Wednesday, August 1, 2018

Samsung Galaxy S8 vs iPhone 7 head to head review




   The clash of titans is on to be the world's greatest smartphone : IPHONE 7 VS SAMSUNG GALAXY S8



                              

Verdict        

Apple's iPhone 7 is an excellent device, but it's just no match for the Samsung Galaxy S8. With a gorgeous design, a stunning display and more features than you can shake a stick at, Samsung has finally claimed its place as the best smartphone on the market.
Once upon a time, Apple was the undisputed king of the smartphone world, taking the top spot both for performance and for style. Now, however, this is no longer the case; where the iPhone once reigned supreme, the Samsung Galaxy range has emerged to snatch its crown.
Rather than just offering a compelling iPhone 7 alternative, the Samsung Galaxy S8 is a fully-fledged rival for Apple's flagship, boasting comparable credentials - if not slightly better. In fact, with Samsung offering innovations like facial recognition technology, a curved screen and keyboard-and-mouse support, it now feels like it's Apple that's playing catch-up.
Design


iPhone 7
Galaxy S8
Thickness
7.1mm
8mm
Weight
138g
155g


Straight off the bat, the Samsung Galaxy S8 is a much nicer-looking device than the iPhone 7. Samsung's curved and virtually edgeless Infinity Display is breathtaking to look at, creating a unique and alluring package that the iPhone just can't match. On top of that, there's no unsightly camera wart where the lens housing protrudes from the back.
On the other hand, the iPhone 7's matte-black and red colour schemes are much more attractive than any of the options for the S8, and the aluminium chassis will be much less prone to picking up greasy fingerprints than the the S8's glass backing.
Overall, however, it's the S8 that takes the cake in terms of design and visual appearance. The iPhone 7 may be nice, but it's nothing that we haven't seen time and time again, whereas the Galaxy S8 feels different and exciting - it's impossible to mistake it for any other phone.
Winner: Galaxy S8Display

iPhone 7
Samsung Galaxy S8
Screen size
4.7in
5.8in
Display type
IPS
AMOLED
Resolution
750 x 1,334
1,440 x 2,560
Pixel density
326ppi
570ppi
sRGB coverage
95.8% sRGB
99.9% sRGB
Max brightness
540cd/m2
416cd/m2


The Galaxy S8's screen knocks the iPhone 7 into a cocked hat in terms of resolution, with the QHD+ screen running rings around Apple's panel. It's much larger, too, measuring almost 6in across the diagonal compared to just 4.7in.
It's just as impressive when you get down to the nitty-gritty - although the iPhone 7's 95.8% sRGB coverage is nothing to be sniffed at, Samsung goes one better with a whopping 99.9% result. It's brighter than the iPhone 7 to boot, and thanks to the AMOLED panel, it's got rich, vivid colours and perfect contrast. As a final treat, the S8 is one of the very first HDR-enabled phones, which translates to brighter highlights and deeper shadows when viewing compatible content.
The Galaxy S8 takes the crown here, but not on resolution - at this level, the extra pixel density over the iPhone 7's display just doesn't make that much of a difference. Instead, it's the extra vibrancy, colour accuracy and contrast provided by that AMOLED screen that nets it the win. The fact that it's wrapped up in a gorgeous edgeless display doesn't exactly hurt, either.
Winner: Galaxy S8Specs and hardware


iPhone 7
Galaxy S8
CPU
Quad-core A10 fusion
Octa-core Exynos 8895
RAM
2GB
4GB
Single-core performance
3489
1994
Multi-core performance
5652
6629


Generally speaking, Apple's hardware is unparallelled when it comes to performance, but the Galaxy S8 comes closer than ever to closing that gap. According to our Geekbench 4 tests, it was more than 15% faster than the iPhone 7 at multi-core operations, and closer than any other phone we've tested to matching its single-core speed.
Under the hood, the S8 packs an Exynos 8895 octa-core CPU (or possibly a Snapdragon 835, depending what territory you're in), with 4GB of RAM. The iPhone, meanwhile, uses Apple's quad-core A10 Fusion processor paired with 2GB of memory.
In practice, both devices feel sufficiently nippy - you're unlikely to notice much of a difference between them unless you're pushing them to the absolute limit, and even then it'll be negligible at best. They really are very fast devices.
Winner: iPhone 7Battery life

iPhone 7
Galaxy S8
Battery life
13hrs 2mins
16hrs 45mins
Charging port
Lightning
USB-C
Wireless charging
No
Yes
Fast Charging
No
Yes


For many of us, battery life is the most common bugbear we have about our smartphones, and having your device die on you midway through the day can be a real irritation. Thankfully, both the iPhone 7 and Galaxy S8 have rather impressive battery lives, and both phones will easily be able to see you through a full working day with juice to spare.
In our battery tests, the iPhone 7 lasted for 13hrs 2mins, which is nothing to be sniffed at. The Galaxy S8 still managed to blaze past it by well over three hours however, clocking in a final score of 16hrs and 45mins.
The S8 also has some added advantages up its sleeve in the battery departement, given that it comes with both wireless and adaptive fast-charging. It's also compatible with the USB-C charging standard, meaning there's a much wider variety of adapters and accessories to fit it.
Apple's device is trumped by the Galaxy S8 both in terms of sheer battery life and in terms of its versatility, offering numerous and more convenient ways to juice it back up after it's run out of power.
Winner: Galaxy S8Features

iPhone 7
Galaxy S8
Ports
Lightning
USB-C, 3.5mm headphone jack
Waterproofing
IP67
IP68
Biometric security
Fingerprint recognition
Fingerprint/ facial/iris recognition


With the iPhone 7Apple finally listened to customers and added one of the most long-awaited features: full IP67 waterproofing. This will be old hat to Samsung fans, who have had waterproof phones for several years now, but it's one less thing that Apple's behind the curve on. Unfortunately, while it's added waterproofing, the iPhone 7 has also removed a much-loved feature in the form of the 3.5mm headphone jack. Apple giveth and Apple taketh away.
Samsung, meanwhile has added a slew of new features to its flagship line. First up is Bixby, the company's answer to Siri and Cortana. The digital assistant can do all the standard tasks like setting reminders and answering questions (though voice capabilities haven't landed in the UK yet), but can also use the camera to let you search for information on objects just by photographing them.
The Galaxy S8 also features new biometric authentication technology. Aside from the now rear-mounted fingerprint sensor seen in previous devices, Samsung has also brought over the iris-scanning tech seen in the ill-fated Note 7, as well as facial recognition capabilities.
Lastly, there's support for Gigabit Wi-Fi and LTE networking, ensuring speedy browsing and download speeds. Samsung has also released a new desktop dock peripheral, called the DeX, which allows you to use the S8 with a monitor, mouse and keyboard in a desktop-like environment, similar to Windows Continuum.
Aside from waterproofing, the iPhone 7 really doesn't have anything in particular to shout about. While it's just about caught up to where Samsung was two years ago, Samsung has delivered a smorgasbord of new features and functionalities, including enhanced biometric security and the ability to use the S8 as a thin-client device. The latter is a huge deal for businesses in particular, and at a single stroke, Samsung has added a string to the S8's bow that is conspicuously missing from the iPhone 7's.
Winner: Galaxy S8Verdict
In head-to-head tests, Apple's handsets used to be a dead cert to win most, if not all, of the categories. Now, however, its rivals have caught up with it. The Samsung Galaxy S8 is a more accomplished device in terms of its, design, display, features and battery life. The only area in which Apple still retains its edge is in performance - but even that's only a narrow lead.
The honest truth is that there's simply no reason to buy an iPhone 7 over the Galaxy S8. More importantly, there's a pretty compelling argument for people who've already bought the latest iPhone to upgrade to Samsung's new flagship. The next iPhone could change this, of course, but for now, the Samsung Galaxy S8 is king of the smartphone hill.
Overall winner: Galaxy S8x
x

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