They may be "vivid" but they are not true to life, which is what you need and want for photography. The color gamut is all wrong. It is TOO vivid and to garish for real photography. Apple works hard to reflect reality in its screens. That's why you see iPhones being used by professional photographers and cinematographers and you don't see Android and Samsung phones being used by pros for much of anything. iPhones have even been used to video two successful feature length movies.
www.macrumors.com/2015/12/29/apple-close-oled-deal-lg-samsung/
blah, blah, blah.
Resolution iPhone
1,080 x 1,920 pixels
Resolution Samsung
1,440 x 2,560 pixels
Cameras iPhone
Rear 12MP, Front 5MP
Cameras Samsung
Rear 16 MP, Front 5MP
The Note 5 bests the 6S Plus in terms of processing power and RAM. With double the RAM available, running multiple apps and switching between them, should be much smoother on the Note 5, especially when the phoneâs Exynos 7420 64-bit chipset is factored in.
I can't believe this review would be so uninformed, can you? I mean, there were two successful feature length movies made with iPhones. The review did not even mention that?
http://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/iphone-6s-plus-vs-galaxy-note-5/