Townsville Bulletin

Phone ups camera ante

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JENNIFER DUDLEYNICH­OLSON

CONSIDER Samsung’s latest smartphone “shots fired” at the camera industry.

The tech giant has thrown everything at the lenses inside its top-of-the-range-set-youback-$ 2000- please- for- thelove-of-all-things-good-buyit-a-case handset.

The Galaxy S20 Ultra packs in four lenses, a huge image sensor, a peak resolution of 108 megapixels, a digital zoom that will magnify objects 100 times over, and a smart new addition that could solve those pesky video-or-photo dilemmas.

It’s even attached to phone that will make calls.

But, before you bin your DSLR, there are serious considerat­ions ahead.

Even sophistica­ted smartphone cameras have limitation­s and, after testing it for just over a week, we have identified developmen­ts you should note before snapping up this flash device.

The photos from this smartphone can be exceedingl­y large. How big are they?

— They’re so big you can make four regular images from one giant photo.

— They’re so big you can tell if your subject has a rogue eyelash or concealed pimple.

— They’re so big you can almost taste the detail in your foodstagra­ms.

— And they’re so big you won’t be able to attach them to an email message. Seriously.

Photograph­ers will tell you that image quality needs more than many megapixels, of course, and they’re right.

But Samsung has countered this argument by almost tripling the size of the image sensor in this phone.

Full-resolution photos capa tured with this phone can be as large as 35 megabytes, ensuring no printer will complain they’re too small.

Their file size, and the power required to create these images, does push this smartphone’s hardware to the limit, though.

The Galaxy S20 Ultra often took a moment longer to capture a 108-megapixel image, as you might expect, making less helpful for action scenes.

Extra effort was also required to lock its focus on some subjects, and the smartphone became quite warm after a shooting session; hot enough to keep it out of your pocket and to challenge its battery.

Samsung has just about weaponised the zoom lens in it this smartphone.

The Galaxy S20 Ultra not only matches the 10x zoom inside some rival Android smartphone­s but takes the technology further.

Its telephoto “folded lens” offers a 10x hybrid optical zoom, and the option of a 30x or 100x “space zoom”.

This can be both useful and creepy and, as with superpower­s, great zoom comes great responsibi­lity.

It can be incredibly handy, though. Whether you’re trying to get close to a butterfly without scaring it, or you want to give the impression that you were actually in the mosh pit at a gig, this close to Taylor Swift, this camera can help.

At 10x magnificat­ion, the camera maintains surprising­ly clear image quality.

At 30x magnificat­ion, there’s still a chance you’ll capture a usable photo that you wouldn’t otherwise be able to record. And at 100x, you’ll get a slightly blurry rendering of something very far away.

It’s worth noting this huge zoom is not available at 108megapix­el resolution. You are with limited to a 6x zoom in that mode.

Moving images have not been overlooked inside this smartphone either. You can record video in an 8K resolution with the Galaxy S20 Ultra camera and, perhaps more impressive­ly, you can capture still photos as you go or after you’re done recording.

One of its most useful photo features might be a software addition. Called Single Take, this mode takes short videos up to 10 seconds in length and uses artificial intelligen­ce to produce as many as 10 photos and four videos in different styles.

The Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra is more than just a big camera.

It also uses a 6.9-inch OLED screen with the highest refresh rate on the market that is slightly taller than the biggest Apple iphone display.

This handset also uses 5G by default, futureproo­fing your investment, will accept memory cards in case your 108megapix­el gallery gets too much for its 128GB storage, and it comes with a powerful 12GB RAM and 5000mah battery, which it needs to record all those pixels.

Its cameras are advanced enough to lift the standard of phone photograph­y and challenge dedicated compact cameras for your attention (though this phone still won’t replace a DSLR).

Its $2000+ price will be an obvious sticking point for some smartphone buyers, but there’s little debate that, in the right hands and circumstan­ces, the Galaxy S20 Ultra is capable of capturing some of the most finely detailed, realistic, and printworth­y smartphone photograph­s to date.

Oh, and it also makes calls.

 ?? Pictures: Jennifer Dudley-nicholson ?? ABOVE: Photograph­s captured at 108 megapixels with Samsung's Galaxy S20 Ultra smartphone.
LEFT: Samsung’s Galaxy S20 range includes the S20, S20+ and S20 Ultra.
Pictures: Jennifer Dudley-nicholson ABOVE: Photograph­s captured at 108 megapixels with Samsung's Galaxy S20 Ultra smartphone. LEFT: Samsung’s Galaxy S20 range includes the S20, S20+ and S20 Ultra.

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