Arab Times

Samsung Note 8 gives its stylus some style – for a price

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NEW YORK, Sept 5, (AP): A stylus might seem, well, out of style in the tap-and-type world of smartphone­s. Yet it’s what sets Samsung’s Note phones apart from the competitio­n.

That’s significan­t as Apple prepares to launch what’s expected to be a super-premium phone next week, one that will match many of the features in the new Note 8 phone . Though not its pen.

Still, the Note 8 isn’t going to be for everyone. Most people will be fine with Samsung’s S8 phones for a few hundred dollars less. The Note 8 is more for “power users” — those who use their phones a lot more than the average consumer. The Note 8 starts selling in the US next week for $930 to $960, depending on the carrier.

Battery issues What’s top on people’s minds probably isn’t the pen, but the phone’s battery, given last year’s Note 7 recall following a string of spontaneou­s fires. Samsung has stepped up its safety tests this year. Time will tell how well they work.

Samsung reduced battery capacity by 6 percent to make room for various safety measures. But there’s still plenty of juice. The phone still had two-thirds of its charge left after four hours of Netflix. Tasks such as email, Facebook and note-taking won’t be as draining.

Great for note-taking ... to a point

A screen-off memo feature lets you use the stylus to take notes without having to unlock the phone. You can jot down a quick reminder while walking, or cross items off your shopping list at the store. It feels like real writing, without any noticeable lag. And writing a quick thought doesn’t feel as rude as opening an app and typing while with friends.

Unlike past Note models, this one lets you scroll down to write more than a single screen worth of notes.

Samsung’s character-recognitio­n software couldn’t make out chickenscr­atch handwritin­g. For instance, “end up typing” got transcribe­d as “inn up yping.”

Traveling abroad Past Note phones translated words you hovered over with the stylus. The Note 8 extends that to full sentences, though it’s on you to figure out that you have to tap the “T’’ icon to switch modes. And you need to specify the language you’re translatin­g from, even though the Google Translate service the feature’s based on usually has auto-detection.

The translatio­n feature also converts currency and units of measuremen­ts. That’s useful in figuring out that a 23-kilogram baggage limit means 50.71 pounds.

But it repeatedly failed to pick up measuremen­ts in centimeter­s. And it didn’t pick up on a common European convention of using a comma where the decimal point usually goes, so 4.20 euros became 420 euros, or about $500. The dollar is getting weaker, but it’s not that bad.

 ??  ?? In this file photo, Justin Denison, vice-president of strategy for Samsung Telecommun­ications America, stands among projection­s of the company’s Galaxy Note 8, during the phone’s introducti­on, in New York. The stylus sets Samsung’s Note phones apart...
In this file photo, Justin Denison, vice-president of strategy for Samsung Telecommun­ications America, stands among projection­s of the company’s Galaxy Note 8, during the phone’s introducti­on, in New York. The stylus sets Samsung’s Note phones apart...

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