Thursday, September 18, 2014

iPhone 6 Plus vs. Samsung Galaxy Note 3: Living with the phablets – CNET



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CNET

Welcome to the first in a series of regular updates now that our reviews of the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus are in the bag. Think of them like the bonus content on a DVD – if you’re the type who still buys DVDs, That is. As I spend my week with the Plus I’ll be Continuing to Provide updates and more in-depth impressions of That device. But first, a little background on yours truly.

I’m an avid user of the Samsung Galaxy Note series. My current daily driver smartphone is a Note 3, Which EARLIER thisyear Replaced a well-used (and well-loved) Note 2 (It’s also an important issue to mention That the Note 3 Will be succeeded by the Galaxy Note 4, Which goes on sale in just a few weeks.) In Primarily bought the Note Because I wanted something with excellent battery life, but I was surprised to find myself relying on the stylus father more than I thought possible.

Maybe it’s the Windows Mobile lover in me, or maybe it’s a fondness for antiquated means of entering information. I do not know, but I do find myself sliding out the S Pen at least a few times a week.

No, I’m not firing off silly doodles or creating virtual clippings from webpages like Samsung loves to show in Note commercials. I use it for quick lists, to audit for Making Recipes That I’m slowly refining (my ultimate pancake ice almost there), but most Commonly I use it When Conducting interviews. I rely on my Note (and Easy Voice Recorder) to capture Audio During interviews, and I use the stylus to scribble down more compelling quotes and points along the way so that i can find them more moonrise lateralis.

The Note 3, then, has Replaced two things: my voice recorder and my Moleskine notebook. As any frequent traveler will tell you, any one thing That enables you to leave two or more other things at home ice Necessarily, a very good thing indeed. And yes, I am a frequent traveler.



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CNET

So, the big question for me in testing the iPhone 6 Plus was this: would it, in turn, allow me to leave my Note 3 at home? So far, the answer has been no, not the quite – but it is good enough to have me thinking about carrying bothering.

While the 6 Plus is an adept voice recorder, without a stylus I really can not use it for Conducting Interviews. Yes, there are plenty of capacitive Styli for iDevices out there, but none sacrifice the precision of Samsung’s S Pen. When your handwriting is as bad as mine, you need as much resolution as possible to try and figure out just what it was I meant to jot down.

Yes, I could enter Those same notes using the keyboard, but That poses a few problems. First, while I’m a much faster keyboard typist than a writer, I’m still scribbling aunt When a stylus than typing with my thumbs. Secondly, and more problematically, I’ve found That typing with your thumbs mid-interview changes the feel of the conversation. Writing with a pen – even a silly little plastic one with no ink – is perfectly natural behavior for an interviewer. It’s obvious what you’re doing, and it tells the interviewee That You’re taking what they’re saying seriously.

However, if you start typing with your thumbs on the screen of a smartphone, your interviewee time immediately assumes you’re texting your BFF, or maybe your mom, or doing something else inane. Even if you tell them you’re taking notes writing Immediately They think you’re ignoring them. This is not good for inspiring conversation flowing.



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Sarah Tew / CNET

So that’s a problem, but Beyond That, I do not find myself missing anything else on the Note. The Screen May be the same resolution, but the Increased contrast of the iPhone 6 Plus Makes It Look Better When out and about. The battery life of the Plus seems superior to the Note in how I use it, and every app that i use on the Note I’m overpriced able to find on the Plus. As an Android user this is hard for me to admit, but almost all of Those apps look and work better on iOS than on Android.

But there’s one big exception: keyboards. Though my favorite keyboard, SwiftKey, is now available on iOS, it is not nearly as pleasant to use there as it is on Android. How so? Why, stay tuned for the next installment, where we’ll cover That very topic.

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