The Galaxy S5 is the company’s latest
flagship phone and sure to be a swift seller. The phone is, in its own way,
beautifully designed and the materials, while clearly plastic, are durable. It
is a great device that has really challenged the I-Phone series.
Samsung has immersed in the mobile market in a very short time. It has become
one of the best flagship for Smart phones.
Basics Information of Samsung S5
5.1-inch, 1920×1080, 432 ppi display
16/32GB storage, 128GB expandable via
microSD
802.11ac, Bluetooth 4.0, NFC, LTE
16MP rear camera, 2MP front facing
camera
Quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 801
2.5GHz processor
2GB RAM
Fingerprint reader, optical heart rate
monitor
MSRP: $199.99 on 2-year agreement, $650
off-contract
Pros
Heart rate monitor is genuinely handy,
especially for aging population
Latest TouchWiz UI is best-designed yet
Cons
Still feels like a plastic phone
More misses than hits with fingerprint
scanner
Design
Samsung’s Galaxy S5 is not a revolution
in industrial design. It looks like the GS4, with a bit of influence from the
Note 3 that Samsung released last fall. The unit I tested had the black pebbled
faux leather back, which is surprisingly pleasant to both touch and look at,
and the phone is rimmed with a faux metal plastic border that reminds me of
something from a 50s diner stool. It’s not the refined, all-metal design of the
HTC One M8, but it is appealing in its own way. I still think Samsung would do well
to join the big boys like Apple with use of high-quality materials, but if we
must have plastic, then this is the plastic I’d opt to have.
One advantage of the plastic: the back,
at least, is relatively durable and drop-proof. Also, the phone is remarkably
light, especially given that whopper of a display it’s packing. Plus, this is a
water-resistant phone that doesn’t look like a water-resistant phone (read: it
isn’t bulky) so that’s a plus. The USB flap door that ensures completely IP67
environment protection is a pain, however, given the frequency with which
you’ll have to fidget with it to charge and connect to your computer.
The heart rate monitor Samsung included
on the device uses pulse oximetry to detect a person’s heart rate through their
finger tip. The concept is surprisingly simple, and my veterinarian brother
says they’ve been using the tech to find your pet’s heart rate for years;
essentially, it shines a light through the capillaries in your finger tip,
taking snapshots of the size of the blood vessels within in rapid succession,
to detect how engorged they are and then translating that into a number
representing beats per minute. It’s a highly accurate measurement method, and
indeed in testing it returned results that made sense given my relative level
of activity, caffeinating, time of day and more.
The fingerprint sensor is also
interesting. It works decently well, but has a higher failure rate than Apple’s
Touch ID sensor, at least when used natural with a one hand grip, swiping the
thumb down from the screen over the sensor pad. This makes it suboptimal for
use with unlocking the device, but used as a specific security tool for
unlocking sensitive data within apps, or for authorizing payments, both of
which are possible since Samsung makes the hardware feature available to
third-party devs, it becomes a lot more interesting.
That said, both of these features are unlikely to make a splash in your daily life. The heart rate monitor is a handy short cut for ageing users who need to keep tabs on their cardiovascular health fairly regularly and change their behaviour accordingly, but for the most part, it’s little more than a neat trick to pull out at parties and then quietly forget about.
Of the software features included on
the Galaxy S5, the best is probably Milk Music, which is for U.S.-customers
only and offers streaming radio, ad- and subscription-free. The service works
great as a replacement for terrestrial radio thanks to its auto-start,
dial-based discovery interface that required minimal user input to get to the
music, and it has an impressive library of tracks thanks to Samsung’s use of
Slacker Radio to power the service. Milk Music is available to any recent
Galaxy device, however, so it isn't necessarily a reason to buy.
Display
Samsung’s GS5 display is definitely a
sight to behold, but it’s very hard to impress in the display world these days
– or too easy. In terms of display quality related to pixel density and the
crispness of text and graphics, I haven’t been able to discern a difference
since Apple introduced its Retina display on the iPhone 4. The Galaxy S5′s
screen size is impressive, however, and makes for a great way to watch mobile
video thanks to full HD resolution and a 5.1-inch diagonal surface area, all in
a phone that manages to still not feel overly large for a pocket.
Is it the best screen in the smartphone
business? Very possibly. Is it a huge improvement over the GS4′s
screen? For most users, no, and in fact, it actually has less pixel density
than its predecessor. If screen quality is a key decision point for those
considering an upgrade from last year’s model, then keep that wallet closed;
the GS4 still has an excellent screen, and the GS5 hasn’t made any strides in
that regard to merit an expensive upgrade. Plus, as with seemingly every
Android device, auto-brightness still has major issues getting things right.
Apple seems to be alone in divining the secret sauce for properly dimming and
brightening your display based on ambient conditions.
Camera
The camera on the Samsung Galaxy S5
benefits from the company’s alter-ego as a camera maker, and works very well in
optimal conditions, with fast autofocus and high res 16MP captures. But it
still doesn’t fare all that well in low-light situations, the bane of all mobile
cameras, and some of the features new to the GS5, while impressive from a tech
standpoint, leave a lot to be desired.
Specifically, the focus selection
option on Samsung’s phone is a bit of a mixed bag. On the one hand, it produces
great final results, letting you create portraits with background blur that
look like they were taken with much more expensive cameras with fancy
interchangeable, wide aperture lenses. On the other hand, they take a long time
to capture, which makes getting candids with them near impossible, and taking
portraits an exercise in “wait, no don’t move yet, it’s still processing.”
The trade-off for your patience is that
the photos are much better in terms of overall quality than the selective focus
pictures captured with the HTC One M8′s
Duo Camera (which captures images much faster though). But the effect can be
replicated on other devices, including the iPhone, using third-party camera
apps, so it has a lot less value as a selling feature for the GS5 over other
handsets.
Battery
The battery on the Galaxy S5 is
removable, so that’s already a big advantage over some of the competition. It
bumps up capacity over the GS4′s
power house by 200mAh, which puts the total at 2,800mAh. In practice, it
improved things over the GS4 and gave a full day of use under normal to high
circumstances, but the HTC One M8 still outperformed it overall. The GS5
doesn’t offer any quantum leaps in battery tech, in the end, but if you like
having the option to swap, it’s there with the GS5, and not with the One.
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