Apple's Iphone 11 Pro Max vs Samsung's Galaxy S20 Ultra
I
know I promised you guys this post so here it is.
Around February, Samsung released the long talked about s20 series and its face, the s20 Ultra, has been every good as expected. Now, some people claim Apple’s IPhone 11 pro max, can give the s20 Ultra a run for its money. Well, I’m here to set those doubts straight.
PRICE:
If you thought
the iPhone 11 Pro Max was expensive, the Galaxy S20 Ultra's price tag puts
Apple's to shame. At $1,399 for the base configuration of the S20 Ultra with
128GB of storage and 12GB of RAM, Samsung's flagship demands a $300 premium
over the cheapest version of the iPhone 11 Pro Max with 64GB of storage.
Is $300 worth
double the base storage? You could argue that it is, considering you'd have to
pay another $149 to get 256GB of storage in the iPhone — driving up the price
to $1,249. Even then, you don't have the ability to expand that further with a micro
SD card on Apple's phone.
Still, most
people are going to look at the different prices between the Galaxy S20 Ultra
vs. the iPhone 11 Pro Max and come away with some sticker shock from Samsung's
offering.
Winner: iPhone 11 Pro Max
DESIGN:
At
6.5 inches from corner to corner, the iPhone 11 Pro is already an imposing
smartphone. But the Galaxy S20 Ultra takes things a step further with its
largest-in-class 6.9-inch AMOLED panel. Samsung's handset also employs a 20:9
aspect ratio that's slightly narrower than the iPhone 11 Pro Max's squatter
19.5:9 proportions.
As a result,
the Galaxy S20 Ultra is considerably taller than Apple's supersized iPhone, yet not quite as wide. Because the S20
Ultra is a hair narrower, Samsung's device is actually a bit easier to grasp in
your hand. On the flip side, the additional three-tenths of an inch of height means you have to stretch your thumb
farther across the Galaxy's display to reach the opposite corner. Make no
mistake: Those shopping for one of the best small phones aren't
going to be comfortable with either of these handsets. But quite honestly, the
Samsung S20 Ultra comes out on top here with its sleek deign and dark colors.
Winner: Samsung S20 Ultra
DISPLAY:
The Galaxy S20 Ultra's
6.9-inch display sports both a higher resolution and a peak refresh rate that's
double the 6.5-inch panel inside the iPhone 11 Pro Max, so you might expect
Samsung to pull out a massive lead in this category.
However, there are a
few caveats to those eye-catching specs. The S20 Ultra defaults to full-HD
resolution, rather than its native quad HD. The default refresh rate mode is
also 60 Hz, even though the phone can be set to 120 Hz for smoother animations
and scrolling. (Raising the refresh rate imposes an adverse effect on battery
life, but we'll get to that later.)
In other words, while
the S20 Ultra's display can look better than the iPhone's, it doesn't come out
of the box that way, and to get the best longevity on a charge, you won't want
to keep it locked on those energy-draining settings.
What's more, the
iPhone 11 Pro Max's panel was able to reach a higher peak brightness setting in
our lab, churning out 761 nits to the S20 Ultra's 662 nits. Apple's screen
tuning also opts for more muted, realistic colors, whereas Samsung provides
several options on its devices, ranging from natural to Adaptive. The latter
lends a noticeably more saturated look to photos, movies and games.
In the end, the S20
Ultra gets the nod here on the basis of its faster refresh rate, but only just.
While Samsung's display breakthroughs are no doubt very impressive, they're not
necessarily efficient enough to use every day.
Winner: Samsung Galaxy S20
Ultra
CAMERA:
Whether you choose the Galaxy S20 Ultra or the iPhone 11
Pro Max, you're getting one of the two best camera phones money
can buy. However, one of them has an edge.
Sure,
the iPhone 11 Pro Max features three 12-MP sensors on the back, tied to wide, ultra
wide and 2x optical telephoto lenses. But the Galaxy S20 Plus sports a 108-MP
primary wide lens; a 48-MP, 4x optical telephoto capable of 10x lossless hybrid
zoom; a 12-MP ultra wide shooter; and a time-of-flight sensor for
depth-measuring capabilities.
In
some cases, such as when you can take advantage of the S20 Ultra’s zoom
capabilities, the results just speak for themselves. The iPhone 11 Pro Max's
camera is good — very good. But it often has a preference for artificially warm
images, and it’s purely digital zoom is no match for the S20 Ultra's
software-aided optical zoom that delivers lossless quality at 10x.
However,
the S20 Ultra also has a habit of trying too hard sometimes — especially when
things get dark. To its credit, Samsung’s device delivered a sharper image here
that extracted more detail out of the ceiling and floor. But the white balance
is a bit too cool, and the contrast is over pronounced compared to the more
naturally-toned scene captured on the iPhone.
Plus,
the iPhone 11 Pro Max still holds an advantage where portraits are concerned.
While Apple's cameras muddied up my skin tone and lent a sepia-like cast to the
frame, they also pulled out much more detail in my hair and the fabric of my
scarf and jacket. The optimal portrait would combine the metering of the S20
Ultra's shot with the detailed exposure visible in the iPhone's.
Likewise, there
are aspects I prefer of the selfie I captured using the iPhone 11 Pro Max.
Apple's Deep Fusion camera technology excels at highlighting fine detail in
medium lighting conditions. The S20 Ultra doesn't really have an answer to that
technique, though I do prefer the more flattering, zoomed-in perspective of
Samsung's 40-MP selfie lens.
It must
be said that the Galaxy S20 Ultra has a few helpful camera interface features
that the iPhone lacks. Single Take, for example, captures a variety of content
types with just one press of the shutter button — including wide and ultra wide
photos, short video clips and a preselected best shot. The S20 Ultra can also
capture 8K video, though you'll obviously need an 8K display to view that
content as it was intended to be seen.
However, right now, those benefits don’t outweigh the glitches many have discovered
within the S20 Ultra’s imaging stack. Samsung’s cutting-edge cameras happen to
come with cutting-edge growing pains for now, like jumpy autofocus that takes
too long to hone in on a subject, and a softness to portraits that is
unexpectedly poor for such a sophisticated multi-lens module. The company is
working on a software update to address these problems that is expected to arrive
in the coming weeks, but until I see how it improves things, I cannot recommend
the S20 Ultra’s on the basis of its camera.
Winner: iPhone 11 Pro Max
PERFORMANCE:
Here's one particular
area where Samsung — and other Android phone makers — still have some serious catching
up to do. The A13 Bionic chipset in the iPhone 11 Pro Max surpasses the
Qualcomm Snapdragon 865 chipset inside the Galaxy S20 Ultra, just like it beat
phones powered by last year's Snapdragon 855 system-on-chip.
Now, rest assured —
the S20 Ultra, with its 12GB of RAM compared with the iPhone's 4GB, is no
slouch. But Apple's still a step ahead of the Snapdragon contingent, judging
from the benchmarks.
For example, in
Geekbench 5's multicore, system wide test, the S20 Ultra delivered a score of
3,076, compared with the iPhone's 3,517. In GFXBench's Aztec Ruins high-tier
off-screen graphics test, the S20 Ultra pulled a 1,319 result at 20.7 frames
per second, compared with 1,657 at 25 fps for Apple's flagship. If maximum
performance is a major priority for you, iPhone remains the answer.
Winner: iPhone 11 Pro Max
5G AND CONNECTIVITY:
The Galaxy S20 Ultra
can connect to any major carrier's 5G network, while the iPhone 11 Pro Max has
to make do with pedestrian 4G LTE.
If you're spending
more than $1,000 on a new smartphone, you're going to want one with 5G. Not so
much this very moment, but rather in the coming years. You're making a serious
investment with either of these devices, and if you're stuck with a 5G-less iPhone
two years from now, you'll probably feel the pain in the future.
Right now, 5G speeds
aren't all they're cracked up to be. Millimeter wave (mmWave) performance
delivers exceptional download speeds well beyond 1 Gbps. But to get that, you
have to stand outdoors, within line of sight of a node on a telephone pole or
building. Meanwhile, broader sub-6-GHz 5G coverage is accessible indoors, but
sort of performs like really good LTE, offering speeds hovering around 100 Mbps
on T-Mobile's 5G network in New York on the S20 Ultra.
Ultimately, networks
figure to improve over time, and because the Galaxy S20 Ultra's X55 modem works
with different kinds of 5G, it stands to reap those benefits as you hold onto
your phone.
Winner: Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra
BATTERY LIFE:
The Galaxy S20
Ultra averaged 11 hours and 58 minutes in Tom's Guide's custom battery test,
where phones are made to endlessly load web pages over a mobile network (in
this case, T-Mobile 5G) while set to 150 units of screen brightness. The iPhone
11 Pro Max lasted essentially just as long, at 11 hours and 54 minutes.
That
places both of these flagships near the top of our list of the longest-lasting smartphones. However, there's a catch.
Remember when we said the S20 Ultra has a 120-Hz screen? That 11:58 time was
recorded with the phone's display set to 60 Hz, and you definitely won't get
the same longevity when using the high refresh-rate mode.
In
fact, Samsung's handset won't come anywhere close to that number, should you
opt for 120 Hz. It turns out the Galaxy S20 Ultra's battery life is
reduced by a quarter when you ratchet up the refresh rate, going from about 12
hours to 9 hours — something prospective owners should certainly keep in mind.
Surprisingly,
the S20 Ultra even charges back up faster than the iPhone 11 Pro Max, even
though it has a much larger battery. The 25-watt adapter included with the S20
Ultra replenished 63% of the device's charge after a half hour, compared with
48% for the 18-watt brick that ships with the iPhone. The S20 Ultra can also
wirelessly charge other devices — like, perhaps, a pair of Galaxy Buds or a
smartwatch — another thing Apple's handset cannot do.
Winner: Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra
SOFTWARE:
The Galaxy S20 Ultra and iPhone 11 Pro Max each come out
of the box with the latest versions of their respective operating systems: Android 10 (featuring Samsung's One UI 2 interface)
and iOS 13. We found the latter to be a more meaningful upgrade
when we reviewed both releases late last year, thanks to Apple's well-designed
new Dark Mode, improved Maps and Photos apps and privacy-protecting and
time-saving Sign in with Apple feature.
And
that's to say nothing of Face ID — Apple's secure, 3D face-scanning biometric
technology that has now been refined over three generations of phones. Samsung
still has no answer to it, and the ultrasonic fingerprint sensor it's used on
the S20 Ultra instead is rather clunky and inaccurate.
IPhones
also tend to be supported with new updates for far longer than Android phones
typically are. For example, iOS 13 runs on every phone Apple has made
stretching all the way back to 2014's iPhone 6s. Samsung's devices, conversely,
often don't see updates after two years — and even then, those updates rarely
show up on time.
Winner: iPhone 11 Pro Max
OVERALL
WINNER: SAMSUNG S20 ULTRAAAAA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Yes, the iPhone 11
Pro Max gives you everything you want and more but out on top comes the S20
Ultra. It gives you everything you want, well, it has to considering the amount
you’re paying for it!
Credit for
information of this post goes to Tom’s guide!
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