Hey, what's up guys everything Apple Pro here, and I've spent almost a week with the Samsung Galaxy, S, 9, plus, and I've, been recording clips going places and in this video I want to go ahead and put a definite of tests, comparing the galaxy s 9, plus to the iPhone 10 and see which one is better in which situations from low lights, super-bright motion, 4k, 60, slow motion, let's go ahead and see how they compare in which ways one is better or worse, and just overall see for yourselves, which one suits you better. All right. All right, boys and girls, we're starting off in E, Pacific Northwest in the sincere mountains, so went out for a hike that didn't exactly work out. We got stuck so went on a little walk at least and immediately from the computer. I couldn't tell this from the devices of themselves. I can see that the colors look so, so different I mean look at the sweatshirt of Constantine here walking in front of the camera.
You can tell the color of the sweatshirt on the galaxy s 9 plus, but on the iPhone 10. It looks black that is so mysterious to me. I, don't understand how the colors can be so different and from there you look at the snow, and it looks a lot more icy and blue on the galaxy s.9 I can tell you. This was not how it looked in person. I mean we all know what snow looks like in person.
It really doesn't look that icy blue, it's more of a white crystal-clear white and the iPhone definitely represented that better, and this is something I seem to always say, because it simply is the truth. The iPhone has boring colors, but real life isn't very exciting. The Samsung Galaxy S line plus seems to put some sort of filter a vibrancy to the actual footage that doesn't exist in real life and do take note. This is 4k. This is shot in auto modes for both I didn't tweak.
Any setting didn't make any adjustments to lighting. The whole point was where you can take this pick it up. You know running gun type of shooting, where you don't have to adjust the settings yourself and if you guys do choose the s9, you might have to tweak the colors a little because really I don't like what it's doing to the footage. Yes, it makes it look a lot cooler, but that's not how it is. You know it's modifying reality for you and making it look a little cooler than it actually is so in this scene.
I was actually raising it to the Sun to see if we could get a shutter issue on either one of these and the iPhone 10 still has remnant of the old shutterbug that I shared with you on the iPhone 7 plus in the dark to light transitions. It will actually have chop, which is interesting, that Apple still has it there, and you'll notice it throughout this video. It's definitely better versus old iPhones, but going from dark to light, there's a very nasty transition in some darker areas. So keep an eye on that. So once we start getting into more foliage, you can see the trees are really, really green.
Like the camera, definitely up the saturation and a lot more color there than usual next we went to a beach, and these colors are gonna, be a little different here as we're getting closer to sunset. This is shot in 4k 60 frames per second, and I cut it in half to get that slow-motion cinematic effect, and this actually shocked me when slowing the footage down the galaxy s.9 is Jacky, it's jumping around. It seems really mechanical I'm, not sure if this is the digital stabilizer. That's interrupting the footage, but I did not like this. The iPhone is like actually usable.
You can put it into a low-budget music video or something like that. It's smooth the Galaxy S line plus on the left, the transitions. You know it's just bad, and I'm wondering if you can turn that off in the settings, because I didn't see an option for turning off the stabilizer itself, but again, I was holding these with my hands, maybe free to use a gimbals you'd, get some better results here, see when I Pan, you start noticing that Jacky Asian the galaxy s, 9, plus and I hope I'm not being too critical. This is literally just what I'm observing from this footage. Anyways 4k quality, though on its own, is pretty dang good, 4k, 60 I feel like Samsung needs to do a software update or something because it did not seem well polished.
Otherwise, I noticed one of the strengths of the galaxy s.9 plus, is in really, really well-lit situations when you've got a light source beaming down on the subject, or you're filming directly. You know behind the Sun. Your subject is in front of the Sun. That's what I mean you're going to notice that the galaxy s 9 plus, can get a lot more detail in color. The dynamic range is much better on the galaxy s 9 plus the iPhone starts looking flat as It's focusing either on these subjects or on the bright light.
The galaxy s, 9 plus, can do a little better of both, so I definitely notice. That was a strength of the SN+ throughout shooting this entire time, and if you actually look at the water look at how much more saturated it is in this shot like it is so much more colorful. Mass 9 I do hereby declare front-facing video does, so the galaxy is capable of 1440p it's a little higher than the iPhones HD resolution and just want to see the quality. We've got the witching hour upon us sunsets happening soon, so I have a lot of light behind me and the iPhone really likes to dark my face out, but on the galaxy it's a little more visible. Watch that out it's alright hard to tell from the phones, but both seem adequate.
No I just wanted to do a test and another one with boring, foliage. Here's our subject against the blue background. It's very, very close, iPhones a little grayer flat because when we pick up those colors as well in this situation, alright next location and slow motion on the Samsung Galaxy s, 9 plus, is obviously a strong suit, as it can do.960 frames per second at 720p, but only 4.2 seconds and actually using this feature, the automatic version of It's where it detects the motion is, in my opinion, very terrible. It's very bad at noticing that motion and starting the recording and trying to do it manually you just can't capture it. I tried it.
We try too many times with many things and I always did it either too soon or too late, which was pretty annoying, but it is pretty dang funny and awesome to do this. So overall, slow motion is a huge advantage on the s9 plus over the iPhone tens yeah, Mrs. Shady his about to fall like caving in can I go for a swim, damn derelict. This is literally like going to break I, don't know go straight through. They would rather not fix it just block it all workers job all right.
So we deal just give me something, and the live portrait mode on both was actually pretty dang. Good I feel, like the galaxy's, brings out a little more color, more vibrancy out of the image, but in general, photography on the iPhone 10 surprised me. The Samsung Galaxy S, 9 plus, was flatter here versus the iPhone 10. The iPhone 10 was able to bring out more color and most of the pictures that I took, which is surprising, so Samsung applies a filter to their video, but not so much to their photos. They're more untouched, you can say, which is a good thing.
So both of these were very close. I was surprised to find that's the iPhone and galaxy are very similar in terms of the crop. The galaxy doesn't really have much of a wider advantage over the iPhone 10. Usually me, passing galaxies had a really wide angle lens, but things were very close here. I mean surprisingly, very close.
The galaxy s 9, though, did a lot better again with the dynamic range. As you can see here, the subjects are a lot more, let's here as well too. Overall, though, it extremely surprised me with its picture-taking ability, as well as the iPhone 10, though, and a couple more focused tests, so one in 1080p to really see the advantages of the dual optical image stabilizer for both lenses. Again, both of these phones do have this feature, and the galaxy, as you can see just was super jittery. The software was cropping, the video erratically, the iPhone felt a lot more natural, and this is a perfect example of this one I'm actually running, holding each of them in my hands individually again and yeah.
The iPhone wins here: hands down the stability on the galaxy I, don't know why it's so bad, and here, as I zoom in during video, you really start to see the advantages of a dual optical image. Stabilizer set up, so the telephoto lens is now stabilized and both are very stable, but the Samsung Galaxy wins here. Hands down as everything is in focus. There's a lot less grain, especially when you go to six times. The zoom Samsung really nailed the zooming capabilities on this one and everything stays in focus.
It's sharp I definitely noticed that if you will be using the zoom feature, the Samsung phone is gonna, be the winner here, I mean I tried to focus, it really didn't want to have it on the iPhone. It was just not very sharp, okay and probably v1. All of you guys were waiting for low-light capability, one of the biggest selling factors on the Samsung Galaxy s.9 series is that it has a dual aperture lens. It can open up to as wide as 1.5 f-stop switch. I smartphone is unprecedented, so I went out to downtown and really immediately I could tell the difference.
Things were a lot less noisy. You can make out way more detail if you zoom in I mean take a look at the lights in the very background, you'll notice, they're, very sharp on the Samsung Galaxy s, 9, plus it's except to light a lot better. It's very, very clear and the noise is still there, but digitally a Samsung that has handled it, but the fact that it has a wider aperture helps so much so. The iPhone here is darker. It can't really keep up, even though I thought it did a very good job when it came out.
The s9 plus here are a hands down a winner. I mean everything was so much sharper all the lights in the dark. I definitely noticed the galaxy had that down. It's still, not amazing, but so I'm, comparing it to the iPhone 10 it's much better, and this is the best low-light footage. I think you're going to get out of any modern smartphone with how actually going to a mirrorless or DSLR camera when zooming in as well.
You can see the detail, the noise, it's a lot more parents at the galaxy s, 9 has it down, although on the iPhone, it does a very good job as well, especially when you focus on the lights. Everything else stays dark around its, but look at this shot right here, so much grain on the iPhone. Oh now, I'm sure most of you guys won't be taking a lot of pictures in the pitch black. If you were to do that, you would use flash, but the benefits of the Samsung Galaxy S 9 pluses camera. The dual aperture lens system is actually a lot more apparent than that throughout the few days that I've been shooting with the asinine plus in any situation where there's a very dark subject, it picks it up so much better.
The detail and color from it, I noticed that I mean this chart right here really illustrates that very well, as you can see it's bringing in a lot more light into the camera, and this is automatic again no extra settings, no post-processing, the iPhone 10 doesn't accept as much light, because the aperture itself is smaller, so I definitely notice throughout the entire. Yes, nine claws is so much better when it comes to low-light shots or low-light subjects in general, it is a fantastic camera, despite all the color differences. Alright guys- and there are my observations on both of these cameras- they're both great they both have strengths and weaknesses, but you can't go wrong with either one. If you need more low-light capability, the s9 plus is the one to go to. If you want better stabilization, I say the iPhone 10.
It really depends on what you want from these cameras, but again either one definitely a great choice. So thanks for watching guys, hopefully this video made it a little easier to decide between one or the other. Of these cameras have a great day guys enjoy your choice. Peace.
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