![]() ![]() The blurred background or bokeh effect is not new to either one of these phones - on the iPhone it's called Portrait mode, and on the Galaxy it's called Live Focus. Portrait mode in video sounds better than it looks Winner: Note 10 Plus: The Note can shoot ultra-wide angle video and offers a smoother shot thanks to better stabilization. The only downside is that this Super Steady mode only works up to 1080p, not 4K.īoth phones have a time-lapse feature and record slow motion video at 240 frames per second at 1080p, but only the Galaxy has a Super Slow Motion feature that lets you go to a really slow, very dramatic 960 fps at 720p. This made the same running clip look almost as if it had been shot on a gimbal. The Note also has a new Super Steady video mode that you can activate from the main viewfinder. The Note 10 Plus didn't have the same exposure issue and looked just as smooth on its regular video stabilization setting. It constantly switched between the white clouds and the dark gray sand which ended up producing a weird jello effect in the video. The iPhone XS Max had just the slightest bounce to it, but it had a hard time figuring out the exposure. ![]() I recorded a tracking shot with both phones while running on the beach, and though they both did exceptionally well, the Note 10 Plus was the clear winner. The Note 10 Plus has ultra-wide, ultra-stable videoįor taking video of people, I prefer the softer, more cinematic quality of the iPhone, but the Note gives you three different vantage points to flip through while you're filming (telephoto, wide and ultra-wide angles) and smoother tracking shots. The ultra wide-angle lens on the Note gives it an extra edge over the iPhone. ![]()
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