Galaxy S10 Lite Review: Great Cameras and Battery Life! By KLGadgetTV

By KLGadgetTV
Aug 22, 2021
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Galaxy S10 Lite Review: Great Cameras and Battery Life!

This is the Galaxy Note 10 plus, and this is the Galaxy S10 light. Yes, it's hard to tell the visual differences. If you aren't looking closely their stand light is far from being a light device, because what Samsung has packed under the hood makes it a very respectable budget flagship. This is the company's answer to Chinese companies that produces budget flagships. I've got early access to the galaxy as the night before the Malaysian launch, and I've been using it for about two weeks and here's what I think about it before we get on with this review. Please help us by subscribing, if you are watching our videos for the very first time on first impressions, the Galaxy S10 light looks a lot like a Galaxy Note: 10, considering it has an infinity old display once you get hold of it, you might like the fact that there's no curved edges, like you get on the s10 plus, which gives a more assuring grip, and it's less fragile if you're worried of dropping it.

Despite having a 1080p resolution, the 6.7 inch super AMOLED plus display, doesn't disappoint when it comes to content consumption as it has decent outdoor, brightness and colors. There is an in-screen fingerprint reader that, unfortunately, doesn't work consistently. Just like the rest of the competition, the standless build quality is excellent. In fact, if you do notice hard enough, you might have thought that the plastic bag cover is the same ceramic material from the s10 plus. The phone's construction is still held by a solid aluminum frame coated in a shiny chrome.

Finish with that said, their stand, light steel, isn't a lightweight device due to its display at 4500 William hour battery. That's when you are going to decide if you want to handle 186 grams of heft in your pockets as a budget flagship Samsung has reasonably omitted. Several hardware features such as wireless charging and ip68 water resistance, which significantly brings down manufacturing costs, however, features such as stereo speakers and the headphone jack should have been present, although it could have been done to make way for a larger battery and the camera is module. The monologue speaker, thankfully, sounds decent, and you probably already have a pair of decent Bluetooth earphones to live without the headphone jack specs wise, the s10 lite sports, a snapdragon 855 soc for all market regions, and my review unit comes with 8 gigabytes of ram and 128 gigabytes of expandable storage, though it's not quite as crazy as other flagships. It will suffice for the next couple of years.

Performance is snappy and at times it feels much reliable than the Enos chip. On my note, 10 plus, especially when it comes to gaming, the snapdragon 855 chips performs much better with no performance throttle, and it only gets a little warm after a 40 minute PUBG mobile session. But what makes it really stand out is power consumption, as I managed to get 1.5 days of usage with a 4-hour screen on time and 2 days. If I had a less busy day. This is something that I cannot achieve when I was reviewing the Enos variant of the s10 plus and note 10 plus.

Furthermore, the SDN light supports the note, 10 plus 45 watt, fast charging. That's a great bonus that I think most people are really going to be excited. The Aztec light may have a different triple camera system from the s10, but they are decent. You get an optical stabilized, 48, megapixel, f2 lens a 12 megapixel ultra-wide angle lens and a 5 megapixel macro lens by default, the satellite shoots at 12 megapixels, and you can shoot in 48 megapixels by enabling the 4x3 h aspect ratio in the camera app during the review period. I wanted to find out how much I was missing from Samsung's flagship phone camera, so I took my note, 10 plus, and the s10 light up for a spin and got very interesting results.

As a matter of fact, I prefer photos taken with the s10 lite, as it does a better job at colors, where it doesn't over saturate. The note 10, plus its main camera, on the other hand, manages details and dynamic range better, while it also does a better job in low light. Their stand light isn't too far off, and I can definitely accept that, where the s10 light's camera system really shine is the macro lens. While it's kind of niche for the general users, which some might not find useful, it is able to take a decent close-up object shot when you need to, and it is probably the best macro lens on the smartphone I've come across in terms of videography. The s10 like super steady OS does an excellent job of stabilizing videos at 1080p.

You can shoot up to 4k at 30 frames per second, but the is feature doesn't work at that resolution. The asteroid, lights, 32, megapixel front camera doesn't disappoint as well, even though it can't quite match the note 10, plus a selfie shooter when it comes to colors and dynamic range overall. The Galaxy S10 light is a great device to own. At the completion of this review, I have not received any pricing information of the phone yet, but I assume that Samsung will be pricing this below 2500 ringgits, because um at this point of shooting. We do understand that the Galaxy Note 10 light is going to be priced at 2, 299 ringgits.

So I believe that this will be priced around the same, because this is a budget flagship by all means all right. So that's pretty much about the review of the Galaxy S10 lite. Let me know about your thoughts in the comment section down below be sure to subscribe to us. Follow us on the usual social media places, and I will see you in the next one.


Source : KLGadgetTV

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