We're just a month away from the launch of Samsung's newest flagship smartphone, the Galaxy S10. We've seen renders before, but now high-quality photos of the device have popped up online thanks to the german blog AllAboutSamsung. The site has pictures of both the S10 and S10+, and while it warns these are "prototype" devices, there isn't a whole lot that can change a month before launch.

The real-life pictures are pretty close to the S10 renders that were released earlier. Samsung is switching from a traditional top and bottom bezel design to a nearly all-screen device. Samsung is also skipping the notch design trend entirely, instead housing the front camera in a circular cutout in the display. Samsung's new display technology allows the camera to be placed just about anywhere, and the pixels that are in the way can just be removed. This design has been given the nickname "hole-punch," because it looks like someone took a hole-punch tool to the display.

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Samsung officially debuts Galaxy S10 smartphone after weeks of rumors, leaks View more stories How big the camera hole is will vary depending on the model: the smaller S10 has a round hole for a single front camera; the S10+ has two front cameras and a pill-shaped display hole. Like the Pixel 3, we expect the second camera to be used for a wide-angle lens, allowing you to leave the selfie stick at home. (Do people still use selfie sticks?)

The back of the phone has a huge camera arrangement, with three lenses and LED flash, and Samsung's typical PPG heart rate sensor. Back in November, a report from the Wall Street Journal said we can eventually expect four Galaxy S10 variants, with the biggest version having 5G mmWave compatibility and four rear cameras, but these more normal SKUs only (only!) have three rear cameras. The four-camera version was supposed to have every multi-camera gimmick from the past few years—the wide-angle lens, a telephoto lens, a main camera, and a depth camera for bokeh effects—and it's unclear what will be cut from the three-camera version.

There's no fingerprint reader on the back because Samsung is including an in-screen fingerprint reader. There have already been a few in-screen fingerprint readers from companies like OnePlus, but those are typically optical fingerprint readers—a CMOS chip under the display takes a picture of your finger. Samsung is expected to include Qualcomm's new ultrasonic fingerprint sensor in the S10; it will take a 3D image of your finger and result in a more secure unlock method than the 2D optical method.

Pictures of the bottom of the phone show off the speaker, USB-C port, and the return of the headphone jack, which belongs on an endangered species list at this point.