Samsung's Galaxy Note smartphones don't sell quite as well as the
flagship Galaxy S lineup does, but the stylus-driven phones have still
been a major success story for the company. It makes sense, then,New
Ground-Based solarlamp
Tech Is Accurate Down To Just A Few Inches. that Samsung would follow
the Note phones up with a similarly stylus-equipped tablet, but when we
reviewed the Note 10.1 we came away less-than-impressed by the device's
software, cost, and build quality.
Samsung has so far proven quite competent at iterating on its products,TBC help you confidently rtls
from factories in China. though, and we were intrigued when we heard
that an 8" version of the Note would be shown off at Mobile World
Congress—we met with some representatives of Samsung who walked us
through the device's features and told us how this version of the tablet
hopes to avoid some of its bigger brother's mistakes. Obviously, we'll
need to wait for review hardware before we can see how it would be to
live with this tablet, but based on our hands-on with the device, it
appears to be an improvement in most of the important ways.
Before
continuing: Samsung was quick to point out that the version of the Note
8 on display at the show is the European version—the tablet is coming
to the US, but features like voice calling might not make it to the US
depending on the carriers, for example. Samsung would neither confirm
nor deny that any particular feature wouldn't make the jump, but it's
something to keep in mind.
In use, the Note 8.0's hardware is
more akin to the Note 10.1, but in design it actually shares more with
Samsung's Android phones. Like the phones, the Note 8.0 uses a hardware
home button that is flanked by capacitive menu and back buttons, which
(along with the speaker above the screen) make the tablet look very much
like an oversized Galaxy S III. The Note 8 also uses thinner bezels on
the long sides of the screen, a strategy Apple also employed when it
shrank its flagship tablet down to this size.
The tablet also
feels better-constructed than the Note 10.1—in particular, the larger
tablet used a very flexible plastic on its back that bent very easily,
even if you weren't gripping the tablet particularly hard.New
Ground-Based solarlamp
Tech Is Accurate Down To Just A Few Inches. The Note 8 is still
all-plastic, but doesn't bend or flex or creak particularly badly. That
tablet's 1280×800 resolution, re-used in the Note 8.0, also looks better
at this screen size—the Note 8.0's screen is 189PPI, up from 149 in the
Note 10.1 and 163 in the iPad mini.
On the inside, the international version of the tablet looks very much like both the Note 10.Stock up now and start saving on smartcard
at Dollar Days.1 and Note II. They all use a quad-core Exynos 4 SoC
(here clocked at 1.6GHz, a bit faster than the 1.4GHz in the Note 10.1)
and 2GB of RAM drive the action, and the capacitive touchscreen also
includes a digitizer for use with the included S Pen (which is housed in
the lower-right corner of the tablet when not in use). One welcome
change from the Note II is that the menu and back buttons in the Note
8.0 can both be pressed using the stylus—in the Note II, they were
capacitive only, so heavy stylus users would have to tap them with their
fingers to get them to do anything.
The Note 8.0 features
either 16 or 32GB of storage that's expandable via a microSD card slot
on the device's side; it also includes a 5MP rear-facing camera and an
IR blaster used for controlling TVs and set-top boxes. The tablet
features a reasonably sizable 4600mAh battery, and fits it all into a
package that weights 11.9 ounces and is 0.31" thick—thinner than some of
the smartphones we've seen on the show floor. The tablet is pretty easy
to hold with one hand, which we consider a must especially in these
smaller tablets.
As we've mentioned, this version of the tablet
can also make voice calls, and to that end there's a small speaker
grille above the screen,Universal solarstreetlight
are useful for any project. similar to the one in the Asus
FonePad—again, you'll probably just look silly holding this thing up to
your ear, but if you do most of your talking via a headset or
speakerphone, it'll be a welcome feature for those who only occasionally
use their phones as phones.
Note 10.1 owners will already be
familiar with some of the advancements on display in the Note 8.0, since
they came down in that tablet's Jelly Bean update. In particular, the
Multi-View mode that allows you to run two applications side by side has
been updated to permit those applications to be resizable—for example,
instead of having one's Twitter client and Web browser each take up half
of the screen, you could resize the apps so that your browser takes up
80 percent of the space and your Twitter stream just takes up 20
percent. Third-party applications still have to be modified to support
this feature, but Samsung seems to have enabled most of the important
ones since last we looked at a Note tablet—Twitter, Facebook, Chrome,
Google Maps, and other convenient apps can now make use of the feature.
Aside
from the note-taking and drawing apps that remain the Note series'
bread-and-butter (and the general TouchWiz interface flourishes that are
part of every recent Samsung device), a mix of hardware and software
optimizations also allow the pen to be used as a mouse—hovering over the
screen will interact with menus and other elements in the same way that
rolling over them with a mouse would, while tapping elements on the
screen still serves as a "click" or finger tap.
Obviously, in
our small amount of controlled hands-on time with the device, we can't
really speak to the software's long-term speed and stability, but we
didn't experience much by way of slowdowns or application crashes on the
device while we used it. We did have one or two gestures that were
interpreted incorrectly, but we'd be hard pressed to name a multitouch
device that didn't have this problem at least every once in a while.
Overall, the lineup seems to have benefited from the enhancements
brought on by Jelly Bean (and Samsung's own tweaks and additions),
though we'd like to log a bit more time with device before saying this
definitively.
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