The Evolution of the Samsung Galaxy Note

The Samsung Galaxy Note series started way back in 2011, positioned as a note-taking device to replace the pen and paper, made obvious by campaigns such as “do you note?”. Samsung’s Note line-up have come a long way. Let’s look back and check out the evolution of the Galaxy Note once again today.

Gnote 1

The first Galaxy Note packed an 5.3-inch display @ 800×1280 pixels, a dual-core CPU, 1GB RAM and a 2,500mAh battery —  all of which, at that time, were heavy-duty specs that were hard to find. The S–Pen already offered differentiating features but, during that time, it was still hard to justify if the stylus was worth the premium; you’ll mostly want the Galaxy Note for the specs and the size.

And speaking of the size, the first Galaxy Note was massive. In 2011, Samsung’s other flagship phone was the Galaxy S2, and that ran a 4.2-inch display along with other Android phones (the iPhone was at 3.5-inches). Basically, when you picked up a Galaxy Note for a daily driver – you were crazy. (Check out our review of the Galaxy Note N7000 back in November 2011)

But Samsung wasn’t crazy. Sooner or later, everyone realized Samsung made the right bet. Phones started getting bigger, and following the success of the first Galaxy Note, the company launched its successor – the Galaxy Note 2.

gnote 2

The Galaxy Note 2 had a bigger 5.5-inch display (but now 720p with 16:9 aspect ratio), a quad-core CPU, 2GB RAM and a massive 3,100 mAh battery. The phone didn’t get much bigger too since it lost some bezel, and the design carried over the infamous Samsung Hyperglaze from the Galaxy S III, love it or hate it.

The Galaxy Note 2 incorporated more features into the S-Pen such as hovering, and while the design of the handset was a miss, it was very sturdy and it still packed a lot of things power users would want to get their hands on. During this time, phones were already playing around 4.5 – 4.7 inches, so 5.5 –inches was surely still huge, but no longer that huge.

gnote 3

After all the criticism from hyperglaze and following the trend of smartphones increasing in size, Samsung released the Galaxy Note 3 in 2013. The Galaxy Note 3 had a larger 5.7-inch display, but the whole footprint of the phone didn’t increase in size; it was still the same as its predecessor more or less. The phone also ditched the glossy plastic for matte – the fake leather stitched back and the “metallic” sides that tried to imitate the sides of a paper notebook. To a lot of people, the design improved, but it still wasn’t there.

The Galaxy Note 3 was still the phone for power users though as it packed a 1080p display, a top of the line quad-core processor, 3GB RAM and a larger 3,200mAh battery. It was also capable of 2160p video recording.

And then, smartphones stopped getting bigger. Anyone who tried anything larger than 5.7-inches would fail miserably, and after all the disappointment with the Galaxy S5, Samsung finally released a metal smartphone – the Galaxy Note 4.

Gnote 4

The Galaxy Note 4 still had the fake leather plastic back, but the sides were now all metal, and it made a huge difference since it was the sides that people are usually holding on to. It feels however, that Samsung was just testing the waters with this, but everything else went smoothly. The Galaxy Note 4 packed a 5.7-inch 1440 x 2560 display, an improved processor, still the same 3GB RAM and a slightly larger 3,220mAh battery.

After the Galaxy Note 4 and the well-received metal and glass Galaxy S6, we think it’s safe to say that the Galaxy Note 5 was predictable – and while it will please some people, it will surely dissatisfy others as well.

Gnote 5

This year, with the Galaxy Note 5, Samsung dropped the removable battery and the micro SD card slot. It also reduced the battery capacity down to 3,000mAh, which tells us that the company is now facing changes as they slightly prioritize design now more than power.

The Galaxy Note 5 improves upon specs again of course, notably the increase in RAM (now 4GB), but with the changes in software and the incremental updates to the S-Pen, the direction of the Galaxy Note is changing, but still more or less familiar: the Galaxy Note is fundamentally a larger and more polished Galaxy S with a stylus, and the Galaxy Note 6 will most likely depend on the failure or success of the Galaxy S7.

galaxy note evolution

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Samsung Galaxy Note 4 local launch set this month

Are your pockets ready? Despite the gapgate issues that surfaced a few days ago, Samsung announced more details on when the Galaxy Note 4 will be available to many countries around the world in a press conference held at Singapore last October 1.

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In the South and Southeast Asian regions, India will be getting Samsung’s flagship phablet first on October 10, followed by Singapore on October 11, Thailand on October 13, Myanmar on October 15, Cambodia on October 17, and Vietnam on October 24.

The Philippines will be one of the last countries to launch the product, as local consumers can purchase the new unit on October 25 along with Laos and Indonesia. Local pricing is not yet available as of this writing.

Samsung’s fourth iteration of their flagship phablet, the Galaxy Note 4, sports a 5.7-inch Quad HD Super AMOLED display with Corning Gorilla Glass 3, a 2.7 Qualcomm Snapdragon 805 quad-core CPU (or Samsung’s very own octa-core Exynos 5433), Adreno 420 GPU, 32GB of internal storage upgradable via microSD up to 64GB, and a 16-megapixel rear camera with OIS, among its key features.

Source: Android Central, Androidos.in
Image from Samsung Mobile’s facebook page

The post Samsung Galaxy Note 4 local launch set this month appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

Samsung Galaxy Note 4 local launch set this month

Are your pockets ready? Despite the gapgate issues that surfaced a few days ago, Samsung announced more details on when the Galaxy Note 4 will be available to many countries around the world in a press conference held at Singapore last October 1.

10628614_752130041502301_4826612802311732001_n

In the South and Southeast Asian regions, India will be getting Samsung’s flagship phablet first on October 10, followed by Singapore on October 11, Thailand on October 13, Myanmar on October 15, Cambodia on October 17, and Vietnam on October 24.

The Philippines will be one of the last countries to launch the product, as local consumers can purchase the new unit on October 25 along with Laos and Indonesia. Local pricing is not yet available as of this writing.

Samsung’s fourth iteration of their flagship phablet, the Galaxy Note 4, sports a 5.7-inch Quad HD Super AMOLED display with Corning Gorilla Glass 3, a 2.7 Qualcomm Snapdragon 805 quad-core CPU (or Samsung’s very own octa-core Exynos 5433), Adreno 420 GPU, 32GB of internal storage upgradable via microSD up to 64GB, and a 16-megapixel rear camera with OIS, among its key features.

Source: Android Central, Androidos.in
Image from Samsung Mobile’s facebook page

The post Samsung Galaxy Note 4 local launch set this month appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

Samsung Galaxy Note 4 leaks, aims to be premium

There are more smartphones to wait for in the second half of the year, and one of them is the much-hyped Samsung Galaxy Note 4. GSMArena has obtained some photos of the aforementioned Galaxy Note 4 in detail, and it looks pretty authentic and consistent.

Samsung Galaxy Note 4

Just as it has been, the Note 4 looks to be having a pretty huge screen with thin bezels. A fingerprint scanner may be working itself into the physical home button once again and another sensor, potentially a heart rate monitor, is found beside the camera. Beside the stylus, the port for charging is probably going to be micro USB 3.0, and since there is nothing to cover it, we may not see waterproofing carrying over from the Galaxy S5. The back still seems like it’s going to be plastic emulating a leather texture, but note that the side frame actually looks like it’s going to be metal this time.

The Galaxy Note 4 will most likely be announced this IFA in September 3, and will most likely be available later that month as well. For more photos, head to the source link down below.

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Samsung Galaxy Note 3: What We Think We Know

The holiday season is coming and phone announcements are popping out in every corner. However, there’s one more phone most people look forward to and that’s the Samsung Galaxy Note 3. So, here’s what we know and what we think we know. For the meantime, take a peek as we head on to Berlin today to find out.

Plastic phablet goes a bit nearer to tablet territory

If you think the 5.5-inch Galaxy Note 2 is big, think about a 5.7-inch GNote 3. Front panels have leaked here and there, and just when we’re nearing the announcement, poof! Press images of the said device has leaked.

Note-3-render

Samsung is going with the same formulas with its flagship devices; larger screens, smaller bezels & same old plastic. As you can see from the image above, that is very true as the device almost has no bezel to rest your fingers on.

However, for the plastic part, it seems as if Samsung had scrapped their glossy Hyperglaze coating off the back shell of the device; that might win over some people.

It’s either 4G LTE or Exynos Octa again (but for the Philippines, it’s 4G).

The international version of the Samsung Galaxy Note 3 is expected to run on a 1.8GHz Exynos 5420 CPU (20% faster and 2x better graphic performance). However, most of the units that will be shipped will be packing a Snapdragon 800 CPU partnered with an Adreno 330 GPU, all because of 4G compatibility. Whatever variant you choose however, we’re expecting 3GB RAM to come with that.

galaxy note 3_list

However, a list of which countries that will be receiving which variant has already been outed almost a month ago, and it says that the Philippines will be indeed receiving the Snapdragon 800 variant.

A better sensor for the camera war

UltraPixel, PureView, iSight, ClearPixel; Samsung doesn’t have a fancy name for their camera sensors, however for their next smartphone, early rumors stated that we might be looking at one with Optical Image Stabilization and 4K video shooting capabilities. The LG G2 and several other smartphones (esp. Nokia) has already employed OIS into their smartphones, and 4K could be the new thing as Sony’s next flagship phone, the Xperia Z1 is expected to have this as well.

Android 4.3, a huge battery, the S-Pen and more; September 4

The Galaxy Note 2 was one of the first devices to run the latest version of Android Jellybean, and it seems that the next iteration will follow suit with Android 4.3. Likewise, the GNote 2 packed one of the best batteries of its time, and Samsung wants to improve that by packing 3,450mAh battery into the Galaxy Note 3 (the highest battery capacity Samsung has ever used on a phone).

Galaxy Note 3

Now, with all of Samsung’s software already out in the open, it’s hard to predict and imagine what Samsung will do next with it’s S-Pen stylus. Maybe they’ll just add the Note suite on top of the S4′s new UI, what do you think?

We’ll be out covering Samsung’s launch event too, and we’ll update you on all the details that the Korean company has in store for the Galaxy Note 3. Stay tuned!

{source 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6} {via 1, 2, 3}

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