If you want your product to sound like it belongs in the future, why not name it after the future itself? Taking a page from the auto industry, Samsung named its new Galaxy Note 10.1 for the coming year, dubbing it the 2014 edition. And, judging from what we've seen of the new Note so far, it's clear Samsung has greatly improved upon many of the original's shortcomings; it even added more storage space! Unfortunately, though, Samsung also boosted the base price by $50 as a result. So how does it hold up? Does the new Note 10.1 trick us into believing it came from the future, or is it too easy to look through Sammy's "futuristic" marketing campaign? Gaze into the Magic 8 Ball with us to find out.
Hardware
We're not claiming sole responsibility here, but we'd like to think that
Samsung read our review of last year's Note 10.1, and heard our
frustration. At least, Samsung heard someone's complaints --
the 2014 edition addresses many of those issues. Where the original felt
cheap, its replacement actually looks the part of a $550 device. For
starters, it sheds the chrome bezel that previously adorned each side of
the tablet, so the new slate, which measures at 243.1 x 171.4 x 7.9 mm
(9.57 x 6.75 x 0.31 in.), is shorter, narrower and thinner. Not only
does this make the 2014 edition look sleeker; the lack of big chrome
lips means the front is also less distracting -- a nice consideration
that lets us focus on that beautiful display. Additionally, at 19.05
ounces (535g), the tablet is lighter than the first Note 10.1 and the Nexus 10,
which tip the scales at 21.16 ounces (600g) and 21.27 ounces (603g),
respectively. This, combined with its overall size, makes this model
much easier to handle.
Samsung also added a touch of elegance to the back of the device by
swapping out the standard glossy plastic back, the company's go-to build
material for at least the last two years. Here instead, we have a soft,
textured "leather-like" material that's meant to resemble a leather
book cover. Happily, it does a good job masking fingerprints, and it
makes for a sturdier grip too. (We also like that the "leather"
stretches across the back uninterrupted; on the first edition, the rear
cover was broken up by a band of chrome along the top.) And if you're
curious about our use of scare quotes, Samsung confirmed that the back
cover is actually comprised of polycarbonate. Still, it feels
better-made than most of Samsung's earlier tablets. We did, however,
find one curious exception that made us less certain of its durability:
there were some spots near the center of the tablet's back that had a
bit of give, as if those areas had air pockets underneath the cover.
If you've read our coverage of the Galaxy Note 3,
you'll notice a lot of similarities between it and the new Note 10.1.
This is typical for Samsung, a company that likes to crank out several
different devices all bearing the same general design. Last year's
contoured, "inspired by nature" aesthetic isn't anywhere to be seen on
the new Note lineup. Rather, Samsung is taking the skeuomorphic route
this time around: the chrome sides feature ridges that, we've been told,
are supposed to mimic a closed book, and a single line of stitching
borders the fake-leather back. Just like on the Note 3, the stitching is
merely there for decoration. Obviously, this isn't surprising --
manufacturers typically don't stitch phones together -- but this feels a
little over the top, if you ask us.
The front of the Note 10.1 shares the same capacitive and physical button placement as the Galaxy Tab 3 10.1.
This setup, which sits at the bottom under the display, includes the
menu button on the left, home in the center and "back" on the right. The
soft keys are now capable of sensing the S Pen (much like on the Note 8.0),
which means you no longer have to adjust your grip on the pen every
time you want to hit the back or menu buttons. A front-facing camera and
proximity sensor sit just left-of-center above the screen. And that's
it: your searches for an LED notification light will be fruitless here.
While the 2014 edition keeps things uncluttered on the front and back,
it's a different story on the sides. All four edges have something going
on: a power button, volume rocker and infrared on the top; a covered
microSD slot (supporting up to 64GB) on the right; a micro-USB socket on
the bottom; and speaker grilles on both the right and left. Those
speakers, by the way, aren't necessarily any larger than most, but
they're some of the loudest we've tested; regardless of which room in
the house I was in, I could easily hear the music blaring.
We already mentioned the presence of a micro-USB port, which for most tablets is actually quite standard. But given the Note 10.1's extensive similarities to the Note 3, which launched at the same time, it seems odd that it didn't get the same USB 3.0 connection as the phone. We aren't complaining about the lack of the unsightly connector, but it doesn't make much sense for the two devices to share so many other commonalities and actively choose not to stick to a standard port.
The Note 10.1 sports a beautiful WQXGA (2,560 x 1,600) TFT LCD panel, which is precisely the resolution bump we wanted to see in last year's unit (that one had a much lower-res 1,280 x 800 panel, if you'll recall). It's so much of an improvement, in fact, that you'll be hard-pressed to find anything better in a 10.1-inch tablet. It's the same size and resolution as the Nexus 10, although the Note offers more usable space since it lacks virtual navigation buttons. Even better, it offers more-saturated (yet still natural) colors, along with superb viewing angles.
Software
The original Note 10.1 may not have come with the latest version of
Android out of the box, but the 2014 edition does. You'll enjoy Android
4.3 Jelly Bean from the very beginning -- well, Samsung's TouchWiz'd
version of it, anyway. Unfortunately, that means you won't be able to
add multiple users as you can on vanilla Android. Indeed, fans of the
untouched Google experience will find TouchWiz frustrating to deal with;
unlike its predecessor, the 10.1 has little (if any) resemblance to the
Nexus 10's ROM. The icons, notification menus, Google search bar
location, app tray setup and more are completely different. There's also
a full suite of Samsung features on board, such as the company's App
Store, S Voice, Samsung Link, Smart Stay / Rotation / Pause / Scroll,
Group Play, S Translator, Story Album and so on.
Of course, Samsung's got a reputation for adding tons of features and
services on each new generation of devices -- most of the aforementioned
features surfaced that way -- but the company didn't seem to go
overboard with the 10.1 or the Note 3, relatively speaking. Aside from
the S Pen stuff, which we'll discuss shortly, the only major overhaul to
TouchWiz this time around is a new feature called My Magazine.
My Magazine, which you can access by swiping up from the bottom of the
home screen, looks like a crossbreed between Flipboard and HTC's BlinkFeed, a service that debuted on the One.
Uncanny? We can't speak to the similarities with HTC's software, but My
Magazine is actually a collaboration between Samsung and Flipboard, so
in that regard, at least, the resemblance was intentional. But here's
the kicker: despite its involvement in the feature, Flipboard isn't
going anywhere; its app is still pre-loaded on the new Notes, and is
still as rich in content as it always has been. My Magazine, on the
other hand, is designed for casual surfers who are looking to kill a few
minutes here and there.
All told, there are four categories that you flip through by swiping to
the left or right, and each screen presents a series of tiles, all of
which vary in size from an eighth of the screen up to half. The
first category is "Personal," which is made up of selections from your
scrapbook, email, calendar, gallery, S Notes and other native apps on
the device. "Social," as you might expect, aggregates your Twitter,
Google+, Flickr, Tumblr, Sina Weibo, 500px and other social media feeds.
(Facebook is noticeably absent.) "News" displays articles based on your
selected interests, and "Here & Now" bundles movies, Yelp reviews,
TripAdvisor content, Groupon deals and other things that are happening
locally. There's also a shortcut bar along the top-right corner that
lets you access the app menu and a few core apps, so you have easy
navigation to other parts of the tablet.
So is My Magazine a worthwhile feature? Owners who simply want to be
cured of their boredom will probably glean a fair amount of use out of
it, but we grew frustrated by the limited amount of customization -- we
could filter news genres, for instance, but couldn't request specific
sites -- and we found ourselves favoring the official Flipboard app
instead. A feature like My Magazine actually makes more sense on a
smartphone like the Note 3 because its content seems to be more casually
curated, which is ideal for people who only have a minute or two to
glance at their phone in the elevator or while waiting for the train.
This formula doesn't apply as much on tablets, since we only tend to use
them when we have time to really consume content. It may become more
useful if Samsung opens the feature up to developers, but for now it
feels limited.
A feature we still haven't grown tired of is Multi Window, a dual-screen
multitasking mode that first debuted on the Note series last year.
Samsung offered third-party support through its SDK, and a plethora of
developers jumped on board, helping to make the feature more robust.
Fortunately, Samsung is not only keeping it around -- it's also
expanding its capabilities. First, the new Notes have drag-and-drop
functionality. This means that you can drag a file of your choice --
say, a map or a picture -- and drop it into your other app. Tasks like
inserting photos into an MMS are faster now, as a result.
Second, you can now have two screens from the same app (so long as the
developer supports it), which means you can look at photos side by side;
you can have two browser tabs open simultaneously; and so on. This is a
wonderful and long-needed enhancement, but we'd like it even more if
Samsung added a way to open up new browser tabs directly into a second
screen; currently, you need to open the new tab within the same screen,
activate the second screen with a blank tab and then use the
drag-and-drop feature. Suffice it to say, we're surviving just fine
without it, but it's one of the first things we attempted to do when we
began playing with the new software.
Third, you can finally save whatever combination of apps you want. In
other words, if you frequently use Maps and Email together, you can now
have that particular dual-app combo take up its very own spot in the
sidebar. It saves you from having to open up Maps and then Email, which
turns into a tedious and time-consuming process when you do it enough
times (or if you accidentally back out of those screens).
S Pen
When Samsung debuted the first Note
in 2011, it worked hard to dispel the idea that the phone shipped with a
"stylus." These days, the company doesn't have to prove anything to
anyone, as the S Pen has found success in its very own ecosystem. S Pens
are now numerous -- there are six now, by our count -- and they're like
snowflakes (S Nowflakes?) in that no two are exactly alike, despite the
fact that most of them (excepting the version used in the OG Note) have
identical functionality and can work with any device in the series.
They just can't fit in each other's enclosures, since some pens are
bigger, wider and / or longer than others, but they all feature the same
type of tip with identical sensitivity. In this Note 10.1 (as well as
the Note 3), Samsung designed the pen to fit into its holster regardless
of which side is inserted. Even then, this is pretty subtle; the
telltale sign that you're using the new Note 10.1 pen are the metal-like
ridges at the top, which make it easier to pull out of its slot. As
soon as you do that, the tablet detects that the S Pen been removed and
automatically pulls up a new Air Command menu (although you can change
it to Action Memo or nothing at all, if you prefer), rather than its own
special home screen.
In essence, the 2014 edition of the Note 10.1 gets blessed with the same
software enhancements as its smartphone companion, the Note 3. Feel
free to check out our review of the phone for more details, but we'll
discuss the S Pen features here as well. As with other recent Notes,
you'll be able to enjoy features like Air View, which lets you hover the
pen over words, gallery albums, calendars and other items to get an
expanded view of the content you're hovering over. New to this fall's
Notes, however, is the ability to click the button over this content
(provided the blue dot is actively throbbing) for a menu with additional
options, such as editing, sharing and so on.
As part of the Air Command menu, which can also be called into existence
by hovering the pen over the screen and pressing the button, you can
take advantage of five different options. Scrap Booker does exactly what
it sounds like: regardless of what app you're in, circle the content
you want to hang onto and it'll retain that information in the scrapbook
of your choice. Action Memo replaces the old S Note widget and is
designed to let you quickly draft a note or jot down a phone number. S
Finder is like Spotlight for TouchWiz, but with more options to filter
through the massive amounts of content you've amassed over the years to
find what you want. Screen Write takes a screen grab and opens it up in
an editor for you to do as your creative mind pleases. Pen Window lets
you draw a rectangle on the screen to pull up a menu of apps that offer
floating widgets -- so far, you can get a calculator, the in-house
browser, YouTube, alarms and a few more options. These widgets can be
resized (although they can often look a bit strange when they're
stretched out) and will remain on the top of the screen. They can also
be maximized to fit the full screen at any time, or you can shrink them
down into Chat Head-style icons that you can place anywhere you like.
Camera
The Note 10.1 has most of the typical Samsung camera features you've come to expect: ISO, metering, burst shot, white balance, exposure, LED flash and plenty of other manual settings. It also has several modes, such as Drama, Sound & Shot, HDR, Night, Best Face and Eraser, but it doesn't have Surround Shot (aka Photo Sphere) like the Note 3 has. The viewfinder is absurdly big, just like any other tablet, and we have a much harder time keeping the camera from shaking simply due to its overall size.
Performance-wise, the camera produces natural colors -- as long as they don't get washed out by daylight, which is unfortunately a frequent occurrence. Shots taken indoors don't typically suffer from this effect, since the amount of daylight coming into the room is limited, but that brings us to another issue: narrow dynamic range. In any photo that consists of both shadows and bright highlights, don't expect the ISP to reconcile both -- even areas that aren't incredibly shady turn out much darker than they should. Low-light images are excessively noisy, and while some cameras are noisier in order to pick up extra light, the Note 10.1's night shots are still way too dark for our taste.
The Note's video quality is set at 1080p resolution and 30fps, and footage was recorded at a bit rate of 17.1Mbps. The obvious side effect of using a large tablet for making movies is constant shaking, but otherwise the device took respectable footage with only a small amount of choppy motion and frame skips. The mics picked up our voice clearly while filtering out the cars in the background, but it sadly picked up the sounds of a slight breeze.
Performance and battery life
With the 2014 Note 10.1, you'll find yourself using one of two chips:
the 3G and WiFi-only versions come with an octa-core Exynos 5420 chipset
built in, while the LTE unit features a 2.3GHz quad-core Snapdragon
800. Since we tested the WiFi-only model, our experience with the new
Note has been completely based on that Samsung chip. Let's dive into
more specifics on what this experience entails. The 28nm Exynos 5420
utilizes big.LITTLE architecture, which means the "eight-core" setup is
actually two sets of quad-core processors, and only one of them is used
at any time: the stronger of the two is a 1.9GHz set of Cortex-A15
cores, while the other is comprised of 1.3GHz Cortex-A7s and is used for
the mundane and menial tasks. The idea is to save energy by only using
the more powerful cores when it's absolutely necessary, although our
prior experiences with octa-core Exynos chips -- last seen as the 5410,
found in the Galaxy S 4
-- didn't offer an advantage in power consumption over Qualcomm's
Snapdragon. All of this sounds pretty powerful, and it's helped more by
an astounding 3GB RAM and a six-core ARM Mali-T626 GPU.
As you can see above, the benchmark scores are nothing to scoff at. With
the exception of SunSpider (which seems awfully low, comparatively
speaking), the metrics appear in line with other top-shelf Android
devices, with the Tegra 4-powered HP Slatebook x2
holding a lead in several categories. Unfortunately, this is one of
those cases in which our real-life experience didn't match up with those
benchmarks as closely as we'd like. The tablet never went so far as to
crash or freeze on us, but it felt much more laggy than we were
expecting, given the powerful silicon inside. Transitions and animations
were choppy; the screen wasn't always responsive; and there were too
many times when the processor seemed overwhelmed trying to keep up. It
slowed down even more when we tried out more intensive activities. It
also struggled when we pulled up a YouTube movie on a Pen Window, loaded
a Multi Window screen with another YouTube movie playing and a pop-up
video simultaneously playing at the same time; we could tell that the
processor was doing everything in its power to stay afloat. You might
say that lag shouldn't come as much of a surprise when stress-testing a
tablet, but we've become increasingly more intolerant of these kinds of
glitches as the available processors continue to get more powerful.
This sluggish performance was also apparent when we played graphically intense games like Asphalt 8 and Riptide GP 2.
The chip had difficulty keeping up with the demands of the latter game,
so there were choppy stretches (complete with frame skips galore)
immediately followed by what appeared to be a much higher frame rate
than usual as the GPU finally caught up to the game. Asphalt 8
didn't struggle in quite the same way, although it still had its share
of problems; run-throughs were usually pretty smooth, but there were
plenty of times when we noticed that various graphic elements were
either slow to populate or just missing entirely. In one instance, we
noticed a rock wall slowly growing from the ground up, because the GPU
was still hard at work creating it as we passed by.
We don't want to imply that our experience with the Exynos chipset was
all bad, but suffice to say, we were underwhelmed given our expectations
going into this review. With its top-of-the-line components and premium
price point, we expect the absolute best performance, and this
particular device doesn't seem to give us any material bump over the
Nexus 10 (in fact, the Nexus 10 often had greater responsiveness than
the Note 10.1). This is a tablet that proudly boasts the year 2014 in
its name, yet it doesn't carry the power we've come to expect from a
2013 flagship. That said, we must again point out that our experience is
specific to the Exynos-powered versions of the device, and the
Snapdragon 800 may offer completely different -- and drastically
improved -- results.
We mentioned earlier that the Note 10.1 is one of the loudest tablets we've ever used. In fact, we were satisfied with the entire multimedia experience; audio was loud, clear and full when we plugged our headphones in. HD movies and video clips looked stellar as well.
Configuration options and the competition
The Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014 edition comes in white and black with 32GB and 64GB storage options. Our review unit is a white WiFi-only 32GB, but LTE models with Snapdragon 800 are on the way, if you prefer the ability to toss in a SIM and get data outside of your preferred hotspots. Samsung hasn't revealed the pricing or launch timeframe for the LTE models, but the WiFi-only version will be available in the US on October 10th, with the 32GB going for $550 and the 64GB offered for $600. The original Note 10.1 started out $50 cheaper, but that version offered 16 fewer gigabytes of storage space.Price-wise, the 32GB model is actually $50 cheaper than the current WiFi-only iPad of the same size, while the 64GB can save you $100 over its iOS competitor. If you're specifically pining for an Android tablet, you could choose the Samsung-built Nexus 10, which starts at $399 for 16GB and $499 for 32GB. This gets you a display with the same resolution, a stock Android experience complete with punctual updates, a snappy dual-core Cortex-A15 processor and other similar stats. Another option is the Toshiba Excite Pro, which retails for $500 and boasts a 2,560 x 1,600 screen and Tegra 4 SoC. Last but not least, Sony's competing tablet is the Xperia Tablet Z for $500, but it comes with a lower-res display and 1.5GHz quad-core Snapdragon S4 Pro.
Wrap-up
This year's version of the Galaxy Note 10.1 is a tad more expensive than its predecessor, but is it worth the $550 for the baseline model? In terms of hardware, there's no doubt that Samsung has massaged all of the sore spots from the first Note 10.1: it's thinner and lighter; it offers a gorgeous display and top-notch sound; it packs better specs; and it sports a cleaner design. What's more, the S Pen features are actually useful. In many respects, Samsung's new tablet is competitively priced with other high-end devices in the same category.
Sadly, its inclusion of an eight-core Exynos chip oddly resulted in sometimes-sluggish performance -- something you don't expect to see on a premium device like this. Casual users may not notice or care that it's not up to par (although we believe that they'd be just as satisfied, if not more so, with the lower-priced Nexus 10). You can bet, though, that its overall performance will be a dealbreaker for power users and early adopters. If you crave the advanced stylus functionality, this is still the best option available for its size -- but that's not saying much, given the limited competition. We suppose it's going to have to do, though, until the 2015 edition rolls around.
Source : engadget











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