Camera

The Fascinate packs a 5 megapixel camera with one LED flash. There's no front facing camera like the Epic 4G, however. Camera launch is relatively speedy, at 2.8 seconds from tapping the application icon to getting a live preview. Successive captures are moderately fast, at around 2 seconds between capture and another preview.

Camera mode (left), Camcorder mode (right)

Just like the Epic (and probably the other Galaxy S phones) the camera UI has a simple mode where everything goes away but very basic information and the control buttons. Like Anand said, the camera application repurposes buttons. Power becomes a lock button that stops input, volume controls digital zoom.

Tapping on the left brings up a small drawer with more settings - shooting modes, flash, exposure, and more settings. There's an outdoor visibility button in settings which increases brightness and contrast for composure outside, among all the usual resolution and quality options. Samsung has done a nice job providing lots of control if you want, or abstracting it away if you're inclined.

Camera resolutions (left), Shooting mode (right)

For a full tour of those settings, check out the gallery below:

Tap to focus is implemented on the Fascinate, including LED illuminated focus when it's dark. There's a confirmation sound when focus is reached as well.

The only nitpick I have about the Fascinate's camera UI is that the icons don't rotate when you switch into portrait mode from landscape. As a result, I was misled many times that images would be recorded rotated 90 degrees. There's rotation support in the captured image's EXIF header for sure, it just doesn't give any feedback in the camera application that acknowledges rotation.

The images captured on the Fascinate are impressive. There's very little distortion or edge falloff, and saturation is about right. There also isn't very much chromatic noise.

The photos taken in the lightbox with the lights on are a bit pink, however detail and dynamic range are quite good. The single LED flash on the Fascinate is actually surprisingly powerful - the photo taken with the lights off is overexposed, which is unfortunate. Apparently the Fascinate doesn't have extremely good short distance metering. This is one case where I wish my lightbox setup was a bit different, since the tradeoff is that photos taken at normal distances are very nicely illuminated. Even better, the camera application focuses with the LED on when you're in the dark, so you have good odds of actually getting focus - something the default Android camera app still doesn't do.

As usual, I've taken photos with the Fascinate in my usual bench locations, and in the lightbox. I've updated things a bit as well with new shots from the Nexus One. A number of readers pointed out that my Nexus One seems to have below average camera performance. I'm inclined to agree that performance seemed below average, and tried numerous times to improve it. I finally got HTC to replace my Nexus One, and reshot everything again, including the video tests. I'd say that the camera performance is largely unchanged between my replacement Nexus One and the old one - the Nexus One camera just isn't as impressive as other 5 MP cameras. 

Video on the Fascinate is 720P in H.264 with AAC audio. I measured an average bitrate of 11.89 megabits/s in our bench video at the usual location. Quality is decent but it seems like there's a bit of edge blur and loss of high spatial frequency possibly due to noise reduction. Luckily, you can shoot video with the Fascinate's bright LED flash enabled in the dark. As per usual, compare for yourself with the videos below:

Samsung Fascinate

Motorola Droid 2

BlackBerry Torch 9800

Motorola Droid X

HTC EVO 4G

Nexus One (redux)

iPhone 4

iPhone 3GS

HTC Droid Incredible

Motorola Droid

Nokia N900

Super AMOLED is indeed Super Cellular and WiFi Performance
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  • WiredWired - Sunday, October 31, 2010 - link

    My mom just got this phone yesterday (better than her old Storm 1) so I've been doing some research. Click on one the preset bookmarks and let it load completely. Then go to your history. You'll see it listed with a star next to it indicating it's a bookmark. Click the star and BAM, no more bookmark!

    Having said that, yes, TOO MUCH BING. The mail program is too basic as well. It couldn't identify / guess the proper POP / SMTP settings for her Brighthouse email, whereas my Droid Incredible had no problems at all. While the SF may be on better hardware than the DInc, the software needs a lot of attention.

    For example: Her phone came with NFS and Tetris. NOT from the Android store though. The phone was on full dev mode as well as set to allow apps to be installed from unknown sources. Looks like you have those apps on your phone as well. If you still have the phone, could you check to see if it's in dev mode and allows apps from unknown sources?

    Only other comment is that the guys at the store insisted over and over that it had Android 2.2 already on the phone. Kind of a spur of the moment purchase for her, so I didn't do any research in advance. When I got to check it out, it had 2.1. Called the store, they INSISTED that it had been released weeks ago and would hit the phone soon. Checked Android forums and there's no release date. Best guess is that it may be released by the end of the month.

    Sub-par phone interface + the rest = possibly returning the phone before the 30 day return policy is up to get the rumored DInc HD that may or may not be coming out in 3 weeks.
  • bankerdude - Friday, January 28, 2011 - link

    Just purchased the Fascinate from Verizon this week (I know- I'm a late adopter. Had to wait for my contract to be up!) Anyhow, one of the first things the phone did after acticvation was download an OTA update and voila- the button lights now stay on as long as the screen. Really happy with the phone upgrade, coming from a Samsung Omnia running a cooked version of Winmo 6.1. Android is a great interface, even with 2.1!
  • 290008381 - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    Does the Samsung Galaxy S take a SIM card and if so where does it go?

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