Los Angeles Times

Samsung tablet packs power, but it won’t replace a laptop

Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 boasts a huge screen, other features; it falls short in productivi­ty.

- By Salvador Rodriguez salvador.rodriguez@ latimes.com Twitter: @sal19

Samsung’s Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 is a powerful tablet with a huge screen rivaling that of laptops. But don’t think of it as replacing your laptop any time soon.

The South Korean tech giant has packed the Galaxy Note Pro with an enormous 12.2-inch screen and numerous software features meant to let users perform the same tasks that they could on a laptop or PC, such as running one app on top of another at the same time.

Samsung says it made the tablet so users could be productive and look profession­al holding it. The tablet features Samsung’s stitched faux-leather back cover that the company has begun to use on many of its products. Though it sounds tacky and looks bad in pictures, the faux leather gives the tablet a business look and makes it comfortabl­e to hold.

Samsung is hoping this approach will help it gain a larger foothold in the tablet market.

The Galaxy Note Pro includes several tools a power user might want: dual speakers, a pop-out stylus and a microSD memory card slot.

But what stands out most about this tablet is its sheer size. With a 12.2-inch screen, the Galaxy Note Pro stands out compared with the 9.7inch screen of Apple’s iPad Air tablet.

Besides its large size the screen is also visually stunning. Its high resolution of 2,560 by 1,600 pixels impresses from the moment the user powers up the device and sees its default lock screen — a beautiful montage of bright colors.

The screen’s large size and high quality make it perfect for watching videos. I saw the latest episodes of “Girls” on the Galaxy Note Pro and enjoyed watching them, thanks to the combinatio­n of the high-resolution screen and the dual speakers.

But besides watching movies and TV shows, the large screen size makes the Galaxy Note Pro perfect for taking in a lot of informatio­n at once. That’s why it is one of Samsung’s first gadgets to run its Magazine UX interface.

The Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 uses the same Samsung Android interface with which users are accustomed, but once users swipe to the left they will see a different kind of screen. There, users can arrange various widgets. By default, Magazine UX comes with feeds from Flipboard, the app that pulls content from users’ social networks and lays it out like stories in a magazine.

The combinatio­n of story feeds with widgets for email, users’ calendars and other tools make the Magazine UX interface helpful for gathering informatio­n a user might need to start the day.

From there, users can get more productive by using the Galaxy Note Pro 12.2’s ability to run as many as four apps on the screen at the same time. To activate this feature, users swipe their fingers from the right edge of the screen, bringing out a drawer of apps. Then they drag out all the apps that they want to use onto the screen, one after the other.

The one downside to the multi-window mode is that users are limited to a tiny onscreen keyboard when they want to type. The keyboard can be dragged around the screen, but because it is so small users will basically have to poke at it with one finger to type.

Fortunatel­y, users also have the option of running apps on top of other apps as pop-up windows, and in this mode they have access to the Galaxy Note Pro’s virtual full-size keyboard.

Being able to use the fullsize keyboard is important, as it is another one of Samsung’s selling points for the device. Samsung has gone away from the typical touchscree­n keyboard and optimized the Galaxy Note Pro to make it resemble that to which users are accustomed on their Windows laptops and desktops.

What this means is the keyboard includes the Control key, the Caps-Lock key, the Delete key and the inverted-T arrow keys. The Control key can be used in combinatio­n with others, like the C and V keys, to access the same shortcuts that can be performed on computers.

Although this is a more advanced keyboard in terms of productivi­ty than the touchscree­n keyboards on other tablets, at the end of the day it is still a touchscree­n keyboard. For many users who don’t like tapping away at a screen, the addition of a few familiar keys probably won’t make a difference. And to use the keyboard, users will essentiall­y have to lay the tablet on a flat surface.

As for the battery, the Galaxy Note Pro performed at an acceptable rate. The Samsung device’s battery life was average for a tablet — meaning I got about a day’s worth of work from it — but it lasted longer than your typical laptop, which can usually run only six hours or so.

The Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 is available with 32 gigabytes of storage for $749.99 or with 64 GB for $849.99.

Overall, I enjoyed my time with the Galaxy Note Pro and believe it is one of the top large-size tablets on the market. However, if you’re really looking for a machine on which you can be productive, a laptop is still the better choice.

 ?? Samsung ?? THE GALAXY NOTE PRO 12.2 contains numerous software features meant to let users perform the same tasks that they could on a laptop or PC.
Samsung THE GALAXY NOTE PRO 12.2 contains numerous software features meant to let users perform the same tasks that they could on a laptop or PC.

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