This Is The New Galaxy S21 Ultra That Was Launched By Samsung
This Is The New Galaxy S21 Ultra That Was Launched By Samsung. The Galaxy S21 Ultra has been launched by Samsung; that’s good news if you’re eager to own the very best of what Samsung can pack into a smart phone. It has a huge screen, five cameras and the best zoom on any readily available Android phone. While it’s cheaper than last year’s ‘Ultra’ phone, it remains pricey for average consumers, and it doesn’t come with a microSD card slot nor does it include a charger.
The new Galaxy S21 Ultra is Samsung’s new ‘everything phone’ with more cameras, beefier specs, and even S Pen compatibility to eclipse the very likable Note 20 Ultra. This is Samsung’s vision of smart phone excess for 2021: five cameras led by a 108MP sensor, two telephoto cameras, 100x zoom and 40MP selfies, plus 5G, all-day battery life and up to 16GB of RAM – all packed into an Android phone with a 6.8-inch 120Hz Quad HD display and an upgraded in-screen fingerprint sensor that has a 1.7x surface area.
The S21 Ultra is expensive – it’s more than the iPhone 12 Pro Max – with a price tag of R24 999 and the iPhone 12 Pro Max at R23 899. Samsung gives you a bit more for the extra cost: a larger, brighter and more capable curved screen, 10x optical camera zoom (vs 2.5x on the iPhone), and stylus support, something Apple has yet to offer on any iPhone. According to Tech Rader, Samsung has retooled its main camera with lasers – yes, lasers – to remedy the autofocus issues on the Galaxy S20 Ultra, and also upgraded the specs to keep up with the demands of processing those large 108MP photos, 40MP selfies, and 8K video without as much as a hiccup.
Samsung’s ‘tripod lock’ software feature steadies the 30x and 100x zoom levels on subjects to prevent the viewfinder image from jumping around. It’s much easier to pull off the 100x ‘Space Zoom’ now, although punching in 100x is limited due to grainy images.
When it is compared with the iPhone 12 Pro Max, which tops out at a 2.5x optical zoom, Apple’s main camera captures cleaner photos in some low-light situations, but Samsung’s night mode has improved enough to almost close that gap after sunset or when you’re snapping away indoors – and its default camera app is more feature-packed and easier to use than Apple’s.