Yo everyone. I am blogging after a long time. Today I’d be telling you about Samsung Galaxy S4. The design of the Samsung GALAXY S4 defies what’s possible.
The incredibly-wide FULL HD Super AMOLED screen fits perfectly within an extraordinarily
slim bezel that’s encased in a special poly-carbonate body, making this the
lightest and most sophisticated GALAXY yet. The Galaxy S4 is a little bigger, thanks to its 4.99in screen, but not as much as you might think: at 136.6×69.8×7.9mm, it’s roughly as wide as the S3, but around 5mm longer, and around 1mm slimmer. Gorilla Glass 3 helps make the phone durable, although we’d still recommend a screen protector or case if you’re going to keep your phone in a pocket with sharp items, such as keys.
The camera has been upgraded to a 13-megapixel model. It has a Backside-illuminated (BSI) sensor for better low-light sensitivity, although there’s also a flash for when it’s really dark. We took a few test shots in the dark demo hall and they looked fine on-screen, but actual quality tests need to wait until we have a test handset.
At the front is a 2-megapixel BSI camera. While it can be used for video calling, it can also be used with Samsung’s Dual Camera mode, which lets you superimpose a shot from the front camera on the footage from the rear camera. The front camera also serves a purpose in controlling the phone with Smart Pause. This technology knows when you’re looking at the screen so it can, for example, pause a video when you turn your head and look away. As soon as you look back, the video continues. It’s a neat way of using the cameras for more than just still images and video.
After you take those photos you don’t just have the option to swipe your finger on the screen to look through them. Using Samsung’s new Air Wave feature you can actually wave your hand over the screen to cycle through the photos. The software, which uses a sensor on the front of the phone, also works in the Web browser; wave to the left to go backward in the browser and wave right to go forward. You can also wave across the screen to accept a call.
The phones at the event were kitted out with Exynos octo-core processors running at 1.6GHz. It’s not strictly an eight-core phone, though, as it uses ARM’s big.LITTLE architecture. The eight cores are divided in two, with four high-power, complex cores to do the heavy lifting and four smaller, power-efficient cores for more mundane tasks. The Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean OS certainly felt fast on the phone and web browsing was similarly as slick.
The battery on the S4 is an impressive 2,600mAh. That’s around 500mAh bigger than the S3’s battery and bigger than the vast majority of batteries used in smartphones today. With such a big battery it shouldn’t have any problems providing all-day power.
The Samsung Galaxy S4 will be available in versions with 16GB, 32GB and 64GB of storage, although it’s expandable by up to 64GB via the microSD card slot. Prices for the models haven’t been announced yet, but it may well work out much better value to buy the 16B or 32GB models, then upgrade storage as and when you need it.
Security tracking is part of the Knox security suite, which is designed to make the platform more secure. It’s aimed at business users, where it will also provide a business and personal side of the phone, so that you only have to carry one device. The work mode can be locked down and managed by your company, while the personal side is yours to do with as you will; importantly, both sides are completely independent.
As well as what comes with the phone, Samsung is also pushing the phone’s lifestyle aspect with a selection of Galaxy S4 accessories. These range from health accessories that can monitor how active you are and your weight and heart rate, to a gamepad that you clip the phone into. There’s also a wireless charging dock, so you can charge your phone simply by laying it on the charging pad. It’s an awesome phone. I really want to try it. 😀


