Since not every phone
buyer is entirely loyal to one brand, you may be wondering whether now is the
time to switch to Android, or iOS if you’re already an Android user. Samsung
has launched the Galaxy S9 and S9+, successors to last year’s S8
models. Apple launches its phones in September, although the iPhone X didn’t go
on sale until November so has only been out for a few of months.
Price & Availability
Everyone knows how much the iPhone costs, because it was
the first phone to cost £1000/US$1000. Well, you’ll get
£1/US$1 change from that, but it’s still the most expensive production
smartphone yet.
That’s just the base model of course. If you want 256GB
rather than 64GB (and who wouldn’t?) then it costs £1149/US$1149. You can buy it from
Apple as well as mobile operators and high street stores.
See the best iPhone X
deals for more.
Samsung’s Galaxy S9 comes in two sizes (like the iPhone
8). The smaller one has a 5.7in screen – almost the same as the iPhone X and
costs £739/US$719. If you want a bigger
screen, the S9+ has a 6.2in display and costs £869/US$839.
That means both are
cheaper than Apple’s flagship, and it’s the same if you get them on contract
rather than buying outright.
Check
out the best Galaxy S9 deals.
Features and design
The iPhone X represents the 10th anniversary
model and has a brand new design with an almost bezel-less display. It’s a huge
leap from the dated iPhone 8 and is considerably smaller than the iPhone 8 Plus
despite its larger screen.
Samsung has merely
tweaked the design of the S8, moving the fingerprint sensor to a more sensible
location beneath the camera on the S9, but in most respects it’s hard to tell
them apart at a glance.
Although that sounds
like a criticism, it isn’t. The S8 was already nearly the perfect Android phone
and the S9 simply serves to creep even closer to that unobtainable standard.
Aside from the bigger
screen on the S9+, the more expensive model also gets two rear cameras, just
like the iPhone 8 Plus (and iPhone X of course). It also has 128GB rather than
64GB of storage, so you’re getting more for your money.
The only frustration
is if you’d rather have the smaller screen, as you also lose out on those extra
features. It’s one reason why we like Google’s philosophy with the Pixel 2 and
2 XL: the only difference is the screen size.
This handy table shows
at a glance how the main specs stack up against each other:
Galaxy
S9
|
Galaxy
S9+
|
iPhone
X
|
|
Operating
System
|
Android
8.0 Oreo
|
Android
8.0 Oreo
|
iOS 11
|
Display
|
5.8in
Quad HD+ (2960×1440) 18.5:9 SuperAMOLED Infinity Display
|
6.2in
Quad HD+ (2960×1440) 18.5:9 SuperAMOLED Infinity Display
|
5.8in
Super Retina Display (2436×1125, 458ppi) OLED
|
Processor
|
Exynos
9810 octa-core
|
Exynos
9810 octa-core
|
Apple
A11 Bionic, M11 co-processor
|
Memory
|
4GB
RAM
|
6GB
|
Not
stated
|
Storage
|
64GB
(expandable up to 400GB via microSD)
|
128GB
(expandable up to 400GB via microSD)
|
64GB/256GB
|
Primary
Camera
|
12Mp f/1.5-2.4
camera with OIS
|
12Mp
f/1.5-2.4 camera with OIS + 13Mp telephoto camera
|
12Mp
wide-angle, f/1.8 with OIS + 12Mp telephoto, f/2.4 with OIS
|
Front
Camera
|
8Mp
|
8Mp
|
7Mp
|
Video
Recording
|
4K @
60fps, Super slo-mo 720p @ 960fps
|
4K @
60fps, Super slo-mo 720p @ 960fps
|
4K @
60fps, Slo-mo 1080p at 240fps,
|
WiFi
|
11ac
dual-band
|
11ac
dual-band
|
11ac
dual-band
|
GPS
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Bluetooth
|
5.0
with aptX
|
5.0
with aptX
|
5.0
|
NFC
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Yes,
only for Apple Pay
|
Biometric
authentication
|
Fingerprint
scanner
|
Fingerprint
scanner
|
FaceID
|
Wireless
charging
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Colours
|
Midnight
Black, Coral Blue, Titanium Gray, Liliac Purple
|
Midnight
Black, Coral Blue, Titanium Gray, Liliac Purple
|
Silver,
Space Grey
|
Ports
|
USB-C,
3.5mm Headphone jack
|
USB-C,
3.5mm Headphone jack
|
Lightning
|
Waterproof
|
IP68
|
IP68
|
IP67
|
Dimensions
|
69x148x8.5mm
|
73.8x158x8.5mm
|
70.9×143.6×7.7mm
|
Weight
|
163g
|
189g
|
174g
|
3000mAh
|
3500mAh
|
2716mAh
|
As you’d expect, they
all have the most up-to-date versions of Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and LTE along with
super-fast processors and great water resistance.
Samsung, unlike other
phone makers, has kept the traditional headphone socket on both versions of the
S9 and that’s sure to win over some buyers.
Both phones have
stereo speakers
Screen
The iPhone X is the
first from Apple to adopt an AMOLED display. However, unlike Samsung’s phones,
colours remain natural and aren’t massively oversaturated. And Apple being
Apple, there are no settings to change colour saturation to suit your
preference.
What you get is
accurate colours (handy when editing photos) and the True Tone feature which
adjusts white balance to compensate for different types of lighting.
The Galaxy S9 has the
expected vivid colours, high resolution and always-on display, which Apple –
for some reason – decided against with the iPhone X. Instead, you can tap the
screen to wake it and check the time and notifications.
Both phones have a
certain wow factor. With the Galaxy S9, the curved screen edges and minimal
side bezels make the screen look even bigger.
Love it or hate it,
the notch on the iPhone is the only part where the screen doesn’t have a tiny
bezel and – if you’re upgrading from an iPhone 6 or later – you’ll really
notice the increase in screen-to-body ratio.
In terms of extra
features, the iPhone X has 3D Touch while the S9 has Active Edge. Neither of
these are deal-makers or breakers: they’re just additional ways of navigating
around the operating system.
Cameras
Samsung and Apple have
some of the best camera tech you’ll find on a phone, so it’s no surprise that
both the Galaxy S9 and iPhone X take great photos and videos.
Both offer optical
stabilisation for sharper photos in dim light and smooth, jerk-free video.
They’ll also both record 4K video at 60fps.
Where they differ is
that only the S9+ has the secondary camera for portrait shots with a blurred
background, so arguably it’s that version which is the closest competitor to
the iPhone X.
Interestingly, Samsung
has introduced a variable aperture on the main 12Mp rear camera on the S9 and
this means it can switch between f/1.5 and f/2.4 depending on the available
light.
DXOMark has tested
this extensively and given the S9+ a rating of 99 overall, two points more than
the iPhone X.
The iPhone X has its
240fps slo-mo which it records at 1080p, but Samsung has followed Sony by
adding a 960fps ultra-slo-mo which is captured in 720p.
Both Samsungs have the
gimmicky AR Emoji which turns a selfie into an animated version of you which,
from the tests we’ve done, don’t look much like you at all.
If we’re honest, we
prefer Apple’s Animoji which take a handful of emojis and allow you to record a
10-second ‘video’ which uses the True Depth camera to transfer your facial
expressions to the emoji. It’s still a gimmick, but one you’re likely to
actually use on occasion.
Performance
With the latest
processors in both phones, performance isn’t really in question. Apple’s phones
tend to dominate in synthetic CPU benchmarks, but both the Galaxy S9 and iPhone
X feel just as fast and responsive as each other in real-world use.
On the iPhone X, you
really notice the extra performance on tap when creating videos from the
Moments feature with Photos. Even an iPhone 7 Plus would take a couple of
minutes to render and save a 90-second video. The iPhone X can do it in around
half that time, so there are tangible benefits: we’ve not yet reached a
performance plateau where new phones are no quicker than their predecessors.
Software
Comparing iOS to
Android is possible, but somewhat pointless if you’re already a loyal user of
one or other. In fact, it’s the software which can be the most compelling
reason to stay with Android or iOS when upgrading your phone.
However, it is easier
than ever to switch between the two and most of the apps you use are sure to be
free ones so it isn’t an expensive exercise in having to re-purchase apps on
the rival platform.
You can read our
Android 8 Oreo vs iOS 11 comparison for more details, but suffice to say that
iOS 11 on the iPhone X is excellent and it doesn’t take long at all to get used
to the navigating without a home button or TouchID.
Samsung’s
TouchWiz overlay doesn’t change Android fundamentally, so while some may still
prefer ‘vanilla’ Android as you get on the Pixel 2 (or any AndroidOne phone) it
isn’t difficult to live with TouchWiz.
The main problem with
switching is that some accessories are compatible only with iOS or Android. So
if you’ve got an Apple TV, say, you won’t be able to use AirPlay to beam photos
and videos to it from a Galaxy S9.
It’s better the other
way around: most Google services work fine on an iPhone.
No comments:
Post a Comment