Today, Samsung is announcing the next generation of their Galaxy-brand phablets, the Galaxy Note 5 and the Galaxy S6 edge+. Samsung’s phablets have been one of their greatest smartphone success stories, finding traction in a market when many thought there wouldn’t be a place for such a large phone. And while you will never see some competitors directly admit to it, products like the Note series have legitimized the phablet form factor and required that the competition catch up as well, making the phablet form factor as much of a home court for Samsung as there can be.

Starting with their 2014 models, Samsung introduced two different phablets, the Galaxy Note 4 and the simply titled Galaxy Note Edge. This year Samsung is retaining the dual phablet approach, however in the case of the Edge product Samsung has shifted gears on what they want to do. For 2015 Samsung seems to be going after a new audience in the form of the Galaxy S6 edge+, which is a more distinct derivative of the Note 5 platform with some greater feature changes than just a curved screen. To try and explain what I mean, I’ve included the specs below.

 

Galaxy S6 edge+

Galaxy Note 5

SoC Samsung LSI Exynos 7420
4xA57 @ 2.1GHz
4xA53 @ 1.5GHz
Samsung LSI Exynos 7420
4xA57 @ 2.1GHz
4xA53 @ 1.5GHz
GPU Mali T760MP8 @ 772MHz Mali T760MP8 @ 772MHz
RAM 4GB LPDDR4 4GB LPDDR4
NAND 32/64GB UFS 2.0 32/64/128GB UFS 2.0
Display 5.7-inch 2560x1440 SAMOLED
Dual edge display
5.7-inch 2560x1440 SAMOLED
Network 2G / 3G / 4G
UE Category 6/9 LTE
2G / 3G / 4G
UE Category 6/9 LTE
Dimensions 154.4 x 75.8 x 6.9 mm
153 grams
153.2 x 76.1 x 7.6 mm
171 grams
Camera 16MP rear camera,
1.12 µm pixels, 1/2.6" CMOS size,
F/1.9. OIS

5MP F/1.9 FFC
16MP rear camera,
1.12µm pixels, 1/2.6" CMOS size
F/1.9, OIS

5MP F/1.9 FFC
Battery 3000 mAh (11.55 Wh)
non-removable
3000 mAh (11.55 Wh)
non-removable
OS Android 5.1 with TouchWiz (At launch) Android 5.1 with TouchWiz (At launch)
Connectivity 2x2 802.11a/b/g/n/ac + BT 4.2, USB2.0, GPS/GNSS, NFC 2x2 802.11a/b/g/n/ac + BT 4.2, USB2.0, GPS/GNSS, NFC
SIM Size NanoSIM NanoSIM

As one can see, the Galaxy Note 5 and Galaxy S6 edge+ share a lot in common. They have the same SoC, same amount of DRAM, almost identical displays, the same cameras, fingerprint scanners, and the same battery. Ultimately what differs between the two devices is not the underlying hardware, but the functionality and form factor of the devices.

There are really two important differences between the two, namely the removal of the S-Pen and addition of the curved display to the Galaxy S6 edge+. The result is that while the Galaxy Note 5 is a traditional Note phablet, the Galaxy S6 edge+ is closer to a very large Galaxy S6 edge, and this is why these two closely related devices are placed in very different product lines. In some ways, I suspect that this will be a litmus test for the S-Pen functionality in general, as sales may prove Note functionality has a relatively small effect on the desirability of a phablet.


Galaxy Note 5


Galaxy S6 edge+

Design

Moving past the distinction between the two models, the Galaxy Note 5 and Galaxy S6 edge+ share very similar industrial and material design. The bezel surrounding the display and the back cover both continue to use the highly reflective patterning that we first saw with the Galaxy S6, and in the case of the Galaxy Note 5 the bezel surrounding the display has become even thinner than before. Like the Galaxy S6 edge, the plus variant has bezels that are effectively equivalent to the Galaxy Note 5 as the angle reduces the effective size of the technically larger bezel.

With the Galaxy S6, there was a noticeable distinction between the normal version and the edge variant when it came to in-hand feel as the standard version was significantly thicker on the left and right sides of the phone. With the Galaxy Note 5, this difference is lessened, but the difference in in-hand comfort definitely remains. The big driver for this is the use of 3D glass on the back cover of the Galaxy Note 5, which allows for a more ergonomic design in the hand. I can’t help but compare this to the first phablet that I’ve seen with a 3D glass back cover, namely the Xiaomi Mi Note line, which feels remarkably similar. At any rate, the Note 5 seems to remain more ergonomic than the edge variant, which has a flat back but a curved display.

S-Pen

One of the major updates changes to the Galaxy Note 5 is improvements on the S-Pen, which has a number of new changes to the design and software functionality. On the hardware side, the pen itself now has a changed mechanism that has a push button top that allows the pen to be completely flush inside the phone when not in use, but easily ejected by pushing on the top of the pen to make it protrude. The digitizer also has dramatically reduced latency. In my experience, this helps a lot with making writing more natural on the Note 5 as I don’t hesitate as much while waiting for the input to catch up.

On the software side, Samsung has added a host of notable additions to extend the functionality of the S-Pen, namely PDF annotation, an Air command floating button, customizable shortcuts, and scroll capture. PDF annotation sounds exactly like what you might expect, which is the ability to write directly on a PDF and save the results. This has obvious utility in cases like signing documents, as the user experience involved in digitally signing a document is horrific and usually goes something like printing out a PDF, signing the PDF, and scanning the signed document. In the case of the Note 5, signing a document is pretty much as easy as opening the PDF with the right application, writing a signature with the S-Pen, and saving the changes.

Meanwhile the Air command floating button and customizable shortcuts are somewhat more mundane. The floating button just allows for one-tap access to what was previously hidden behind the button press of the pen, and customizable shortcuts in the Air command menu is useful but not exactly life-changing.

Scroll capture is also arguably a “minor” feature, but I would argue that its value is significant when it comes to improving the user experience of the phone. In short, this screenshot mode makes it possible to screenshot a long list in an entire screenshot, so something like Google Maps directions can be taken as a single scrollable screenshot rather than 2-20 screenshots that might have overlapping information and potentially missing information from the ListView. However, as far as I can tell this capture mode is strangely hidden behind S-Pen functionality when it really should be integrated into the existing screenshot capture gestures that programmatically determines whether to present this scroll capture mode.

Camera

Although the camera configuration is unchanged from the Galaxy S6 with an IMX240 or S5K2P2 camera sensor, f/1.9 optics and a 5MP FFC, there are some new and interesting features present in the camera application. One notable additional is improved pro mode, with extended ISO range down to 50 ISO and the addition of a shutter speed toggle for long exposures. However, manual white balance remains unchanged as far as I can tell with only a few presets rather than fine-grained color temperature adjustments. I was unable to get a RAW sample from the device, but it will be interesting to see if Samsung has properly implemented sensor and lens corrections into the RAW files.

Software, Samsung Pay, and Accessories
Comments Locked

218 Comments

View All Comments

  • nascentian - Monday, August 17, 2015 - link

    Apple is a singular noun, don't is a plural verb, so instead it should say doesn't, not don't. Did you fail English or something?
  • tenoutoften - Tuesday, August 18, 2015 - link

    And you're a twat, which is a noun.
  • Gigaplex - Thursday, August 13, 2015 - link

    If MicroSD is a niche, then what does the magstrip payment emulation qualify as?
  • halcyon - Friday, August 14, 2015 - link

    Beg to differ.

    There is clearly room enough in the whole worldwide market for at least 1 power-user business phone, that just lasts forever (i.e. big, user-swappable battery) and with tons of storage options.

    Ever have to fly transcontinental? Ever in bad reception? Debugging clients stuff? Need all the files, but 1yr + attachments worth of email storage. Lots of docs, video and your own music collection (and I have a PDF fully content indexed databse)?

    There are millions of users in the world like this. Others just want to have LOTS of storage.

    And no, cloud doesn't cut it (I've described why).

    People use their phones constantly in offices, near a charger, in constant 4G/LTE-A reception with maybe 2 weeks of mails and a few podcasts and 30+ apps have no concept of what a power user is, what the use scenarios are and what they need.

    There is a big enough and well-paying (take my money, please) segment like this in the world and they don't ask questions about the price, if you give them the features.

    Samsung didn't with Note 5 and they will lose most of this segment really fast.

    There's a great opening now for the fast Chinese makes, like Xiaomi and others to move into this space and own it. The profits in this segment are to die for (Apple level)....
  • tenoutoften - Friday, August 14, 2015 - link

    I get your points, I just honestly don't think the removal of an SD card slot and removable battery is going to drastically affect Samsung's sales of the Note or S6 in any variant.
  • FozzyofAus - Saturday, August 15, 2015 - link

    Time will tell on sales.

    I think what people here are trying to get you to understand is that the market segment buying the Galaxy Note series is very different from those buying the Galaxy S series.

    Speaking for myself personally, I have had exactly ZERO interest in any of the S series models (S2 through S6+). I bought the Note2 for the stylus, large display and LTE (with removable storage and MicroSD being nice to haves). When I went to upgrade (nearly went Note3 12 months after release but switched to Note4 for GearVR support) I found that the stylus and MicroSD were now essentials.

    I showed my Note2 to our CEO and he bought the Note2 on company money (despite iPhones being our corporate standard) within a month, when it broke he bought the Note3 (money no object he can any phone he wants). He has a MicroSD in his as well.

    As I said the sales figures will be interesting, but lots of Note buyers WANT those two features.
  • NetMage - Sunday, August 16, 2015 - link

    And you base "lots" on what evidence?
  • FozzyofAus - Sunday, August 16, 2015 - link

    You'll appreciate i hope that "lots" is not a percentage as I obviously haven't done any formal polling. As I said above in another quarter we'll see the sales figures and then we'll know.

    But there's no shortage of discussions on this, so it's definitely a concern to "many" (if you prefer that deliberately vague term better).
    http://phandroid.com/2015/08/13/samsung-galaxy-not...
    http://forum.xda-developers.com/note-4-verizon/gen...
    http://www.androidcentral.com/numbers-galaxy-note-...

    Samsung's share price would seem to indicate Shareholders aren't excited either, peaked mid march and down 24% since!!!
    https://au.finance.yahoo.com/echarts?s=005930.KS
  • Medtxa - Thursday, August 20, 2015 - link

    Well obviously. Most people prefer apple. If people doesnt realize it yet samsung want to embrace more on mainstream consumer which they doesnt care much about the lack of some features namely microsd and battery. Obviously people who are ready to leave samsung just for that doesnt realize that they would miss some of samsung top notch and most advance hardware. I am sure even the true geeky would ready to sacrifice micro sd for that super amoled or exynos chips or the excelent build and design.
  • The Rogue Tomato - Sunday, August 16, 2015 - link

    "There is clearly room enough in the whole worldwide market for at least 1 power-user business phone, that just lasts forever (i.e. big, user-swappable battery) and with tons of storage options."

    Carrying around your entire music library in FLAC format doesn't sound like a power-user business case to me.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now