The Samsung Galaxy S4 was an excellent phone at the time. The
problem is that 2013 is the day: five years later, it's not the phone you want
to put in your pocket - not just because Android 5.0.1 is not enough. This
makes it a serious security risk as we are used to rocking from Android 8.0
phones. If you buy the Samsung Galaxy S4 in 2018, you may find it frustrating,
with poor performance and frequent slowdowns. The good news is that you don't
have to spend the most dollars to get a decent upgrade, because everything that
was released in the past two years is an improvement. Of course, if you can
extend to the Samsung Galaxy S9, this is a great experience, but the S8 can do
the job almost. If your budget is tight, the Motorola Moto G6 is for you.
It's easy to see why many people are trying to find the
difference between the Galaxy S3 and the new S4: the two phones share their
curved shapes, chrome-effect edges and familiar home buttons. The difference is
only identifiable at close range. The screen is slightly higher, the lower lip
is smaller, and the sensors on the top of the display have been subtly
rearranged. There is also an additional black point - an infrared sensor that
can implement S4 gesture control. At the top of the phone is still the notification
light, which uses the full RGB color space - this is an improvement to the HTC
two-color lamp.
Despite being a slightly larger
screen, the new mobile phone is more compact and pluggable than its
predecessor: it is 5 mm narrower and slightly lighter, but feels more stable
and gives hardly anything into the back wall. We like the diamond-shaped rear
case of the S4, which is a big improvement over the simple S3, but the case is
still completely plastic and lacks the reassuringly expensive feel of the HTC One's
aluminum cup. It just does not feel like a device that earns £ 500. At least
this plastic back panel is removable, allowing access to the micro SD slot and
removable battery, and gaining Samsung points for versatility.
The screen:
The S4's Super AMOLED panels with
1,920 x 1,080 pixels use a PenTile grating, but this type of display does not
blur edges - the 441ppi makes Samsung's screen as sharp as anything on the
market, The black levels are perfect, the distinction between deep black and
light white shades is treated with flying colors, and the colors of the S4 are
a bit fuller than on the HTC's LCD screen. Viewing angles are excellent.
However, there is a problem and its
brightness. The measured maximum brightness of the S4 of 221cd / m [sup] 2 [/
sup] cannot match that of the HTC 481cd / m [sup] 2 [/ sup], and the deep black
level does not make up for the lack - pictures, web pages and games have no
liveliness when the phones are compared side by side. The screen of the S4 is
still one of the best in the industry, but here he is the runner-up.
Performance:
The European S4 mobile phones do not
have the 1.6 GHz eight-core processor announced at the market launch. Instead,
we are equipped with a 1.9GHz quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 600. This can
disappoint speed freaks, but is the same processor as the HTC One and certainly
not a slouch.
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