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These 3 features on the S26 Ultra makes me miss my iPhone 17 Pro even more

Galaxy S26 Ultra: So good it made me go back to Apple emotionally

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Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra
Tom Bedford / Digital Trends

Switching phones is always a gamble. You expect something new, something exciting – maybe even something better. And to be fair, the Galaxy S26 Ultra delivers on that promise in many ways. It is one of the most technically impressive smartphones available today, packing a 6.85-inch 2K LTPO AMOLED display with a 120Hz refresh rate, peak brightness reaching up to 2,600 nits, and Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chip, which offers roughly a 10–15% performance boost over its predecessor.

But after spending time with it, I found myself in a strange position. The more I appreciated what Samsung had built, the more I started missing my iPhone 17 Pro.

The Privacy Display has got some real trade-offs

The standout feature this year is easily Samsung’s Privacy Display. It uses pixel-level light control to restrict viewing angles, effectively making your screen unreadable from the sides. In theory, it’s brilliant. In practice, it’s genuinely useful – especially in public spaces like flights or metros where shoulder surfing is a real concern.

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Samsung deserves credit here because this isn’t just software trickery. It’s hardware-driven innovation, and that’s increasingly rare in modern smartphones.

But the moment you turn it on, the compromises become clear. The display dims noticeably, color accuracy takes a slight hit, and the overall viewing experience feels constrained. This is particularly noticeable because the S26 Ultra’s panel is otherwise one of the brightest and most vibrant in the industry.

And that’s when the contrast hits you.

Apple doesn’t offer a privacy display. But it also doesn’t introduce features that degrade the core experience. The iPhone approach is slower, more conservative – but also more refined. You don’t get experimental features, but you also don’t deal with their trade-offs.

Camera improvements that don’t change the outcome

On paper, the S26 Ultra’s camera system sounds upgraded. The main sensor now features a wider f/1.9 aperture, while the telephoto sits at f/2.4, theoretically improving low-light performance. The phone retains its 200-10-50MP setup, including a periscope zoom lens.

In isolation, the results are excellent. Photos are sharp, bright, and social-media ready.

But compared to the S25 Ultra, the differences are minimal. In most real-world scenarios, you would struggle to tell which phone took which shot unless you were actively looking for it. Even benchmark comparisons and side-by-side tests suggest that the improvement is incremental rather than transformative.

Meanwhile, the iPhone continues to excel in areas that matter day to day – video consistency, color accuracy, and optimization for apps like Instagram and Snapchat. Apple’s computational photography may not always push boundaries, but it delivers predictability.

Samsung is innovating. Apple is refining. And more often than not, refinement wins in daily use.

Performance and AI: Powerful, but overwhelming

There is no denying the raw power of the S26 Ultra. The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 delivers top-tier performance, and the device handles everything – from gaming to multitasking – effortlessly. But the real focus this year is AI.

Samsung has packed the phone with features: AI image editing, generative fill, object insertion, writing assistants, real-time translation, and contextual suggestions through tools like Now Brief or Now Nudge. These features are technically impressive, but they come with limitations. AI-generated images often output at lower resolutions – which doesn’t match the phone’s native display. Editing images can reduce quality by up to 20–30%, making them less practical for long-term use.

More importantly, many of these tools feel optional rather than essential. They are features you try, not features you rely on.

And over time, that starts to feel exhausting.

The iPhone, by comparison, takes a different approach. It integrates AI more quietly, focusing on tasks that improve existing workflows rather than introducing entirely new ones. It does less – but it does it more consistently.

The irony of it all

The S26 Ultra didn’t make me dislike Android. It reminded me why I liked iOS.

Because while Samsung is experimenting with bold features – privacy displays, AI tools, camera tweaks – Apple is focusing on stability, consistency, and polish. And that difference becomes more noticeable the longer you use both. The features you admire aren’t always the ones you miss.

My final take

The Galaxy S26 Ultra is an exceptional device. It is powerful, innovative, and packed with features that push the boundaries of what a smartphone can do. But using it didn’t feel like an upgrade in my daily life. It felt like stepping into a different philosophy. And sometimes, that’s enough to make you realize that what you value isn’t innovation for its own sake – but how seamlessly everything fits together.

And in that regard, I found myself missing my iPhone 17 Pro more than I expected.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
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