Welcome to the first installment of a series of frequent updates now that we have carried out our analysis of the new phones iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus. Think of them as extra content you get on a DVD – of course, if you are a person who still buy DVDs. Throughout the week I will have close to 6 Plus, I will provide updates and in-depth analysis of the device. But first, I will talk to them a little about me.
I am an avid user of the Samsung Galaxy Note online. My current phone is the daily Note 3, which this year replaced my much used and loved Note 2 (Please note that the Note 3 is the predecessor of the Galaxy Note 4, which goes on sale in a few weeks). I bought the Note mainly because I wanted a device with excellent battery life, but I was surprised to realize that I became gradually more dependent on the stylus.
Perhaps the amateur to Windows Mobile in me, or perhaps my fondness for old-fashioned ways of entering information, do not know, but I use the S Pen at least a few times a week.
No, I’m not doodling or doing virtual newspaper clippings as Samsung likes to show their ads Note. I use the stylus to do lists, recipes correct’m slowly adjusting (the pancake is perfect to come), but I use it more often when I’m doing interviews. I depend on my Note (and Easy Voice Recorder Voice Recorder) to record audio during interviews, and use the stylus to record appointments and highlights of the interview to find these parts more easily then.
Note 3, then, has replaced two things: my voice recorder and my notebook. As any frequent traveler I can tell, either of these two things allows you to leave a couple of other things at home, and that’s good. I’m telling you, I’m a frequent traveler
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So the big question for me during my tests with the iPhone 6 Plus is: Apple’s device will be able to afford to leave my house Note 3? So far, the answer is no, not yet – but it is good enough to make me consider carrying both devices
While the iPhone 6 Plus is a recorder competent voice, without the stylus, really. I can not use this tabléfono when doing interviews. Sure, there are lots of styluses for iDevices, but none offer the accuracy Samsung S Pen. If your handwriting is as bad as mine, you need as much resolution as possible for you to decipher what you wrote down.
Sure, I can make those notes with the keyboard, but it has a couple of problems. First. while I’m typing faster than writing by hand, I’m still faster typing with a stylus to type with my thumbs. Second, and more problematically, I’ve noticed that typing with my thumbs in the middle of the interview changes the dynamics of the conversation. Writing with a pen – even one plastic without ink – is a perfectly natural for someone who is doing an interview behavior. It’s obvious what you’re doing and tells the respondent that you’re paying attention.However, if you start typing with your thumbs on the screen of your smartphone , you immediately assume that he interviewed you are sending a text message to your best friend, or your mom, or doing anything else. Even if you say you’re taking notes, they immediately think that you’re ignoring. And this is not good to encourage good conversation.
So that’s the problem. Beyond that, however, no wonder none of the iPhone Note 6 Plus. Although the screen has the same resolution, the highest contrast iPhone 6 Plus makes the screen has better viewing when you’re outdoors. The battery life of the Plus seems to be higher than the Note in the way you use it, and every app I use on the Note I can find on the Plus. As an Android user, it’s hard to admit this, but most of those apps look and work better on iOS than Android.
But there is one big exception: the keyboard. While my favorite keyboard, SwiftKey is available on iOS, it’s not as enjoyable to use as Android. Why? Find out in the next installment of this series, which will discuss this very subject.
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