2020 is the year of 8K on mobile, thanks to the support presented by processors such as Snapdragon 865. In addition, the first results leave a good impression, able to confirm the appearance of the 8K video, which is four times more pixels than the 4K recording. This week various calls have come in support of the 8K recording, as is the case with the Galaxy S20.
The Samsung Galaxy S20 becomes the first full-fledged internal platform 8K recording support. An important impetus for this decision, which has already become a market phenomenon. Though recording in 8K is something that will eventually make an impact.
We tested the Samsung Galaxy S20, S20 + and S20 Ultra: pre-video analysis
We've been able to test out for a few hours new Samsung phones, Galaxy S20, Galaxy S20 + and Galaxy S20 Ultra and tell you everything.
8K video takes up more space on the phone
An increase in quality has an immediate impact on such storage. In the case of the Galaxy S20, Samsung said that the 8K video would it consumes 600 MB of storage per minute. It represents a significant increase in respect to 4K video recordings, at speeds between 200 and 350 MB per minute, depending on a few features such as formatting or small scale.
That is why genres like Samsung are taking certain steps to stop recording such videos and eventually consume all that is stored. At the Global S20 level 8K recording will be limited a total of five minutes per video. Not only does it matter how much storage is consumed, but you also want to avoid overheating the phones. This was already happening in his day with 4K videos, which was limited to five minutes.
It has been foreseen that 8K video will take up more space on the phone, now it is known that it will double or even lower than 4K video. The good part is that The new Galaxy S20 range comes with 128 GB of storage, and is expandable, which will allow users to record 8K videos without having to worry too much.