Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra 5G vs Huawei Mate 30 Pro 5G: Daytime Camera Comparison! By #GNTECH

By #GNTECH
Aug 14, 2021
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Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra 5G vs Huawei Mate 30 Pro 5G: Daytime Camera Comparison!

How's it going guys I was here from GM Tech and welcome to the daytime camera comparison between these Samsung Galaxy s, 2005 T, and if, while we made 30 pro 5, G's I'm recording on the front-facing cameras on both of these smartphones at 1080p resolution. So this will give you an idea of the stabilization and quality that both these smartphones can produce and also give you a judgement on how they pick up audio but the galaxy s.20 ultra can also do ok, video at 30fps and 60 fps. So let's take a look at those as well. So now I've switched to 4k 30fps on the Samsung Galaxy s, funny ultra, whereas it's still 1080p 30fps on the mate 30 Pro, because this is the maximum setting. Then the front-facing camera on that smartphone is capable of recording in, but let's now switch over to 4k 60fps on the s20 ultra and finally, now this is 4k 60fps resolution on the s20 ultra vs.1080p 30fps on we make 30 pro 5, but I. Think that gives you a fair idea of the front-facing camera capabilities in terms of video.

Now, let's move on over to the primary camera, setup test, photos and videos, in varying conditions, to give you guys an overall judgement on both of these cameras. So here's a roundup of the primary camera specifications of both of these smartphones and as you can see, the competition is stiff, and this is a look at both the phone selfie cameras now we'll start with zoom, which is one of the biggest features on both smartphones. So this side-by-side was taken from the Burn Kali fa, and we can really test the extent of each phone's capabilities. One thing that is obvious is the higher dynamic range capabilities from the s20 ultra sensor. Now, if you zoom in at two times, you start seeing some big differences.

The color profile from the mid 30 pro looks less natural in this case, but quality wise, the dynamic range processing prevails on the s20 ultra, especially on that gold building were zooming into this is now at three times. Zoom we're detailing on the s20 ultra is better, but not by that. Much to be honest here is the same sample now at five times, zoom, where differences are starting to diminish and now at 10 times zoom, where both phones are using hybrid zoom capabilities. Color differences aside, both phones are able to pick up good detail. But if you looked at these images, side-by-side one would prefer the s20 all trust just because of its color accuracy.

This is now at 30 times zoom, where the s20 ultra clearly captures more detail in the image, and this can go up to 50 times and a hundred times showing the cameras versatility over the made 30 pro 5g, which can zoom in a maximum of 30 times. Next up we're testing, AI capabilities. The best way to do so is by taking pictures of plants, and in this case, while detailing, is fairly par. The exposure on the s20 ultra is a tad lower, compensating for the roses bright color with scene, optimizer mode on the s20 I'll. Try an AI mode turned on the mate 30 Pro.

You can see that the saturation from the s 20 ultras image, stays natural on the mid 30 Pro, the greens and Red's look overly exposed, but in this scenario the mate 30 Pro excels is able to capture more detail in the foreground. If you look at both buildings, and in the treetops underneath overall, the mate 30 pro 5g just seems to have the sharper image in this next image. It's all about color processing, the s20, ultras colors, look more inviting at first glance and there's better balance in the picture. If you look at the background where the Sun is directly shining notice, how the s20 ultra can bring out that color versus the mid 30 Pro, which cannot, but it seems the mid 30 Pro- is able to process darker area as well, for example, underneath those stairs and back in downtown, though this is to test both phones, ultra wide-angle lenses notice the difference in color profiles between these and once we switch to the ultra wide-angle lenses. You can tell that the s20 ultras field of view is a lot larger, but, more importantly, the deviation in color compared to its standard lens is lower compared to the mid 30 Pro detail, wise too, it seems that the s20 ultras lens is sharper, but in this next image it's fairly difficult to differentiate the quality of either image.

Both are sharp, but perhaps the better dynamic range is from the s20 ultra going by the detail in the tree above. The main reason for this image was to actually capture it with each phone, high megapixel sensor, so the 108 megapixel mode on the s20 ultra and 40 mega pixels on the mate 30 pro, so switching to that here's, what the difference in quality looks like and for good measure, we'll also zoom into these images in editing to see how much of difference in quality this makes. Quite frankly, when zoomed in it's not so much now here's a look at portrait images. The exposure of the subject here is better from the s20 Patron. So is detail in terms of edge detection everywhere, but the left edge has a slight issue here at the phone's blur out the sticker with the wider modes on both phones, the S detection blemish is less of a problem on the s20 ultra, but more so on the May 30 Pro, with it blurring the green sticker completely for portraits of people.

The warmer image is from the s20 ultra. It also captures more detail and offers better edge detection again with the wider modes. The s20 ultras image looks more natural and has better dynamic range processing, but the exposure on my face, though, does look a lot better from the mate 30 Pro to round upon photos. Here's a selfie of me seeking refuge in the shade from the by Sun. The mid 30 Pro has the wider field of view.

Naturally, but the s 20 ultra is a separate, wide selfie mode, while we're added I also thought it would be nice to throw in the s20 ultras 40 megapixel selfie mode sample, which, as you can see, has worse off dynamic range for the time being. Although a software update might fix that this is a look at selfie portraits with both the normal angle and wide angle modes on the s20 ultra and mate 30 pro 5g, with that we can start to move to video first up, we've got 9 60fps, slow motion. The main 30 Pro does offer more versatility here with a wider angle to film, but not just that. You also get its 7680 fps slow motion. Video with both standard and wide-angle field is used to capture more explosive events, which is more impressive than Samsung slow motion.

Video in this case now over to 1080p 30fps footage. We see similar stabilization, but the s20 ultra offers better dynamic range. One thing to note is that both these smartphones allow you to change angles while recording and the transition is smooth, as you can see, with the ultra-wide angle lens. Here's some sample footage where again, the experience is fairly similar. This is a look at 1080p 60fps footage which, from a stability perspective, looks better from the May 30 Pro 5g.

Furthermore, you can also film 1080p 60fps video, with the ultra wide-angle lens on the Huawei, which is something that the s20 ultra does not currently have something when the McClair Pro does not have, though, is a super steady mode and here's a side-by-side comparison showing the difference. The mode can make when running both using the wide field of view and then the narrower one, but the narrow one does suffer from some quality issues. Due to pre-release software. On the ultra, we've now moved to 4k 30fps footage, which seems to look a bit jerky err on the s20 ultra compared to the main 30 Pro, but dynamic range is still with the Samson. Once again, you can switch to the ultra-wide angle lens seamlessly, in this case, to capture more of the view.

This is a look at 4k 60fps footage where both the phones seem to have a fair deal of jerk to them, but something about the mid 30 Pro is that again it has the ability to record with the ultra wide-angle lens, which may be a future software update will enable on the Samson. Finally, we've got 8k footage from the s20 ultra compared to 4k 30fps from beam 830, Pro 5g and while the s20 ultras is a lot sharper, and it is the first phone to do so- there is a strange warping effect to it, which should be ironed out with more iterations to come and updates in the long run. But that's about it for this daytime comparison do check out the nighttime comparison as well to get a firm idea of both these smartphones' camera capabilities, and thanks for watching, do subscribe for more videos to come. This was Vaibhav and I'll. See you in the next one adios.


Source : #GNTECH

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