Samsung Galaxy Note 5 Review

Samsung has changed its flagship DNA since the introduction of the Galaxy S6. This is evident with the new Galaxy Note 5 — premium materials, solid unibody construction and a gorgeous design that is so unlike the Samsung of old.

Of course, there were compromises made, some of them might even alienate long-time Note users but Samsung hopes the advantages far outweigh the disadvantages.

Design and Construction

Samsung has a simple but equally complicated task with the new Note 5. A powerful hardware, large screen, stylus pen and interface that maximizes the ability to draw and take notes.

That has been a signature that Samsung tries to improve with each iteration of the Note series. Taking cue from the huge, mostly positive reception of the Galaxy S6, Samsung thought the same formula should work with the Galaxy Note 5.

Hence, they engineered a single, solid unibody design completely out of metal alloy and covered it with tough Gorilla Glass 4 both at the back and the front.

While maintaining the same large 5.7-inch display, Samsung shaved off significant amount of excess fat to produce a slim and smaller form factor. That means it is slimmer, shorter and narrower yet offers the same display size.

The Note 5 sheds off any remaining polycarbonate and faux-leather that we saw from the Note 4 and used an all-metal body with a Gorilla Glass 4 outer layer both at the front and back panel.

The power button is found on the right side while the volume controls are on the left. Up top is where you can find access to the SIM card tray that pops when you poke the pinhole. The SIM card tray can carry two nano-SIM cards for the Duos variant of the Note 5.

At the bottom end is the 3.5mm audio port, the micro-SUB charging port and the S Pen. Unlike previous designs where you normally to pry out the stylus, the Note 5 has a spring mechanism that easily pops out the stylus in a single press on the head.

The front panel is flat with slightly rounded corners where the surface is completely covered in tough Gorilla Glass that is somewhat beveled along the edges.

At the back is the 16-megapixel camera that slightly protrudes from the flat surface along with the dual-tone, dual-LED flashes. The Duos label indicates the device is dual-SIM which is the official release in the Philippines (this is also true with the Galaxy S6 Edge+).

To make the profile more comfortable to the hands, the back panel has been redesigned to have a more curved or tapered edges allowing for a better grip.

In many ways, the only difference between the Galaxy Note 5 and the Galaxy S6 Edge+ is the exterior design and the S Pen. There are also a few specific UI implementation that are found in the Note 5 only.

While the unibody design allows for a thinner and lighter profile, it also means that Samsung has to do away with the removable back cover which have been traditionally one of the more practical advantages of the Galaxy Note family. Likewise, the battery capacity has been reduced compared to the Note 4. However, Samsung claims the actual battery performance should be equal or better than that of the previous generation as they moved on to the 14nm technology which is more power efficient as we’ve experienced in the Galaxy S6.

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Samsung Galaxy Note 5 hands-on, first impressions

Samsung has just unveiled the Galaxy Note 5 here at the Lincoln Center in New York and showed the new direction with their flagship phablet. The Note 5 is perhaps the biggest and most radical move the company has ever done on the series since they introduced it over half a decade ago.

With a 5.7-inch display, the Galaxy Note 5 no longer looks and feels like an oversized smartphone. In fact, the very first time we saw it last week (during our preview session which was under NDA) it didn’t look like the Galaxy Note we were familiar with all these years.

Due to the thinner bezels and higher screen-to-body ratio, the Galaxy Note 5 is very comfortable to handle with one hand. It shares some similarities with the Galaxy Alpha and the Galaxy A7 only slightly bigger. The new form factor allows you to navigate the handset with one hand where you’d normally be using both hands with the previous Galaxy Note generations.

The Note 5 sheds off any remaining polycarbonate and faux-leather that we saw from the Note 4 and used an all-metal body with a Gorilla Glass 4 outer layer both at the front and back panel. Since the Galaxy S6, Samsung has moved to the more premium aluminum alloy and glass materials in their flagship devices and this is also evident in the Note 5.

While the unibody design allows for a thinner and lighter profile, it also means that Samsung has to do away with the removable back cover which have been traditionally one of the more practical advantages of the Galaxy Note family. Likewise, the battery capacity has been reduced compared to the Note 4. However, Samsung claims the actual battery performance should be equal or better than that of the previous generation as they moved on to the 14nm technology which is more power efficient as we’ve experienced in the Galaxy S6.

To make the profile more comfortable to the hands, the back panel has been redesigned to have a more curved or tapered edges allowing for a better grip. The stylus is also conspicuously hidden at the bottom end and pops out via a small mechanical spring from the inside.

Samsung has made a lot of refinements with the use of the S Pen especially with how it interfaces with the UI of the smartphone. These are actually small improvements that folks who are heavy users of the stylus will definitely notice and appreciate.

Majority of the internal hardware of the Galaxy Note 5 were inherited from the Galaxy S6, starting with the Exynos 7420 chipset to the quad HD Super AMOLED display and the use of Gorilla Glass on both the front and back panel. We expect the performance will be the same as the Galaxy S6.

The 16-megapixel camera of the Note 5 is exactly the same sensor they used in the Galaxy S6 (Samsung used two sensors in the Galaxy S6 – the Sony IMX sensor and its own ISOCELL sensor so we believe the Note 5 will most probably use the latter). Just like the S6, the camera barrel at the back slightly protrudes from the surface of the panel (Samsung uses a sapphire glass to prevent the camera lens from accidental scratch) that is paired with a dual-tone, dual LED flash. The Note 5 also comes with a built-in livestreaming feature in the camera app that connects directly to YouTube Livestream.

Memory has been bumped up to 4GB. There is no micro SD card support which means you are stuck with the storage capacity of either 32GB or 64GB. According to Samsung representatives, historical buying trends of the Galaxy S6 showed that a significant majority of consumers end up buying the 32GB or 64GB variants anyway. While Samsung admits some folks will initially complain about the non-expandable storage, they will ultimately get used to it in the long run (just as they did with the Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge).

Samsung has learned a lot from their relative success with the Galaxy S6 and is employing the same strategy when they redesigned the Galaxy Note 5. It is as if they went back to the drawing board with the schematics of the Galaxy S6, added more screen real estate (from 5.2 to 5.7 inches), bumped up the RAM (3GB to 4GB) and inserted the iconic S Pen stylus to come up with the Galaxy Note 5.

Samsung is expected to release the Galaxy Note 5 in the Philippines sometime in the end of August or first week of September with the dual-SIM (Duos) variant in 32GB and 64GB storage options with black and gold colors. No suggested retail price has been indicated (our guesstimate is in the vicinity of Php37K for the 32GB and Php42K for the 64GB).

Samsung Galaxy Note 5 specs:
5.7-inch Quad HD Super AMOLED display @ 2560×1440 pixels, 518ppi
Gorilla Glass 4 (front and back)
Samsung Exynos 7420 64-bit octa-core CPU
ARM Cortex A57 2.1GHz quad-core, ARM Cortex A53 1.5GHz quad-core
Mali T-760 GPU
4GB LPDDR4 RAM
32, 64 internal storage
Dual-SIM, 4G/LTE Cat. 6 and Cat 9.
WiFi 802.11 b/g/n/ac, 2.4GHz & 5.0GHz, MiMo 2×2
Bluetooth 4.2, LE, ANT
NFC
GPS with aGPS, GLONASS
16 megapixel rear camera, OIS, dual-LED flash, f1.9
5 megapixel front-facing camera, f1.9
Qi Wireless Charging
3,000mAh Li-Ion non-removable battery
Android 5.1 Lollipop with TouchWiz
153.2 x 76.1 x 7.6mm (dimensions)
171 grams (weight)

What we liked about it:
* Large, gorgeous display
* Impressive performance
* Great design and build quality
* Generous amount of RAM
* S Pen adds more features
* Dual-SIM, LTE capability

What we did not like:
* Lower battery capacity
* No micro-SD card for expandable storage
* Non-removable battery

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