MOBILE

T-Mobile’s Samsung Galaxy Note II Review (Part 4)

7/2/2013 11:19:33 AM

S Pen

On the source Galaxy Note, the pen is of course stronger than the finger. While we cannot firmly state, the first “phablet” might haven’t succeeded without the help of S Pen, the “don’t call it a stylus” stylus took full advantage of Note’s Wacom digitizer. Samsung brought everything up to a new step with the next model, by adding a new Wacom plate with greater pressure sensitivity and a stylus having much more functionality.

S Pen

S Pen

The new S Pen is longer, wider (8mm) and it is flat at the button side, making you feeling like holding an old-styled pencil – a feature that many traditional artist will prefer to the first pen. It also offers a bigger rubber-made head, bringing a similar feeling to you casual writing tool. The additional levels of pressure sensitivity (1,024, in comparison with 256) offer a more accurate drawing experience and even allows for greater change in how light or dark your stroke turns out without the need of switching brushes every other second.

The new S Pen is longer, wider (8mm) and it is flat at the button side

The new S Pen is longer, wider (8mm) and it is flat at the button side

Let’s discuss what S Pen can do on the new Note. The most important feature for the latest phablet is hovering. It will get acquainted with anyone having used Wacom or Bamboo Pad for years. The phone can detect when the pen is on it, and it will display this by listing a cursor right in the place where the pen is hovering. It opens possibilities, most of which is relevant to Note II’s Air View. You can scroll up/down through lists or websites when you hover the pen over the screen’s top or bottom; you can point it into inbox or schedule and a pop-up box will provide more details about that special email or the list of date you have in a specific day; hovering over an icon you have never seen and a small box (tool tip) appears showing you what to do with that button; and you can point the pen into a thumbnail of image or video and its larger version will turn up. (By the way, Note II’s preview mode lists GIF-like thumbnails for your entire collection).

You can also you S Pen, while hovering, to access many features. For instance, you are drawing in S Note app, a quick-pressing will switch between brushes, pencils and erasers, while long-pressing brings out Idea Sketch. In this feature, you will write down a name of a special category (or just browse through the list) and an amount of potential illustrations will appear for you to choose. When you finish choosing the proper one, it will be shown in S Note where you can adjust the size and style of the draft – then you can find inspiration from it, redraw for your own purpose or just add color into strokes.

There’re many things you can do with it when the pen is touching the screen

There’re many things you can do with it when the pen is touching the screen

Speaking of button, there’re many things you can do with it when the pen is touching the screen. Press and hold to create an adjustable screenshot (quite useful for map, website and other things you want to add notes or drafts before sending to colleagues). You can also press and double-tap the screen to bring out Popup Note, or you can add a specific part of the screen by pressing and rotating around the area you want. Besides, you may hold the button while gesture-drawing: up button shows the menu, left button mimics the phone’s back button and skimming the pen over the screen shows Quick Command. As mentioned before, the most difficult task is mastering long list of various gestures and commands that S Pen can create.

Quick Command is another useful feature. A familiar handwriting box turns up, asking you to write a command symbol followed by a keyword. For example, write "@ Jill" to send an email to Jill; "? [search term]" to carry out a web search; "# Robert" to tell the phone to call Robert... This function is nice, viewed from easy accessibility, but we encountered difficulty finding a good reason to use it over S Voice, Google voice search or even our own shortcuts. However, that doesn't mean it's completely useless, in fact, but contrary. The benefit of this feature is the ability to add user’s own customized gestures, which turns Quick Command into Samsung’s own versions of Smart Actions or Tasker. For example, program the phone to turn on Blocking Mode and Wi-Fi while turning off GPS and Bluetooth concurrently -- by drawing a letter, number or symbol that you choose.

Quick Command is another useful feature

Quick Command is another useful feature

In another distinctive addition to the S Pen experience, the Note II is able to sense when the stylus has been taken out of its place. It realizes your intent of using the pen, and automatically executes a special home page featuring several S Pen friendly options. You can also make the phone activate Popup Note when the pen leaves the place, if desire. Above all, you can tell the device to sound a notification whenever it senses that the pen has been too far away from its home.

Before moving on to the next section, we'll say that the S Pen on T-Mobile's Note II is identical to the global version, and you won't see any difference in functionality or the way it interacts with the digitizer. We think the story will be for the other US models, but we'll update our review after those models arrive at our homes.

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