Samsung Galaxy Note 8 review
Are you looking for a
big-screen smart phone? This Samsung phone needs to be high on your
shortlist .
After suffering a
setback due to the explosive failure of Note 7 that led the company
to recall and stop the production in the mid , Samsung is back
with another entry in its most premium device series – The Galaxy Note
8
The launch of the Note
8 has definitely put Samsung in its top spot as the leader in smartphone
business, clearly speaking; the Note 8 remains the best smartphone in the world
as it has every 2017 spec requirement on a flagship model.
The design of the Note
8 is very familiar – glass build covering both front and back of the device
with a metal frame sandwiched in between. However, a very visible feature on
the design of Note 8 is the height, a rectangular shape and less pronounced
dual curved display when compared to the S8.
Build
The Note series has
always been targeted at a more professional peoples around the world – business
people and creatives looking for bigger screens and more innovative ways to do
things on the go. In the Note 8, that message has never been clearer.
With the stylish
design of the S8 and S8+ to contend with, it’s chosen the smart route:
it's be the geekier choice next to its trendier siblings.
It does this with more
angular corners, a slightly chunkier design (by modern standards) and a more
subtly curved screen. It’s not as seamless either – there’s a more pronounced
ridge where the front and back of the phone meet.
There are
similarities, though. The Note 8 continues the mostly glass design and taller
18.5:9 aspect ratio of the S8 and S8+.
Though this aspect
ratio might make it easier to hold such a large phone in one hand, thanks to
its relative narrowness, it’s unlikely you’ll be able to use it with just one.
It’s just a bit too
tall, so you’ll struggle to reach anything at the top of the screen without
readjusting your grip first. There is a one-handed mode that allows you to
shrink the screen with a diagonal swipe, but it’s fiddly and hit-and-miss in
use.
Even more
annoying is the fingerprint scanner, which has been moved from
the now non-existent home button placed all the way up at the top, next to
the camera.
Not only does this
make it tricky to use, it also makes smearing the camera lens with misplaced
finger a real possibility.
Screen
Of course, that 6.3in
AMOLED display is the hero feature of the Note 8, in all its 2960 x 1440
resolution/522 pixels per inch (ppi) glory.
If it sounds
impressive, that’s because it is - and it makes for a beautifully
bright, sharp, near bezel-less display that makes everything from browsing to
watching movies a dream.
There’s the usual
struggle of trying to get Samsung’s colour balance just right. The default
Adaptive Display, which changes settings depending on what’s on the screen, now
has advanced colour balance controls to help tone down its tendency towards
over-vibrancy.
However, even on the
warmest setting, whites are still slightly tinged with blue. We find ourselves
choosing between the muted hues of the 'basic' screen and the (now much
improved) 'AMOLED Cinema' setting, opting for the latter for its extra
punch.
Whites are a little on
the warm side, but we’ll take that in exchange for a more
natural overall handling of colour.
Watch out for the
‘video enhancer’ feature in the settings menu though, which claims to boost
colour and brightness. We prefer it stay off – you’ll lose picture detail
and introduce some noise with it turned on.
You should also
consider the screen resolution setting, too. While the Note 8’s screen is
capable of 2960 x 1440 Wide Quad High Definition (WQHD+), by default it sets to
2220 x 1080 Full High Definition (FHD+).
The difference isn’t
huge when streaming videos on Netflix, but it does
deliver some extra insight when pushed up to maximum - albeit with extra
drain on your battery.
For a phone so focused
on its screen, it’s worth spending some time in the settings to see which
balance suits your tastes best. Once you do, you’ll find a picture that’s crisp
and detailed, with a strong handle on contrast thanks to the inky deep blacks
of AMOLED.
There’s a whole lot of
brightness available here too, which is good for outdoor viewing and
beneficial once Netflix begins streaming in HDR to mobile devices. The Note 8
is listed as a compatible device on its website.
Sound
The audio quality on
the Note 8 is remarkably similar to that of the S8 and S8+, which is no bad
thing. It even comes with the same bundled AKGheadphones in the
box.
They’re better than
most bundled freebies, with a clean, clear midrange and decently
controlled treble, but they're a little bass-heavy for our tastes. If your
budget stretches to it, you’ll get a more balanced listen from a £40 upgrade to
the SoundMagic E10S.
The Note 8 sounds
solid and controlled with all music, from Spotify streams up
to 24-bit/192kHz native files. It’s a confident, full-bodied sound with
decent handling of rhythms, and a good amount of space and detail.
It doesn’t pull a
track together with quite as much cohesion as the iPhone 7, though,
which pips it for absolute organisation under pressure. Dynamically the Apple
is a touch more expressive too.
A single mono speaker
handles all external sound, pushing it out through the bottom right of the
chassis. Considering the size of the handset, stereo speakers would be nice.
It does a fine job
with voices, but anything more involved – such as an action scene – sounds
cluttered. You’re better off sticking with headphones for that.
Features
The big added feature
to the Note 8 is, of course, its S Pen stylus, neatly tucked away in a holder on
the base of the device.
Pop the S Pen out and
the S Pen menu wakes immediately to give you some specific options, including
note-taking, screengrabbing and the ability to write a live animated message.
Remove the S Pen when
the screen is locked and you can even write directly onto the lock screen. With
4000+ pressure points, writing on it feels, and looks, natural.
Bixby Vision is one of
the new options on the S Pen menu, and is part of Samsung’s suite of Bixby
smart functionality.
It’s hit-and-miss –
hover over a picture you’ve seen and it aims to show you where you can buy it,
similar images like it or, with text, the ability to extract or translate it.
It’s the latter we
find most useful (and effective - the shopping functionality doesn’t work for
us at all), and the ability to translate huge chunks of text rather than
individual words (as you could with the Note 7) is very handy indeed.
The voice assistant
strand of Bixby is also a work in progress. It currently understands US English
only, with some UK English words and pronunciations not always recognised.
It’s activated by
pressing a dedicated button on the side, or by saying the command “Hi Bixby”,
but it occasionally activates itself during video playback – sometimes when sat
on a table in a quiet room – with no explanation.
But it shows promise,
offering deeper functionality than the (also included) Google Assistant.
Tell Bixby to open up
the camera and take a selfie, open settings and change brightness, or even open
Facebook and update your status - and it does.
Bixby currently
understands over 3,000 commands, and there are already a few Easter Eggs to be
found if you fancy asking it some silly questions too.
As for security
features, the Note 8 introduces facial scanning as a back-up to its rather
awkward fingerprint scanner and the vague iris scanner of the Note 7.
It’s quick to track
your face, and the phone usually unlocks as soon as we look at it - as
long as the light is good. At night, we often find ourselves looking directly
towards a light for the phone to register us correctly, which isn’t quite as
fluid.
It has also thrown up
some security concerns- can the phone could be unlocked with a photo? We
try many, many times and manage it once - which is once too
many.
Ultimately, using a
PIN or (annoyingly) scrambling for the fingerprint scanner is still your most
foolproof bet for now.
Camera
The camera on the Note
8 has had a boost, with the addition of a second lens to allow for more
advanced photography effects.
The main camera is a
wide-angle 12MP f/1.7 option, with the support of a 12MP telephoto lens
offering 2x optical zoom and an f/2.4 aperture.
This means you can get
closer in on subjects without the drop in picture quality digital zoom can
cause. And unlike the iPhone 7 Plus (or forthcoming 8 Plus), which has a
similar setup, both lenses feature optical image stabilisation for steadier
shots.
As well as zooming,
the two cameras can also work together to create a fake bokeh effect which
Samsung calls Live Focus. Select it and it’ll take two photos of anything at
least 1.2m away – a standard wide shot and a zoomed-in option.
You can add some
background blur on the latter, for an arty effect. It’s pretty good as far
as these effects go, though variable lighting can catch it out on some
outlines.
Taken in good light,
regular pictures are sharp, bright and detailed, with good colour balance
and fast autofocus - so you can fire off shot after shot.
Variable light can
trip up the exposure on occasion, but it’s rare, and the auto HDR mode works
well to lighten up darker elements and cling on to the detail in any
highlights.
Low-light shots fare
pretty well too, with the built-in Optical Image Stabiliser (OIS) allowing in
more light to keep them as low-noise as possible.
Performance
The Galaxy Note 8 is a
monster of a performer, packing the same octa-core Exynos 8895 processor as the
Galaxy S8 alongside a whopping 6GB RAM.
As you might imagine,
there’s little that trips up this powerful pairing. We find everything from
games to browsing to multitasking (you can make the most of that big screen
with the Multi Window split-screen functionality) is taken in stride.
Its battery is of
3300mAh capacity, which perhaps seems a conservative choice considering the
3500mAh in the S8+. But with the cause of the Note 7’s woes being put down to
an overly ambitious battery overheating, Samsung has understandably erred on
the side of caution.
That does leave us
with a few battery concerns for power users. Even using it as a secondary phone
for a full day saw the battery drop by more than half – upgrade it to your main
phone and you’re likely to be looking for a charger before the day is out.
Streaming a Netflix
video at full resolution, over wi-fi and at half brightness, sees a 10 per
cent drop in battery within an hour (9 per cent on FHD+ resolution) – the same
results as we saw on the S8+.
That big screen
certainly needs some power, but it comes with a fast charger in the box (we
managed to get from 2 per cent to full in just over an hour), and there’s
wireless charging built in too.
Verdict
The Note 8 is arguably
not a phone for everyone, but that doesn’t make it any less brilliant. It’s
been built from the ground up after a tricky year, and is all the better for
it.
There’s little to take
issue with for that reason, though its battery life should be better. It’s
not a deal-breaker (as any iPhone user will attest to), but for a phone as
powerful as this, it would be good to have a battery with longevity to match.
Perhaps the biggest
problem for the Note 8, though, is its price. At almost £900 SIM-free, it’s no
small outlay - especially when the equally excellent 6.2in Galaxy S8+ is
£100 less.
But after a year of
waiting, the addition of the dual camera, more advanced S Pen functionality and
an even bigger screen are sure to have Note fans chomping at the pre-order bit.
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