Mobile Technology

Samsung's Galaxy Note 9 arrives with a huge display and a supercharged stylus

View 7 Images
The Samsung Galaxy Note 9 has been unveiled in New York
Samsung
The Samsung Galaxy Note 9 has been unveiled in New York
Samsung
One of the stand-out features of the Galaxy Note 9 is the 6.4-inch display
Samsung
The Galaxy Note 9 comes with an upgraded S Pen with Bluetooth
Samsung
The top-end Galaxy Note 9 configuration comes with 8 GB of RAM and 512 GB of internal storage
Samsung
One of the new tricks the S Pen has with the Note 9 is the ability to control video playback away from the screen
Samsung
The Galaxy Note 9's S Pen offers all the usual functions, like note-taking and digital drawing
Samsung
The new Galaxy Note 9 goes on sale from August 24
Samsung
View gallery - 7 images

The Samsung Galaxy Note 9 is here, with a giant 6.4-inch screen, top-of-the-line specs and an S Pen stylus that offers a few more tricks than previous years. It's instantly one of the most powerful and appealing Android phones of the year, but is it enough to pull users away from the next iPhone?

If you've been studying the specs of Samsung handsets launched earlier in the year, and keeping tabs on the flood of Note 9 leaks hitting the web, there won't be too much here to surprise you. Like its Galaxy S9 predecessors, the Note 9 comes with a powerful Snapdragon 845 or Exynos 9810 processor, depending on where in the world you are.

That's matched with 6 GB of RAM and 128 GB of storage, or – brace yourselves – 8 GB of RAM and 512 GB of storage. That's a decent spec for a laptop, never mind a phone, and shows how Samsung is continuing to position the Note as the powerhouse handset that can do just about anything.

One of the new tricks the S Pen has with the Note 9 is the ability to control video playback away from the screen
Samsung

As is the norm for Samsung phones from the last couple of years, the huge Super AMOLED display is one of the stars of the show. With barely visible bezels, the 6.4-inch, 1,440 x 2,960 pixel resolution, 18:9 aspect ratio screen really stands out, as you would expect.

As for that S Pen, as well as a variety of new colors (to match whichever color Note 9 you get), the stylus has been upgraded with Bluetooth – that means you can control video playback or the camera shutter with the pointing device, as well as do all the usual on-screen scribbling and selecting.

The 12 MP + 12 MP dual-sensor rear camera around the back of the Note has a fixed F2.4 lens aperture on one sensor, and the option to switch between F1.5 and F2.4 apertures on the other, so the amount of incoming light can be adjusted manually or automatically. The Galaxy S9 Plus offered the same trick, and if the photos are as good in terms of quality, the Note 9 should be able to get a decent picture in just about any lighting condition.

The new Galaxy Note 9 goes on sale from August 24
Samsung

Samsung was keen to play up the battery inside the Note 9, with a capacity of 4,000 mAh that the company says will last "all day," whatever that means. We'll have to wait and see how the phone performs in real life, but it looks like Samsung is confident that this is a phone that can run and run.

All the usual Samsung staples are here too: wireless charging, waterproofing, dustproofing, and even a 3.5 mm headphone jack. As with the Galaxy S9 phones, Samsung DeX is included too, so you can hook up a monitor and use the phone to drive a Windows-like experience on a bigger screen – only with the Note 9, you just need a cable rather than a dedicated dock.

The Samsung Galaxy Note 9 goes on sale in its various configurations on August 24, and your color options are blue, copper, lavender and black, depending on your region. This premium phone comes with a premium price though, and will set you back US$999 for the 128 GB model, and $1,249 for the 512 GB version.

Source: Samsung

View gallery - 7 images
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Flipboard
  • LinkedIn
4 comments
paul314
Costs more than an iphone, more than many laptops. Who these days is making phones for the rest of us?
Gizmowiz
I'll never buy a phone with a non-removable battery. The battery dies--your phone dies. And sure you can lease a replacement until it's fixed--which might take weeks--but what about all your applications you'll have to temporarily install on the loaner--some of which are security apps for your home automations, etc. Those can take days to setup. Who has that kind of time to waste? Better to buy a cheap removable battery phone than this stupid 'keep up with the Jones' phones from Apple and Samsung.
Buy instead a cheap under $200 LG K20 or LG Stylo 2 and have a removable battery that you can keep numerous spares around and don't worry about your phone burning up in your pocket! Jeeze people today don't have a brain.
Robert Walther
6.4 inches!!! If only people were 18 inches tall!!!
Trylon
@VincentWolf, your complaints are baseless. If an iPhone battery "dies," just take it to an Apple Store and they'll replace it with a factory fresh battery in a few hours, next day at most, leaving every other part of your phone unchanged, exactly as you had it. And no battery I've ever seen just suddenly died without warning. They always degrade gradually, giving you plenty of time to plan for replacement, unless you're the type who ignores obvious warning signs. Even if you manage to completely destroy or lose an iPhone, anyone with a bit of digital savvy will have had it backed up either to their computer or to iCloud, making a complete restore to a replacement phone a painless process. You may not believe this, but most of us do have brains.