Speaking of that screen, the S10 sports a gorgeous 6.1-inch AMOLED panel that blows away the standard definition display on the iPhone 11. Now many phones have adopted this tactic to reclaim pixels. It was moderately polarizing, but most appreciated the additional screen real-estate. The Galaxy S10 series was the first from the company to introduce what it called the Infinity-O screen, featuring a nearly edge-to-edge AMOLED panel with a tiny hole-punch cutout at the top right of the screen for the selfie camera. Ironically, the one device that seemed to get overlooked the most from this group was the "regular" S10. Apple did this with its iPhones, but let's not forget that this arm of the Galaxy brought us the standard S10, the smaller, more affordable S10e, and the huge S10 5G (not counting processor variants between these devices). It has quickly become the norm for top handset manufacturers to release multiple tiers of their "flagship" devices. It may be an oldie, but it's still a goodie Apple and Samsung have long prioritized different features in their flagships, and these popular phones are no different. The iPhone 11 came out nearly half a year later than the Galaxy S10, but that doesn't make a whole lot of difference in this spec comparison. Sure there is a newer Galaxy S series, but in reality, these two phones are only separated by about six months, so they're in the same technology generation and, therefore, are more comparable. However, it's fairer to compare last year's Samsung S10 to the "regular" iPhone 11.
#Iphone 10 vs 11 pro#
As of early 2020, the iPhone 11 Pro and Pro Max are the cream of the crop for Apple, and the S20 lineup sits at the top of the mountain for Samsung.