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crwdns2936043:0crwdne2936043:0 crwdns2933505:0crwdne2933505:0 Jeff Suovanen
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+ | [* black] Next up: cameras. Both motherboards have to come out first. |
+ | [* icon_note] These two camera arrays differ mainly in how they zoom, and how many pixels they pack: |
+ | [* black] The Ultra inherits the super-cool optical [guide|131607|Space Zoom module from the S20 Ultra|stepid=259587|new_window=true], but with a smaller 12 MP sensor behind it. (Click the link for a detailed take-apart of the periscope mechanism.) The regular Note 20 doesn't "space zoom," instead relying on a dense 64 MP sensor and some cropping magic. |
+ | [* black] The situation reverses for the wide-angle module, where the Ultra gets a gigantic 108 MP sensor—which, [guide|131607|like the S20 Ultra|stepid=259199|new_window=true], usually bins down to 12 MP. Meanwhile, the regular Note packs a more modest 12 MP sensor here. |
+ | [* black] Neither Note gets the S20 Ultra's 40 MP front-facing camera—instead, both pack 10 MP selfie sensors, which appear to come bundled with some [https://twitter.com/backlon/status/1295726396711428097?s=20|unfortunate smoothing effects|new_window=true]. |
+ | [* icon_reminder] Oddly, the standard Note 20 releases its selfie module with gentle prying—but the Ultra's comes firmly hot-glued in place. |