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Android Hardware

Samsung Galaxy Note 7 Launched, Features Curved Display, Iris Scanner (theverge.com) 116

Another day, another new, shiny new smartphone. On Tuesday, Samsung announced the Galaxy Note 7 featuring a handful of new interesting hardware capabilities. The Samsung Galaxy Note 7 sports a 5.7-inch QHD (2560x1440 pixels) display, and is powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 SOC, 4GB of RAM. It also supports quick charging and quick wireless charging. On the photography front, there's a 12-megapixel sensor on the back, 64GB of internal storage (with support for more via microSD card), and a 3,500mAh battery. The Verge adds: Since the specs are largely the same between the Note 7 and the S7 series, Samsung is differentiating its larger flagship with features. The Note 7 has a new iris scanner that joins the familiar fingerprint scanner and lets you unlock your phone with your eyes. Samsung says the iris scanner is more secure than a fingerprint scanner. It's similar to the Windows Hello login features seen on Microsoft's Lumia 950 and a number of Windows 10 laptops and relies on an infrared camera that works well in low light, but less so in direct sunlight. The iris scanner can also be used to lock apps, photos, notes, and other content in a secure folder, separate from the rest of the phone's data. And of course, the Note 7 wouldn't be a Note without Samsung's S Pen active stylus. The S Pen has been upgraded this year with water resistance, a finer point, and twice as fine pressure sensitivity (4,096 levels, as opposed to 2,048 on earlier models). There a handful of new software features for the S Pen, including a magnifying loupe, quick text translation tool, and a new tool that makes it easy to create GIFs from any video that's currently playing. Samsung has also updated its software interface for the Note 7, with a cleaner color palette, softer white menus, and an overall nicer-looking aesthetic. It seems that with each new phone, Samsung's software gets better looking, and the Note 7 is no exception. The company says that the new software interface will likely come to older models, such as the S7, but it did not provide a timeline for when that might happen. Out of the box, Samsung Galaxy Note 7 runs Android 6.0. No word on pricing yet, but Samsung says it will be higher than Galaxy S7 Edge's $770 retail tag.Update: 08/02 15:46 GMT by M : The unlocked Galaxy Note 7 will retail on AT&T at a price point of $880. Expect similar price on other networks, and for the standalone unit.
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Samsung Galaxy Note 7 Launched, Features Curved Display, Iris Scanner

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  • I know this isn't the first phone that's 5.7 in with 2560x1440 pixels, but isn't that wildly overkill? That's about 515ppi for a screen that you're not going to hold closer than about eight inches from your face. Can even the most attune pair of eyes in all of humanity resolve the display with any pixelation at that point?
    • The true area of overkill is the camera pixels. At a very small fraction of a square cm, they long ago passed the point of increasing the count actually meaning anything on such small chips. More important is improving things like the dynamic range, but it's hard to slap a marketing number on that.

      • They can ramp up the pixel count, but the optics are still going to be awful in a camera that size.

        I'd like to know how nature solved the problem. Hawk eyes have no problem achieving a very impressive acuity in a package not much bigger. Something to do with the use of a lens with varying index of refraction? It's beyond me.

        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

          I'd like to know how nature solved the problem. Hawk eyes have no problem achieving a very impressive acuity in a package not much bigger. Something to do with the use of a lens with varying index of refraction? It's beyond me.

          Probably very powerful wetware. Eyes suck. Human eyes typically are around 2Mpixels, but they're not evenly distributed - about 1Mpixels are concentrated through a very narrow part of your vision (your central vision), while the rest of it is peripheral. You can easily demonstrate th

          • No birds see in IR. Many birds see into the UV, but raptors are not among them. Even the kestrel, which was previously thought to be UV-sensitive. What they do have over humans is density: A much higher density of receptor cells, a much higher density of ganglion cells to connect them up. Rubbish for night vision, great for spotting tiny rodents from altitude. All of which still makes me wonder why cellphone cameras always give such awful images.

    • Re:QHD 5.7 in (Score:4, Interesting)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday August 02, 2016 @10:59AM (#52628819) Homepage Journal

      Can even the most attune pair of eyes in all of humanity resolve the display with any pixelation at that point?

      No, and that's the point. Despite what Apple claimed with their low-res "retina" displays, the point at which the display is visually perfect is about 500 PPI. That's why printers target 600 PPI as a good standard for readable text.

      My 5.5" phone is only 400 PPI, with a 1080p screen. It's damn close to perfect, but still not quite in some situations.

      • Pixel density by itself is meaningless, you also have to consider how far away from your eyes the screen is. To my knowledge even the very best human eyes can't distinguish more than 30 ppi per inch away from your eyes, which means even 400 ppi is overkill if you have 20/20 vision.
        • Yeah, you have to put your eyeballs so close to the screen to see the pixelation that you cannot focus.

          However, Samsung uses these displays for VR and through their Gear system 1440p is very low resolution. Samsung would actually need something like an 8K display on their phones just to get close to real-life resolution in your primary field of view (not even counting the peripheral vision, which is like 80 million pixels).

        • First it's your secure 2G flip phone with encrypted voice calls, now it's you failing at math.

          even the very best human eyes can't distinguish more than 30 ppi per inch away from your eyes

          Even the very best human eyes can't distinguish more than 3000 ppi at 100 inches away.
          Even the very best human eyes can't distinguish more than 300 ppi at 10 inches away?
          Even the very best human eyes can't distinguish more than 30 ppi at 1 inch away?!

          Damn those rules with 1/32" markers! They're just a blur!!

      • When I'm using my kid's iPad Mini, I have to take off my glasses so I can't see the pixels. But then I get eye strain. I find e-ink to be the easiest on the eyes, but that appears to have gone the way of the Zune.

        One of the things I haven't seen addressed in these specs is the gap between the pixels. My old hp laptop had lower resolution, but I liked it better than my Dell because I could see teeny tiny little black lines between the pixels. Everybody else thinks I'm crazy. But I took a macro photo of the

      • Re:QHD 5.7 in (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Tuesday August 02, 2016 @12:20PM (#52629373)
        There are two ways to go about this. 20/20 vision is defined as the ability to distinguish a line pair with one arc-minute of separation.
        • Some people interpret this to mean each pixel should be one arc-minute or smaller. If that's your standard, then the pixel size has to be 1 / tan (1 arc-minute) = 3438 smaller than the viewing distance. If you're holding your phone 12 inches from your eye, that corresponds to 286 PPI being all that's needed. That's what the Retina displays target - 326 PPI before the iPhone 6+.
        • Other people interpret this to mean you need two pixels per arc-minute. After all, to form a line pair with a separation, you need a row of white pixels with a row of black pixels in between. So then the pixel size becomes 1 / (0.5 arc-minutes) = 6875.5 smaller than the viewing distance. If you're holding your phone 12 inches from your eye, that corresponds to 573 PPI.

        It should be noted though that this is for luminosity resolution - your ability to resolve details of any color. This is why printers target 600 PPI - because they print in black and white. Within a specific color, your eye's resolution is substantially worse [nfggames.com]. Especially for blue, and somewhat for red (the density of your red and blue cones is lower than for green cones and rods). This is the basis behind Pentile displays, which cuts the blue and red resolution in half.* All the bad press coverage they've gotten is by ignorant reporters who compare magnified photos of it completely oblivious that magnifying it defeats the whole purpose. This strategy of reducing red and blue resolution has been used since NTSC video transmissions, and is still used today in JPEG and MPEG encoding. You've been seeing pictures on the web and digital videos all this time with reduced red and blue resolution. If you've never notice this before, then you've basically affirmed that Pentile works.

        Anyway, it's a moot point on the Samsung displays because they design them to be used in the Gear VR headsets. Those provide a 96 degree wide angle of view, which to fool 20/20 vision would require 5760 pixels for each eye. Which which correspond to a 11520x6480 resolution display on a 5.7 screen, or 2319 PPI. Any lower than that and you can "see this pixels." This is why the 3D graphics and display screen industries still have a lot of room left to grow, even though CPUs have pretty much hit the point where a low-end CPU is "good enough" for most people's needs.

        * The more clever displays take further advantage of this difference between color resolution and luminosity resolution, and use something called subpixel rendering [grc.com]. For an RGB stripe, this corresponds to shifting the "pixel" by 1/3 pixel increments. So if you're trying to display a white dot using two pixels, you actually have 4 possible locations. RGB rgb, rGB Rgb, rgB RGb, and rgb RGB. The problem (for displays you can rotate) is that this extra resolution is only along one axis - usually the horizontal. Windows subpixel rendering for fonts (ClearType) basically turns your 1920x1080 display into a 5760x1080 display for fonts. Pentile overcomes this by using a subpixel layout which is symmetric in both the horizontal and vertical axes. So you can use the same subpixel rendering algorithm regardless of whether the display is in landscape or portrait mode. It really is a superior subpixel layout, which has gotten a bad rap because early implementations had too low a PPI and thus the pixels were visible and lines and fonts were "fuzzy".

        This is also why these super-high resolution screens aren't as important for Windows as they are for Macs. Subpixel rendering like ClearType shifts the location of letters by up to 1/3 pixel to make them line up with the subpixel grid. Apple knew their computers were used by most page layout professionals which would find this unacceptable. So their font rendering engine (based o

        • And it should be pointed out that while you can discern detail at a specific resolution any imaging sensor with discreet sensors will alias. So offering more samples than the imaging system can resolve will reducing imaging artifacts. That's why a 6k RED camera makes for a better 1080p image. Fine detail can theoretically be captured by a 1080p sensor but it will look inferior to a 6k sensor that supersamples. If your eye can resolve a 2k phone display, that means you have to perfectly align the pho

    • by Zocalo ( 252965 )
      It's overkill for general use, certainly, but it is a good combination for physical screen size and semi-standard display resolutions which is why I suspect so many phones are using it. Compared to similar sized screens at lower resolutions like 1920x1080 and at least in my personal experience you can just about see the difference, especially for things like reading ebooks where fonts appear a little bit crisper, which makes it easier on the eyes during longer usage sessions such as on long haul flights.
    • Thin lines that are very nearly horizontal or vertical stll get a slightly wobbly effect as they transition between sharp and fuzzy. And a perfectly vertical 2 pixel black line looks different from a 1 pixel black line between two 50% gray lines. This is especially noticeable when nicely aligned interfaces are scaled by the OS.

      But apart from those minor issues, the effect of smaller pixels certainly does start to approach negligibility. You probably won't be able to tell when watching a movie or playing a 3

    • Can even the most attune pair of eyes in all of humanity resolve the display with any pixelation at that point?

      In theory, yes. In practice, it's not worth it because there's a cost in processing power (thus precious battery). I'd say about 300ppi is as good as a normal user will even notice. Still, there is one big point for higher ppi: using the phone as the display of a virtual reality headset (such as Samsung's own Gear VR). I tried my old Note II (265ppi) with a generic "Cardboard" headset, and it was rather pixelated.

    • Actually, this phone is meant to be able to go into the Gear VR 2, so the high DPS would be useful in that application certainly.

    • I know this isn't the first phone that's 5.7 in with 2560x1440 pixels, but isn't that wildly overkill? That's about 515ppi for a screen that you're not going to hold closer than about eight inches from your face. Can even the most attune pair of eyes in all of humanity resolve the display with any pixelation at that point?

      Oversampling. It actually does make sense, especially for people with superior vision, +2 glasses, or when moving your eye across the display. Some examples:

      Image editing? Best to at least double the size first. Edit in 16-bit mode instead of 8-bit if you can. Down-sample at the end.

      Recording music? Don't edit at 44.1 kHz and 16-bit – that is the bit rate and depth for the final product, a song on a CD*. I haven't checked lately, but last I looked, audio tracks were being recorded at 196 kHz

      • Yes but your triangular wave arguably describes all the data you needed from that 22 kHz sine. So, if your data is "only" 44 KHz and it's all staircase-like and square-looking when drawn and zoomed on, except the DAC does not work like that but makes it sound like the original, it's about perfect.

        Now if you're talking about people who convert their 44.1KHz stuff into 96KHz or higher.. All they're doing is making their stuff sound slightly worse (if the difference can be heard at all)

  • But with a display .2" larger and a pen. And the battery is even smaller.

    • The stylus isn't a nonzero factor. Besides, some people hate the curved screens. It results in unintended contact with the touch screen, it's more breakable, and it distorts images on the border of the display.
      • by ranton ( 36917 )

        The stylus isn't a nonzero factor. Besides, some people hate the curved screens. It results in unintended contact with the touch screen, it's more breakable, and it distorts images on the border of the display.

        I have had my Note 4 for two years and have used the stylus less than a dozen times. If it is keeping me from better battery life I wish they offered a Note without one.

        • You need to be reminded that you are not everyone.

          I use the stylus a lot - on my Note 3, I can draw schematic diagrams and write component values next to them, draw assembly instructions (not writing ASM, but I could do that too if I wanted), document mechanical engineering problems, draw maps, architectural features, etc

          If you did not want the Note's features, why did you buy one?

          I really want is a new Note TABLET- ie bigger than 9", so I can share the drawings with colleagues a bit easier - and yay -

          • by ranton ( 36917 )

            You need to be reminded that you are not everyone.

            And you need to be reminded I said "I wish they offered a Note without [an sPen]", not that I wish they removed the sPen from the entire Note line. They offered the S7 with and without a curved screen, so its not unprecedented to be given options.

            If you did not want the Note's features, why did you buy one?

            The Note 4's primary features for me were its size, build quality, and other specs. I also thought I would use the sPen more but never really had a reason. Use cases like yours seem to be the edge cases, especially since I believe no other phablet has a stylus, but

            • I don't think using the S Pen is an edge case. I bought a Note 2 and a Note 4 specifically to have a built-in stylus. I would suggest that given the number of high-quality large phones out there, yours is much closer to the edge case, for exactly the reason you stated - the Note is the only flagship device with a stylus.
      • Exactly! I'm one of those hating curved screens for the reasons you described. I have a Galaxy Note 4 but I'm done with Samsung Note X because of this (curved screen). My next phone will be a Nexus (and I will have OS updates a LOT quicker).

        • Exactly! I'm one of those hating curved screens for the reasons you described. I have a Galaxy Note 4 but I'm done with Samsung Note X because of this (curved screen). My next phone will be a Nexus (and I will have OS updates a LOT quicker).

          Maybe I'm misreading TFA but I don't think the Note 7 will have a curved display. In the last generation, the Samsung phablet with the curved display was branded "Galaxy S6 Edge+".

          • by green1 ( 322787 )

            And yet the headline says "curved display"

            I sure hope they're wrong here, I have enough trouble avoiding accidental edge presses on my Note4, on a curved screen I'd never be able to use the thing without the edges being constantly pressed. I've never come up with any possible reason why anyone would want a curved display, but I can come up will lots of reasons to avoid it.

            Not sure what my next phone will be, I'll keep the Note4 for now, I love pretty much everything about it, but when it needs replacing I W

        • by ranton ( 36917 )

          Yes, I also hope the Nexus 7P ends up being a better upgrade than the Note 7, because I am thinking of jumping ship from Samsung as well.

      • by fedos ( 150319 )
        I fell in love with the look of the S7 Edge, but I hate the constant unintended contact. "Oh, I want to watch this YouTube video." Turn phone to landscape. Different video starts playing because I accidentally tapped on one of the recommended videos.
    • by ranton ( 36917 )

      The rumors for the Note 7 were very underwhelming, and the true specs even came in a little under the rumors. My wife and I have Note 4s we were planning on upgrading, but both the Note 5 and Note 7 upgrades are not nearly enough of an improvement for another $800+ expenditure. And I'm really not a fan of curved screens either, so not having any other option will keep me on the sidelines as well.

      This is starting to make me think there just isn't anything new these cell phone manufacturers can think of to im

      • by green1 ( 322787 )

        I agree fully, I too am a Note4 user (my third Note in a row!) but I won't be getting another Note series phone as long as they are going this route.

        Curved screens make phones extremely difficult to use, and have absolutely no benefit of any kind.
        irreplaceable batteries limit the lifespan of your phone, and again, have no benefit of any kind.
        Iris scanner? from what I can tell, I wouldn't be able to unlock my phone in bright sunlight, well that's not acceptable in any way, so another useless gimmick.

        Give me

        • by dave420 ( 699308 )

          Those things might not have a benefit to you, but they do to some people. Please stop speaking for the entire world - we don't appreciate it ;)

          • Re:Same as S7 Edge (Score:4, Insightful)

            by green1 ( 322787 ) on Tuesday August 02, 2016 @11:49AM (#52629163)

            Ok, please explain the benefit to a curved screen as implemented in the Samsung phones.

            So far we have:
            - Can't hold the phone without touching part of the touch screen
            - videos look weird either curved over the edge, or arbitrarily ending before it
            - parts of everything that appear on the screen are distorted as they go over the edge, or you don't use the whole screen.

            I'm open to some form of game changing use for the "edge" of the screen, but I've never heard of one.

            Also please explain the benefit of the battery not being removeable.
            So far we have:
            - Decreased life span of the phone as you have to replace the whole phone if the battery lifespan gets too short

            Note that you specifically stated that these features were a BENEFIT, not simply neutral, please explain why these 2 features are an IMPROVEMENT over the readily available alternatives.

            • by unrtst ( 777550 )

              I'm not the GP, and I don't see any benefit to the curved screen edge(s).
              However, IF (HUGE IF) it is a matter of either water resistance or a user replaceable battery, I'll take water resistance. Otherwise, I'd agree... I don't need to shave off half a mm; let me replace the battery easily.

              • by green1 ( 322787 )

                S5 is water resistant and has a user replaceable battery, so no tradeoff needed there.

        • by ranton ( 36917 )

          Give me something BETTER than my Note4 and I'll consider it.

          I too have been a loyal Samsung customer, and literally haven't even looked at the competition for years. That changed this morning when I started researching the Nexus 6P and rumors about the upcoming 7P. Any phone manufacturer needs to know they can sometimes get away with one lackluster release, but two in a row is going to lose you customers.

          • by green1 ( 322787 )

            Most people replace their phones every 2-3 years, most phones have yearly model releases. As such I'll skip one lackluster release, MAYBE 2, but 3? I'll start looking for another phone.

            Thing is, for some strange reason, nobody else has copied the stylus, the Note is still the only phone on the market with one. That said, as much as I love the stylus, it's not enough to keep me in an otherwise inferior phone.

  • Really disappointment seeing Android going places, but my phone still stuck with essentially the factory OS version installed..

    Going to wait for the next great Nexus phone.... My (relatively) ancient nexus tablet and phone both got marshmellow... Samsung Note 4? Nope. No OS updates beyond security patches.

    • Wikipedia says the Note 4 should've gotten Marshmallow. I presume then your carrier is blocking the update in order to quicken its obsolesence. The solution to that is to not buy SIM-locked smartphones, so you can switch carriers when one of them goes rotten.
      • by fedos ( 150319 )

        One of the reasons I left Verizon was their OS update policies. I had waited forever for my Storm and later my Droid 2 to get updated, so when I next bought a new phone I went with a Nexus, which the sales guy assured me would get OS updates early without having to wait for Verizon's lengthy OS review process (with the Storm it was so bad that new updates were being released by Blackberry before Verizon was done reviewing earlier ones, with them responding by ditching the earlier update they were reviewing

  • microSD expansion?
    I don't think I need anIris scanner, Iris is my mother-in-law

    • by fedos ( 150319 )
      RTFS:

      64GB of internal storage (with support for more via microSD card)

    • Yes, it supports micro SDHC (and likely SDXC). They even give you a "free" 256 GB card when you drop $880 on the phone. Or you can choose their Gear Fit v2 smart watch/band thing.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Locked boot loader means no deal.

    • by green1 ( 322787 )

      I have rooted every Android phone I've ever had, I won't buy one where I can't.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        I made that mistake. I had a galaxy s with custom firmware, loved it. Then I had a galaxy s 3 custom firmware, loved it. I wanted the same thing with a bigger screen and better battery life so without enough research I got a note 4. It is a good phone but never a great phone because of the locked bootloader. Until I get confirmation of unlocked bootloader I will be buying phones from someone else.

        • by green1 ( 322787 )

          I am running a rooted note4 as my daily driver, no locked bootloader here. Do you have some form of a different version?

  • I'm hoping the curved screen matches the curve of my butt, then it will fit in my back pocket without distraction.
  • Since they're going to use Exnos in some markets, I presume that means no QuickCharge 3 for it. Still it's at the top of my list to replace the LG pocket heater I'm currently using (my G4 likes to just get stuck with the CPU on 100% for no reason).

    I would be curious to see how it's radios are - it's a shame nobody ever tests those anymore.

  • Expensive (Score:5, Insightful)

    by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Tuesday August 02, 2016 @11:50AM (#52629171) Journal

    "The unlocked Galaxy Note 7 will retail on AT&T at a price point of $880."

    After tax (roughly 10% in WA state), you're within spitting distance of $1000...maybe it's just me, but that seems like a hell of a lot of money for a phone.

    Yeah, I know it's got a lot of cool features and is undoubtedly a very capable device...but still, almost $1000 for a phone?

    I also understand that most people will get this with a phone plan so they won't just buy it outright, but even so...I guess I'm out of touch with what a new, top-of-the-line phone goes for these days. Personally I couldn't see spending that much on a phone, but that's just me.

    • I have a Note 2, and have had it for almost 4 years. Other than getting the latest version of Android and Samsung's new S-Pen features, the Note 7 doesn't look like much of an upgrade.

      A curved screen? Fuck that. I'm losing a chunk of resolution and wasting my battery on it. And good luck if you ever want to hold the damned phone without touching that shit. Now on both sides! What's next? A screen that curves on the top and bottom too? Why not make the whole outside surface a screen?

      More storage? I

      • A curved screen? Fuck that. I'm losing a chunk of resolution and wasting my battery on it. And good luck if you ever want to hold the damned phone without touching that shit. Now on both sides!

        This has always puzzled me...how DO you hold a phone that has potentially active edges?

        This seems to me to be something that's going to generate a lot of frustration, especially if it can't be turned off. Can the edges be set to be touch-insensitive?

    • by Win0ver ( 613215 )
      Oh please. We've had this discussion everytime a new high end phone comes out since the iPhone 3G. Phones aren't just phones anymore. They're really small computers that fit into your pocket, and for most people, do more than a 5000$ PC did 15 years ago.
      • Oh please. We've had this discussion everytime a new high end phone comes out since the iPhone 3G.

        Relax, bud. I never said people shouldn't buy one, I just said it seemed like a lot to spend on a phone.

        If you want one, by all means go get one, and I hope it's a great phone.

    • Republic Wireless has some new phones and I thought the same thing while browsing the selection. $800 for a Galaxy S7 Edge is pretty damn expensive!

      Fortunately there are a lot of phones available at a variety of price points these days. The Galaxy J3 is only $179.

      • Fortunately there are a lot of phones available at a variety of price points these days. The Galaxy J3 is only $179.

        The J3 looks nice. I see them on Amazon and eBay for ~$130 and up, which seems like a damn good phone at a bargain price.

        I use a plain-jane Samsung Rugby Pro ($99) and for what I need it's perfect. More than I need, actually. If I was to upgrade, though, the J3 would probably be at the top of the list.

  • (as in The Freaking Slashvertisement), I see squat about any commitment to rolling out Google patches in a timely fashion nor more than just for a few months before they start planning for the Note 8. Shocking.
  • I am an iphone user with hardware issues looking to switch to Android. Most people I've spoken to also have hardware issues with their iPhones and I don't trust their quality anymore. I'll admit that I was still under impression until about a week ago that Android phones are cheaper than iPhones, easy to reflash / upgrade with a stock google rom without bloatware and come with removable battery and expandable storage. From the options I've looked at, most Android phones do not meet the above criteria. A
    • You are sorely misinformed on the "wipe and flash" for any Android. Yes, many android handsets can be rooted and flashed, but Android handset manufacturers are just as protective of their hardware and custom skin software as Apple is. Android phones are all of the things you mentioned, but they're not all of those things IN ONE PHONE. You can get removable batteries. You can get expandable storage. You can get waterproof. You can get flashable. You can get none of those in an iPhone. You can get at least o

  • I have a note 4 with 1440 x 2560 pixels (~518 ppi pixel density) and I see the pixels when using my VR headset when watching movies. 1280×1440 per eye sounds better than current stand alone VR headsets, but you can still see pixels.

  • Of some people, be advised before jumping on this new biometrics.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Bratch ( 664572 )

      My same thought, I change the battery in my Note 4 all the time, and when I replace it I will still want that capability. I don't use the S-Pen very much, so I won't miss it if I change manufacturers. It may sound useless to many people, but I still miss having a working FM radio, like in the HTC One series. Although it may be my carrier, Verizon, because I heard the radio does work on the Note 4 on Sprint.

  • I own a 3 year old Tmobile-branded Samsung Galaxy note 3. My experience: 1. Loaded with uninstallable bloatware. 2. Some hard keys (long press) are hijacked to invoke said bloatware by accident. 3. Did not root because no time and afraid to brick $1000 device. 4. No software updates in 3 years. 5. This year there was an OS update that broke GPS.
    I don't want to upgrade but need GPS daily. So far it seems that Nexus is the only way to go.
  • With the display curving around the sides, you won't be able to put a bumper on the thing.

    No bumper = More screen breakage = More repairs.

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