Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Review: The Samsung S7's Camera Now Rivals The iPhone

The Canadian Press, 08 Mar, 2016 01:36 PM
    NEW YORK — It's difficult to justify paying for a high-priced, top-end smartphone these days — unless, that is, you want to take good pictures.
     
    In this Age of Instagram, a great camera is one of the few reasons to pay $650 or more for the latest smartphone, instead of $200 or $300 for a budget phone that does texting, Facebook and Web surfing just as well.
     
    Samsung's phone cameras have shown tremendous improvement in just a few years. The new Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge phones take much better pictures than last year's S6 models. In fact, they're now basically neck and neck with Apple's iPhones, meaning that you no longer have to compromise on picture quality if you prefer Android.
     
    I took more than 2,000 still shots and a few videos using 10 smartphones from Samsung, Apple, LG, Huawei and Motorola. To make the comparison clearer, I focused on indoor and night settings, such as museums, bars and New York's Central Park at night. Even budget phones can take great shots in good light, but only great phones take good shots in poor light.
     
    ___
     
    BETTER LIGHTING, BETTER FOCUS
     
    I was impressed with the S7's ability to capture Central Park's unlighted Bethesda Fountain at night. Shots from most other phones appear pitch black, save for a faint outline of the fountain's statue and some distant light from building windows.
     
    The S7 was also more likely to get the focus right on its own, without having to choose a focus area first by touching the phone screen. Even with touching, focusing sometimes takes a second or two on other cameras. I don't get that lag with the S7, meaning fewer missed action shots.
     
    The lens and image sensors on the S7 aren't large enough to match the capabilities of full-bodied SLR cameras, but the phones borrow some of the focus and light-capturing technologies found on more sophisticated shooters. These technologies combined result in brighter, sharper images in low light.
     
    ___
     
    UPGRADING THE S6
     
    The S7 also has a wider-angle lens than last year's S6 models, one that now matches iPhone hardware. It captures more of what's in front of you. Among other things, people don't have to squeeze together as tightly for group shots.
     
    Samsung also corrected some design deficiencies in earlier models. The S7's camera lens no longer protrudes awkwardly, as it did on the S6. Its screen turns into a flash for low-light selfies, just like the latest iPhones. (That means my selfies now look awful because of their subject and not the low light.)
     
    The S7 also takes photos in a standard 4-by-3 rectangle, not the wider 16-by-9 frame of the S6. While overall megapixel count is lower on the S7, that's entirely a consequence of the narrower width, which yields a photo like an S6 shot with its far edges chopped off.
     
     
    A FEW QUIBBLES
     
    Many indoor shots come out yellowish, possibly reflecting the yellowish nature of indoor lighting. On the S7, books look as though they've yellowed from being out in the sun too long. Egg whites on a burger don't look so white (though bacon comes out brighter). Faces are more orange than usual.
     
    Odd colours can make pictures look better, but they often don't seem natural.
     
    The S7 also produces a white outline — a bit of a glow — around black text. It isn't noticeable when viewed on a screen, but looks fake when enlarged.
     
    ___
     
    COMPARISONS
     
    Of all of the phones I tested, the S7 and iPhone 6S produced the most consistent low-light photos. The S7 shots typically had better focus, while the iPhone pictures looked more natural, with colours typically mirroring how you see things.
     
    The S7 has also cloned Apple's Live Photos feature, in which the camera captures short video clips as it's taking still photos. The feature is on by default on the iPhone, but you need to turn it on with the S7. Unlike the iPhone version, Samsung's Motion Photo has no sound.
     
    The latest Apple and Samsung phones are comparable in many other ways. (I took a first look at the S7 a few weeks ago: http://apne.ws/21hAP8X .) One impressive non-camera feature is the S7's fast-charging capability. With the included charger, I get a full charge in just 80 minutes, and that's enough for nine hours of Hulu video streaming on the S7, 10 hours on the S7 Edge.
     
    The camera, though, is where these phones really stand out from the pack.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    New design to make batteries last for 50 years?

    New design to make batteries last for 50 years?
    If you have a pacemaker, you may no longer have to go under the knife every ten years just to replace the battery as researchers have now developed a chemistry that could extend battery life beyond what was earlier thought possible.

    New design to make batteries last for 50 years?

    Camera that lets you refocus photos after clicking them!

    Camera that lets you refocus photos after clicking them!
    Love photography? Here comes a new-age camera that allows photographers explore "living picture" - making it possible for them to refocus the photos even after taking them.

    Camera that lets you refocus photos after clicking them!

    Electric paint to fix remote control in a jiffy

    Electric paint to fix remote control in a jiffy
    You need not see red if you find your remote control broken just before the start of a match as you can now fix it just by painting it with a brush. All you need to do after that is wait for it to get dried up!

    Electric paint to fix remote control in a jiffy

    How to win more 'likes' on Facebook photos

    How to win more 'likes' on Facebook photos
    An Indian-American student at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US, has devised a formula that tells how the contents of a photograph may predict its popularity online.

    How to win more 'likes' on Facebook photos

    Twitter selfies to reveal your mood

    Twitter selfies to reveal your mood
    What if selfies posted on Twitter can reveal our mood - whether people who live in “happier” cities tend to post more selfies and whether they smile more while taking self-portraits?

    Twitter selfies to reveal your mood

    Need a house? Print it in hours

    Need a house? Print it in hours
    In what could make the dream of owning a house a reality for a large section of people in developing countries, a Chinese company has devised a method of 3D printing a house.

    Need a house? Print it in hours