagship of the S20 trio, the Galaxy S20 Ultra brings with it the supposed best the company could do.

On paper, the camera array and all its additional features come off like a photographic arsenal. The three lenses are complemented by a depth sensor and unique software-powered tools that include a 108-megapixel camera and 8K video.

Though this review focuses on the S20 Ultra, many functions also apply to the Galaxy S20 and Galaxy S20+. Having shot with all three of them, I will point out unique differences between them where necessary.

Megapixel madness

As it did last year, starting with the Galaxy S10+, Samsung lays out three rear cameras in the S20 Ultra. You get a 12-megapixel (and 108-megapixel) wide, 12-megapixel ultra-wide and 48-megapixel telephoto, plus a DepthVision Time-of-Flight (ToF) sensor. What’s gone is the f/1.5-f/2.4 mechanical aperture that goes back to the Galaxy S9.

Of those figures, the 108-megapixel camera stands out. Samsung also hyped it to a large degree, and understandably so. It’s a big number, and with an image sensor larger than any other phone currently available, it paints an intriguing picture of what could be with this camera. The company crammed in a sensor measuring 9.5mm x 7.3mm, making it 70 percent larger than the one in the S10+.

The truth is, it’s not a real 108-megapixel sensor. Samsung uses pixel binning to split existing pixels into nine smaller ones. When you do the math, the 12-megapixels rocket up to 108-megapixels. Megapixel counts were long a myth in the short history of digital cameras, and that applies here, too. The main reason why is because, unlike a DSLR or mirrorless camera, the image sensor in this phone is still terribly small by comparison.

12/04/2020 09:35 PM