![]() The HDR system works well, too, in preventing blown out highlights and over-dark areas of shadow without creating an unnatural look or adding unsightly halos around object edges. Otherwise, both cameras have optical image stabilisation (OIS) and snappy dual-pixel phase detect autofocus, while the front-facing camera is an 8-megapixel f/1.7 unit. There’s another camera on the rear, too, and this is designed to provide a telephoto view – a 2x zoom, effectively, just like on the Apple iPhone X and this has a more conventional single aperture of f/2.4. ![]() It captures 28% more light than the Galaxy S8+’s camera did last year. For low-light shots, the camera switches to a super-wide f/1.5 aperture, while above 100 lux the secondary f/2.4 aperture comes into play and is used to ensure sharper photographs in good light.Īt f/1.5, this is the brightest aperture I’ve ever seen on a smartphone camera and it great news for low-light photography. The key selling point of the Samsung Galaxy S9+, though, as with its smaller sibling, is the dual-aperture rear camera. That’s not a huge benefit because although it is a little quicker, you have to swipe rather than simply tap your finger on the reader, so it’s more awkward. ![]() Samsung has also improved the fingerprint enrolment process so it takes only two to three swipes of the finger instead of the 16 dabs it required previously.
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