What's up guys, I'm Kim VHD here- and this is your first look at the brand-new Samsung Galaxy s- 20 and galaxy s.20 plus now there's a whole new lineup of Samsung clones out right now, they're going all out for 2020 clearly, so we have the galaxy s: 20 the galaxy s, 20 plus, and a new galaxy s.20 ultra I've got an entire separate video on that s, 20 ultra it's the new pro version in their lineup, but that phone starts at thirteen. Ninety-nine and we don't all have a G and a half to spend on a new phone, no matter how nice it is. So these are the true successors to the galaxy s 10 and S 10, plus the s 20 and s 20 plus, and to me this is actually one of the biggest jumps up. I've seen Samsung take with their phones. Literally, everything you can think of is upgraded, and they've taken the biggest jumps in the most important areas of the phone, so the screen the battery and the cameras. So, let's start with the screen.
These are now 6.2 inch and six point. Seven inch displays respectively, and they are 120 Hertz quad, HD OLED displays so super high resolution HDR+ and super responsive high refresh rate screens. This is the Train I've been telling you guys. Flagships are all going to get on in 2020 and to match that super high refresh rate Samsung has also doubled the touch sensitivity to a 240 Hertz sample rate, meaning it responds to touch input twice as fast and the whole new speed difference is instantly noticeable. Now.
Obviously, it's still tough for me to show you guys in this a 30fps YouTube video but yeah, literally everything from swiping around the UI to opening and closing apps and scrolling, and eventually, of course, gaming. Everything will look and feel smoother and I. Think Samsung has also tweaked some of these animations in one UI to be a bit shorter and snappy or two, so you can easily tell it feels way. Smoother than 60, Hertz and I can actually tell the difference versus 90 as well, which I've gotten used to Hey editor Marquez. Here real quick with a little message.
Little asterisk, so galaxy s, 20s at 120 Hertz are actually to be limited to 1080p, not for resolution 1440p. So this is something I just found out later after the briefing I didn't even really notice, while using it. But if you get the phone out the box, it will be at 1440p and at 60 Hertz and when you go into the settings to change it, to move it up to 120 Hertz it'll, lock you at 1080p, probably to save battery life and power, and things like that, a small asterisk. On what we've learned about the phone but figured I'd, let you know back to the video, so I'm super happy about the screen and on top of all that, there's now the center hole punch you can see which actually preferred because, unlike the corners there's, usually nothing being blocked in the middle, and it's now actually flatter, which is so unlike Samsung, because they've always been the ones to push the curved glass melting over the sides, but hey new decade, new Samsung. Now this display doesn't melt over the edge nearly as much or kind of at all, it's much more flat.
In my opinion, much more usable and I still have the ultrasonic fingerprint reader, of course, underneath the display. Now, let's talk about battery for a second, they have increased the battery sizes on all these phones by a healthy amount -. So it's a four thousand William hour battery on the smaller s, twenty and a forty-five hundred million power battery on the S 20, plus, so they're not trying to make these phones super razor-thin, which is great they're, actually just a tiny bit thicker. But it's also, probably because with a huge bright hundred twenty Hertz display, you're going to want all the battery you can get. So this is something we're going to have to test.
Of course, when we get the phone in for the full review, but I'm at least glad to see on the spec sheet much larger cells plus there's still 25 watt fast charging with that charger included in the box and wireless charging ? and while we're at it, let's hit the specs boom there. You go high-end CPU and insane 12 gigabytes of RAM on all of them. Expandable storage, ip68, certified I mean these phones are complete on the spec sheet, not quite as wild as the s20 ultra, but still no big shortcomings as you'd expect from a Samsung flagship and the entire lineup is also all 5g capable, but I don't think this is quite a game-changer as much as some people will try to make out to be. You know the s20 and s20 plus they will not do millimeter-wave so only sub, 6, 5g and so it'll say 5g in the corner. But we talked about this in a previous video.
It's only going to be up to about 20% faster than good 4G on a good day, and so I wouldn't buy this phone just for the 5g. So anyway, that's it. The last and probably most important new piece of these new phones with the galaxy s 20, and that is the cameras. They are a huge focus for Samsung in these new phones. This year, pun intended, and I haven't seen the unpacked slideshow slides, yet I'm recording this before that, but I'd be willing to bet that probably half of them at least half are about cameras.
So you're, looking at a new triple camera setup for the s 20 and the s 20 plus has room for an extra depth sensor, but otherwise they're the same things here with a new 12 megapixel main sensor at F 1.8, then there's a 3 X 64 megapixel telephoto camera at f/2 and a 12 megapixel ultra-wide at F 2.2, and they are all physically larger sensors than last year, which is great for pretty much everything, light, sensitivity, low light performance and anything else, basically to do with photography and there's some serious zoom capabilities, not just optical zoom, but with software, giving you at 10x multiplier. That's going to give you a comfortable, 30x, hybrid, zoom and I know this isn't a video about the ultra, but that phone has a 10x zoom, which means the hybrid zoom, with software will go up to a hundred X, which is ridiculous, but they'll call all of this space zoom. It could have called a galaxy zoom, but I guess that works as well, but the nice cherry on top of all this is they're all capable of 8k 24 FPS video across the whole lineup. Now 8k, video in a smartphone camera sounds incredible, sounds like something I put in my dream phone, but there is a catch.4K was already big, but 8k video is 33, mega pixels per frame, which is awesome because you can get the flexibility of being able to pull thirty-three megapixel stills from a video. But to get that you have to have a window of a sensor, big enough to shoot 8k video, which you need at least a 33 megapixel sensor.
But the main camera on these phones, like I mentioned, is that 12 megapixel sensor, it's the 3x telephoto, that's 64 megapixels! So when you go into the settings and turn the video resolution to 8k like I, did that's going to be coming from that telephoto camera, not the main camera. So it's gonna punch in a bit as you can tell, which definitely drops it a bit on the convenience side. Also, 8k doesn't support tracking autofocus or video effects. Some things to note, as it says here in the settings, so they do technically shoot.8K, yes, but it's not from the main sensor. It's punched in there's just a little extra to think about when maxing out video on these phones.
So it's not like the dream world, where we can stream 8k over 5g to YouTube without even thinking about it, just not quite there yet either way, though, as you can tell with the entire rest of this phone, not a lot to dislike even a lot of the little stuff they changed, I'm liking, ?, they changed the button situation. So now the buttons have moved back over to the right hand, side and the dedicated Bigamy button is gone. They are also pretty lightweight phones as well, despite their size and the bigger batteries. I was impressed with how good they feel in the hand and how light they are compared to some other big phones and Samsung's.1Ui 2.0 has some neat improvements as well. Now I'd be lying if I said I loved it.
It's still far from my favorite flavor of Android, but there's still things like building a zoom preview into the camera app now so when you're zoomed in super far, you still get that preview on the top left of what the hell you're zooming into, which is super useful and there's other stuff like Spotify and now integrated into Bixby routines and HD Google Duo, video chat, built natively into the dialer and some other stuff, like the subtle new animations and there's also a new single take mode in the camera. It's like the opposite of Pro Mode. Basically, instead of you doing all the hard work of taking several photos and videos, you just hit the shutter button once and point it at some action, and it will decide for you when to take photos and videos based on you know when eyes are open and faces are smiling and stuff. That seems kind of cool. But this isn't something I think I'll ever use.
Call me crazy, but I like taking the photos myself, but at the end of the day, if you look back at this thing, you get on the spec sheet and everything they had done with this phone. It's hard to find anything, you could consider a weakness or a complaint or a downside or a bad thing about this phone aside from maybe the price. Now, of course, a lot of this is on paper and based on, like the two hours that I spent with this phone. Getting this footage, but honestly I'm excited to review this song definitely subscribe to be among the first to see that when it comes out, if you haven't already yeah, is it too early to call Samsung a front-runner for the most improved award, just based on how many things are better about this phone I? Don't know something to think about either way, thanks for watching and definitely check out the galaxy s 20 ultra video first link with a like button. If you haven't already watched that check that one out to catch you guys in the next one peace.
Source : Marques Brownlee