When Samsung's Galaxy Note smartphone went on sale in the U.S. in February, two things made it, um, noteworthy. At 5.3″, its display was the largest one ever offered on a phone. And the Note came with Samsung's S Pen, a precision stylus which let you jot notes and sketch pictures without jabbing at the screen with your finger.
Let's face it, though --
that humongous screen completely overshadowed the S Pen. Everyone had a
strong opinion about it. Many people found the notion of a phone with a
screen that edges in on tablet territory alluring: Samsung says it's
shipped ten million Galaxy Notes to date. Others, however, considered
that same notion to be comical rather than practical. (Held to the ear,
the jumbo-sized Note tends to throw off proportions and make it look
like your skull has shrunk by a size or two.)
Now Samsung is releasing its second Galaxy Note device, the Galaxy Note 10.1, which goes on sale in the U.S. Thursday. This Note, unlike its smartphone sibling, shouldn't be an object of controversy.
There's nothing startling
about its form factor: It's an Android tablet with a 10.1″ display, a
size that's comfortably familiar in the Android world, and not radically
dissimilar from the 9.7-incher on Apple's iPad. But it's a solid,
straightforward Android tablet that comes with an S Pen, a suite of
pen-friendly apps and some productivity-oriented software enhancements
which give it a more businesslike flavor than Samsung's
The Galaxy Note 10.1 with
16GB of storage lists for $499, the same price as a 16GB iPad. But the
32GB Galaxy Note is $549, $50 less than a 32GB iPad. And while there's
no 64GB model, the tablet's microSD slot lets you add a 32GB memory card
for $20 or less, bringing capacity up to 64GB for a grand total of
about $570 -- a steep discount off the 64GB iPad's $699 sticker price.
Both the 16GB and 32GB variants offer wi-fi but no cellular option and
come with 50GB of Dropbox online storage for two years.
If the Note 10.1 sells
well, it won't be on the strength of the bang it delivers for your buck.
It'll be because it's one of the relatively few Android tablets with a
snappy answer to the bottom-line question "Why should somebody buy this
instead of an iPad?"
The iPad doesn't come
with a pen and may never do so, given Steve Jobs' famous declaration
that "if you see a stylus, they blew it." Scads of companies have
stepped in to fill the gap -- my favorite iPad stylus is Adonit's Jot
Flip -- but all of their designs suffer from the fact that they're
designed to work with a tablet that was engineered for fingertips.
Samsung, however, built
the Galaxy Note 10.1 from the ground up for pen use. And when it decided
to add pens to some of its devices, it made the eminently sensible
decision to work with Wacom, the company which dominates the market for
graphics tablets used by artists.
The S Pen, which stows
in a slot on tablet's side when not in use, is based on Wacom's
technology. That means that it's pressure-sensitive and extremely
precise, and doesn't use a battery. Using it feels like writing with a
slightly stubby ballpoint; Samsung also sells a larger pen, as well as
one with an "eraser" on the opposite end from the nib.
Android doesn't come
with any apps meant expressly for pen use. So Samsung created some of
its own, including S Note, a highly capable note-taking program which
lets you write and draw on simulated lined pages, graph paper and blank
sheets. You can use a fine-line pen, a pencil, a paintbrush or a
highlighter; pressure sensitivity lets you vary your pen strokes or lay
down a thicker coat of paint by pressing harder.
S Note can also convert
your block-letter or cursive input into editable text. It did a
surprisingly accurate job of deciphering my chicken scratchings. But as
with every other device I've ever used with handwriting recognition, the
payoff didn't seem worth the effort required: You need to write words a
few at a time, then pause while the tablet interprets them. Except for
brief notes, if you want to see your words in a crisp, legible typeface
rather than your own handwriting, you're probably best off using the
on-screen keyboard. (Samsung sells a case, obviously inspired by the
iPad's Smart Cover, which lets you angle the tablet for comfy typing.)
Unlike the iPad, the
Galaxy Note 10.1 is designed to let you rest your palm on the screen as
you write or draw without getting confused by the fact that two parts of
your hand are in contact with the display at once. Despite this, I
found myself occasionally triggering actions unintentionally as I
worked.
I suspect that the fact
I'm a southpaw doesn't help: When I begin to write on the left-hand side
of the screen, my palm rests on top of Android's on-screen buttons for
tasks such as going back one screen and returning to the home screen. A
righty's palm would fall in a less critical spot.
The S Pen works in other
apps besides S Note, of course. I liked using it to crop photos and
perform touch-up work in Photoshop Touch, which Samsung throws in for
free. The tablet includes a program that points you towards pen-friendly
programs in Google's Play store; most of the ones I tried didn't
support pressure sensitivity, but the S Pen is still a plus in any
program that involves handwritten note-taking, sketching or any gesture
that's tough to perform accurately with a fingertip.
Pen aside, this is one
of the best big-screen Android tablets I've tried, a nicely-styled
1.3-pound package that's a skosh lighter than an iPad and doesn't look
too much like an iPad clone. (Samsung, presumably, would like to
minimize the future time it spends squabbling with Apple in court.)
Retweet this story
No comments:
Post a Comment