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Galaxy Note 10.1 - The Pen Sets This Tablet Apart

11/24/2012 2:57:07 PM

THOUGH THE Wi-Fi only 10.1-inch Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 has some rough edges, it’s a solid performer with wide appeal. Carrying a quad-core Samsung Exynos processor and 2GB of system RAM, the tablet comes in 16GB ($500) and 32GB ($550) versions, expandable up to 64GB via a MicroSD card.

Description: Description: Description: Description: Galaxy Note 10.1: The Pen Sets This Tablet Apart

Galaxy Note 10.1: The Pen Sets This Tablet Apart

Design

Measuring 10.3 by 7.1 by 0.35 inches, the tablet weighs 1.31 pounds – noticeably less than the third-generation Apple iPad (1.44 pounds).

It’s best held horizontally in two hands, with the front-facing 1.9-megapixel camera at the top and the stereo speakers on either side. I tended to keep my hands toward the bottom edges so my fingers didn’t obstruct the speakers. When I held the tablet vertically, the audio sounded a bit skewed.

A slot in the tablet houses the included S Pen. Based on Wacom pressure-sensitive technology, the S Pen is highly responsive, with little lad and with integrated palm rejection – a useful feature that capacitive-touch styluses can’t provide.

The Note 10.1 ships with Android 4.0.4 Ice Cream Sandwich; Samsung says Android 4.1 Jelly Bean will come by year-end. Like other Samsung devices, this tablet is not for Android purists. Most of the TouchWiz modifications make for a friendlier experience, though having multiple paths to accomplish the same task can be confusing.

Another annoyance involves the power settings. Samsung is aggressive in automatically dimming the display when the battery falls to 5 percent remaining. You can’t adjust the brightness back to normal; and the reduced brightness is so low that the murky image is practically useless, making the value of the extra 30 minutes of battery life that you get highly dubious.

Performance

Description: Description: Description: Description: Performance

Battery life was middling, holding out for 8 hours, 24 minutes during video playback at a brightness setting of 200 candelas

The tablet excelled in our lab tests, setting new bests for graphics performance among Android tablets, and for Web browsing across all tablets.

Battery life was middling, holding out for 8 hours, 24 minutes during video playback at a brightness setting of 200 candelas.

The display’s resolution is just 1280 by 800 pixels. Samsung has done something behind the scenes, however, the boost sharpness and color are dramatically better than on the 10.1-inch Galaxy Tab2, and the sharpness and detail of my high-resolution images in the Google Gallery came close to matching what a high-pixel-density display would produce. Text clarity was better than on the abysmal Galaxy Tab 2 as well.

Samsung bundles many apps of its own creation, such as S Note for note taking, sketching, writing formulas, and performing handwriting to text conversions with the S Pen. Also among the tablet’s preloaded apps is Adobe’s Photoshop Touch, a $10 value that works well with S Pen input. Regrettably, the overall selection of S Pen apps was paltry at this writing, and many of the ones available were optimized for phone screens. Perhaps Samsung will encourage more developers to support the S Pen; only then will the device achieve its potential.

Bottom line

The Galaxy Note 10.1’s lack of a high-pixel-density display is unfortunate. But its performance is solid and when you factor in the handy S Pen and its optimized software, this tablet enjoys an edge all its own.

Details

Ratings: 4/5

Price: $500 (16GB), $550 (32GB)

 

 

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