OnePlus 8's, Note20, Huawei, Pixel & iPhones

OnePlus produces the best all-rounders

One of the biggest surprises this year and devices which generally delighted me the most was OnePlus’s new 8-series. Particularly with the OnePlus 8 Pro, I feel like the company had ditched its mantra of making “flagship killer” devices and simply outright made their first full true flagship device – a device with very few compromises.

The OnePlus 8 Pro for me really checked almost all boxes for what you’d expect in a 2020 flagship phone, QHD 120Hz screen, triple-camera setup with a new massive sensor- all whilst maintaining competitive pricing throughout the year and undercutting the closest competitor devices such as from Samsung.

Weak points of the OnePlus devices continue to be camera software processing. Unfortunately, I no longer have the devices to test further firmware updates throughout the year and to see how things have developed, however it looks like the phones aren’t getting as much attention and updates as other competitor devices such as from Samsung.

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Samsung’s Note20 creates a bad precedent

One of the most baffing devices of the year was Samsung’s new Note20. Samsung’s decision to create two Note devices isn’t exactly new as we had already seen the this being first implemented in the Note10 series in 2019 – however while the Note10 was mostly a smaller variant of the Note10+, with only a few feature discrepancies such as a lower resolution screen and a lack of a ToF sensor, the new Note20 really had almost nothing to do with the Note20 Ultra.

Featuring a completely different camera setup, a lower resolution, quite different design, 60Hz-only screen, a plastic covered back, the Note20 really felt more like a Note20 Lite whereas the Note20 Ultra was the true successor to last year’s Note10 series. This came at quite a starker contrast compared to the S20 versus S20 Ultra devices, with Samsung still featuring the Note20 at a quite expensive price point.

While we don’t usually comment on non-official information, there’s been plenty of leaks on the upcoming Galaxy S21 series where we’re seeing signs of a similar feature discrepancy between the regular S21 devices and the S21 Ultra – with features that were usually present on the regular models now being only present on the higher-end large-format phone. This is a general bad sign for consumers, especially in a year where Apple’s new iPhone 12 line-up now covers the entire spectrum from small to large in regular and premium variants.

It’s left to be seen how 2021 plays out, but I have a feeling Samsung here is loading up the gun in preparation of shooting themselves in the foot, and leaving open opportunities for the competition to actually deliver no-compromise devices across the spectrum.

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Huawei’s Last Kirin Phone?

Due to geopolitical circumstances, Huawei’s Mate 40 series devices might be the very last phones from the companies in the foreseeable future which come equipped with their in-house Kirin SoCs. Beyond the fact that the company had been barred from using Google services such as the Play store, cutting the company away from its own in-house silicon designs is a major blow that will have large repercussions to future products.

Amongst the largest implications, and assuming the company will be able to actually continue to produce handset devices using third-party SoCs such as from Qualcomm, is that this bars the company from having an advantage in software-hardware vertical integration. Huawei had been particularly a company that for years now had been taking advantage of their internal SoC designs to create camera experiences leveraging custom sensors along with their custom ISPs, giving them unique advantages such as RYB sensor designs that were vastly superior in low-light compared to other manufacturer designs.

Whether Huawei would be able to continue such unique differentiation in 2021 isn’t clear – and if the current software situation hasn’t already killed the viability of Huawei smartphones outside of China, then the possible lack of any differentiation against the competitor hardware surely will.

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The Pixel is no longer a Flagship

The last few generation of Pixel phones weren’t all that successful – Google’s late-year release schedule always meant that hardware-wise, the Pixels were always relatively out-dated compared to nearest released competitor flagship phone, which always put into question the value proposition of Google’s flagship phones. I had commented in our Pixel 4 review last year that Google had to change something in their strategy, and they actually did this year with the Pixel 5:

The Pixel 5 no longer positions itself as a flagship device, but rather as a “premium” segment phone, meaning the segment between flagships and the usually mid-range. Falling back to a Snapdragon 765 SoC, this means that the Pixel 5 featured a weaker SoC, but also came with a much more reasonable launch price of $699.

The issue for the Pixel 5 however came from its own ranks: the sibling Pixel 4a 5G features the same SoC, same camera setup, adds a 3.5mm headphone jack, and only gives up an IP68 rating and 90Hz refresh rate for only $499 in the non-mmWave variant of the phone, positioning itself as a much more attractive value than the Pixel 5.

The fact that Google still doesn’t officially release the devices in many countries also continues to pose the question of whether they’re being serious about the whole Pixel line-up.

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Apple’s has an iPhone for everybody

Apple’s new 2020 iPhone 12 line-up has been extremely impressive, for the sole reason of it being extremely versatile in terms of the model offering. Now having released a total of 4 iPhone 12 models, Apple’s offering of the iPhone 12 mini, iPhone 12, iPhone 12 Pro and iPhone 12 Pro Max means there’s a plenty of choice for consumers, with this year having significantly less features discrepancies between the models other than their builds and form-factors.

While Apple’s iPhones don’t particularly shine in every aspect besides the still outstandingly well performing A14 SoCs – they lack fancy features such as high refresh-rate displays or the new more advanced camera sensors of the competition, they’re still outstandingly solid overall devices, with particularly the 12 mini and the iPhone 12 offering shockingly good value starting at $699 and $799 – something we usually can’t really claim very often about Apple devices.

What really impresses me about the line-up is that these are almost feature equivalent between each other whilst being mostly different in their form-factors – an increasingly rare product design decision that comes in contrast to other vendor’s choices of putting all bells and whistles onto their biggest models while leaving the smaller devices with compromises, or even removing historically present features. In that sense, Apple offers an iPhone for everybody’s taste and budget.

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What to expect from 2021: Maturity, Refinement

Overall, 2020 has been a year of varying successes and introduction of new features. The market is becoming increasingly mature and device purchase cycles are getting longer, as manufacturers are struggling to really put truly differentiating features on every new generation of devices.

For 2021, what I’m expecting is more of a year of refinement and maturity. I hope to see 120Hz displays become a standard, with a more optimised software and hardware stack that reduces the battery life impact.

The new generation 5nm SoCs such as the Snapdragon 888 will bring performance benefits, but the newer generation of 5G modems hopefully will also mark a maturation of the technology and a return to extremely long battery life devices.

Finally, cameras are really becoming the aspect today where smartphones differ the most from each other. The various new camera technology approaches, together with the fact that AI and software plays a huge role in the final products means that vendors have to differentiate through talent and software resources as well. While the hardware of 2021 might not bring anything ground-breaking to the market, I still expect major leaps in the computational photography side of devices.

We’re looking forward to the first new releases of 2021 in the comings weeks and months, and we’ll be sure to cover them extensively.

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Big Sensors, 120Hz, SoCs Loses & Wins
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  • Revv233 - Saturday, January 2, 2021 - link

    Love my "small" sony 5.2

    First no compromise since galaxy S9.

    Wish it had S9 camera though.
  • iphonebestgamephone - Monday, December 28, 2020 - link

    The wider aspect ratio has been helpful for games, more space for all the onscreen buttons and ui elements, along with the wider view. Also movies.
  • iphonebestgamephone - Monday, December 28, 2020 - link

    Oh, it also makes split screen experience better.
  • iphonebestgamephone - Monday, December 28, 2020 - link

    Its even been useful for some excel docs, now that i remember.
  • eastcoast_pete - Monday, December 28, 2020 - link

    Andrei, whenever you have a chance, I'd appreciate a reasonably deep dive into the differences in onboard storage tech and the impact on a phone's speed, response in daily use etc. I believe Apple is still the only phone maker that uses NVMe storage, while all Androids seem to use some version of UFS. Why is that, and how much faster is NVMe if used in smartphones (assuming it still is)? Thanks!
  • RSAUser - Saturday, January 2, 2021 - link

    UFS 3.0 and iPhone Nvme are about matched with UFS3.0 usually being slightly faster sequentially, and then UFS 3.1 being a good 10 faster on average.

    The difference really isn't that much though, both are plenty fast.

    Do note it's not Nvme on iPhone, it's the mobile version which caps at 1.1GBps.
  • Cod3rror - Monday, December 28, 2020 - link

    Larger camera sensors, 5G and 120Hz screens have all been good, meaningful upgrades.

    For 2021, I would really like for even larger sensors. Can they reach the golden 1" sensor size?

    I hope they keep 120Hz screens and not go higher than that. Screen sample rates should increase though; the higher, the better. And flat, go back to FLAT screens!

    If the new 5G chips are more battery efficient that'll be great!

    Other than that I don't really know what they could bring that would be innovative and compelling people to upgrade. I don't care about under-the-screen front cameras at all personally. I am only interested in bigger camera sensors.
  • FunBunny2 - Monday, December 28, 2020 - link

    "5G!! We don't need no stinkin 5G!" You really should have delineated two simple facts:
    1 - mmWave 5G, the only real 5G, exists essentially nowhere
    2 - what is advertised as '5G' is not much more than LTE

    That phone vendors are conspiring with carriers to dupe the sheep is bad enough. For you to not call them out for it... isn't that your job?
  • Andrei Frumusanu - Monday, December 28, 2020 - link

    Calling mmWave real 5G is complete nonsense. Sub-6 is of magnitudes more important to the increase in spectrum and bandwidth, and has significant benefits over LTE.

    mmWave will always remain a niche due to how it works.
  • Bp_968 - Monday, December 28, 2020 - link

    I think most people assume mmWave *is* 5G because they marketed 5G using *big numbers* because it sells. Except mmWave is required for those big numbers. From what ive read the sub6 changes mainly benefit carrying capacity and customer load issues. So while yes, it will improve speed and consistency for people in dense environments, it won't necessarily improve their top end speed and isn't as easily marketable as showing a speed test window and saying "wow! GIGS!!!"

    Which never made much sense to me anyway. I am a massive abuser of bandwidth on my PC and have GB fiber at home, but on my phone ive never wished I had more bandwidth.

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