miércoles, 7 de noviembre de 2012

Samsung Galaxy Note II: Visual Tour - InformationWeek

The most noteworthy thing about Samsung's Galaxy Note II is its size. It's huge for a phone. But it's tiny for a tablet. As a device that falls somewhere between these two product categories, it has been called a "phablet," perhaps the ugliest sounding portmanteau since "turducken" entered the vernacular.

"Phablet" is a rather unfortunate term for such an attractive, capable piece of technology. But anyone considering the purchase of the Galaxy Note II should make a point of trying the device out in-person. There's simply no way to grasp how the Note II's form feels, if you haven't used something similar in the past, until you actually grasp it.

For me, it's simply too big. It passes the pants and jacket pocket test, just barely, but as a phone it feels like I'm holding a paperback or shoe-phone out of Get Smart. It just doesn't feel right. But it may be right for you.

I also dislike styluses. Many years ago, I used a Palm Treo 600, which had a stylus, and I didn't have a positive experience with it. If I did a lot of on-device drawing, I might feel differently. But to me, a stylus is just an accessory that's likely to get lost.

Some people apparently love using a stylus. If you're one of those people, the Galaxy Note II deserves careful consideration. The Note II's S-Pen works nicely as a navigational tool, a photo editing tool and a drawing tool, particularly in conjunction with Samsung's S-Note app.

But a stylus requires real commitment. You have to care enough to get used to the conventions for interacting with your device through your stylus. For example, the stylus can send touch events to on-screen areas, but not to the Menu and Back buttons that reside just below the screen, in the phone chrome. Those only respond to finger-based touches.

Other factors: The Note II's 5.5-inch HD Super AMOLED 1,280 by 720 pixel screen is a joy to use for taking pictures with the 8 megapixel camera. You also can do burst shooting via the "Single Shot" camera mode by holding the shutter button down to take images at 6 frames per second, for a maximum of 20 shots. It also allows you to share photos, videos, songs, maps, Web pages, apps and contacts with other NFC-capable Samsung devices using S-Beam. It also ships with Google's Android 4.1.1 (Jelly Bean), a mobile operating system that equals or exceeds Apple's iOS in all but a few areas. Jelly Bean includes new features like Android Beam and Google Now, a push data service.

If the size and the stylus are pluses rather than minuses, Samsung's Galaxy Note II has a lot going for it. Now take a closer look at what else the device has to offer.

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