Waikato Times

Little has changed on Samsung S9

- GEOFFREY A FOWLER

If a new phone debuts and no one can spot what’s different, does it matter?

Samsung unveiled its new flagship Galaxy S9 phone on Monday with prices in New Zealand starting at $1399 for the

5.8-inch S9 and $1599 for the

6.2-inch S9+. That’s more than the Galaxy S8 ($1299) and S8+ ($1499) which were released last year. Both phones are available for preorder now and will be in shops on March 16.

Get out your magnifying glasses, folks: The S9’s screen margins are a smidge slimmer at the top and bottom. The fingerprin­t reader on the back moved an inch toward the middle. The biggest change is that the camera aperture now physically opens and closes.

I set the S9 side by side with last year’s Galaxy S8... and then couldn’t figure out which was which. Samsung’s theory may be not to mess with success: The S8 design (now passed to the S9) was revolution­ary, beating Apple’s iPhone X to the all-screen look by several months. Samsung’s targets for the S9 aren’t just owners of the S8 – they may still be holding on to an S6 or older. So what, if anything, would make a new Android phone worth an upgrade?

Improved camera

Samsung chose to double down on the camera. And for anyone who treats smartphone photograph­y as a hobby or form of communicat­ion, a few of the S9’s improvemen­ts may pique interest – though they still need to be tested.

On the larger S9+, Samsung added a second lens on the back for zooming in and depth-effect shots. On both models, the S9 promises improvemen­ts to photo quality. The camera will take up to 12 separate shots at once to combine into one 12 megapixel image, reducing pixelated noise in some shots.

Its slow-motion is now super slow – 960 frames per second - to capture every hilarious millisecon­d. A new mode can detect movement and automatica­lly begin recording.

And the S9 camera has a geeky but impressive trick on its aperture, the opening where light comes in. Most smartphone cameras are stuck with a one-sizefits-all aperture. The S9 can flip between two apertures: opening up for 28 per cent more light in the dark and closing back up for bright shots. When it switches, the camera looks as though it’s winking.

Will any of this make a noticeable difference in your shots? I’m looking forward to putting it in a three-way death match versus the Pixel 2 and iPhone X, both of which have a fixed aperture.

AR Emojis

On the front camera, the S9 isn’t letting the iPhone X have all the fun with its augmented-reality Animojis, those cartoons you make come to life by moving your head.

Samsung’s answer is AR Emoji, and it advances the idea with a cartoon that looks kind of like you. The S9 auto-generates personal AR Emojis based on a photo.

Still, I was surprised Samsung didn’t go all in on AR with frontfacin­g depth sensors, as the iPhone X uses to unlock the phone and do other tricks with your face. (Samsung plays up its multiple unlock options, which use the same tech as last year. The S9 can unlock with facial recognitio­n, but it isn’t as secure as Apple’s Face ID. There’s also a secure iris reader and a trusty fingerprin­t scanner on the back.)

The S9 has lots of other little improvemen­ts, from a faster processor to louder sound. It’s also one of the few flagship phones left that still comes with a standard headphone jack and the ability to add your own storage.

But the S9 doesn’t tackle many of my bigger wishes, such as new tech that can embed the fingerprin­t reader convenient­ly inside the front screen.

Or there’s my big wish: Better battery life. The S9’s battery might last a tiny bit longer, they say – but I keep hoping for a quantum leap. -

 ?? AP ?? The Samsung Galaxy S9+, left, and Galaxy S9 will be available in shops on March 16.
AP The Samsung Galaxy S9+, left, and Galaxy S9 will be available in shops on March 16.

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