Samsung Galaxy Note 4 Review

Perhaps the most impressive release of Samsung this year points to the Galaxy Note 4. The Korean company went all-out both on the hardware and material design. Check out our full review of the Samsung Galaxy Note 4 below.

It’s been 4 years since Samsung introduced an oversized smartphone that everyone said no one would use.

Today, the Galaxy Note is the poster child in this category where everyone else tries to emulate and perhaps the most iconic in the phablet category.

The Samsung Galaxy Note 4 is most notable due to so many reasons and millions await its announcement and eventual release. For this review, we got the Frost White variant to the test.

Design and Construction.

For the longest time, Samsung has been keen on using polycarbonate materials on their flagship devices eschewing any form of metallic parts.

This year, they’ve introduced a more industrial and modern approach to building the Note 4. With a solid metal alloy frame, the Note 4 becomes a big slab of solid yet elegant handset. Our impressions of the Galaxy Note 4 has drastically changed since they introduced the first one 4 years ago.

The power button is on the right side for easy access with the thumb while volume controls are on the left side. At the top side, the 3.5mm earphone jack and noise-cancelling mics are found together with the IR blaster while the microUSB charging port and the compartment for the stylus are found at the bottom.

Around the back side, the 16-megapixel camera is smack right in the upper middle corner with the LED flash just below it. The camera barrel slightly protrudes by no more than a millimeter from the back panel.

The hard physical home button at the front is also home to the fingerprint sensor. This allows you to unlock the screen with a swipe of a finger (as against a simple press on the iPhone 5S/iPhone 6). The sensor is very accurate and you’ll seldom get any read errors except perhaps if you don’t swipe your prints the normal way.

Between the two available color variants, we prefer the white one as the combination of frosty white finish with the silver trimmings. We’re not sure if Samsung will eventually ship the Bronze Gold and Blossom Pink but at the moment, we think the Frost White stands out the most.

Display.

With a large 5.66-inch Super AMOLED display, the Galaxy Note comes with one of the highest resolution among smartphones and tablets alike. Pixel density goes down to about 515ppi when you consider the 2560×1440 WQHD resolution. Those numbers are only match by much bigger devices like the iPad Air 2 and the Galaxy Tab S. The only other handset we’ve reviewed that went past this was the LG G3 with 538ppi.

Samsung boasts of a Super AMOLED screen that is undeniably clear and crisp with vivid and vibrant colors. Images and photos pop out, movies are sharp and stunning. Outdoor visibility is also really good, even on direct sunlight.

The thick glass completely covers the front panel which slightly curves along the edges and is protected by the metal frame.

The screen itself is already overkill if you asked us but Samsung has always been that way with their own technology. Without a doubt, the display on the Galaxy Note 4 is among the best, if not the best, we’ve seen this year.

OS, Apps and UI.

The Note 4 comes with Android 4.4 Kitkat and the custom TiuchWiz UI by Samsung. The UI looks much cleaner and simpler compared to previous iterations.

Samsung continues to bulk up on their TouchWiz UI with a lot of customization and additional features that certainly dominate the user interface.

While many would consider these inclusions as bloatware, some of them are actually useful and practical like S Health paired with some sensors such as optical heart rate monitor and pedometer. In any case, one can just completely ignore and not use them if they don’t see any usefulness in them.

With the large display comes some inherent benefits like more real estate for virtual keys, more comfortable typing and sketching space. We find ourselves typing on the Note 4 with much comfort and better speed. For those who fancy taking notes or drawing, the built-in S Pen stylus is fun and easy to use. We’ve had several meetings where we were able to use it with as much ease as if we were using a pen and paper.

Samsung added a lot of native apps and features into the system, some of them are not really that useful while most are very practical like the Download Booster, S Note and Scrapbook. S Health has some basic features that we liked — Step Counter, Calorie Counter and Heart Rate Counter.

Camera and Multimedia.

Samsung’s biggest defining feature in their Note series is the stylus (S Pen). Very few brands have attempted this route and so far, only Samsung has succeeded and perfected the implementation of a stylus on their smartphones. For people who like to draw or write down notes, this is the best tool to pair with the phone. The stylus is very accurate, smooth and responsive.

The huge screen is just perfect for watching movies and TV series. The speakers at the back panel are more than enough for comfortable listening at close proximity. The ultra high resolution offered more real estate when viewing photos and browsing the web.

As for the camera, we found the 16 -megapixel sensor at the back to be snappy and accurate. Resulting photos are sharp and vivid with the internal optical image stabilization offering compensation for shaky hands or blurry shots.

The front-facing camera is most useful when taking selfie shots especially with its f/1.9 aperture and 120-degree wide angle lens.

Here are some sample photos we took using the rear camera:

The lens focuses really fast, colors are accurate and the sharpness of the subjects are pretty good.

Here are several sample video recording:

The benefits of OIS is more evident when taking continuous video shots that require steady hands.

Overall, the camera on the Galaxy Note 4 is nothing short of impressive. It’s fast, it’s sharp and stunning.

Performance and Benchmarks.

Samsung used two different processors for the Galaxy Note 4. One is from Qualcomm which is a Snapdragon 805 with a 2.7GHz quad core processor while the other is their very own Exynos 5433 chip with 8 cores.

The chip uses the big.LITTLE implementation by pairing a high performing ARM Cortex A57 quad core processor with 1.9GHz clock speed and another power-efficient ARM Cortex A53 quad core 1.3GHz.

The result is a high-performing chip that’s very efficient yet consumes less power (by switching the pair whenever necessary).

The benchmark scores of the Exynos 5433 will attest to what kind of a monster this chip is.

Add to that the generous serving of 3GB of RAM and you get a handset that can plow thru anything you throw at it.

BenchmarkScore
Antutu Test49,250
Quadrant Test26,614
Nenamark 2 Test59.8 fps
3DMark Unlimited19,405
Vellamo Browser4,350
Vellamo Multicore1,554
Vellamo Metal1,887

The Mali T-760 GPU is equally impressive, being able to easily handle intensive graphics on a screen with a resolution of 2560×1440. The Exynos 5433 is also a 64-bit processor so it gained some performance benefits that will show in the benchmark scores compared to the Qualcomm variant. This will become more evident once Android Lollipop rolls out on the device.

The benchmark scores above are already impressive, and considering the resolution, it could have been higher.

Call Quality, Connection and Battery Life.

Call quality on the Note 4 is very clear and crisp while text messages are sent and receive quickly and without delay. Signal reception is pretty strong on both cellular and WiFi radios. Despite its size, making calls is still comfortable although composing text message would mean using both hands instead of just one.

The Exynos model of the Galaxy Note 4 only has a Cat. 4 LTE, unlike the Cat. 6 of the Qualcomm variant that can support more networks and theoretically go as fast as 300Mbps downlink.

Nevertheless, we often get good internet speeds when connected to LTE networks.

As for battery life, we managed to achieve around 11.5 to 14 hours of video playback using our standard bench of 50% brightness and 0% volume. That’s pretty much the same time we got with the equally impressive performance on the Galaxy S5 but considering the Galaxy Note 4 has a quad HD resolution, those numbers went beyond our expectations.

On moderate to heavy use on a daily basis, we manage to last more than a day’s worth with data turned on and about 20-30% battery life left to last for the following day.

Conclusion.

The Note series has always been regarded as Samsung’s secret monster — a humongous, beastly and powerful handset that lacked the finesse and elegance that many people look forward to in a flagship handset.

All that has changed with the Galaxy Note 4. It’s not only intimidating and gargantuan but it also showed radiance and flamboyant posture, much like the characters of “Beauty and the Beast” but this time the Note 4 is both the pretty lady and the monstrous beast rolled into one.

Samsung would be hard pressed to top this one next year. For the meantime, we think the Note 4 is a very strong contender as smartphone of the year.

The Samsung Galaxy Note 4 is now available in stores with a suggested retail price of Php37,990. It’s also being offered by Globe and Smart under postpaid plans.

Samsung Galaxy Note 4 (SM-N910C) specs:
5.66-inch WQHD Super AMOLED display @ 2560×1440 pixels, 515ppi
Corning Gorilla Glass 3
Samsung Exynos 5433 1.9GHz Cortex A57 quad-core + Cortex A53 1.3GHz quad-core processor
Mali-T760 Graphics
3GB DDR3 RAM
16GB/32GB internal storage
up to 128GB microSD card
LTE Cat. 4 150/50Mbps
WiFi 802.11 b/g/n/ac
Bluetooth 4.1, ANT+
USB 2.0, MHL 3.0
16-megapixel rear camera with LED flash
Built-in Optical Image Stabilization
2160p video recording @ 30fps, 1080p @ 60fps
3.7-megapixel front camera, f/1.9 with 120-degree angle lens
1080p video recording @30fps
Fingerprint Sensor
Heart Rate Monitor
FM Radio tuner
IR Blaster
Android 4.4.4 Kitkat
Li-Ion 3,220mAh battery
Dimension: 153.5 x 78.6 x 8.5mm
Weight: 176g

What we liked about it:
* Premium build.
* Large, impressive display screen.
* Great performance.
* Huge RAM capacity.
* Long battery life.
* Great camera performance and quality.
* IR Remote.

What we did not like:
* Quite expensive.
* Some bloatware.

The post Samsung Galaxy Note 4 Review appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

IdeaSpace Foundation looks for ‘next big idea’

When orthopedic surgeon Dr. Rene Catan introduced to his fellow doctors some years back his plan to manufacture a local joint replacement, it was dismissed as a “backyard project.” When he presented it to a group of physicians last week, they snapped up shares, even at P12,000 apiece, of the company he built to bring his idea to life.

The difference? Catan won last year a nationwide competition for startup ideas conducted by the IdeaSpace Foundation, the largest privately-backed technology incubator in the Philippines. IdeaSpace has a P500-million fund for five years, pooled together from the resources of Manuel V. Pangilinan’s group of companies.

Catan’s project was borne out of frustration — of the increasing number of people who need joint replacements every year, only about two percent get it because the process is expensive. Parts for the total knee replacement can cost up to P150,000, not counting the costs of the procedure, medicines and other related expenses.

The Cebuano doctor designed a knee replacement that will be manufactured in the Philippines. When he shared his idea with other doctors, most were skeptical and dismissive. One smirked and scoffed at the idea of the Philippines manufacturing such a medical product.

Dr Rene Catan of Arthrologic

PAIN POINT, LITERALLY. Dr. Rene Catan talks about his product – a locally-designed and manufactured knee replacement. (Photo by Max Limpag)

After he won the IdeaSpace competition, where his team of doctors was the oldest and most applauded in a field composed of hackers and geeks young enough to be their children, Catan was able to move forward with his idea.

Now valued at P250 million

The company he founded, Arthrologic, is now valued by a third-party company at P250 million, he said in an interview last week. Word is quickly spreading around. Catan said doctors approached him the day after his presentation in Cebu to ask why he did not invite them to his briefing for potential new investors.

“We are not just making and selling the part,” said Catan, “we are assisting with the entire process from planning, pre-operation, surgery, post-operation and physical therapy.”

And from four hours of surgery needed for traditional imported prostheses, Arthrologic’s replacement only requires one-and-a-half hours. It also offers quicker recovery with patients able to go home, walking he said, after a few days.

The biggest benefits are the 50 percent cut in the cost of prostheses and the better quality of living after the operation because the parts were designed to fit Asians. With traditional replacements, Catan said “we have been putting oblong prostheses in circular knees.” This explained why some would still complain of pains after undergoing surgeries.

“Better fit, better range of motion”

Since he designed his knee replacement with fewer parts and on an Asian physique, the quality of movement is good. Their solution offers “better fit and a better range of motion.”

“Part of their fear is whether they could still kneel or squat. Squatting is not an activity that’s common among Caucasians,” he said, “Our patients should be able to squat and kneel like those with natural knees.”

His demo video showed an old woman with bent legs, walking or dragging her feet in pain because of severe osteoarthritis. He said the woman, who used to work as a seamstress but was forced to turn to running a sari-sari store to make a living because of the disease, wouldn’t have been able to afford the traditional joint replacement. Catan’s after-surgery photo is of the woman joining a Zumba class.

“We are in the business of improving lives by restoring mobility,” he said.

“Doctors are excited”

He said an estimated 80,000 Filipinos have osteoarthritis so severe they need surgery. But every year, only 1,500 surgeries are performed. Catan said his company hopes to help bridge that gap with their solution. They have so far used it on 18 patients and the feedback has been very good. “The doctors are excited,” he said.

Catan said they are looking to go beyond the country. Joint replacements are a $30-billion global market because of the epidemic of osteoarthritis with an aging population. Catan said that what was crucial to his idea moving forward was the backing of the IdeaSpace Foundation. Apart from seed funding and incubation support, the foundation’s network of companies provided legitimacy to his project.

In an interview after they were announced winners last year, Catan said their experience showed that “it’s never too late to chase your dreams.” He encouraged those with startup ideas to pursue these.

IdeaSpace, meanwhile, is currently accepting applications until January 15 for the next round of ideas that will be supported. Goldy Yancha, of IdeaSpace community development, said they already received about 300 submissions as of last week. She advised those who will be sending applications to closely look into market need of their ideas, saying this is key in the selection.

“We are particular on impact — it’s all about nation-building. Nation building by empowering people to run businesses, creating productivity and profit in the country and creating jobs,” Yancha said.

The post IdeaSpace Foundation looks for ‘next big idea’ appeared first on Leon Kilat : The Tech Experiments.

Pag-IBIG: Buy Solar Panel Now, Pay Later

As much as Filipinos would want to purchase/install solar panels on their houses, the fact of the matter is that most of us just don’t have that kind of money required up front to put up one.

This is exactly the reason why Emma Imperial, the CEO of the Imperial Homes Corporation, requested to Darlene Marie Berberabe, the CEO and President of the Home Development Mutual Fund or more commonly known as Pag-IBIG Fund to allow its member to apply for a loan to finance the purchase/installation of solar panels.

sharp-solar-panels

In a statement, Berberabe said that Pag-IBIG Fund will be able to finance the purchase and installation of solar panels through the agency’s Home Improvement Loan which, at the present, requires the mortgage of the house.

Imperial adds that eligible HMDF members may be able to borrow up to Php130,000 from the agency to fund the purchase of 1-kilowatt solar panel unit. The payment for the loan may be amortized for up to 25 years, depending on the member’s discretion and ability to pay.

Source

The post Pag-IBIG: Buy Solar Panel Now, Pay Later appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

Pag-IBIG: Buy Solar Panel Now, Pay Later

As much as Filipinos would want to purchase/install solar panels on their houses, the fact of the matter is that most of us just don’t have that kind of money required up front to put up one.

This is exactly the reason why Emma Imperial, the CEO of the Imperial Homes Corporation, requested to Darlene Marie Berberabe, the CEO and President of the Home Development Mutual Fund or more commonly known as Pag-IBIG Fund to allow its member to apply for a loan to finance the purchase/installation of solar panels.

sharp-solar-panels

In a statement, Berberabe said that Pag-IBIG Fund will be able to finance the purchase and installation of solar panels through the agency’s Home Improvement Loan which, at the present, requires the mortgage of the house.

Imperial adds that eligible HMDF members may be able to borrow up to Php130,000 from the agency to fund the purchase of 1-kilowatt solar panel unit. The payment for the loan may be amortized for up to 25 years, depending on the member’s discretion and ability to pay.

Source

The post Pag-IBIG: Buy Solar Panel Now, Pay Later appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

Five Apps to Help You Save Your Phone’s Battery

Compared to phones of the previous decade where batteries give power for 3 days to a week, smartphones of the current generation are battery hoggers. You’d be lucky enough to have one that can last through a whole day. Here are five apps that can help provide your phone’s battery a boost and help you extend your usage.

fivebatteryapps

Now if you’re wondering, do battery-saving apps really work? Yes, they actually do. As much as a segment of the smartphone users hate the fact that some of those battery apps are downright buggy and sucks a lot of the power when it shouldn’t even be or fall into the cat-mouse-game of stealthy-running and aggressive killing which unnecessarily consumes more battery juice, there are a few that actually work and lengthen the battery consumption. This list is in no particular order.

Deep Sleep Battery Saver

deep-sleep-mode

Deep Sleep Battery Saver, as its name says, hibernates your phone during inactivity, thereby putting it in a state of ‘deep sleep’. Users can set periodic intervals at which the app will wake the phone to receive notifications. It also has its own Pro version which unlocks more functions for Php143.08.

Greenify

greenify

If you have a rooted phone, Greenify is an app that is a must-have. Instead of freezing your battery-hogging apps that makes them unusable, Greenify hibernates your running apps, allowing you to still use them whenever you wanted to. The only downside I’ve seen is that once you’ve ‘greenified’ the app, you can’t see any incoming notifications from it, which isn’t a problem for me since I check those apps only a few times a week.

Tasker

tasker

For the advanced users, Tasker is an app that can automate and trigger common functions — from connections to settings to even cellular functions such as SMS. This is one app that doesn’t come in free like the other apps in this list; it costs Php182.76 to use.

SnapDragon BatteryGuru

snapdragon-batteryguru

Here’s one for our SnapDragon-equipped phones out there: Battery Guru is Qualcomm’s own application for extending battery performance. Unlike other battery-optimizing apps where you fiddle with a ton of settings to customize, BatteryGuru requires minimal to no settings as it adapts to the phone three to four days after installing, optimizing performance and extending battery life in the long run.

Du Battery Saver Pro

dubattery

Last but not the least, we have Du Battery Saver Pro. A free version is also available in the Google Play Store, but a purchase of the Pro version can unlock many more battery-efficient settings for rooted and non-rooted phones alike such as intelligent mode switching, auto-clearing apps, and more. This costs Php134.18 to buy.

In addition to these apps, I also recommend that you read our tips on how to save battery life. If these still doesn’t work… well, maybe it’s time to tell yourself that you need to buy a brand new original battery for your device.

Do you agree with this list? Are there any other battery-saving apps you can recommend? You can write down your comments below.

The post Five Apps to Help You Save Your Phone’s Battery appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.