By Robert Schoon (r.schoon@latinospost.com) | First Posted: Sep 11, 2013 04:06 PM EDT

Apple just unveiled its new iPhone(s), transforming the iPhone into a range of phones - albeit more limited than Samsung's "Galaxy" series of devices. Samsung is probably Apple's best competitor, and has a fairly new Galaxy S4 smartphone and a brand new Galaxy Note 3 coming to stores soon.

So now the question is: "Who has the better line up?" Tell us what you think in the poll below.

Samsung

The Samsung Galaxy S4 has been available for a while, and features a 5-inch Super AMOLED display with 1080 x 1920p resolution. It runs on an Exynos 5410 processor, while some models run on a new Snapdragon 800 processor. That's also what the Galaxy Note 3 runs on in some versions, while others get an Octa-core Exynos 5 processor running its mammoth 5.7-inch Full 1080p HD screen.

Both Samsung devices come with a 13-megapixel camera and extras like NFC sharing or eye-tracking smart scroll, and the Note 3 has a redesigned S Pen that brings up an multitasking menu capable of all sorts of intelligent tasks. The Samsung Galaxy S4 is old enough that it can be found for as little as $100 in some places, while the Galaxy Note 3 is slated to cost $300 (both with two-year contracts).

Apple

Apple hit a $100 price tag (with agreement) with the 16GB version of its lower cost iPhone 5C. The new handset features the same iPhone 5 A6 chip, along with Apple's 4-inch Retina display with 1136 x 640p resolution. The same display is on the new iPhone 5S, but a new 64-bit A7 processor packs twice as many transistors on to the same real estate, meaning, according to Apple, that the iPhone 5S is twice as fast as the iPhone 5. Both phones have an improved 8-megapixel camera, along with Apple features like Siri and the redesigned iOS 7.

The iPhone 5S also has a new fingerprint scanner that Apple is hoping will make phone security tighter, not to mention simpler, for its users. The iPhone 5S comes in three premium colors for a starting price of about $200 on-contract, though the Note 3-comparable 32GB model is the same, at $300.

So which tag-team line-up of premium phones is stronger? Does iOS 7 give Apple the edge, or do Samsung's extra features (or new smartwatch accessory, Galaxy Gear) make it the stronger brand?

© 2015 Latinos Post. All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.