الثلاثاء، 25 أغسطس 2015

Samsung provides a simple solution for the S Pen insertion debacle

There’s this thing about the Galaxy Note 5 that has steadily been gaining steam online today, for some it’s a design flaw and for others it’s just something that has been blown way out of proportion. It was reported earlier today that if you were to insert the S Pen backwards into the Galaxy Note 5 and yank it free, which you would obviously do because you won’t carry around the device like that with the pointy end sticking out, this would end up damaging the mechanism that automatically detects whether the S Pen is attached or detached from the device.

Samsung was asked to comment on the matter and maybe provide a solution, and it has come up with a very simple solution. It provided the following statement to the BBC:

We highly recommend our Galaxy Note 5 users follow the instructions in the user guide to ensure they do not experience such an unexpected scenario caused by reinserting the S-Pen in the other way around.

Yes that’s precisely what the company is saying, read the user manual, it’s that thing you immediately chuck to the side the moment you unbox your new handset. The user manual does have a warning which clearly states that inserting the S Pen the wrong way can cause it to become stuck which will ultimately cause damage to the pen and the phone. From the looks of it Samsung doesn’t have any plans of fixing this at a hardware level, even when the case can be made that it’s more than possible for people who have read the user manual to insert the S Pen in the wrong way particularly when they’re preoccupied or just not paying attention to the matter at hand.

s-pen-insertion

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Galaxy Note 5 inboxing and unboxing video is a visual treat

Unboxing videos are very common on YouTube, countless channels basically do the same thing where they take their time to open the box, put the new device to the side and check all of the contents. There’s hardly anything new to these unboxing videos which is why Samsung’s “inboxing” videos caught everybody’s attention, the first was released earlier this year when the Galaxy S6 and the Galaxy S6 edge arrived. Instead of showing a box being unwrapped and its contents being put under a magnifying glass, Samsung started from the other way around by showing the new smartphone being assembled by hand. It has already published a beautifully shot inboxing video for the Galaxy S6 edge+ and now one for the Galaxy Note 5 has arrived.

The idea remains the same, a Samsung engineer approaches a table where all of the Galaxy Note 5 components are neatly laid out. The device is assembled by hand and then packaged in a box which gets unboxed in due course, there are plenty of crisp sound effects that make almost all of us love the unboxing experience. You get plenty of good shots of the Galaxy Note 5 so that it’s striking beauty can be truly admired, but I guess this will be a bit painful to watch for people who don’t live in select markets where the Galaxy Note 5 will be released.



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Gear S2 smartwatch final design is very pleasing to gawk at

The Galaxy S6 edge+ provides form factor excitement in a rather boring market

The Galaxy S6 edge+ is one of coolest smartphones on the market right now. It is something fresh, something new that we haven’t seen on the market in a long, long time. And it is a testimony to the Korean manufacturer’s ability to emerge with something exciting in a smartphone market that has really gone downhill and is nothing short of stagnant and boring, to say the least.

To see the current sad and unfortunate state of the market, take a look at some recent smartphone presentations (that shall remain nameless). For some odd reason (nothing short of odd), swappable back covers have become the new style preference of some tech enthusiasts and consumers, with many online discussions going something like this: “do you like the sandstone, Kevlar, or wood back best?” If sandstone and wood are not your swappable back cover options, there are the “childish” colors like some form of neon green, neon purple (light purple, even), and bright yellow (which is an atrocity for any smartphone to model off, no matter how good-looking).

Colors and build materials are all the rage in the smartphone market now. How many times have you seen a video or read a blog post that dominates 90% of a new smartphone announcement with, specs aside, a lengthy discussion about whether or not one build material looks better than another? It’s gotten to the point where I feel like smartphones have become nothing short of paperweights or luxury bricks that we discuss because these items “happen” to have tech specs and run Android.

I’m not a person who usually gets excited about hardware build quality, since, honesty first, most smartphones have the usual “brick” look with some back cover material and a front display. Most smartphones also come with front and back-facing cameras, speakers, USB port, and so on – so these components do not surprise me. In the hardware arena, though, good looks have become a top priority for premium smartphones, and Samsung’s Galaxy S6 edge+ meets that.

Swappable back covers and wood, sandstone, and Kevlar, along with childish colors gone amok, are all testimony to the fact that the smartphone manufacturers, who are to lead the way for the consumer market, have failed in their job. Manufacturers should consume their efforts with examining and creating new approaches to mobile gadgets, looking for ways to advance the devices we cradle in our hands. The goal of selling smartphones each year is to raise money that can be spent on research and development, known in the tech world as “R&D.” When manufacturers come out with new smartphones that stuff a few chips in them that meet industry standards (and don’t cost much), with the same “brick” form factor that has persisted over the last few years, it makes me wonder what they’re doing with the money consumers give them. Additionally, it makes me wonder why anyone should invest in them at all if this year’s phone looks like last year’s phone with a few new color options and no additional experience-enhancing software to boot.

And let’s reexamine the removable back: was Samsung not criticized for the same thing in the Galaxy S5? “It’s cheap and flimsy,” they say; yet and still, Motorola does it with the Moto X Style, and OnePlus does it with the OnePlus 2 (which has a removable back but not a removable battery) – and they call them masterpieces? It’s funny how Samsung is pounded for removable back covers, but Motorola and OnePlus are praised for them by consumers (although removable back covers are criticized by a great number of tech reviewers). As the old saying goes, “What’s good for the goose is good for the gander.” If Samsung’s back covers are cheap and laughable, then so are Motorola’s and OnePlus’s – even if you happen to like them better.

Samsung’s Korean rival, LG, has had its G4 smartphone praised for its 16MP camera with laser autofocus, OIS+, and f/1.8 camera aperture, but the company’s latest smartphone (with its brown leather back cover) looks hideous. Marques Brownlee has stood out for his claim that Samsung’s Galaxy S5 looks like “a giant Band-Aid,” but it’s got nothin’ on the LG G4: the brown leather-backed phone looks like a deflated basketball with a display and two cameras. I’ll let you figure that one out on your own.

Nowadays, when you want to look as if you’re innovating in the smartphone space, you need only create a swappable back cover with a few build materials and colors to convince everyone. If, hypothetically speaking, Samsung’s Galaxy S5 contained software “gimmickry” last year, and the Galaxy S4 the year before it, as some believe, the new “childish” colors and swappable back covers with Kevlar and sandstone are the “gimmickry” in the current market, placed under the titles of “customization” and “choice.”

While the current gimmicks are winning people left and right, with $389 and $399 price tags thrown in (or swappable covers with build materials as cheap excuses to hike phone prices), Samsung’s Galaxy S6 edge+ appeals to consumers who know what they want and who value what innovation is. Innovation is unique, distinct, separated from the batch. Anyone can add a few colors and build materials like wood, metal, Kevlar, and sandstone; however, not everyone can create a smartphone form factor that sets it apart. When it comes to Samsung, the Korean manufacturer isn’t your typical “sandstone, wood, and Kevlar back cover” manufacturer; its Galaxy S6 edge+ and edge predecessor, the Galaxy S6 edge, stand alone – in a market that has been boring for a long time.



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Samsung drops some ‘Galaxy Gifts’ for the Galaxy Note 5 and the Galaxy S6 edge+ owners

Samsung usually bundles paid content, apps, and premium service subscriptions for free as a part of its high-end smartphone package to sweeten the deal for its customers. Last year, the company bundled $575 worth freebies with the Galaxy S5, and earlier this year it bundled 22 premium apps and services with the Galaxy S6 and the Galaxy S6 edge.

After the official launch of the Galaxy Note 5 and the Galaxy S6 edge+, the company has listed all the premium content that will be offered for free to the owners of these new phablets. The list includes art apps like the ArtRage that will be useful for Galaxy Note 5 owners, The Economist and NY Times subscriptions for news junkies, and Hearthstone Heroes of Warcraft for gaming enthusiasts.

  1. Art Rage – For drawing and painting using advanced real-life like tools.
  2. Driver Speedboat Paradise – High-speed boat racing game.
  3. The Economist – A 6-month premium subscription that is valued at $64.
  4. Empire: Four Kingdoms – A strategy-based game with multiplayer option.
  5. The Guardian – A 6-month premium subscription that is valued at $24.
  6. Hearthstone Heroes of Warcraft – A strategy card game that is quite popular these days.
  7. Kindle for Samsung – One ebook free every month that is valued at $50.
  8. Komoot – Hiking and bicycling app with 3 regional bundles including topographic maps, real-time navigation and more.
  9. Lifesum – A 6-month Gold subscription of a Goal tracking app.
  10. NY Times – A 6-month subscription (3 months in the US and Canada).
  11. OneDrive - 100 GB of storage space for 2 years that is valued at $48.
  12. PES Club Manager – Comes with additional in-game value to spend.
  13. Scribd – A 3-month subscription to unlimited access that is valued at $27.
  14. SketchBook – Sketching app.
  15. TripAdvisor - 15% off on your total (up to $100) the next time you book a tour through TripAdvisor.

If you’ve pre-ordered or purchased either of these devices, be sure to check out these premium apps and services and make full use of them.

Source



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