Samsung Galaxy Note 3 – amazing tech but missing the obvious perhaps?

As the owner and editor of a tech blog I always like to own phones from different operating systems to try and maintain some neutral bias.

I was out shopping and was playing with the Note 3. I quite like this device but its originally sim free price was way too expensive. It has now seen this price drop by £200 so the option of owning one becomes more of a reality.

Whilst I was using the store demo model, instead of the shop assistant I was greeted by the actual Samsung representative who was visiting the store. We had a great exchange over the Note 3, but I did ask some questions which he did not really have a suitable answer or solution.

You see if you own an Apple iPhone or iPad you can backup your device to your PC or Apple’s iCloud. If ever you need to wipe and restore, or you get a new iPhone or iPad you can restore from your backup as easy as ABC. Everything comes back! This is an awesome feature and I have used it loads of time, always successfully.

But with the Note 3, everything becomes more complicated. Do you backup to Google? or to Samsung servers or both? What gets backed up? Everything? Or just pieces? What if your Note 3 phone got stolen or was faulty and you got a replacement? Can you restore it from your old Note 3? The answer is not completely.

What amazed me even more was the Note 3 stylus “Action Notes” which is one of the options that appears when you pull the stylus out of the device CANNOT be backed up anywhere. The Samsung representative even looked through the file manager, saying if you could find where they were stored, you could manually select and copy the Action Notes in to the cloud. Except he could not find them in the file manager either.

So one of the key Note 3 apps has no backup solution as a default. Am I missing something here because this cannot be right, surely?

Nokia removes its HERE Maps from the Apple App Store – its reasons

Nokia offer a fine mapping and turn by turn solution for Windows Phone users. It has also offered for about a year its HERE maps on the Apple App Store so that iOS users could use them too.

Now, Nokia has removed the app, and cited that iOS 7 ruins the HERE maps experience. Consequently, Nokia has received a lot of media coverage over this decision along with its reasoning.

Personally, I am dubious about Nokia’s reason, sounds like a load of nonsense. iOS 7 provides a brilliant user experience for mapping solutions. Google Maps, TomTom and CoPilot all function just fine. Maybe Nokia Here maps couldn’t cope with the pressure or wanted its solution only available on its Windows Phone platform.

If Apple produced an iPhone Phablet ?

At present Apple only sells an iPhone with a 4 inch screen. Android and other operating systems are moving towards bigger and bigger screens with 5 inches being the normal. Samsung’s phablet, the Note 3, comes with a 5.7 inch screen.

But what if Apple produced a phablet?

Would this destroy android phone sales as it would no longer have the large screen as it’s differentiator. I reckon if would certainly be very disruptive.

But first Apple has to sell a larger iPhone. Rumours indicate this will happen in 2014, but rumours and just that. Rumours!

After the Samsung Galaxy Gear Watch comes the Galaxy Band – details

In the first quarter of 2014, Samsung will be releasing the Galaxy Band, a fitness tracking band much like Nike’s FuelBand. Motion, pressure, and humidity sensors will be built-in, and the device will be able to sync with other Samsung devices via Bluetooth. Voice controls may also be included.

Many people don’t wear watches nowadays, so maybe a smart band is the future.

Samsung Galaxy S5 rumoured specs

Sammobile reported from Korean web site DDaily that Samsung has commenced production of their new 5.25-inch AMOLED displays to be used in the upcoming Samsung Galaxy S5. The screen is expected to be a 2560×1440 2K display. Similar to the technology used for the Samsung Galaxy S4 and the Galaxy Note 3, the new display uses a diamond pixel arrangement. Each of the red and blue pixels is shaped like a diamond, with normal green pixels interleaved throughout, which is supposed to increase sharpness and pixel density. For the size and resolution, the Galaxy S5 screen will be running at 560 ppi.

The Galaxy S5 is expected to also come equipped with 3GB of RAM, a 16MP camera and will have Android KitKat 4.4 installed. Like other Samsung devices, the processor will likely vary by market with Snapdragon 800, Snapdragon 805 and 64-bit Exynos processors all believed to be candidates.

If the above is correct, then the S5 will likely only be a modest spec increase from the S4, but should bring a much better user experience.

You decide – which camera took which photo – iPhone 5S vs Moto G

2 different phones and 2 extremes of pricing. I was recommended to try “A Better Camera” app on android by Mike Paterson who commented yesterday on the home screens post, so as the app was on offer I gave it ago using the Moto G vs the iPhone 5S.

Now, before anyone says the Moto G is nowhere as good as a camera as that found on the iPhone 5S, it’s not but with the right app and if necessary some post processing anything is nearly possible. However, to be fair, the below shots are unedited. So, is the top shot the iPhone 5S or Moto G?

Happy commenting :). I will reveal answer after 6pm UK time.

Answer – top is Moto G and bottom iPhone 5S.

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All the Reviews in 2013

Below are all the reviews written in 2013. I hope to have a few more in the next few months. The links also pick up any other posts written after the reviews were published as well.

Motorola Moto G review

Nokia Lumia 820 review

Logitech UE 6000 Noise Cancellation Headphones review

Moga Ace Power iOS 7 Game Controller review

Nokia Lumia 1020 review

Netatmo Urban Weather Station Review

Sony XBA-H1 Headphone Review

Sony Xperia Z1 Review

Sony QX10/QX100 lens review

ZTE Open Review – Firefox OS

Huawei Ascend P6 Review

Nokia Lumia 925 review

HTC One

Samsung Galaxy S4 Zoom Review

Sony Xperia Z Tablet

Samsung Note 2 review

Nokia Lumia 620

Audio Technica ATH-AD900x Headphone review

Fiio E12 Headphone Amplifier

Olloclip 3 in 1 Lens review for iPhone 5

Trident iPhone 5 case review

Bluetooth iPad Mini case review

Glif+ for iPhone 5 review

USB Fridge Review

USB Rollup Drum Kit