I own both the iPhone 5 and
the Samsung Galaxy S III and love each phone. In the following iPhone 5 vs.
Galaxy S III comparison I look at design, display, performance and other
important factors to help readers pick the best phone.
Some said the iPhone 5
will blow away the Galaxy S III.
After spending a weekend
comparing the iPhone 5 and the Galaxy S III, here’s what I learned.
iPhone 5 vs. Galaxy S III Display
I love the large 4.8-inch
display on the Samsung Galaxy S III. Samsung packs in a 1280×720 resolution,
giving it true 720p HD quality with 306ppi. The display is bright, crisp and
beautiful. The iPhone 5 uses a 1136×640 resolution display with 326ppi making it
more crisp even if users don’t get full HD video. The iPhone 5 display looks
better and has a warmer color temperature. It’s brighter at maximum and middle
brightness levels while the Galaxy S III shines brighter at lowest
settings.
When I put the two phones next
to one another, the iPhone 5 looks better, but not by a wide margin. I didn’t
really notice a big difference until I laid them side-by-side so display quality
isn’t a reason to pick one phone over another.
I like larger screens, but I
chose the iPhone 5 mostly for the display quality, not the size.
Winner: iPhone
5
Siri vs. S-Voice
Both phones offer voice
control. Siri on the iPhone 5 got a big upgrade in iOS 6 and now lets users
launch apps, check sports scores and more. S-Voice could do many of these things
from the start, but that doesn’t give it an edge now that Apple shipped iOS
6.
With my previous iPhone I
didn’t use Siri because it usually failed to connect to Apple’s servers. Things
work better now, but not enough to make it dependable.
Winner:
Neither
Network Speed
Both phones run on 4G LTE from
AT&T, Verizon or Sprint. Verizon blankets more of the U.S. with LTE than the
competition. However, I’m an AT&T customer and tested the phones on LTE in
Gastonia, NC.Samsung
Galaxy S III didn’t download data as fast as the iPhone at peak levels, but it
provides more consistent results. The iPhone 5 speed tests varied too wildly to
depend on so I’d pick the Galaxy S III.
The history shows that the
results with the Galaxy S III are also all over the place. I got speeds below
3,500kbps and above 23,000kbps.
On my iPhone 5 see the speed
test below which shows 15.81Mbps which translates to 15,810kbps. The upload
speed failed in this test.
Here’s the history of all my
iPhone 5 speed tests.
Comparing the extremes, the
lowest iPhone test came in lower than the lowest Galaxy S III and higher than
the highest S III. However, the S III is more consistent.
Both phones run fast on my
Wi-Fi network, but iPhone 5 suffers some Wi-Fi connectivity issues for some,
including me. See the Apple support posts with 30+ pages of people complaining
of similar issues. We posted a fix that works for some, but didn’t work on my
phone.
Due to more consistent LTE
data speeds and more dependable Wi-Fi connections, the Galaxy S III takes this
category.
Winner: Samsung Galaxy S
III
iPhone 5 vs. Galaxy S III Battery Life
The Samsung Galaxy S III
offers better battery life than most Android phones thanks to the 2100mAh
battery. Mine easily lasts most of the day if I keep things like Wi-Fi and
Bluetooth turned off until I need them.
I tested both phones in a
single day’s time using them extensively with Bluetooth and Wi-Fi turned on most
of the time and screen brightness set to about half. The iPhone lasted under 9
hours of heavy use. The Galaxy S III lasted 45 minutes longer. Also I can change
the battery on the Samsung Galaxy S III which lets me install an extended
battery.
Winner: Samsung Galaxy S
III
Operating System Speed
Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich
runs quickly and smoothly on the S III but iOS 6 runs just as well on the iPhone
5, with a faster processor than previous iPhones. Sometimes Android apps freeze
temporarily taking over the interface. That didn’t happen on
iPhone.
iPhone 5 doesn’t let me
customize the keyboard or put widgets on my home screen. Since the Android
crashes happen so seldom, the customizable interface wins. Also it’s easier to
root an Android phone. Users can’t yet get an iOS 6 jailbreak on iPhone
5.
Winner: Samsung Galaxy S
III
iPhone 5 vs. Galaxy S III Quality and Design
The iPhone clearly looks
prettier than the Galaxy S III. It’s a work of art while the S III just looks
nice.
While holding both phones, the
Samsung Galaxy S III with the plastic back feels cheaper. I thought it would
hold up well, until I dropped mine. Now the corner looks like it melted. A
recent drop test showed that the S III screen breaks easier than the iPhone
5.
Playing Video on iPhone 5 vs. Galaxy S III
I play a lot of video on my
Samsung Galaxy S III, from podcasts to movies. I love the larger screen. The
iPhone 5 screen looks crisp, but doesn’t offer true HD resolution. Due to the HD
resolution and larger display, I prefer the Galaxy S III.
Winner: Samsung Galaxy S
III
Apps on iOS and Android
I’ll keep this simple. Apple
has more apps, but it no longer leads in the number of quality apps. When the
Samsung Galaxy S III updates to Android 4.1 Jelly Bean it may suffer from the
fragmentation issue since fewer apps run on the latest version of the OS. We get
a similar issue with iOS 6.
Not all iOS apps run in full
screen yet on the new iPhone 5 with the taller 4-inch screen. Older apps run
in letterbox, meaning iOS places a black bar above and below the app in portrait
mode or to the left and right in landscape. That’s because older apps fit a
3.5-inch screen and Apple didn’t want to stretch the apps.
The Google Play Store doesn’t
offer as much content in the video, magazine or music areas of the store as
iTunes offers. For that reason iOS gets a narrow victory.
Winner: iPhone
5
Maps
The iOS 6 Maps app controversy
reminds me of the problem with the iPhone 4 signal that dropped when people held
the phone tightly in their hands. My experience isn’t as bad as some report, but
there’s a clear problem and even Apple seems to get that since their looking for
Android app developers.
In the video below our own
Xavier Lanier searches for a hospital in the new Apple Maps and it
fails terribly.I trust Android’s Maps and use it all the time. The app gives me
accurate directions and a helpful picture of the destination that appears when I
near the spot.
Recently I experienced a
strange issue with the Galaxy S III that required me to recalibrate the phone.
I’ve never had that with an iPhone, but that’s a minor problem.
Winner: Samsung Galaxy S
III
Accessories
The iPhone 5 comes with a new
set of EarPods that sound great but don’t fit my ears because they’re too big.
The pods kept falling out no matter how much I pushed them into my ears. I also
don’t like that Apple put the stereo jack on the bottom fo the phone. Samsung
ships the Galaxy S III traditional in-ear earbuds. They don’t sound as good as
the EarPods, but sound good enough.
I prefer the new Apple
Lightning charging and sync cable because it’s easier to slide into the phone
than a micro-USB cable, which the Galaxy S III uses.
Few accessories work with the
new Lightning connector, but there’s a ton of micro-USB charging accessories and
they’re cheaper which offsets the better connection from Apple.
Because both phones did and
will sell millions, they’ll both get plenty of accessories like cases and
chargers and car mounts.
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