Samsung is one of the important companies in the smartphone market. The company has been one of the most preferred brands for users with the Galaxy S series it has developed for years. The development of the cameras of the Galaxy S series remains one of the important factors behind this success of Samsung. Samsung has now released an infographic that shows the evolution of the Galaxy S series camera. The published infographic shows the most important breaking points of the development of the cameras of the Galaxy S series. Galaxy S series has been pushing its rivals in the camera field since its first member, Galaxy S. Galaxy S, the first phone of the Galaxy S series launched in 2010, came up against its competitors with its auto focus, face recognition and anti-shake features on the 5MP camera. Launched in 2012 after the Galaxy S, Galaxy S3 appeared before the users with a camera that can capture moving objects. The Galaxy S4 Zoom, announced in 2013, was one of the most talked-about phones of that time with its 10x optical zoom. The Galaxy S5, announced in 2014 and the Galaxy S7, announced in 2016, offered more vivid and realistic photo quality. Especially with the dual pixel technology in the Galaxy S7, auto focus capabilities were at a higher level. Samsung’s flagship Galaxy S9, announced in 2018, was announced with a feature that could change the aperture value of the environment from f / 1.5 to f / 2.4 depending on the light situation. The flagship Galaxy S10 after the Galaxy S9 prevented blurry photos with its super stabilizer. The Galaxy S20 series, announced this year, shows the point where Samsung’s smartphones have arrived in camera technology. The high resolution cameras of the S20 series offer stunning photos. Especially the S20 Ultra’s 100x space zoom feature takes the S20 series to a completely different point than its competitors. The Galaxy S20 series allows you to easily take photos while taking videos. The fact that the S20s provide 8K video shooting actually summarizes the point Samsung brought to the camera technology in 10 years.
