![]() ![]() The upgraded Single Take feature is a boon for bad photographers like this reviewer. I am not sure if you have ever been an Instagram spouse and can empathise but as a self-proclaimed terrible photographer, taking photos has always been a challenge for me. The highlight of the S21 Ultra is its back cameras – a 12-megapixel ultra-wide camera, 108-megapixel wide-angle camera and dual 10-megapixel telephoto cameras, one with 3x optical zoom and the other with 10x. So if you already own a Note smartphone, you can use its S Pen to doodle and draw on the screen, or opt to buy the upcoming souped-up stylus which will be bigger, and dare I say, mightier. The S21 Ultra is also the first S series phone to support the much-coveted S Pen stylus, which has been exclusive to Samsung’s Galaxy Note range, the company’s other flagship series, until now. At 120GHz, scrolling and playing games can’t get any smoother, and it’s supported at Quad HD+ (3,200 x 1,440 pixels) resolution unlike previous iterations or other models in the S21 range. During the review, it hardly failed to recognise my fingerprint and was super quick. ![]() Talking about fingerprints, the S21 Ultra boasts a much larger and faster fingerprint sensor on the front. ![]() The matte black finish is nice to the touch and, more importantly, is not a fingerprint magnet. The matte finish would be my pick if one is planning to forgo a case, as it feels nice to the touch and is not a fingerprint magnet. The phone comes in two colours – Phantom Silver and Phantom Black – the former eye-catching, while the latter more interesting because of its matte finish. Instead of just chasing megapixels and processor clock cycles, Samsung has found nifty new ways to put every tech it has managed to cram into the phone to great use, making it a polished product built in line with the user’s needs.Įven in terms of design, the S21 Ultra’s protruding camera block, an eyesore for many other phones, blends in with the design to give it a sleek finish. Options currently include cameras with a ×4 zoom and night-vision capabilities, as well as a laser range finder.If only one word could be used to describe the Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G, then it would be “refined”. The source declined to say how much the Smash Dragon weighs and indicated that future customers would be offered a range of options from the existing Smash range depending on their requirements and the payload the multicopter can carry. “Once the user identifies the target – independently or using the detection system guidance – and locks on it, Smash tracks its movements and synchronises the shot release to assure fast and precise hits on target,” a company source told “Extremely lightweight and therefore allowing long mission endurance, Smash Dragon integrates a unique stabilisation concept with the Smash technology that enables the system to accurately hit static and moving targets while flying,” the company said in a press release. The Smash family incorporates target-acquisition and -tracking algorithms, as well as augmented-reality displays that tell operators where to aim to hit the designated target. A version of the company's Smash fire-control system is fitted to the top of the weapon like a standard sight, the difference being that its view is transmitted back to the UAV's operator. The Smash Dragon consists of a mount that it attached to the underside of the multicopter to carry the weapon, which can be various types of assault rifle, sniper rifle, or 40 mm grenade launcher. Israeli company Smart Shooter unveiled on 10 January its Smash Dragon system, which enables small multicopter unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to be armed with infantry weapons, saying it has completed live-fire tests and is in an advanced stage of development. A multicopter armed with the Smash Dragon system.
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