“Your move, Samsung.”
That’s how we wrapped up last month’s review of the HTC One M8, a product that we called “an elegant smartphone for a more civilized age.”
The One M8 is such an impressive device that it might well be on its
way to dominating the smartphone sales charts by now, were it not for
the South Korean juggernaut whose brand has become synonymous with
Android.
Yes, it’s time for the next Galaxy S: the fifth installment in a legacy stretching back to 2010. But where Samsung’s front-running smartphone brand has previously brought us iPhone alternatives, devices with natural appeal, and life companions,
this year’s halo device is all about the “glam” – at least on the
marketing copy. Dig a little deeper and the Galaxy S5 becomes a signpost
of change within the world’s largest smartphone manufacturer, a step
away from the spaghetti-at-the-wall approach of years past toward a more
focused, more mature strategy.
Even without these changes, Samsung’s
marketing muscle will ensure that untold millions will flock to the
stores to buy the Galaxy S5. The question is: should you be one of them?
Read on to find out.
Specs & Hardware
To a large extent, the story
of the Galaxy S line has always been about specs. It should come as no
surprise, then, that Samsung has packed the Galaxy S5 with some of the
most powerful innards available. Our model, the AT&T-branded
SM-G900A, comes packing a Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 humming along at
2.5GHz, and some international models carry Samsung’s own “octa-core”
Exynos 5422. Either way, you’re looking at one of the most powerful
processors in the world – and a considerable boost over last year’s
Galaxy S 4, which used either a Snapdragon 600 or an Exynos 5410.
Speed and size being the name
of the game, nearly everything surrounding the CPU has seen a boost as
well. The microSD card slot now officially supports cards up to 128GB in
size, and the phone’s new connectivity package is extensive. WLAN
connection speed gets a boost from the new dual-antenna (MIMO) WiFi
component, while cellular connections get similar sizzle in the form of
Category-4 LTE, and even wired transfer speeds see a jolt from the
inclusion of USB 3.0 – a carryover from last fall’s Galaxy Note 3. Only
the 2GB of RAM and paltry 16GB of onboard storage are bound to
disappoint power users. Fortunately for some, the latter metric varies
based on market, with 32GB variants available for those who can’t deal
with the roughly 10GB available out-of-the-box on the AT&T version.
There’s more sensor capability
built into the phone’s casing than ever before. In addition to the
usual package of accelerometer/gyro/compass/barometer with a side
helping of infrared and NFC, the Galaxy S5 now sports a fingerprint
scanner hidden beneath the home key, and a heartbeat monitor nestled
under the rear camera lens.
Other improvements are more
subtle, at least at first: the big 1080p display is Super AMOLED and
pixel-packed at 432ppi, just a tenth of an inch larger than its 5-inch
predecessor on the Galaxy S 4. As we’ve come to expect from the Galaxy S
family, its colors are jaw-droppingly gorgeous and its blacks are deep
as night. Its principal improvement is in illumination range: without a
colorimeter we’re unable to give exact levels, but we’ve seen reports
that the S5′s display can overpower to almost 700 nits to counter the
effects of bright sunlight. We find the opposite extreme even more
useful: dragging the brightness slider all the way down brings the
screen illumination to just 2 nits, handy for reading in bed without
disturbing your bunkmate.
Where the Galaxy line has often stumbled is in industrial design –even back in 2010 we were deducting points for a cheap-feeling build–
and sadly, the S5 does little to change that. It’s not necessarily
unattractive, but it’s honestly tough to see why Samsung felt justified
in appending the cheesy “glam” moniker to such an unremarkable-looking
device. With the exception of the gaudy gold edition, the Galaxy S5 just
kind of … exists. And as we touched on in our comparison with the S4
earlier this week, the new phone is thicker (8.1mm vs 7.9mm) and heavier
(145g vs 130g) than its predecessor, and from certain angles, its wider
bezels make it look even more robust.
But that’s not entirely a bad thing. A beefier, bolder design is something we’ve been pining for ever since the Galaxy S III
hit the scene with its flimsy, slimy plastic. The Galaxy S5′s added
draft and heft gives it a more substantial presence, and the new dimpled
back cover makes it more comfortable to hold. Ten minutes after you
take it out of the box, it feels like you’ve carried it forever.
Many will appreciate that comfortable
familiarity, not to mention the S5’s durability. We’ve been screaming
for manufacturers to make phones more rugged,
and there’s no bigger sign that the trend is finally going mainstream
than Samsung making its newest flagship IP67 compliant. That doesn’t
mean it’s MIL-SPEC, but the phone’s casing does keep out dust – and
it’ll also survive immersion in freshwater for up to 30 minutes at 1
meter depth. That means you’re covered if your buddy pushes you in the
pool with your phone in your pocket, and if you feel like having some
fun with underwater photos or video while you’re in there, you can do
that too.
Samsung deserves praise for bringing this ability to its halo smartphone, rather than pawning it off on a less-capable “Active” offering.
Those who don’t need or want the immersion protection may chafe at the
slight inconvenience of the repetitive software warnings and the
protective hatch on the USB port, but we think more people will be
pleased than annoyed – especially the fitness mavens Samsung is trying
to woo with this device.
Sensors
Those exercise aficionados
will be pleased to know that the S Health suite is still here in all its
glory, now with the addition of the Coach by Cigna app so you can set
fitness goals and tell the S5 just how horrible your diet and stress
levels are. And thanks to that new heart monitor, it can tell when
you’re lying and deliver a punitive electric shock for your deception.
Mmkay no it can’t. (But wouldn’t that be
coolhorrifying?) Ultimately, the heart monitor is a case of “does what it
says on the box,” and how much you value it will depend on how hardcore
you are about fitness. We found ourselves using it a bit more often
than we expected: it even came in handy on one occasion, when an
anxiety-prone dinner guest used it to confirm an alarmingly high resting
heart rate. For the average consumer, its novelty will likely erode
over time; fortunately, its unobtrusive design makes it essentially
invisible when not in use.
In that same category sits the
S5′s new fingerprint scanner: it’s integrated so cleanly into the home
button that you’ll completely forget it’s there if you disable it.
Unfortunately, disabling it is one of the first things most will likely
do.
That’s not because the concept is bad – despite the manifold problems with fingerprint scanners from the Atrix to the iPhone,
we still think the notion is cool in a futuristic kind of way. But a
cool notion requires a solid execution, and just as with the similar
scanner on HTC’s One max,
the execution on the Galaxy S5 falls short. For one thing, Samsung went
with a sensor that requires a top-to-bottom swipe, and then positioned
that sensor very close to the bottom edge of the phone; the resulting
war between gravity and grip is going to cause a lot of dropped phones
out there.
Also, the act of swiping over a
button is an incredibly unintuitive maneuver (Apple got it right with
its press-and-hold sensor on the iPhone 5S), and the problem gets worse
when you stick a case on the phone. Finally, the sensor itself is very
finicky, meaning you almost always need to try more than once to unlock
the phone.
The fingerprint scanner isn’t a
disaster, by any means: we’ve had our good days with it, and some S5
owners say it works more often than not. The PayPal extensibility built
into the software is also clever, and the visual cues that guide your
finger are well-designed and attractive. But all that cruft isn’t enough
to get past the fundamental flaw of a swipe sensor mounted in an
inconvenient position. That important failing renders the S5′s
fingerprint scanner little more than a me-too feature in a sea of me-too
features, and after using it for a week we’re happy to turn it off.
It’s fortunate that it’s so invisible.
Software
In a refreshing change of
pace, the interface formerly known as TouchWiz has seen some fairly big
changes in the Galaxy S5, and many of them are for the better.
Samsung’s recent discussions with Google seem to have resulted in more than just a boot screen revamp,
with the company’s new interface having undergone a spring cleaning of
sorts. To be clear, this is more window-dressing than any major overhaul
–it’s still very plainly a Samsung UI atop Android 4.4.2– but sprinkled
throughout the software are accents that give the interface a more
modern look and feel, without cluttering things up too much.
Some of these changes are
quite simple. There’s been a general flattening and modernization of the
interface on the whole, which includes a rather stylish shift from
squares to circles in places like the notification shade and the
settings menu. The latter (though perhaps even more cluttered than
before with the unaccountable duplication of icons) is now searchable:
if you get frustrated scrolling down the list
looking for the Bluetooth settings, you can tap the magnifying glass
and start typing “Bluetooth” – by the time you get to the third letter,
you’re done. And to hop back to what you were doing before, just hit the
new capacitive multitasking button down below; the tiresome requirement
of pressing-and-holding the home button has thankfully been removed
(though that action still exists as a shortcut to Google Now).
If you’re a couch-loving kind
of person, you’ll be happy to hear that the Peel-powered Smart Remote
now works better than ever. The app offers plugins for Netflix and
social accounts, and the interface is simplicity itself: setting it up
to talk to our TiVo and LG television using the S5′s IR port took less
than a minute. With volume and channel controls now available right on
the lock screen, controlling your home entertainment system with the
Galaxy S5 is more than possible – it’s actually convenient. And we like the added touch of the phone’s status LED lighting up to register each keypress, like most modern remote controls.
There’s
a new and refreshing emphasis on the little things: the process of
making a folder on the home screen has been tweaked to make it easier;
one-handed operation is a simple swipe away; and when you call someone,
the phone reminds you of the last time you spoke with them. In general,
there’s a bit more attention to detail, a bit less emphasis on the
gimmicks of yesteryear. And old favorites like MultiWindow are back –
probably Samsung’s best contribution to Android and still the easiest
way we’ve found to multitask on a smartphone.
But for all its high points,
the new TouchWiz also carries a pretty heavy load of junk. Buried in its
massive system image are all the things we’ve come to loathe about
Samsung software: dialog boxes ranging from the repetitive (“Clear
Default App Settings by going to Settings > Applications >
Defaults [sic] Applications”) to the nonsensical (“Screen will be turned
off when screen is locked”). Ugly, iOS-like badges made obsolete by
Android’s notification center back in 2008. Wonky unpredictable behavior
like occasional lock screen sluggishness and browser lockups. And
vestigial remnants of the old TouchWiz like the dated app drawer icons
and the system sounds that haven’t made sense since 2012. This isn’t the
“Nature UX” anymore, so why does my smartphone still sound like a leaky
faucet when I touch it?
The holdovers and shortcomings
contribute to a pervasive sense of being stuck between generations, of
using software that seems unfinished. We get the feeling Samsung is on
the way to crafting something pretty compelling here, and we understand
the pressure to deliver concrete changes in something of a hurry. We
just wish the company had gotten all the way there before shipping it.
Camera
The Galaxy S5′s camera software has also been given a facelift of sorts. As we mentioned in our first hands-on
with the new device, we’re excited to see the company has consolidated
many of its crazy shooting modes (Golf Shot, anyone?) into just a few
hubs along the bottom, which have been made more intelligent and simpler
to use. Sadly, some of that complexity has been shuffled elsewhere
rather than eliminated: the settings cog now stands sentry over a grid
containing 27 different buttons, which is kind of daunting when you’re
just trying to find the right setting for a quick shot.
But Samsung’s not alone here:
most smartphone viewfinders are pretty convoluted. And if you’re the
type who will put up with a little complexity as long as it also brings
added capability, you’ll probably be right at home here. The Galaxy S5’s
camera packs a 16MP, 1/2.6” sensor with a 1.12 µm pixel pitch and
Samsung’s new ISOCELL technology. In proper lighting, that combination
delivers a nice combination of high contrast, strong midtones (both with
and without HDR augmentation), and just a touch of added saturation in
Auto mode. That last part may not please the diehard photographer, but
the
killjoysauthenticity appreciators out there can correct it using manual settings.
Sadly, notwithstanding the
much-ballyhooed ISOCELL technology, night shooting is decidedly not the
Galaxy S5′s strong suit. There’s quite a bit of digital noise in most
low-light shots, taking the form of a blue haze that intensifies toward
the edges. As can be readily seen in our Galaxy S5 vs HTC One M8
comparison, this is not a shooter you’ll want to invest in if you take
most of your photos in dim environments, unless you’re a fan of the
flash.
On the brighter side, the flash is plenty bright:
… and the new selective focus
feature is fun to use when its stringent conditions are met, letting you
set your focal point after your shot is taken:
Other offerings like Dual Shot
are still here for making every shot a semi-selfie (the 2MP
front-facing camera does well enough for this purpose), and Beauty Face
stands ready as ever to give your face the pancake-makeup smoothness of
your favorite 1980s TV star. If you’ve always wanted to bring Google’s
Photo Sphere wonder to the great indoors, Samsung’s Virtual Tour allows
you to make a kind of walking map of a space – though it’s finicky in
rooms that aren’t totally square. Much like Windows Phone’s approach
with its various lenses, you can download additional plugins for the camera via the Samsung App Store.
If moving pictures are more your speed,
the S5 will stand you in good stead: though there’s no optical image
stabilization, software stabilization is here, and 1080p and 4K shooting
modes are supported, as is high-speed video for slow-motion playback.
Just as with stills, colors are rich and contrast is high – even if
audio is a little on the muffled side.
Performance
“Muffled” is also the word
callers used to describe our voice when talking on the Galaxy S5. When
we asked them to rate the phone’s performance on a scale of 1 to 10, our
volunteer squad gave the phone’s voice quality an average score of 6.5.
While that’s to be expected with a soaking wet microphone, that
happened even when the phone was bone dry. Nothing new when compared
with last year’s similarly disappointing Galaxy S 4, but still kind of a shame. The loudspeaker is also, once again, nothing to write home about.
Fortunately, the fundamentals
are more solid: during our seven days of testing, reception and data
speeds were excellent on AT&T’s network in and around Greater Boston
(we averaged 15-20Mbps down and about 10-15Mbps up on LTE), and the
phone’s outstanding benchmark scores are matched easily by its graphics
performance, which really shines on the gorgeous display. It was much
tougher to get the Galaxy S5 to break a sweat than it was with older
models.
That’s all thanks to the
Snapdragon 801 CPU, which in addition to being much more powerful is
also, paradoxically, easier on the battery. We were often able to
squeeze a full day (and about 5 hours of screen-on time) from the
26002800 mAh (10.78Wh) battery – but if you start using the Galaxy S5′s
more power-intensive features like the pedometer, that endurance drops
considerably. Samsung’s Ultra Power Saving mode is here for extreme
cases like forgetting a charger at home during a weekend camping trip,
but at the extreme cost of rendering the Galaxy S5 little more than an
expensive dumbphone with a black-and-white screen. In our experience,
Ultra Power Saving also grossly inflates its endurance estimates: on one
occasion with 9% battery remaining, it anticipated 29 hours of standby:
we made it to just five hours, with very moderate use, before the
battery gave up. Fortunately, as with most Galaxy smartphones, the
battery is user-replaceable so road warriors can buy extra packs and
swap them in at will.
Pros
+ IP67 ingress protection+ Outstanding, adaptable display
+ Excellent camera performance in good light, satisfactory performance underwater
+ Impressive specifications
+ Improved user interface
Cons
- Industrial design doesn’t live up to “glam” messaging- Software still looks, feels half-baked
- Poor camera performance in low light
- Features like fingerprint scanner, Ultra Power Saving under-deliver
Pricing and Availability
Not content with watching us unbox our review unit above? Not to worry: odds are, you can buy one of your own right now.
The Galaxy S5 and its wearable companions
launched in 125 countries on April 11, with US carrier availability
following almost immediately thereafter. Our North American model is on
sale at all four US national carriers, with a retail price of $599-$660
and an up-front price of between $0 and $199, depending on operator. If
this review has you hankering to pick up one of your own, see the
following links to the Galaxy S5 product page on all four US nationals:
Conclusion
The Galaxy S5 was supposed to
change things. It was supposed to be the dawn of a new age for Samsung: a
product lighter on gimmicks and heavier on real improvements, from a
company newly focused on listening to its customers.
This is not that device. The
gimmicks have been reduced in number and altered in type, but from the
fingerprint scanner to the heartbeat monitor, they’re still here: and
once again, their execution doesn’t always live up to their ambition.
These lapses in focus, plus the hiccups in fundamentals like software
and voice quality, prevent the Galaxy S5 from actually achieving the
epic status its advertising promotes.
But we must give credit where it’s due.
While it’s not so “glam” as Samsung likes to advertise, this smartphone
is indeed a step in the right direction – a bigger step than last year’s
model. This new Galaxy S is a beautiful screen and excellent camera
wrapped in a dust-proof, water-resistant casing packed with the best
internals money can buy. That combination makes it pretty easy to
overlook the phone’s more philosophical flaws – and it makes it
imperative to consider the Galaxy S5 if you’re shopping for a truly
top-of-the-line smartphone in 2014.