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8 Reasons the Galaxy Note 8 Beats iPhone X

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Dual Cameras

Dual Cameras

This next category is somewhat of a toss-up. Last year Apple debuted the iPhone 7 Plus with two cameras on the back. It's a trend that nearly every smartphone manufacturer adopted over the past year. Samsung and Apple both have arguably the best smartphone cameras on the market, so this is all about personal preference. 

iPhone X: Dual 12 Megapixel cameras with a wide-angle and a telephoto lens. The main camera has a f/1.8 aperture and secondary camera is f/2.4 aperture. Both cameras feature optical image stabilization. 

Galaxy Note 8: Dual 12 Megapixel cameras with a wide-angle and a telephoto lens. The main camera has a f/1.7 aperture and secondary camera is f/2.4 aperture. Both cameras feature optical image stabilization. 

Both phones take amazing photos, both have a 2x optical zoom, and both companies added optical image stabilization to each lens. This means no matter how or when you take a photo, you'll enjoy the results. 

Samsung's Note 8 has a better aperture that should help in low-light situations, but we'll have to wait and see. They both take great portrait photos with neat "bokeh" effects, although Samsung lets you control the background blur. Additionally, you can control the blur effect before AND after you take a photo on the Galaxy Note 8. 

However, Apple has a new Portrait Lighting mode that looks very promising. If there's a silver lining here, the iPhone X has higher FPS with 4K video recording and offers slow-motion video at 1080p vs 720p on the Note 8. Both phones have a great set of cameras, but the Note 8 gives you more control over the final product. 

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