Samsung Galaxy Note 7
Specs
PROS
·
Glorious screen
·
Best camera on any phone
·
S-Pen is fun
·
Water-resistant
·
Excellent battery
life
|
CONS
·
Software still a bit
ugly
·
Pointless iris
scanner
|
KEY
FEATURES
· 5.7-inch quad-HD Super AMOLED display · USB-C
· Octa-core CPU
· Fast and wireless charging
· 4GB RAM · 3,500mAh battery
· 64GB storage + microSD slot · IP68 water resistance
· S Pen stylus
· 12MP camera, f1.7 aperture
· Android 6.0.1
· 153.5 x 73.9 x 7.9mm, 169g
· Fingerprint and Iris scanner · Manufacturer: Samsung
|
WHAT IS THE SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 7?
Big phones
weren’t big until the original Samsung Galaxy Note came along. Its radical
resizing of the smartphone was bonkers to some, but a revelation to others.
The phablet
was born, people criticised it, but now every manufacturer makes one – even
Apple with its iPhone 6S Plus and upcoming iPhone 7 Plus.
The Samsung
Galaxy Note 7 proves that Samsung still makes big phones properly, rather than
just stretching a smaller phone to a bigger size.
It’s got
stiff competition from the HTC 10, incoming Nexus devices and
the Galaxy S7 Edge, but the Note 7 is the one to beat – even if its price
can only be described as eye-watering.
SAMSUNG GALAXY
NOTE 7 – DESIGN AND BUILD
While the Samsung
Galaxy Note 7 might look like a minor tweaking of the design formula started
with the Galaxy Note 5 and improved with the Galaxy S7 earlier in 2016, it’s
actually a big signal of intent.
For the first time, Samsung has released a phone with
only the option of a dual-curved-edge screen. This isn’t like the Galaxy S6 and
S6 Edge, nor the Note 5 and Galaxy S6 Edge Plus. Samsung is giving you one
curvaceous option and saying that the curved-edge ‘experiment’ is now complete.
This is the path the Korean company wants to take.
I wouldn’t
be surprised if next year’s Samsung Galaxy S8 takes a similar
approach and ditches the flat version, going curvy all the way.
The Galaxy
Note 7 is the pinnacle of Samsung’s design and is the culmination of everything
the company's learned since ditching faux-leather and plastic disguised as
metal.
The curved
display is the headline trait, but even that’s come a long way since it was
first used on the ill-fated Galaxy Note Edge. It’s even been improved over the
one on the Galaxy S7 Edge, as the curve is less obvious and, well, less curvy.
It juts down at a steeper angle and takes less screen real estate away, but
it’s just as eye-catching as ever.
Following
the curve on the front is a similar roundedness to the back, which was a small
design alteration introduced on the Galaxy Note 5. The biggest achievement
here is just how comfortable the phone feels, considering it has a 5.7-inch
screen. It’s smaller in every dimension than both the iPhone 6S Plus and
Huawei Nexus 6P, making it easier to hold and use than both of those
phones.
This is
huge, because finally you get all the benefits of the big screen without
worrying about juggling it in your hands.
The Note
series has always been marketed as more of a ‘business’ device, and while this
is just marketing speak that isn’t really relevant, it feeds into the design.
The Note 7 is more straight and boxy than the rounded Galaxy S7 brothers,
which are a little more fun to look at.
It’s still completely formed from metal
and glass, and stands out as being the best-looking phone you can buy right
now. It’s more ergonomic than the HTC 10, less boring than the iPhone 6S and
not as sharp as the Nexus 6P. It's also water-resistant enough to be dunked in
the bath for about 30 minutes.
Another ‘first’ for the Samsung Galaxy
Note 7 is Gorilla Glass 5. This glass not only covers the front, but the back
too, and it should protect the phone if you happen to drop it – which no doubt
you will at some point. I’ve been vocal in the past about how my biggest
annoyance with these flagship phones is their delicate nature.
I’ve dropped my Galaxy S7 Edge from about
2ft onto a wooden floor and it caused a snaking crack down the back, while a
colleague dropped one from a similar height onto concrete and destroyed the
whole front.
Thankfully, and I’m sure the Samsung PR
folk will be happy to hear this, I haven’t dropped the Note 7. Yet. So I can’t
really say if Gorilla Glass 5 is a whole heap better than 4, but I’ll
definitely update this review once I've used it for a few months (and probably
dropped it).
SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 7 – DISPLAY
Its size was once the story with the Note
series. Its size set it apart. It was huge, unmanageable, basically a tablet.
How big was the display on the original Note? It was 5.3 inches. That’s now
considered small.
And while the Note’s display has grown to
5.7 inches, it’s no longer the differentiator. Other phones, such as the Nexus
6P, are the same size, and while the iPhone 6S Plus has a smaller display, it
has a bigger footprint.
But even though it may not stand out for
its size, the Note 7 does so because of its quality – something arguably much
more important.
Like all of Samsung’s flagships, and even some of its
cheaper phones like the Galaxy J3, the starting point is the Super AMOLED
panel. It might not have the viewing angles you get with an IPS LCD, but the
oomph and joyous colours more than make up for that. Samsung’s honed this
display technology over time and it’s now the best it's ever been.
Colours are strong and vibrant, blacks are
dark and there’s no muddiness in the whites. It’s a joy to look at, and its
brightness means it’s perfectly viewable even in direct sunlight. This is the
brightest phone screen I've ever used, and it’s mightily impressive. There are
some minor reflections if you look very closely near the edge of the display,
but it doesn’t affect use.
Instead of upping the resolution to 4K –
something that was heavily rumoured – Samsung has kept it at quad-HD. With a
pixel density of 518ppi, individual pixels are impossible to spot, even if you
get really close.
While it hasn’t added 4K, it has added HDR
(high dynamic range). Well, Samsung calls it 'Mobile HDR', but it works in a
similar way to how it functions on an HDR-compatible television. It’s a display
tech that improves contrast while retaining extra detail in the brightest and
darkest areas of the picture. Many in the TrustedReviews office will tell you that HDR is more
important than 4K. It’s a big deal.
Most HDR content comes from a service, such as Amazon
Video or Netflix, piped through a dedicated box or supported television. The
new Xbox One S, for example, can play both HDR content and games if you’ve
got the right television to display them
It works a bit differently on the Note 7,
though. Along with streaming actual HDR content, there’s a mode that bursts
into life when a supported app is opened. Start up Netflix, YouTube, Amazon
Prime or the dedicated video app and a ‘Video enhancer mode’ will kick in. This
simulates the idea of HDR, boosting the brightness and fiddling about with the
contrast settings.
It does make a very visible difference,
but at times It can be a little jarring. The move from a typical phone screen
to one that feels like it’s trying to sear your retinas is odd, but the results
are great.
I do feel this would work better on a
tablet, as that’s meant to be used for media, whereas I rarely sit back and
watch anything other than YouTube on my phone. Still, it's typical of the Note
series to deliver something we haven’t seen before, perhaps as some sort of
trial. I wouldn’t be surprised if we see this tech trickle down to the Galaxy
S8, and hopefully the Samsung Galaxy TabPro S2.
Just like the Galaxy S7, the Note 7 has an ‘Always-on
display’. Even when the phone is locked, a clock and a row of notification
icons glow on the screen. The bonus with AMOLED tech is that it only needs to
light up individual pixels, so there’s not a huge drain on battery from this
feature. My biggest issue with the original way the AOD worked has been
resolved, as it’ll now display icons from every app rather than just Samsung’s
own.
It’s a nice, if unessential, feature that can be both
annoying and useful. But at least you can turn it off.
SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 7 – PERFORMANCE
The Galaxy
Note 7 has the same CPU and GPU as the six-month old Samsung Galaxy S7, but that's
no bad thing. The 4GB LPDDR4 RAM and Exynos 8890 CPU is a potent combination
that can handle intensive and day-to-day tasks with ease.
During
my synthetic benchmarks, the Note 7 scored a respectable 2,118 in the
single-core Geekbench 3 test and 5,924 in the multi-core version. That’s pretty
much on par with all the flagship phones I've reviewed this year. The Note's
129,729 score in Antutu 6 is also almost exactly the same as the Galaxy S7
Edge's. Its 2,139 3DMark Sling Shot score confirmed its solid graphics
performance.
Galaxy
phones of old were packed with high-end components, but still lagged due to
software issues. Luckily Samsung's fixed the problems on the Note 7. Apps open
instantly on the Note 7 and there’s no slow animations or janky scrolling.
There’s also 64GB of extremely speedy UFS
2.0 internal storage. Samsung isn't offering any other storage options, but
there’s a microSD card slot that can be used to add a further 256GB of space.
Past Samsung phone speakers have always been a little
disappointing, and this hasn't changed on the Note 7. The downward facing
speaker is loud and fine for YouTube, but it’s poor compared to the HTC 10.
Call quality is absolutely fantastic, with
the mics picking up clear audio and managing to block out any irritating
background noise. 4G/LTE signal, on both Three and EE's UK network, is also
strong and steady.
SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 7 – S PEN AND IRIS SCANNER
Steve Jobs famously said that ‘if you see
a stylus, they blew it’, but Samsung has long marketed Note phones' S Pens as a
key selling point.
I must admit, even though I have used every iteration
of the Galaxy Note line I haven’t found myself itching for a stylus once I
switched to another phone. I have no qualms saying that the S-Pen in the Galaxy
Note 7 is the best one yet. But has it converted me?
In some ways, yes. There are certain tweaks and
software enhancements that make the S Pen more than just a writing tool. GIF
creation, for one, is intuitive and fun. Start a YouTube video playing, pop out
the pen and you can create up to a 15-second GIF. It works as advertised, but
it’s the easiness that makes it great.
I’ve also fallen slightly in love with the
translation mode, even though I don’t think it works very well. The idea here
is that you bring up a picture of a menu completely written in French, drag the
S-Pen across specific words and it’ll translate them in real time. It’s quick
and intuitive, but not always accurate.
It managed to translate some very basic
words and knew ‘pain’ was bread, but it couldn’t work out ‘oignons’ meant
onions. At this stage it’s unreliable, but could be great if Samsung spends a
little time fixing it.
The S Pen's increased 4,096 levels of pressure sensitivity
makes it the most precise S Pen yet. The figure puts the Note 7's S Pen on par
with the Surface Pro 4's Surface Pen and over twice as sensitive as the
Note 5's stylus. This makes drawing and writing much smoother and the change is
instantly noticeable on the Note 7.
Watercolours blend into each other,
pencils shade and pens are pin sharp. I’m no Picasso, but I could still get
some averagely drawn stickmen out without much trouble.
Note taking is also better’, but the Note 7's screen
is still a bit small for me personally. That’s probably because I have been
using the iPad Pro for so long. Either way,I love how you can pop out the
pen and write on the blank screen, sliding it back inside to save the memo.
Samsung has tidied up its software on the Note 7,
combining all its S Pen related apps into ‘Samsung Notes’. It’s very similar to
Apple’s Notes app, with drawing, painting and text all bound together in one
spot. It looks good, has a simple UI and offers a nice range of pens, effects
and brushes.
I haven’t really spoke much about the stylus itself,
because there isn’t much to say. It’s thin sliver of plastic, with an addictive
clicky top and a single button halfway down. It satisfyingly slots in and out
of the phone and as usual doesn’t need to be charged or paired. It’s small, but
still feels big enough to write comfortably.
I'm less impressed with the Note 7's iris scanner. The
iris scanner backs up the Note 7's fingerprint sensor and aims beef up the
phone's security.
Setting it up is easy – it’s quicker than adding a
fingerprint – but in real life use it’s little more than a James Bond-esque
addition that sounds way cooler than it is. The scanner is finicky to use as
you have to have it level with your retinas to get it going and then swipe up
on the lockscreen. This makes it a much slower overall process than the
fingerprint scanner.
SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 7 – SOFTWARE
Samsung’s approach to software has always
been strange. The company has traditionally taken a very heavy approach
skinning Android. The end result is a unique looking user interface that's
radically different to stock Android.
The UI on Note 7, which runs atop Android 6.0.1, is
the sleekest and starkest version Samsung has ever made. It’s whiter, with
pastel shades and less in your face colours. But, it’s still recognisably
Samsung software and looks nothing like Marshmallow on a Nexus 6P. Samsung
pushes you towards its own apps, its own services (it still has its own app
store and cloud backup) and Google’s versions are hidden away in a folder.
To give Samsung credit, the software is so
much better than it was even two years ago, but I still prefer Google’s
alternatives for browsing the web, email and so on.
There are a couple of Samsung software
tweaks that I really like, though. Split Window – having two apps side by side
– might be coming to Android in Nougat but Samsung has been doing it for years
and manages to make it work without any sort of slow-down or dodgy behaviour.
A new Blue light filter mode reduces blue hues and
turns the screen orange, making it better for late-night reading. Like Apple’s
Night Shift, it can be scheduled so it kicks in at the same time every night.
Instead of having Google Now on the leftmost
homescreen window, there’s Upday. This is a basic news aggregator that works in
a similar way to Flipboard, pulling in the latest articles from your favoured
topics. The feature is a little hit and miss with its recommendations, during
my time with the Note 7 it seemed to think I love celebrity gossip, but I
generally found it useful nonetheless.
A particularly nifty
software feature is the Secure Folder. This is far more than just a folder
that’s locked away behind a passcode, as it actually acts as a separate OS.
Throw the Twitter app in there and it’ll be a clean install, letting you add a completely new account. It’s backed up by Samsung’s Knox software and can be secured by a fingerprint, iris, password or passcode. I can see this being useful to not only hide your secret second personality on Twitter, but to also, ahem, conceal those pictures you don’t want to accidentally scroll through in a business meeting.
The big question though is when will the
Note 7 will get Android 7.0 Nougat? Well, Samsung says ‘soon’. Hopefully that
means before 2016 ends, but I won’t be holding my breath.
One major negative I still hold against Samsung’s
phones is that they don't yet have an Apple Pay rival set-up and available in
the UK. Samsung Pay has been around for ages in the USA, South Korea
and a smattering of European countries but it still hasn’t hit the UK. I’ve
been repeatedly told it’s coming soon, but until then at least there’s Android
Pay.
To make those ‘Edges’ – the curved portion
of the display – seem more than just something to lust over, Samsung has Edge
apps that aim to put the curves to use.
Developers can build
extensions for the Edge, but there hasn’t been a whole load of them introduced
since the launch of the Galaxy S7. Yahoo, for instance, made one for quickly
swiping in and checking the news. It’s more of a novelty than something you’ll
actually use everyday, but it’s nice to see Samsung is at least trying to do
something different here.
SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 7 – CAMERA
Another part
plucked straight from the Galaxy S7 is the 12-megapixel rear
camera. This is far from a bad thing, though
I’ll happily
say this set-up is the best on the market and easily outmuscles the cameras on
the iPhone 6S Plus, Huawei P9 and HTC 10.
It’s got
everything you want in a smartphone camera – it’s super-fast to open, simple to
operate and has a wide f/1.7 aperture for better low-light performance. There’s optical image stabilisation
too, for keeping everything steady.
Like HTC and Huawei, Samsung lowered the amount of
megapixels in the its phone cameras and instead went for bigger pixels that
theoretically let in more light. In the Note 7, they’re known as dual pixels
and they work great. The Note 7 is one of the best phones for low-light snaps.
The camera setup reduces blur and brings out more colours than Huawei’s P9,
which has an extra bespoke sensor to take better night photos.
These also help the auto-focus work fantastically
well. The sensor has two ‘photobodies’ instead of one and this means the camera
can focus much quicker, and more accurately than before.
The camera app is also excellent. Too many phones have
fallen by the wayside because of their awful, unintuitive camera apps, but
Samsung avoids this. Double-tapping the home button takes you straight into
shooting mode and then it’s a case of swiping to the left for manual options
and to the right for live filters. A ‘Pro’ mode lets you alter the focus
points, ISO, white balance and so on while the ‘Live Broadcast’ option lets you
beam videos straight to YouTube.
Pictures look absolutely fantastic. They’re packed
full of detail, colours are vibrant yet accurate and you can get lovely blurry
background when taking macro shots. Results are almost indistinguishable from
Galaxy S7, but I have noticed there’s a little more exposure on the Note 7 that
leads to less pop, but more realism.
The auto-HDR mode has developed into something I keep
on all the time, because its reliability has increased with every release. It
manages to keep all the colours accurate, but give great contrast and better
black-levels than the regular shooting mode. The mode is turned on by default,
which shows just how confident Samsung is about it.
The wide aperture, OIS and larger pixels all combine
to create great low-light, night time shots. Noise is kept to a minimum and
photos don’t look over processed.
If you’re used to the Galaxy S7 there
isn’t much different here and you won’t be blown away again, but if you’re
coming from another older phone the camera will feel like an incremental
improvement.
UHD (that’s 4K) video recording is an option too, but
picking this higher resolution does restrict your use of some of the cooler
video features. If you go for 1080p there’s HDR, video effects and tracking
auto-focus that makes a real difference for quick moving footage.
It I had one complaint, it would be front-facing
5-megapixel selfie camera. It’s fine, but nowhere near as memorable as its
rear-facing brother. It struggles with faces and smooths out details, giving
the impression you're wearing heavy make-up. If you’re all about the selfies,
the HTC 10 is a better overall pick. Still, for the odd Snapchat this is
fine.
SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 7 – BATTERY
The 3,500 mAh – still non-removable –
cell tucked inside the Samsung Galaxy Note 7 has impressive stamina, but it’s
not going to redefine how long a smartphone can last for. The Galaxy S7
Edge has a 100 mAh bigger battery, but I didn't see any discernible
differences between the stamina of the two phones.
I can comfortably go from morning to
bedtime with 25% of the Note 7's charge left. From there, if I leave it
unplugged overnight I can get to between 2-3pm without reaching for the
charger.
An hour of Netflix streaming eats through 8-9%
(depending if you have the HDR video enhancer mode off or on) while a basic 2D
game takes off 7%. Something more intensive, in this case Asphalt 8, takes off
10%. These scores are all comparable with other similarly sized phones.
Thankfully, there’s Fast Charging on board – both
wired and wireless – and this is the first Samsung phone to utilise USB-C,
which was a surprising omission from the Galaxy S7.
Samsung has included a handy Micro USB to USB-C
converter in the box, so you can use your old cables. That’s a nice touch, and
makes the switch to the new reversible port a little easier to handle.
Fast charging is one of my favourite features on any
phone and I think I would struggle without it. This sounds like a ridiculous
first-world problem, but fast charging makes a huge difference.
Fully charging the phone with the included block and
cable takes 92 minutes. Using a charger that doesn’t support Quick Charge 2
takes twice as long. It’s a similar story with wireless chargers. Samsung’s own
Fast Wireless Charging juiced the Note 7 from 0-100% in about 110 minutes, but
it took nearly four hours on a standard Qi plate.
SHOULD I BUY THE
SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 7?
I started
this review saying the Samsung Galaxy Note 7 wasn’t for everyone, and it really
isn’t. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t a truly fantastically complete
phone. Galaxy S7 aside, there aren’t any other phones (iPhones very
much included) that are this close to perfection.
The screen
is sublime, the camera makes me want to go out and take pictures and the
engineering that must have gone in make a phone with a 5.7-inch display this
good to hold is beyond impressive.
But I'd
expect a phone this price to be great. Whether you pony up the gigantic
SIM-free price or pay monthly, this is one of the priciest phones on the
market. If you’re not going to take advantage of the S Pen, then you’re
probably better off with the Galaxy S7 Edge. You could also buy two OnePlus
3’s for the price of a single Note S7.
VERDICT
Fantastic in pretty much every way, but all that tech
comes at a steep price.
SCORES IN DETAIL
- Battery Life9
- Calls & Sound7
- Camera10
- Design10
- Performance9
- Software8
- Value7
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