iPhone X HUMILIZES Galaxy Note 8 in Performance

The iPhone X humiliates the Samsung Galaxy Note 8 in terms of performance, the Apple phone having a better result in daily performance, under certain conditions.

iPhone X humiliates Samsung Galaxy Note 8 in the first performance test, showing that it still has the ability to maintain the good "evolutions" of previous phones. The iPhone X, just like the previous iPhone models, surpasses the Samsung Galaxy Note 8 in terms of opening games, and this is because its superior hardware is so powerful that it can face any challenge.

The iPhone X still wins thanks to the speed with which it processes 4K video clips, here the Samsung Galaxy Note 8 needs a very long period of time to achieve this. The difference between the iPhone X and the Samsung Galaxy Note 8 turns out to be more than 2 minutes in the test, and this is because of the very long time required to process the 4K video clip, where many Android phones have problems.

The iPhone X still shows that it has the same problems with keeping applications open in the background, in contrast to the Samsung Galaxy Note 8, which manages to open everything in the background without problems. Comparing with last year, the Samsung Galaxy Note 8 is the phone that manages the RAM memory excellently, while the iPhone X is the phone that has major problems in this regard, surprisingly.

The iPhone X is still slower in terms of unlocking through facial recognition vs iris scanner, and this is because the Samsung Galaxy Note 8 has one less gesture to make. You can see that the Samsung Galaxy Note 8 unlocks immediately when the phone's Power button is pressed, while the iPhone X requires a swipe on the screen to unlock, so Apple is the main problem here.

The iPhone X has an A11 Bionic chip with a very powerful processor, but it does not have enough RAM memory for what users need in everyday life. The Apple company should have implemented at least 4 GB of RAM in the iPhone 8 and iPhone X, because the Samsung Galaxy Note 8 surpasses both of them in RAM memory management, but Apple's concern to make a profit leaves us without that extra GB of RAM.