The Galaxy S5 is another phone to join the list of phones that ship with a fingerprint scanner for unlocking the device. While the Motorola Atrix 4G was the first to have a fingerprint scanner, it was mostly forgotten as a feature until Apple reintroduced it to the market in the form of TouchID. HTC also released the One max with a fingerprint scanner, which was generally viewed with mixed reactions due to the swipe sensor. Overall, it seems that while no one has a perfect implementation, Apple has the best implementation on the market today.

I do think it's important to give Samsung some credit, as the Synaptics-provided capacitive fingerprint scanner does work. Although not perfect, the GS5 is definitely better with its fingerprint scanner than had it shipped without it.

Samsung integrated Paypal and Samsung Account verification into the fingerprint scanner software as seen below, which is neat and shows the direction that fingerprint scanners could take in terms of identification and verification.

The fingerprint scanner is a high-DPI capacitive one based upon the Chipworks teardown, and in effect, is identical to the fingerprint scanner in the One max. The big difference is that it's integrated into the home button on the front of the phone as seen above, although based upon my experiences the home button is the only area with high precision capacitive sensing. The sensor detects features of the finger by measuring the effect that the dermis of the skin has on the electrostatic field that is generated by the touchscreen, and at sufficiently high resolution, the sensor can interpret the effect accurately enough that a map of the finger can be generated.

What is different from the One max is that it is much more difficult to use. The enrollment process is simple enough, and is accomplished by swiping eight times over the sensor as seen above (just like with TouchID, you can enroll multiple fingers in place of one by switching the digits you swipe with during the 8 swipe training process). After that, the fingerprint scanner can be used as a unlock method, along with the Paypal and Samsung Account login as previously stated. Where things get difficult is actually unlocking the phone. The sensor is simply too low to reasonably use with one hand, especially because the fingerprint scanner requires straight swipes with very little diagonal deviation. The scanner is also quite sensitive to swiping either too slow/fast or swiping at an inconsistent rate, and will often fail if the user is not consistent in swiping from enrollment to unlock. Enrolling the finger at multiple angles does help a bit with the issue, but it doesn't fundamentally change the experience.

It's pretty easy to adjust to the GS5's fingerprint sensor if you give up on the hope of a one hand unlock. If you're ok with swiping with another hand, the sensor works pretty well and is a great alternative to a long password.

Capture Latency Platform Power, Ultra Power Saving Mode, Battery Life & Charge Time
Comments Locked

296 Comments

View All Comments

  • tipoo - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    They certainly aren't measly cores. Extremely wide for mobile.
  • tipoo - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    I believe Nvidia will be following this concept next, two big cores rather than four low power small ones.
  • Streamlined - Wednesday, April 9, 2014 - link

    I was shocked that last years iphone still seemed to outperform Samsungs latest. Holy crap!
  • twotwotwo - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    On the camera page, no mentions of the G2, which, to me, seems to produce better-looking output in the low-light shots than the rest (though, for all I know, that might be mostly a difference in postprocessing)? What's up--was that added after the text was written, or am I an outlier for thinking the G2's shots look nice?
  • coburn_c - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    That OIS really makes the difference in low light. The stock camera app actually does stupid things in low light, XDA camera apps make it even better.
  • peterfares - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    Still PenTile. Yuck.
  • pppp6071 - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    I guess the review deliberately avoided PenTile RGBG issue. Its just cheating in my view. LG G2 and Nexus 5 and HTC One M7,8 uses RGB pixels.
  • tipoo - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    Who cares anymore when in every measurable aspect it's a great display?
  • melgross - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    Not great by any means, but better than before.
  • kaelynthedove78 - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    For starters, it means that the resolution is not actually 1920x1080, but 1493x840.
    1,25 megapixels instead of 2, so in reality it's closer to a 720p RGB display than a 1080p one.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now