Photographs: Courtesy, Samsung Abhik Sen
Many years ago, owning a mobile phone was a sign you had arrived. Depending on one's budget, one could choose from the few handsets, nearly identical in functions, available.
With the progress of technology came the boon of choice, which is proving to be a bane in recent times.
If many handsets at multiple price points and form factors weren't enough to confuse you, we now have multiple devices straddling different categories. For example, tablets with calling facility.
Samsung, which already had such a device, Galaxy Tab 2, has added the Galaxy Note 510, which is what the Note 8.0 is called in India. Let's see what it can do.
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Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 is not an iPad Mini killer
Photographs: Courtesy, Samsung
Look and feel
The Note 510 is made of plastic with a metal strip running around its edge. It comes in Samsung's signature white colour, and while it's easy to grip the device, it looks cheap. Though it can be held in one hand, it's more comfortable if held it with two hands.
The top of the device houses the audio jack ,while the right side has the power/lock key, the volume rocker and the IR sensor.
The opposite side houses the microSD and microSIM slots, while the bottom has the microUSB port and two speakers.
The bottom right corner houses the S Pen, while the front has the home, back and menu buttons below the 8-inch screen. The device feels solidly built.
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Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 is not an iPad Mini killer
Photographs: Courtesy, Samsung
User interface
We turn on the Note 510 to find Samsung's familiar TouchWiz interface.
Running Android 4.1.2 (Jelly Bean), it comes with Samsung's typical customisations, minus some. For example, the Air Gesture function, spotted on the Galaxy S4, is missing.
The Smart Stay, which checks if one is looking at the tab or not, is present. The user interface mimics that of the S4 and supports features such as multi-window.
The 1.6-GHz quad-core processor ensures there is no lag while using this feature. Games are enjoyable on the bright screen (though we've seen more vivid colours, like that on the S4).
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Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 is not an iPad Mini killer
Photographs: Courtesy, Samsung
We would like it if Samsung incorporates something like 'Floating Apps', a menu found on the ASUS FonePad that lets one access commonly used apps easily, on this tab.
After getting used to them, we really missed them on the 510. Of course, there's something called 'Favourite apps', but 'Floating Apps' are so much better.
Calling and texting
The 510 essentially feels like an oversized phablet while making calls. To make things simple, one needs a headset, which, surprisingly, isn't present in the sales package.
A Bluetooth (version 4 is supported by this tab) headset is ideal. Video chats over the 1.3MP front camera are fine, but the placement of speakers at the bottom of the tab creates a problem. Place the tab on a table or something and the sound gets muffled.
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Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 is not an iPad Mini killer
Photographs: Courtesy, Samsung
The tab has three keyboard modes - portrait, landscape and split. Typing in the landscape mode is effortless but the keypad feels cramped in the portrait mode. The split mode comes in handy, especially when one is in multi-window mode.
The screen is a pleasure to read eBooks on, indoors. Outdoors, visibility takes a hit.
If you are using the 510 after you have been using a high-end smartphone for long, you will notice the difference in the quality of the screen.
For example, while the Galaxy S4 sports a Super AMOLED screen, the 510 has just a TFT LCD screen, as is the norm in tabs.
Even then, we found the display of the Google Nexus 7, a device cheaper by around Rs 10,000, better.
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Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 is not an iPad Mini killer
Photographs: Courtesy, Samsung
Camera, music, video
The 5MP back camera doesn't sport a flash, but its autofocus function works well outdoors. Some colours might appear muted. Indoors, dark places are a problem. The camera can also shoot videos in 720p without a hitch.
With no supplied headphone (and the surprising exclusion of FM radio), the 510 might not be your preferred music device. But the stock Android player is intuitive.
However, the speakers aren't very loud and if you don't get a stand, get ready to strain your ears to catch the dialogue if you plan to watch a film on it. Also, viewing angles on the 510 aren't as great as on the S4.
Battery life
The big, though non-replaceable, battery on the 510 lasted us for more than a day after innumerable sessions of Temple Run, Facebook, heavy browsing, light calling and moderate viewing of videos. This device won't let you down on that road trip.
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Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 is not an iPad Mini killer
Photographs: Courtesy, Samsung
The good bits...
Browsing was a fantastic experience on this tab and full marks to Samsung for retaining the ICS browser. Websites with flash loaded fast over both Wi-Fi and 3G.
The tab can also be used as an oversized remote for other devices. The best feature of the tab is, of course, the S Pen. (Why else would you pay double the price of the Tab 2, which has calling facility, for a tab with roughly the same functions?)
Take it out of the silo and the S menu pops up. The 510 lets one jot down notes during meetings and while handwriting recognition is present, it takes some time getting used to.
Use the Wacom-enabled stylus any way you want - to draw and paint, take notes or just to browse through menu screens (in fact we loved how easily we could do the last one).
Used with other tools on the 510, the S Pen becomes a great productivity tool. And the battery is a big plus.
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Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 is not an iPad Mini killer
Photographs: Courtesy, Samsung
The turn-offs
The 510 doesn't have NFC built-in, a big miss for a tablet at its price, especially since the cheaper Nexus 7 has it. While people don't generally use tabs to ...
Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 is not an iPad Mini killer
Photographs: Courtesy, Samsung
Samsung Galaxy Note 510 Specification
Price: Rs 30,999
Screen: 8-inch 1280x800 pixels TFT LCD multi-touch panel
Weight: 340g
OS: Android 4.1.2 (Jelly Bean)
RAM: 2GB
Processor: 1.6GHz quad core
Memory: 16GB, expandable via microSD (up to 64GB cards supported)
Camera (rear/front): 5MP /1.3MP
Battery: 4600 mAh Li-Ion
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