Software - Camera

Samsung spent comparatively little time talking about the Galaxy S 4 hardware and instead chose to focus mostly on software. While Android 4.2.2 is the underlying OS, Samsung’s customizations are very visible and present throughout the Galaxy S 4 experience.

The user interface and experience is distinctly Samsung. The Touchwiz icon stylings and water sounds that permeate the experience remain intact and mostly unchanged. UI performance is finally at the point on most of these modern devices where it’s just amazingly smooth throughout everything. The Galaxy S 4 is no exception here.

Samsung spent a lot of time adding functionality to its camera app, which now includes the ability to shoot stills and video out of both cameras simultaneously. This is similar in nature to an LG feature we covered last month at MWC, Samsung calls it Dual Camera.

Dual Camera is very easy to activate (there’s a dedicated button in the top left of the camera app). Once activated you can choose from various filters/effects, including a basic split screen mode.

As a way of enhancing stills, Samsung includes support for Sound & Shot - a feature that captures up to 9 seconds of audio alongside a still image.

There’s a new mode dial that allows you to switch between shooting modes, including some new ones like drama shot which lets you take multiple stills in a burst mode and combine them all together to show character progression in a still frame.

Burst shooting can also be used to erase a photo bomb with eraser mode, a feature we’ve seen before (highlight and remove a character from a scene).

On the video side, the Galaxy S 4 introduces Cinema Photo - a feature that lets you shoot a video, highlight areas that you want to continue in motion and have the rest remain static - resulting in an animated gif.

In its final new camera feature is the ability to create, group and stylize albums of your photos. You can create albums locally on the Galaxy S 4, style them with templates, and send them off to print via Blurb. There’s Trip Advisor integration to pull in highlight information about the locations you’ve taken photos at.

The camera software features are aimed at bringing as much of the photo processing/organization experience onto the smartphone as possible. Samsung clearly has the point and shoot market in its crosshairs and it is leveraging the fact that modern smartphones are sophisticated computing platforms in order to go after that market.

Introduction & The Hardware S Translator, Air View/Gesture, Smart Pause/Scroll and More
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  • Chloiber - Thursday, March 14, 2013 - link

    No way.

    1. As always, first come the PenTile screens, then the RGB Stripe screens of a specific resolution
    2. Leaks from chinese website show no RGB Stripe matrix (something different, like RGBGG)
    3. It says Super AMOLED, not Super AMOLED+
  • Affectionate-Bed-980 - Thursday, March 14, 2013 - link

    that happened ONCE with the SGS1 pentile going to SGS2 non pentile. That was the only time there was a + screen. Then everyone started dancing around saying they do this Pentile => Non-Pentile move. We didn't see it with the Gnex => SGS3, and there wasn't a new 720p phone. Anyway, what I'm saying is let's just see what it is. Using a 1 time occurrence to predict the future is absurd
  • trincisor - Thursday, March 14, 2013 - link

    SGS3 pentile 720p -> Note 2 RGB 720p
    God,dont you guys read news?
  • althaz - Thursday, March 14, 2013 - link

    There's a (smallish) range of Super AMOLED+ screens available form Samsung and they appear in things other than Galaxy phones.
  • blau808 - Thursday, March 14, 2013 - link

    WTF I swear the article said RGB stripe at one point when I read it. Did you edit that out Anand or am I going crazy?
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, March 14, 2013 - link

    It was removed.
  • darwinosx - Thursday, March 14, 2013 - link

    Since when does any Samsung device feel well built? Even Samsung fans complain they are cheap and plasticky feeling and Samsung has acknowledged as much in recent comments saying they would do better. Having said that does the S 4 feel any more solid or premium than the S3?
  • erple2 - Thursday, March 14, 2013 - link

    Honestly, the galaxy s variant I have feels extremely well built (Samsung captivate). My s2? Not nearly as much. Now that I think about it, I think that my captivate is the nicest phone I've owned (typing this on my Nexus 4). Shame that I got used to the nicer (and bigger screen of my s2 and now my Nexus 4.
  • Death666Angel - Sunday, March 17, 2013 - link

    Build quality doesn't have anything to do with choice of materials. I'm a Samsung fan and like the plastic they use. I had a SGS2, now a GN and a Ativ PC Pro. I don't need metal for my computers, it serves no purpose for me that the plastic doesn't.
  • apertotes - Thursday, March 14, 2013 - link

    Didn't somebody say yesterday that S4 would ship with a year old OS?

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