Although I preferred the iPhone's camera over the Note 10's, Samsung's phone does offer a few perks that you can't find on any of Apple's smartphones.
Among the most notable is Samsung's S Pen stylus, which enables you to do things like take notes on screen and edit videos with better precision. I don't use the S Pen too often, but it did come in handy when I needed to keep track of reminders in a pinch, since I didn't have to unlock my phone to scribble down a few thoughts.
Plus, the Note 10 offers other convenient features, like an in-screen fingerprint scanner (which I found to be a faster and more reliable way to unlock my phone compared to Apple's Face ID) and a video-recording feature that makes sound from your surroundings less noticeable to better focus on the subject. And Samsung's software is better optimized for multitasking, since you can open more than one app on screen at once.
Apple, too, has a few special features that iPhone users will appreciate, especially when it comes to the device's software. Apple typically offers more granular and transparent privacy controls, and that's improving yet again when iOS 13 launches this fall. One such example is the new Sign In With Apple feature coming in iOS 13, which lets you log into websites and services without sharing your actual email address. Google is baking more privacy-oriented features in Android 10 as well, but it's unclear when that update will roll out to Samsung devices.