The SGS3 with MSM8960 also captures 1080p30 video, just like the Exynos 4412 based international SGS3. I captured videos at 1080p, 720p, and with image stabilization turned on at the usual test location, and like normal uploaded a copy of the video to YouTube, and our servers for you to download without the transcode.

The USA SGS3s encode video at an even higher bitrate than the SGS2. It’s 17.0 Mbps H.264 high profile CABAC with 1 reference frame. For comparison, SGS2 was 15 Mbps high profile SGS2 was actually 17.0 Mbps as well. Audio is 128 kbps 48 kHz stereo AAC. The 720p video encode paramaters are a bit lower, at 12.0 Mbps H.264 baseline, with the same audio settings.

1080p30 Bench Video
720p30 Bench Video
EIS Enabled - 1080p30 Bench Video

Last time around, SGS2 was among the best, if not the best, for video encode. The SGS3 is likewise using the best encode settings I’ve seen thus far at 17 Mbps high profile. Best of all, the SGS3 doesn’t drop any frames from what I can tell, as the end FPS in MediaInfo was exactly 30, and watching the videos I don’t see anything dropped. It’s curious to me too that this is being done (as far as I know) on the MSM8960 when partners like HTC are still using 10 Mbps baseline on their highest end products and dropping frames.

The other things worth mentioning about video encode is that the 1080p mode without anti shake now uses the full field of view of the sensor in the horizontal direction. This is a big improvement over the center crop modes I see a lot. If you turn anti shake on, you do appear to lose some pixels around the edges (which is expected, probably 16 or so in x and y). Unfortunately, the EIS mode appears to be severely glitched, producing very shuddery video which jumps around as EIS works. I’d keep this turned off until it gets fixed.

 
Left - still shooting mode (16:9 6 MP), Right - video capture (1080p) with same Field of View

Inside the video capture UI everything is pretty much the same as the still image capture UI. What’s worth mentioning is that like the One X, SGS3 has a capture button which enables you to save full size 1080p frames while capturing video. My favorite new feature is suble - after tapping to focus once while video recording, you’ll get a box with AF in brackets.

Tapping on this stops CAF (continuous auto focus) from running, effectively giving you an AF lock. This is super useful as I often read many complaints about the breathing effect that CAF adds to video capture while it runs - hold this down and it won’t run until you release it - a very useful feature if you’re serious.

Camera - Stills Display Analysis - 4.8" HD SAMOLED
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  • geniekid - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    Thanks for the review. Anandtech does it the most thoroughly, probably because you guys are engineers instead of just enthusiasts (not hating on enthusiasts, just loving the engis).

    Can't wait for the LTE and sound tests. Hopefully this article will get a bump on the front page when those results come in.
  • sitharien - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    I see you have numbers from Sprint's One X, and that phone has been out for a couple of weeks. Did the review get side tracked?
  • BSMonitor - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    I thought all the trolls said this phone would DOMINATE the iPhone 4S.. Yet...
  • shaolin95 - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    Are you retarded or something? There are many Android phones that totally humiliate that over priced piece of junk...grow up apple zombie.
  • steven75 - Friday, June 22, 2012 - link

    Charts don't lie, son.
  • behindthepen - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    "We’ve already seen dual core Krait (MSM8960) performance before and talked about it in the HTC One X (AT&T) review. "

    can you confirm that, I was under the impression the One X at AT&T ran a Tegra 3.

    It would be super helpful if you could list the processors somewhere near all of the performance data.
  • Impulses - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    All US One variants run S4, its nit exactly a secret....
  • Skiddywinks - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    International One X's are Tegra, US ones are S4.
  • tuxRoller - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    Great article. Quite disappointed with the battery life when compared to the One X (att), though I suppose that is mostly due to the differences in screen tech.
    A nice addition to the battery life section would be to add an efficiency chart so we can see past the varying battery sizes.

    Thanks,
    Liam
  • dijimoto - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    What version of ICS does the Galaxy SIII have on it's phone? Also, is the Galaxy Nexus phones tested with 4.0.4 version or the 4.01 / 4.02 version? I read and heard from many Galaxy Nexus phone users that their was a lot of improvements in battery life. I'm just wondering how much, and if the Galaxy Nexus phone would move up in the list of all the other phones.

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