Mobile Technology

iPhone 6s Plus vs. Samsung Galaxy Note 5

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Gizmag compares the features and specs of the new iPhone 6s Plus (left) and Samsung Galaxy Note 5
3D Touch
Camera aperture (rear)
Battery
Build (back)
Build (frame)
Physical camera launch shortcut
Camera megapixels
Color options
Processor
Dimensions
Display resolution
Display size
Display type
Fast charging
Fingerprint sensor
Gizmag compares the features and specs of the new iPhone 6s Plus (left) and Samsung Galaxy Note 5
MicroSD
Mobile payments
Optical Image Stabilization
Starting price (full retail)
RAM
Release
Software
Storage
Stylus
Weight
Wireless charging
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Humongous phones aren't novelties anymore. In fact, most likely these two phablets will be two of the most popular mobile devices during the next year. Let's size up the new iPhone 6s Plus and Samsung's Galaxy Note 5.

Size

Dimensions

The iPhone 6s Plus, despite having a smaller screen, is the bigger phone. It measures 3 percent taller and also 3 percent wider than the Galaxy Note 5.

The iPhone is a little thinner, though, by 4 percent.

Weight

Weight

The Galaxy Note 5 is 11 percent lighter than the iPhone 6s Plus.

Build (back)

Build (back)

On the unibody iPhone, there's no separation between its aluminum back and aluminum frame. The Note 5, like Samsung's other 2015 flagships, has a Gorilla Glass 4 back (which, in this case, is curved).

Build (frame)

Build (frame)

The Note has an aluminum frame.

Colors

Color options

We're looking at four color options for each handset, though no US carriers are yet selling the gold or silver Note 5.

Display size

Display size

The Galaxy Note 5 has a 7 percent bigger screen than the iPhone 6s Plus. With the Note's smaller face, it gives you a much better ratio of screen size to phone size.

Display resolution

Display resolution

Apple's displays tend to look great without breaking any pixel density records, but the Note 5 is (based on PPI) 77 percent sharper.

Display type

Display type

We're looking at AMOLED on the Note 5 with an IPS panel on the iPhone.

3D Touch display

3D Touch

The iPhone 6s Plus has a next-gen version of the Force Touch tech found on the Apple Watch and latest MacBooks. The new "3D Touch" senses three different depths of input – tap, press and deep press – giving you new ways to interact with iOS.

For example, tapping an email in your inbox list will open it as usual. But if you instead press on that email, a pop-up window ("peek") will give you a quick glimpse of its contents. But if you decide you want to jump all the way into that email, a deep press ("pop") will do the trick.

Stylus

Stylus

Apple now makes a stylus (erm, "Apple Pencil") but it's only compatible with the new iPad Pro.

Fingerprint sensor

Fingerprint sensor

Both devices have outstanding touch-based fingerprint sensors – and Apple says the Touch ID in the new models is up to twice as fast as the (already-quick) Touch ID in older iOS devices.

Camera megapixels

Camera megapixels

You can't judge camera quality from pixels alone (well, maybe you could if one of them had an absurdly low resolution, but that isn't the case here), so you shouldn't draw any big conclusions from this category.

We'll look forward to putting the new iPhone's 12 MP shooter through the paces, but the cameras in Samsung's 2015 flagships are the ones to beat right now.

Camera aperture (rear)

Camera aperture (rear)

Though the new iPhones should have improved cameras over their 2014 predecessors, their aperture stands pat at ƒ/2.2.

OIS

Optical Image Stabilization

Both phones' rear cameras have Optical Image Stabilization, so you may be able to get away with some shaky hands without ruining your shots.

Physical camera shortcut

Physical camera launch shortcut

Samsung's 2015 flagships, including the Note 5, let you fire up their cameras quickly – and from anywhere – with a double-tap of the home button.

Battery

Battery

No word yet on the iPhone 6s Plus' battery capacity, but we do know Apple is estimating the same uptimes as last year's 6 Plus (see our review for battery tests).

Wireless charging

Wireless charging

The Note 5 has built-in wireless charging (as well as fast wireless charging if you buy a special Samsung-made charging pad).

Fast charging (wired)

Fast charging

The Galaxy Note 5 also has fast charging support, when using the cable that's included in the box.

Mobile payments

Mobile payments

The iPhone 6s Plus supports the NFC-based Apple Pay, while the Note 5 will soon have Samsung Pay, which uses both NFC and Magnetic Secure Transmission (thanks to Samsung's LoopPay purchase), which will supposedly let it work at standard credit card terminals.

Processor

Processor

We'll have to wait for benchmarks to learn more about the iPhone 6s Plus' CPU, but last year's A8 was (and still is) a beast, despite its lackluster-sounding two cores and 1.4 GHz max frequency.

RAM

RAM

No word yet on the new iPhones' RAM, though it looks like they're most likely jumping to 2 GB this year.

Storage

Storage

The Note 5 doubles the iPhone's storage on the entry-level tier.

With app sizes growing through the years, along with the bigger photo and video files it will be spitting out, you might want to think twice before buying that 16 GB iPhone 6s or 6s Plus.

MicroSD

MicroSD

Neither handset lets you expand that internal storage with a microSD card.

Software

Software

The iPhone 6s Plus will launch with the new iOS 9. The Note 5 runs Android Lollipop, with Samsung's TouchWiz layered on top.

Release

Release

The new iPhones launch on September 25. And for the first time in recent memory, many of Apple's flagships models (iPhone 6s) are still estimated to deliver on that day, two days after pre-orders began. iPhone 6s Plus orders, however, have been backordered.

Starting price (full retail)

Starting price (full retail)

The Note's pricing varies a bit from carrier to carrier, but it could save you some money over the iPhone 6s Plus – and remember that the Note also gives you double the storage on the entry-level tier.

Stay tuned for much more on the new iPhones. And for a deeper dive on the Note, you can hit up our Galaxy Note 5 review.

View gallery - 27 images
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3 comments
mayankraipure
I think S-Pen supports pressure sensitive touch which is like 3D Touch on iPhone .
MykhalLloydPolite
Androids have had 3D Touch since the beginning. Not called 3D Touch but the same concept. Press to open an app, deep press for other options. Also as the comment above states the S-Pen enables preview function. So 3D Touch has been integrated in Androids for years. Also no mention of Samsung's ability to multi-task.
SunnybabuBoddeti
Very good detailed edition. Explained clearly. Samsung and iPhone features. Thanks a lot.