OUR EARLY
VERDICT
The Samsung Galaxy Note is almost dull in its
predictability – it's a hugely powerful phone that's great for multi-taskers,
has a mind-blowing screen and an improved dual camera, and costs an absolute
fortune.
FOR
- So much power
- Strong camera
- Beautiful screen
AGAINST
- SO expensive
- Easily-smudged rear
·
Let’s get this out the way now: if the Samsung Galaxy Note 7
hadn’t been so prone to explosions the Note 8 would have been a slam dunk of a
phone, so impressive is this new handset at first sight.
·
Well, it very much still is – there’s very little wrong with the
Note 8 if you’re a fan of the phablet – but the spectre of last year's debacle
is still hanging over its shiny body.
·
As with the Galaxy S8, Samsung has promised that its rigorous
battery checks will prevent such incendiary incidents from happening again –
and that’s clearly the case with the Note 8 too.
·
As such, you can disregard the issues from last year if you go
for this new and powerful handset from Samsung... apart from the inevitable
questions / mocking you’ll have to put up with when you pull it out for the
first time.
·
As mentioned, you’ll have to be a fan of Samsung’s phablets
specifically to be drawn towards the Note 8 over the Galaxy S8 Plus, for
instance, because despite having more power and a larger and sharper screen
than anything Samsung has launched before, it's got a smaller battery than the
S8 Plus and is more expensive too.
Samsung Galaxy Note 8 release date and price
The
Samsung Galaxy Note 8 is available to pre-order on August 23 in the UK,
Thursday, August 24 in the US and Friday, August 27 in Australia. It’ll be in
US stores on Friday, September 15, in Australia on September 22, and around
those key across other key territories, such as the UK.
In
terms of price – get ready for a very expensive
phone. In the UK it’s going to be £869 SIM-free, and Note 8 deals will start at around £60 per month if you
want a free phone – very much at the pricey end of the scale.
In
the US, it costs $930 for a Note 8 unlocked through Samsung, while carrier like
Verizon are charging a hefty $40 a month. T-Mobile is only charging $30 a
month... with a $210 downpayment. Luckily, there will be Note 8 deals in the US.
You
can order the Note 8 in the US through Samsung, AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile and
Sprint as well as smaller carriers like C Spire, Cricket Wireless, Straight
Talk, US Cellular and Xfinity Mobile. Best Buy, Walmart and Target will also
carry it.
In
Australia, the Note 8 is easily the most expensive Galaxy phone to date, with
an RRP of AU$1,499 — that's a good $150 dearer than even the Galaxy S8 Plus,
which sells for AU$1,349.
The
good news is that pretty much every major Australian telco is carrying the
device, with the cheapest plans starting at around $80 per month on a 24-month
contract. If you're looking to pick up the handset down under, our Aussie deals
team has a round-up of the best Australian Note 8 plans on offer.
More screen than ever before
The
big thing about the '8' series of Samsung phones is the Infinity Display, which
is Samsung's name for the edge-to-edge, bezel-less display that adorns the
front of the handset.
And
the Galaxy Note 8 has the biggest version of this display yet seen, with a
6.3-inch QHD+ offering that just looks sublime. You're really just picking up a
screen with the phone attached somewhere on the back.
The
quality of the screen hasn't been updated a huge amount from the Galaxy S8 and
S8 Plus – it's still the same Super AMOLED technology with HDR support baked
in, but that's no issue, as we consider Samsung to be making the best phone
displays in the world right now.
It's
brighter and more colorful than anything we've seen before - although we're
awaiting the lab tests to confirm this - making it the best phone to watch
movies on again if so.
The design of the phone complements the display well, with the
slightly rounded edges on the back having a touch of sharpness about them to
make the phone easier to grip.
It was interesting to note (sorry...) that we tended to pick up
the phone more in the middle of the display, rather than cradling it from the
bottom – this made finding the buttons and the rear fingerprint scanner easier
to hit (more on that later).
The buttons all protrude well enough to be easily clicked, and
weirdly for a phone of this size it didn't feel too cumbersome in the palm. It
was even possible to reach the full width of the screen with a thumb, although
you can forget hitting the corners.
It's got three flavors of internal storage: 64GB, 128GB and
256GB. On top of that there's a microSD slot (up to 256GB supported) and with
an S Pen port too, there's a lot to pack into the Galaxy Note 8, and Samsung
has done well to put it all together in a package like this (especially as it’s
IP68-rated for water and dust resistance).
However, the Gorilla Glass 5 still feels lightweight, and still borders on feeling a little like plastic. This does
save weight, and the overall construction feels premium, but there's a
tactility to metal – or even ceramic – that we miss here.
Fingerprint
mistakes are repeated
However,
when it comes to design choices, we're disappointed that Samsung has maintained
its stance of putting the fingerprint scanner on the back next to the camera.
We'd
assumed that last-minute design changes had meant the Galaxy S8 had to have the
biometric unlocking method put on the rear, and that this issue would be solved
with the Note 8.
Samsung's executives will tell you
that they use iris scanning to unlock their phones most of the time, but in our
testing of the Galaxy S8 we didn't find this accurate enough... and that still
seems to be the case here.
Double take
The
camera on the Samsung Galaxy Note 8 is probably one of the biggest upgrades
over anything else in the South Korean brand's range, with dual 12MP sensors on
the rear.
As
on Apple's iPhone 7 Plus, one of these is telephoto, so you can zoom in 2x to
your subject with no loss in clarity. You can also use the two sensors together
to create a background blur effect, either when taking a photo or after you've
shot it.
However,
this feature needs some work. In our testing we noted (dammit, again...) that
the Note 8 didn't do a very good job of working out which elements to blur in
the live preview very well, with subjects with detailed outlines, such as
plants, proving especially problematic.
We'd
also question whether being able to blur the image post-shot is a good idea.
What Apple does well is keep things simple, and a 'background defocus' mode
that did just that would have been a better idea here.
Perhaps
give users a 'geek-out' mode where they can enable tuning, but the average user
is presented with a lot of options on the Note 8 camera, which always feels
like something of a danger.
What you won't find an issue with is
the picture quality. It's as excellent as ever, and combined with the Super
AMOLED screen your snaps always look brilliant – even if taken quickly, such is
the speed of autofocus.
With
one sensor on the rear taking wide-angle, f/1.7 images and one taking zoomed
f/2.4, you should be able to get good low-light performance from the Note 8, as
well as being able to take a wide range of styles of photo.
That
said, in our low-light comparison with the iPhone 7 Plus, the results from
Apple's setup looked brighter, albeit with more noise. We're not going to pass
judgement on that though, as it needs more of a look.
Paired up
Another small update that came with the Galaxy Note 8 was the
pairing of apps. This is pretty much as it sounds: swipe from the edge of the
screen in any mode and you'll be able to see pairs of apps that you use
regularly.
Play music every time you turn on maps in the car? Have both in
split screen with a single tap.
It's not the most exciting feature in the world, but does push
the point of Samsung's split screen capabilities better than anything.
Whether it comes to the Galaxy S8 and S8 Plus remains to be seen
- but it would be a neat feature to bring across.
The most useful S Pen ever made
The
S Pen is – along with the raw power inside – the thing that defines the Note
series, and the new version of the stylus is better than ever. Its 4,096 levels
of pressure sensitivity, a more flexible tip and nice weight make it a pleasure
to use.
Samsung,
once again, has wheeled out the idea that 'this feels like writing on paper'
and while it utterly doesn't (because this is rubber on glass) it's closer than
ever before, and highly accurate.
The new features offered, such as the option to create an
animated GIF from your doodles, and to translate more words in a single swipe,
are among the most useful that Samsung has offered with the S Pen.
We never felt that being able to snip out parts of pictures was
a great tool to have, but the Galaxy Note 8 feels more useful to the millennial
generation than ever.
Bixby bursts forth
The Galaxy Note 8 should really be known as the phone that
brings Bixby, Samsung's digital assistant, to the fore, with the full suite of
features enabled from launch.
That means that alongside the Bixby Home screen (which is still
more perfunctory than amazing as a feature) and Bixby Vision (which has a long
way to go to convince us it's any use) we'll have Bixby Voice on board,
offering the full range of ways to interact with your phone.
·
Bixby Voice:
everything you need to know
It'll mean you'll be able to press the physical Bixby button and
have the phone perform all manner of tasks – and in the demo we've seen, it's
incredibly accurate and powerful for a voice assistant.
It won't mean a lot right now, even
to Samsung phones, but where we derided Bixby's presence on the Galaxy S8 at
launch, the Note 8 will offer far more functionality.
Battery
There’s
always a worry with any phone when you don’t see an industry-leading number in
the battery spec column, and that’s the case with the Samsung Galaxy Note 8.
The
3300mAh power pack just feels too small for a phone that has these specs. More
RAM (6GB), a powerful CPU (either the Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 or the Exynos
8895), and a wider range of functionality means people will be using the Note 8
a heckuva lot.
It's
a smaller battery than the Galaxy S8 Plus (which offered a 3500mAh option), and
this could be an issue for Note users.
Yes,
Samsung has optimized its software well, and yes, there needs to be space for
the S Pen – but we expect the best of the best from the Note range, so we'll
have to wait and see how well the device performs in our usual battery (sorry,
again, sorry...) of tests.
Anything else I need to
know?
One
of the things Samsung is keen to promote in its new range of phones is the DeX
desktop experience, where you plug the phone into the dock and have a full
desktop experience if there's a monitor, mouse and keyboard handy.
This
seems more in keeping with the Samsung Galaxy Note 8 than the Galaxy S8, as the
Note is designed to be more of a productivity tool.
The demo we were shown did show off
an improved DeX, with a more fluid desktop experience and more full-screen
Android apps that can be used effectively with a keyboard and mouse, but we saw
nothing to convince us that this was a complete desktop replacement.
Biometrics still need
sorting
Samsung
still hasn't solved the issues around the biometric unlocking of its phones –
at least going on what we could see in our limited testing.
The iris scanner failed on a couple
of occasions, despite being in the right lighting conditions, and while we
didn't test out facial recognition we didn't see anything that suggested
Samsung has solved the issue of these options being slightly inaccurate and
erratic.
Early verdict
Samsung
didn't have to do much to make a decent Note 8, such was the impressive nature
of the Galaxy S8 and S8 Plus.
Essentially,
this is just a beefed-up version of those phones with a fancier camera – more
options, but overall still the same quality underneath.
The
power will attract some users who want 6GB of RAM alongside the latest CPUs on
the market, but they won't really change the performance for most users.
In
reality we can see people buying this phone for the larger display and improved
S Pen – and despite the higher price, that could attract a large audience
indeed.
As
long as the Note 8 doesn't run into any similar issues to last year, we're
going to be treated to an epic battle between Samsung and Apple this year to
see which brand can offer the most impressive handset.
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