The Galaxy S10 and Note 10 Lite are cheaper takes on Samsung’s flagships

Meanwhile, the Note 10 Lite’s display slots in between the Note 10 and Note 10+’s 6.3-inch and 6.8-inch screens. However, the biggest difference between all the displays is that the screens of the two Lite phones are lower resolution 1080p panels, instead of QHD panels like on Samsung’s flagships. Combined with their massive 4,500mAh capacity batteries, the lower resolution displays should help with battery life. It’s also worth pointing out Samsung hasn’t said whether the screen it sourced for the Lite models features HDR10 support. For biometric authentication, the phones include both an in-display fingerprint sensor and face recognition.

Both phones include triple main camera arrays, though they differ in the types of lenses they offer. The S10 Lite includes a 48-megapixel wide-angle, a 12-megapixel ultra-wide and a 5-megapixel macro camera. The Note 10, meanwhile, features a 12-megapixel wide, 12-megapixel telephoto and 12-megapixel ultra-wide camera. Notably, neither phone features the variable aperture main lens of Samsung’s flagships. In another design change from Samsung’s earlier models, both the S10 Lite and Note 10 Lite have square camera bumps, instead of the horizontal ones of their predecessors.

Galaxy S10 Lite

Merely looking at the camera specs, the S10 Lite is the one that stands out. For the main camera, Samsung has gone with a dense 48-megapixel sensor and a relatively slow f/2.0 aperture lens. Usually, that’s not a combination that leads to great low-light performance. The company says the S10 Lite features its new “Super Steady” optical image stabilization, but didn’t say anything about how it compares to other OIS solutions. The inclusion of a macro lens is also interesting since there aren’t a lot of phones that include that type of lens.

One area where the two phones differ is that they feature different processors. Samsung hasn’t said the exact model of chip that’s in each phone, but the S10 Lite includes a 7-nanometer octa-core processor, while the Note 10 Lite features a 10-nanometer octa-core chip. The fact the Note 10’s processor is a 10-nanometer chip suggests it’s an older design than the S10 Lite’s. Depending on the market and operator, the phones will include either 6GB or 8GB RAM to support their processors.

When it comes to storage, the two phones come with 128GB standard, with no option to buy more built-in storage. However, both models include microSD expandability, allowing you to add as much as 1TB of additional storage to the phones. Besides their lower-resolution displays, this is probably the two Lite phones’ biggest “downgrade” since the Note 10 comes with 256GB of storage standard. Samsung also doesn’t make any mention of waterproofing or wireless charging, so it’s likely the company tried to cut on cost there as well.

The company will sell the S10 Lite in three colors — “Prism White,” “Prism Black” and “Prism Blue.” The Note 10 Lite will be available in three colors, as well: “Aura Glow,” “Aura Black” and “Aura Red.”

Samsung hasn’t said when either the Galaxy S10 Lite or Note 10 Lite will be available yet, nor how much they’ll cost. Despite today’s announcement, there’s still a lot about these phones we don’t know, which why we’ll be digging into them at CES.

Follow all the latest news from CES 2020 here!

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