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Android Hardware Technology

Samsung Won't Let Android Tablets Die, Announces the Galaxy Tab S6 (arstechnica.com) 96

Samsung is one of the only companies still producing tablets to rival Apple's iPad. Today the company announced the Samsung Galaxy Tab S6, its latest high-end tablet, for $649. Pre-orders start August 23, and the device ships September 6. Samsung says there will be an LTE version available later. Ars Technica reports: The Samsung Tab S6 features a 10.5-inch 2560x1600 OLED display, a 2.84GHz Snapdragon 855, and a 7040mAh battery. The base version has 6GB of RAM and 128GB of storage, with a higher tier of 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage. For cameras, there's an 8MP front camera, while the rear gets a 13MP main camera and a 5MP wide-angle lens. The device is down to 5.7mm thick and weighs 420 grams. This is Samsung's first-ever tablet with an in-screen fingerprint reader. Interestingly, it's an optical reader instead of the ultrasonic tech that the Galaxy S10 uses. Somehow, on a 10-inch tablet, Samsung couldn't find room for a headphone jack. Even Apple, which ditched the headphone jack two years ago, still puts a headphone jack on iPads. Samsung is apparently declaring war on the headphone jack with this round of updates -- the Galaxy Note 10, launching next week, is expected to dump the headphone jack, too.

The S-Pen comes with the tablet but doesn't stow away inside the body; instead, a groove on the back of the tablet gives it a spot to magnetically attach to. Of course, don't expect the tablet to sit flat on a table with a big pen attached to the back. As with other newer Samsung devices, the S-Pen now comes with a battery and some Bluetooth functionality, allowing it to do things like work as a remote shutter button for the camera. A new "Air action" gesture system lets you do things like change the camera mode or scroll through pictures with a flick of the pen.

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Samsung Won't Let Android Tablets Die, Announces the Galaxy Tab S6

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  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday July 31, 2019 @06:45PM (#59020424)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re:At this stage.. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Zorro ( 15797 ) on Wednesday July 31, 2019 @07:24PM (#59020622)

      Exactly.

      But they have the"Courage" to not make something I will buy.

    • Not half as funny as you might think.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Amazon fire tablets probably have overall largest market share at this point.

    • They are also catering to a vastly different market segment - value media consumers. Fire tablets are not what anyone would consider a high performing piece of hardware on the level with an iPad Pro or this new Galaxy Tab 6.

  • Amazon Fire HD 10 (Score:5, Interesting)

    by StormReaver ( 59959 ) on Wednesday July 31, 2019 @09:31PM (#59021088)

    I have an Amazon Fire HD 10, and it does everything I need: it plays games and apps (both Amazon and Google Play), plays music and movies, and runs Firefox and Chrome. The interface is smooth and responsive, and it costs under $200.

    The last Samsung I had was great for about a few months, then started bogging down.

    • The 2017 Amazon Fire HD 10 has surprisingly good specs for a tablet that you can sometimes buy for just 100 bucks (with forced Amazon ads, and all). I mean, it's actually still better than the 2018 Samsung Galaxy Tab A 10.5 (poor CPU, no DRM for FHD, +300 MSRP) or 2019 Galaxy Tab A 10.1 (no stereo sound in landscape orientation, and CPU pretty much on the level with A72 in Fire HD). I can't wait for the 2019 Amazon Fire HD 10, which is rumored to exist.

      • The problem with Amazon tablets are the poorly developed launchers that are forced on them. Yes you can change the launcher with a bit of work, but the amazon crapware still seems to get in the way.
    • Actually, Samsung Fire Tablet is much more impressive [thesun.co.uk]!
    • I got a Fire HD 10 to tide me over after I broke my old Galaxy Tab S 10.5 (the Tab S4 was recently released so was $600+, and the Tab S5e hadn't yet been announced). It was a decent step up from the 4-year old tablet. But it wasn't displaying certain websites and games properly. So I eventually got a Tab S4 when it went on sale for $400. It runs circles around the Fire. The UI on the Fire HD 10 is fine, and I didn't really notice any slowness when I was initially using it. But after having used the Ta
    • If I was going to get at tablet I'd probably just go chinese. Less bloatware and it's easy to install a new launcher if you don't like the UI. I wonder if Xiaomi do tablets. For me a tablet should be on a kitchen wall for inventory or possibly music. For anything else a phone or computer is better.
  • Sheet music (Score:4, Interesting)

    by innocent_white_lamb ( 151825 ) on Thursday August 01, 2019 @12:07AM (#59021428)

    I use a tablet for my sheet music. All of my music is in PDF files and the tablet fits well on my piano.

    It's wonderful to have all of my music in one place, immediately available, and I don't have a big messy stack of papers on my piano, on the floor beside it, and so forth.

    "I'm sure it's in here somewhere"..... flick flick flick...

    Now replaced by, "I've got it right here, filed under show tunes"..., or ballads, or wedding music or whatever else. I've got lots of categories. Getting a tablet for my music was actually a life changing event.

    It's a Samsung Galaxy Tab S2; it works well and I like it a lot.

    • That's cool, I've got a Tab S2 as well, and am a huge fan. It's more of a 'handy' device for me, for looking up stuff while watching a show (hello IMDB, what's this actor up to these days?) or playing a few games, or reading news sites and magazine PDFs. It's only got Android 7.0, but that seems to be holding up well, as well as the speed, battery, etc..

      Bummed to see they're ditching the headphone jack in the newest model tho, another use is plugging into a portable speaker for music in other rooms or the b

  • Brand new Huawei Mediapad M6 comes with similar specs, costs less, and have a headphone jack. (keep the jokes about chicoms to yourself)

  • ... along with Amazon, Google, Lenovo, Huawei (spyware included in price), Xaomi, and a hundred or so budget companies
  • by Qbertino ( 265505 ) <moiraNO@SPAMmodparlor.com> on Thursday August 01, 2019 @05:39AM (#59021944)

    I was never a Samsung fan, their UI variant was too shitty - but they've since updated their UI to a more lean, closer to Mint Android approach.

    My daughter needed a tablet computer for studying medicine. Medicals fill a metric ton of paper each semester, so digital notes auto-synced and backupped make total sense. We made seeking out the right tablet for her a big project and took roughly half a year to evaluate, test and finally chose the right tabletcomputer for her.

    The Samsung S5 won hands down.
    Lightweight, powerful, excellent screen, big battery time, best-in-class stylus, neat ready-made software and a neat extra feature called Samsung DEX that does a good job at resembling a useful modern desktop computer and shows everyone how convergence looks like when you actually make it work.

    It's nice to see they're actually pulling through and upholding their strategy.
    If I needed a tablet now the S6 would lead my shortlist by quite a margin.

    My 2 cents.

  • I use a 7" tablet to read books and watch videos. It cost me $80 a few months ago. It is nowhere near as powerful as the Tab, but it does what I want, and it does it well. I hope manufacturers will carry on coming up with such low-cost tablets that get the job done. I couldn't care less about tablets that cost hundreds of dollars - they do not do anything above and beyond what my $80 one can do that justifies the price difference.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    I just want a vanilla AOSP tablet.

    A 7 or 10 inch, 16:9 aspect, so I can watch videos.

    Not the ipad which feels dated to me, software and hardware, and Android is my preference.

    Too bad there is no more Nexus/Pixel tablets.

  • I've been happy w/ ASUS tablets, and they're still available for reasonable prices. Zenpad.

  • Most people don't know that BlueTooth still can't even deliver the same quality as the analog audio jack.

    No matter the quality of whatever MP3, AAC+, M4A, or lossless FLAC you downloaded, your BlueTooth headphones reduce the quality far below even the most generic analog audio headphones.

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