Astroboard samsung.battery5/29/2023 The endurance rating denotes how long the battery charge will last you if you use the device for an hour of telephony, web browsing, and video playback daily. Our battery tests were automated thanks to SmartViser, using its viSerDevice app. It bested both the Galaxy S21 and S22, as well as the iPhone 14 and 14 Pro. Still, the Galaxy S23 scored a 101h endurance rating on our battery life test and showed outstanding performance across all tests - call, web browsing and video. The Galaxy S23 is powered by a 3,900mAh battery, which means it has 200mAh more capacity than the cell inside the Galaxy S22, but still 100mAh short of the Galaxy S21's. And thanks to the Widevine L1 support, all apps stream 1080p HDR10 content hassle-free. The Samsung Galaxy S23 display supports HDR10+ and is recognized as such by all popular streaming apps. Games and videos playback will not use 120Hz modes if Standard is selected. When using the Standard mode, the refresh rate behaves as in Adaptive - using 24Hz, 30Hz, and 60Hz where applicable. Oddly, 48fps and 90fps videos/games always used 120Hz refresh. We weren't able to make the screen switch to 10Hz, 48Hz or 90Hz at the time of writing. The Always-on display works with 24Hz refresh rate and that's the lowest possible. And throwing a 120fps video will result in the expected refresh 120Hz. For example, 24fps videos are shown at 24Hz refresh, 30fps use 30Hz, we also saw 60Hz used on 48fps and 60fps videos across different apps. Video streaming and playback are done in an adaptive fashion, too, depending on the frame rate. When the picture is static, then the software usually dials down to 24Hz in most cases. When using the Adaptive mode, we saw the screen use 120Hz across the interface and all compatible apps and quite a few games. According to the description, the Adaptive one switches automatically between different modes and can do up to 120Hz, while the Standard one does the same, but can go up to 60Hz for longer battery life.Īccording to the device hardware scanning apps, the screen supports these fixed fresh steps - 10Hz, 24Hz, 30Hz, 48Hz, 60hz, 96Hz and 120Hz - that's consistent with the Galaxy S22. The Samsung Galaxy S23 has two Motion Smoothness modes - Adaptive (refresh rate) and Standard (refresh rate). You can also tune RGB saturation to your liking if that's your thing. When using the Vivid mode, there is a barely noticeable bluish tinge over the white and gray colors, but you can get rid of that by opting for the middle position towards Warm on the color temperature slider. The accuracy towards both is consistently great - both modes are fairly accurate towards DCI-P3 and sRGB targets. The Galaxy S23 offers two color modes - Vivid (wide color, DCI-P3) and Natural (standard color, sRGB). Sony Xperia 5 IV Creator Max Auto (default, Medium WB) The minimum brightness at point white was just 1 nit. We even simulated peak brightness within a 10% screen patch, and it did offer about 1750 nits. The Auto brightness is now higher, though, as we captured 1200nits on the Galaxy S23 screen. We've completed our brightness test first, and the manual brightness is a match to the one on the Galaxy S22 - 476nits in its default mode and 786nits with the Extra brightness boost from Settings. Not that many people can tell the difference, but still. Most flagship displays have been offering 10-bit, even 12-bit color depth, while Samsung is yet to offer more than 16 million colors on its smartphones. The protection is handled by the latest Gorilla Glass Victus 2. There is support for a dynamic 120Hz refresh rate, wide color gamut, and HDR10+. The AMOLED panel has your typical 2,340 x 1,080 pixels resolution, but on this 6.1-inch screen, it makes for 422ppi density, and everything looks sharp. It has one notable improvement - 35% higher peak brightness, something that should further improve the HDR streaming experience. The 6.1-inch Dynamic AMOLED 2X we saw on the Galaxy S22 appears again on the new Galaxy S23 model.
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