Way back in
my entry for November 24, 2015, I explained how
we lucked into a pair of Samsung's Galaxy Note 4 smartphones. The
Note 5 was out by then, but I didn't want it. Why? It has a
non-replaceable battery and no internal card slot. That was a
deal-killer for me, and something I'll go into more detail on a
little later. We stayed with Verizon, because several people said
Verizon has the best local network in Phoenix. (I'll state from
experience that they did not have the best local network
in Colorado Springs.)
Why did we want a Note phone at all? I have a lot of Samsung
gear, and for the most part it's been reliable and delivers what
was promised of it. The Note 4 is bigger than my 2011-era Droid X2
(a feature I wanted, irrespective of the ghastly coinage "phablet")
but still small enough to fit in my shirt pocket. (I made scale
cardboard cutouts of all the major phones I was considering and did
the test on several shirts.) More compute power was basically
assumed, since my Droid was almost five years old. I wanted a
larger, brighter, higher-res display. I wanted S-Health, a piece of
Samsung software that does several useful things, like tracking
steps and measuring blood oxygen. Carol wanted a stylus. Her
fingers have a somewhat strained relationship with touchscreens,
and unlike me, she texts a lot. The stylus works perfectly for
her.
I didn't really intend for this to be a review, because by this
time I'm guessing it's pretty hard to find anybody selling Note 4s.
Several people have asked me what I think of it, and what I'm doing
here is gathering my thoughts on its first ten or twelve weeks in
my pocket.
I like the phone a lot, and most of that cooks down to one
thing: It consolidates several functions into a single slab. Prior
to getting the Note 4, I did most of my ebook reading on my Kindle
Paperwhite, which is still a marvelous item. However, it's another
slab, and if I'm running around it has to be carried somewhere. I
was poleaxed at how good the Note 4 display is for text, assuming
you're not out in the sun. It runs the Kindle app, and it's in my
pocket any time I'm awake. So if I need an e-reader to kill some
time in an unexpectedly bad line at the Post Office, it's always
there. In the photo above we have, L-R, the Kindle Paperwhite, the
Galaxy Note 4, and the Droid X2, all running the Kindle app. I
still lean toward the Paperwhite when I'm sitting in my comfy chair
at home, but the Note 4 comes very close to the same
experience.
It has a surprisingly capable digital camera, which (given
sufficient light) takes very good HD video. The pedometer/blood
oxygen/heart rate monitor serve specific needs of mine right now.
I've tested the phone performing those functions against other
instruments I have at home, and it agrees with all of them. I
actually measured out a two-mile walk on MapPoint and walked it
with the Note 4 in my pocket and its pedometer feature active. It
agreed with MapPoint on the distance to within a couple hundred
feet. I'm guessing that GPS helps out a little, as S-Health makes
no attempt to physically measure my stride.
On the downside, battery life is nowhere near as good as on the
Droid X2. I suppose that's reasonable, given the device's greater
compute power, but it is annoying. When I'm at home, I find myself
plugging it into the charger no later than 3PM and sometimes
sooner. I'm not entirely sure how well it would handle a full 14
hour day. When the battery falls below 40%, I simply stop using it.
If I had to be away from a charger for over a day (unlikely but
possible) I would carry an extra charged battery.
Which brings me to the second point of this entry: The
mysterious disappearance of replaceable batteries and SD card slots
in modern smartphones. I specifically wanted the Note 4 because the
Note 5 has no SD slot, and a non-replaceable battery that limits
the useful life of the phone to the life of a single battery. Some
say it's a cost issue, which is nonsense, especially on a $500
high-end phone. Some say it's a security issue, which puzzles me,
since the phone can be set not to deal with apps installed on an SD
card. No, these are excuses. I am pretty damned certain that the
carriers are putting enormous pressure on the manufacturers (who
sell most of their phones through carrier upgrades) to get rid of
the card slots. The reason is simple: The carriers want to charge
you bigtime for network data, and if you can sideload all your
music and movies onto a 128 GB SD card, they won't get paid when
you don't have to pull them down from the cloud. The battery is
collateral damage, because the best excuse for a missing SD slot is
to give the phone a back that can't be removed.
Planned obsolescence is a particular loathing of mine. When I
like a piece of gear, I want to be able to use it as long as I
choose. (We drove our 1995 Plymouth Voyager for almost 20 years.
We've had our 4Runner for 15 years now, and intend to go for 20
there as well.) Microsoft's enormously pesty Windows 10 upgrade
offer falls into that category. I like Win7, and feel that it's by
far the best version of Windows yet. I see no reason to stop using
it. Sooner or later, MS is going to make the upgrade mandatory, or
at least slip it in under the door in the middle of night, rather
like Congress did with Obamacare. What happens then I don't know
and probably won't talk about, except to say that I will
keep on using Win7. Or perhaps switch to a Linux distro that's been
tweaked to look just like Win7. I have Zorin (if not the latest
version) and may consider something like RoboLinux that runs Win7
in a VM. We'll see.
Carol and I have now had enough experience with our phones to
decide that we're just not going to have a landline put in down
here in Phoenix. We haven't had one here for two months now, and
haven't missed it a bit. That's a first for us: Neither of us has
ever lived for more than a few days without a landline. (We also
bought an indoor TV antenna and so far have not missed cable,
either.)
The note 4 runs all the apps I'm used to running: Voice Search,
Google Maps, Weather Underground, Sky Map, Waze, GPS Test,
SoundHound, a couple of dumb puzzle games, and whatever else comes
with the phone. Response is more than perky enough for my needs,
which are nowhere near as smartphone-centric as a lot of
people's.
Bottom line: It's a good phone. It can be loaded to the gills
with Flash memory, and you can keep a spare battery in your pack.
If you have one, take care of it, because given the carriers'
data-based business model, we may not see its like again.