Now I have
big hands (Ladies *wink*) but on first contact with the Samsung Galaxy note,
those hands felt dwarfed. I genuinely couldn't fathom why anybody would ever
require a mobile device that is dangerously close to being mistaken for a prop
from the film Honey I Shrunk the Kids.
Yet it
seems another niche has been discovered in the market and that is of course,
Phablets. Phablets, for those of you who haven't figured it out yet, are
smartphone/tablet hybrids genuinely classified by their size which tends toward
the 5 to 5.3 inch range, with anything smaller being considered a smartphone
and anything larger, a tablet.
Now
personally, for me, a phone with a 4.3 inch screen is the sweet spot. I can
easily navigate the device with one hand and it fits comfortably in the pocket.
I'm a complete and utter media whore when it comes to my personal devices. I'm
talking games, videos, music streaming, app downloads, the lot, so anything
with a reduced screen size is inevitably a disappointment (*cough* iPhone 4s).
The 4.7 inch screens found on a lot recent smartphones such as the Galaxy Nexus
(which to be fair actually incorporates the screen size with minimal intrusion)
are tolerable and again, great for media but I do find them just outside the
range of complete and utter comfort in day to day use.
Which
brings me to Phablets and the likes of the Samsung Galaxy Note and the upcoming
LG Optimus Vu. Although new to US shores we've had the Galaxy Note over here in
the UK for since about November which is sometime now and I will say this, as sceptical
as I was at first, if you can get used to the size of this leviathan then you
are in for one hell of a smartphone experience. If like me, media on the go is
your thing then the 5.3 inch Super AMOLED screen will offer the best mobile
experience possible, proving more convenient to carry and pull out than a
tablet. Praise should also be heaped on the device's mammoth 2500 mAh battery
which, despite the huge screen size will easily see you through the day and is
second only to Motorola's Droid Razr Maxx in the entire Android spectrum.
It's
proving to definitely be a love or hate thing with Phablets but if the size can
be tolerated then evolution in this area of the mobile world should prove very exciting
over the years to come. Would I personally carry the Samsung Galaxy Note on a
day to day basis? It's hard to say. As previously stated 4.3 inches really is
my own personal sweet spot but everybody's different and if you can handle the
girth of the Galaxy Note, then you deserve to be rewarded, which I'm certain
you will be.
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