- Mar 15, 2003
- 12,668
- 103
- 106
I recently upgraded from an iPhone 6 to a galaxy s6 edge, and thought I'd share my thoughts for anyone considering doing the same. I'm not really much on writing wordy reviews, so apologies for getting right to it without much romance.
Build / ergonomics: Impressive improvements on the s6 edge over prior samsungs. I'd say hand feel is pretty top notch. Button placement is a little weird because it's so similar (but not exact) to the iPhone that I stumble when buttons aren't exactly where they "should" be. I'll get used to this, but I also turn the thing off more often than not because the power button's too easy to press when gripping the phone.
Weird usability issue - the touch screen doesn't feel as precise when I use the phone left handed - touches don't register I'd say 1/4th of the time. I *think* my palm may be hitting the left edge causing double taps?
Screen: Samsung, by a million miles. The s6 edge may have the richest, brightest, most detailed screen I've seen on a device, ever. I never thought the iphone 6's screen was mediocre, but my wife's Iphone 6 just looks dull in comparison now. I spent like an hour last night just watching 4k youtube trailers.
Battery life: Atrocious, assuming you use your phone. Just listening to spotify and playing candy crush brings my battery life down from 100% to 70ish% after an hour and change commute, there's no way I'd make it a whole day based on my fairly pedestrian usage. I have to pick up more qi chargers to adjust to the crappy battery life. I also now carry around a usb battery back up thingie. I thought my iPhone 6 had crappy battery life but it would last me a day without a problem (I expected more), it just seems like this generation's about performance, not longevity. Also, I'm kinda annoyed that my qi charger needs to be placed just right, and can lose contact over night - woke up to a dead phone because of this, thank god I don't rely on the alarm to wake up. I'm going to try going from a $15 qi pad to a more robust one.
Camera: I was most excited about the camera, and I'm a little taken aback by how blurry my indoor pics have been (since they're of moving children). I suppose if I took pictures of still objects I'd be fine, or maybe I'm not doing it right? My iPhone didn't have a motion blur problem, and side by side the white balance on my wife's iPhone is more accurate. I like that the camera is endlessly tweakable, and do hope to master the camera in time. I'm really thinking this is a case of me being a shitty photographer and not the camera sucking, online reviews all find the opposite to what I find.
Sound: Weirdly, bluetooth audio volume's really low compared to my iPhone. Kinda really annoyed by this (my daily beater jabra moves will need to be retired - playback is too low to compensate for NYC street noise now, it was fine on my iPHone), but it's compensated by excellent headphone jack out sound quality. Also, the software sound tweaks actually work really well - I really enjoy the tube amp effect. The bottom firing internal speaker is also quite loud.
Another weird quirk - interference with my bluetooth speaker set (even when not connected). Annoying at night. Seems like a problem from 1994, my iPhone never caused interference with any radios.
Accessories: I kinda miss apple's walled garden when it comes to accessories. It seems like, without a certification process, accessories are really hit or miss. My qi charger has been flaky, my spiegen case mushy around the buttons, and I'd honestly pay the premiums for higher quality, certified gear. Samsgung's first party stuff is stupid expensive, $60 for a case! But I'd pay $30 for a case if I knew it were perfect (endorsed by the manufacturer). Now I may have to order a few and test them out, because amazon reviews are misleading and mostly useless.
Overall I don't regret anything - the screen is awesome and there's great potential. But it's not a massive evolution over the iPhone 6. My wife planned on demoing my edge before upgrading and now insists on keeping her iPhone. The things I appreciate (screen, sound quality) don't mean much to her, and the flaws (battery life mainly) greatly outweigh the positive in her situation. I personally don't mind the usb battery, but I do hope a software update helps the situation.
Build / ergonomics: Impressive improvements on the s6 edge over prior samsungs. I'd say hand feel is pretty top notch. Button placement is a little weird because it's so similar (but not exact) to the iPhone that I stumble when buttons aren't exactly where they "should" be. I'll get used to this, but I also turn the thing off more often than not because the power button's too easy to press when gripping the phone.
Weird usability issue - the touch screen doesn't feel as precise when I use the phone left handed - touches don't register I'd say 1/4th of the time. I *think* my palm may be hitting the left edge causing double taps?
Screen: Samsung, by a million miles. The s6 edge may have the richest, brightest, most detailed screen I've seen on a device, ever. I never thought the iphone 6's screen was mediocre, but my wife's Iphone 6 just looks dull in comparison now. I spent like an hour last night just watching 4k youtube trailers.
Battery life: Atrocious, assuming you use your phone. Just listening to spotify and playing candy crush brings my battery life down from 100% to 70ish% after an hour and change commute, there's no way I'd make it a whole day based on my fairly pedestrian usage. I have to pick up more qi chargers to adjust to the crappy battery life. I also now carry around a usb battery back up thingie. I thought my iPhone 6 had crappy battery life but it would last me a day without a problem (I expected more), it just seems like this generation's about performance, not longevity. Also, I'm kinda annoyed that my qi charger needs to be placed just right, and can lose contact over night - woke up to a dead phone because of this, thank god I don't rely on the alarm to wake up. I'm going to try going from a $15 qi pad to a more robust one.
Camera: I was most excited about the camera, and I'm a little taken aback by how blurry my indoor pics have been (since they're of moving children). I suppose if I took pictures of still objects I'd be fine, or maybe I'm not doing it right? My iPhone didn't have a motion blur problem, and side by side the white balance on my wife's iPhone is more accurate. I like that the camera is endlessly tweakable, and do hope to master the camera in time. I'm really thinking this is a case of me being a shitty photographer and not the camera sucking, online reviews all find the opposite to what I find.
Sound: Weirdly, bluetooth audio volume's really low compared to my iPhone. Kinda really annoyed by this (my daily beater jabra moves will need to be retired - playback is too low to compensate for NYC street noise now, it was fine on my iPHone), but it's compensated by excellent headphone jack out sound quality. Also, the software sound tweaks actually work really well - I really enjoy the tube amp effect. The bottom firing internal speaker is also quite loud.
Another weird quirk - interference with my bluetooth speaker set (even when not connected). Annoying at night. Seems like a problem from 1994, my iPhone never caused interference with any radios.
Accessories: I kinda miss apple's walled garden when it comes to accessories. It seems like, without a certification process, accessories are really hit or miss. My qi charger has been flaky, my spiegen case mushy around the buttons, and I'd honestly pay the premiums for higher quality, certified gear. Samsgung's first party stuff is stupid expensive, $60 for a case! But I'd pay $30 for a case if I knew it were perfect (endorsed by the manufacturer). Now I may have to order a few and test them out, because amazon reviews are misleading and mostly useless.
Overall I don't regret anything - the screen is awesome and there's great potential. But it's not a massive evolution over the iPhone 6. My wife planned on demoing my edge before upgrading and now insists on keeping her iPhone. The things I appreciate (screen, sound quality) don't mean much to her, and the flaws (battery life mainly) greatly outweigh the positive in her situation. I personally don't mind the usb battery, but I do hope a software update helps the situation.
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