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That's unusual, since just about every high-performance silicon manufacturer from Intel and AMD to Apple loses performance over time due to high turbo clocks that can't be sustained due to either energy draw or thermal loads. The gap between the Galaxy Tab S7+ and the ROG Phone 3 is close enough we'd call it a tie.ģDMark Wild Life is the newest benchmark from UL, and it's caused something of a stir since Snapdragon 865 devices don't seem to lose performance over time in its stress test. For the first time, it seems that the Snapdragon 865+ on display here is finally pulling its own weight and just about takes the overall lead. Here we see something totally different: the Snapdragon 865 devices are felled by the Galaxy Tab S7+.

Still, we wanted to take a quick look at how the cameras in the Galaxy Tab S7+ performs in different conditions. Very often, the best camera for a photo is the one you have with you, and for us, that duty falls to a smartphone, not a tablet. We see the rear-facing camera in tablets as a bonus, but not an absolute necessity.
S7 GEEKBENCH 720P
Around the front, a single 8 megapixel shooter captures selfies and works as a ridiculously nice webcam, putting the meager 720p webcams on most Windows notebooks to shame. In terms of its camera setup, Samsung equipped the Galaxy Tab S7+ with dual cameras on the rear: a 13 megapixel main camera with an f/2.0 lens and a 5 megapixel depth-sensing camera for 3D effects, like adding faux bokeh to portraits. If you want anything landscape though, reaching the shutter button is not possible with one hand, but wasn't terrible with two hands, as long as one is on the bottom of the device. Since the camera's orientation matches the tablet's, holding it in portrait mode gets portrait photos. Taking photos with a tablet this big is kind of difficult, since the shutter button is positioned at the bottom center of the screen.
