The bigger, the better. Location - This field shows the positioning systems supported by the device. Every wireless phone device that is sold in the U. Date approved - Shows the date when the particular phone is approved by the Federal Communications Commission.
These limits are given in terms of a unit referred to as the Specific Absorption Rate SAR , which is a measure of the amount of radio frequency energy absorbed by the body when using a mobile phone.
PhoneArena Score Review. User Score User reviews. OS Android 5. Display 5. Battery mAh. Description Samsung prides itself in the differentiation the AMOLED screen technology brings to its high-ends, and it has indeed achieved the unthinkable with the Galaxy S 4 this time around - a five-inch panel with the amazing for OLED screen ppi pixel density.
Display Benchmarks. Hardware Benchmarks. Battery Benchmarks. Camera Benchmarks. Design Size comparison. The Samsung Galaxy S4 runs Android 4. The rear camera setup has autofocus. Samsung Galaxy S4 is based on Android 4. The Samsung Galaxy S4 measures It was launched in Black Mist and White Frost colours. Display 5. Samsung Galaxy S4 Review. Good Brilliant HD screen Great performance Decent battery backup Good camera except low-light shots Bad Same old design that doesn't feel premium Camera is not good at taking low-light shots No FM radio Major portion of internal storage taken up by Samsung apps read bloat-ware.
Read complete Samsung Galaxy S4 Review. Samsung Galaxy S4 Price in India. Out of Stock. Price too high? Subscribe to our price drop alert Notify When Available. Error or missing information? Please let us know. Samsung Galaxy S4 Comparisons. Samsung Galaxy S4 Competitors. Displaying of 3, reviews. Is this review helpful? A phone worth to buy. Samsung galaxy s4 a phone that has all features that make it the best Android phone ever!!
I owned it and was smooth to use!! Samsung is a best phone brand. I purchased it from a local vendor named www. I would like to say that nothing is comparable with samsung. Thanks to team samsung. I think S4 shared the same date with samsung galaxy zero release date. Awesome phone good price.
This rating gives original review of gadgets so I will glad to write in this reveiw. The screen is much better than other rival phones' IPS panel screens. But, as in all android phones, you have to charge it daily. S4 doesn't have FM radio. But, now who wants FM when one can stream through net. It is nice phone at good price. This phone is better than other rival phones at same price level. I've been using samsung s4 for last 1 year. I would like to tell you the accidents it suffers. I am a hard core gamer.
I installed all the high graphics games like aspahlt,modern combat,fifa14 etc. But the landscape has changed since the Galaxy S III came out, and good cameras, big and beautiful screens, and fast performance now come virtually standard.
The Galaxy S4 comes into a fiercely competitive market, with great phones on all sides and a particularly strong showing from the HTC One — is it enough of an improvement to keep Samsung atop the Android heap? I've had one for a week or so, and I have a few thoughts on the subject. Where Apple and HTC have both made beautiful, well-made, high-quality phones, the GS4 has Samsung back in the land of cheap, plasticky handsets. It looks for all the world like the Galaxy S III — despite having a bigger screen and more horsepower, at 7.
I don't like holding this phone, and I can't overstate how much that informs the experience of using it. It makes an awful first impression, slippery and slimy and simply unpleasant in your hand. My white review unit is completely smooth and glossy, with a subtle checkered pattern that looks textured but is neither grippy nor textured anywhere on its body.
Even the silver band around the sides, which is obviously supposed to look like metal, is plastic. That's going to be a huge problem for Samsung, because the GS4 and One are likely to be next to each other on store shelves, and at least on first impression there's absolutely no contest between the two. It's not all bad: the GS4 is thin and light, and feels durable despite its cheap materials.
It's also an improvement over the S III, thanks to slightly flatter edges and shrunken bezels. The port layout is smart: power button on the right, volume on the left, headphone jack up top and Micro USB on the bottom, with the SIM card, microSD slot, and battery accessible when you peel off the removable back.
It's very comfortable for such a large phone, but I can't get over the gross feeling I get holding it. Samsung's proven repeatedly that people don't care about build quality, or at least will overlook it in favor of features and performance, but the landscape's different now. Samsung's feature list has to be awfully long to overcome that — and it is, but I'll get there. Through my entire time with the GS4, I kept imagining walking through a store and trying to pick a phone.
The answer's simple, and luckily for Samsung it's also immediately obvious. It's the screen. The GS4's 5-inch, x display is big, beautiful, and seriously eye-catching. Those colors may not be accurate — reds and oranges absolutely explode off the screen, whether they should or not — but they certainly catch your eye. And with a ridiculous pixels-per-inch, even the PenTile display matrix I usually loathe causes no problems.
For some reason, Samsung has always had trouble with screen brightness settings — the GS4 can never seem to decide how bright its screen should be, changing suddenly and drastically often and without warning. I turned automatic brightness off very quickly. I tried to pick my favorite between the One's display and the GS4's, and wound up going back and forth a dozen times before giving up.
Both are incredibly high-res, bright, and crystal clear; the One is slightly more accurate, but I still periodically forget my nitpicking and get lost in the GS4's vibrant colors.
You really can't lose, and that's pretty great. The lone speaker on the Galaxy S4 resides on its backside, in that wonderfully unconsidered spot where audio is both muffled by your hand and blasting directly away from your ears.
Once again, HTC broke the curve by offering two big, powerful speakers pointed straight at your face — but the One aside, the GS4 offers surprisingly loud sound from rear-facing grille. It's not very rich and is very compressed, but it's loud.
Loud is good. While HTC is trying to convince buyers that megapixels don't matter, and that its so-called Ultrapixels are better anyway, Samsung went the opposite direction. I don't know if all the pixels in the Galaxy S4's megapixel sensor are the reason, or if I should credit Samsung's fast processor or the clear attention paid to its software, but the upshot is that the GS4's camera is the best Android camera I've ever used by a considerable margin, and in most cases it's every bit as good as the iPhone 5's camera.
The GS4's autofocus stumbles in low light, too; I learned quickly to take three shots at night, in order to get one that was properly focused. It's actually Samsung's experience with dedicated cameras that make shooting photos with the GS4 so nice. The company borrowed a lot of the GS4's camera software from the Galaxy Camera , a concept car of sorts that clearly informed its ability to build a great cameraphone. The interface is much improved over the S III, from the scrolling Mode dial to the one-press capture of either stills or video.
It's also simple and fast, two things many cellphone cameras are not. The GS4's greatest photographic achievement, though, is that it manages to be simple and fast while simultaneously offering the largest, most impressive feature set of any smartphone camera I've ever used.
If you're just turning the phone to Auto and firing pictures, you're missing out. Instead, you should try turning it to Eraser Mode, which detects moving objects in your photo — like the stranger that always walks by right as you take the shot — and automatically removes them.
Or scroll up to Drama Shot, which takes a series of pictures as a subject moves and then shows a whole leap, or the soccer ball's whole flight path, in one automatically-overlaid photo. Animated Photo lets you take a few seconds of video, then choose with your finger whether a part of the frame is still or in motion — you can actually create and share animated GIFs without ever leaving the camera app.
Some of the more advanced features require some staging — and Drama Shot sometimes takes a couple of tries — but they're all pretty cool. All except for Dual Camera, which despite Samsung's heavy promotion remains a mystery to me.
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