Samsung takes on iPad with Galaxy Note tablet
Agence France-Presse
NEW YORK—Samsung on Wednesday unveiled a Galaxy Note tablet designed to make a more personal connection with users and aiming to knock Apple’s iPad off its market throne.
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A key feature of the Galaxy Note 10.1 was a sophisticated “S Pen” that can be used as if it were a pen on paper or a computer mouse.
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“The mission of this device is personalization – using pen input to create more human communication,” Galaxy Tab consumer business division director Travis Merrill told AFP while providing an early look at the new tablet.
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“Receiving a handwritten note from someone you know is so much more emotional and powerful than just receiving an e-mail,” he said.
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Samsung built technology from Japan-based Wacom into the tablet screen to create a layer that can sense “S Pens” so precisely it can tell how hard they are being pressed or even if they are hovering, slightly out of touch.
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“If you don’t want to use the S Pen you don’t have to but it is really the heart and soul of the device,” Samsung Telecommunications America product strategy director Shoneel Kolhatkar said.
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Note 10.1 tablets are powered by Google’s latest generation Android software and feature powerful quad-core processors as well as two gigabytes of RAM for quick handling of videos, games and other graphics-rich content.
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The tablets are Wi-Fi enabled to connect with the Internet at hotspots and will be available in the United States on Wednesday at prices of $500 for a 16-gigabyte model and $550 for a 32-gigabyte model, according to Samsung.
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The launch of the Note 10.1 will be accompanied by a massive promotional campaign, according to Merrill.
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“We are betting big on this; not just on the tablet but on the Note brand,” Merrill said, indicating that Samsung felt that it struck a chord with its Note smartphone that provides an Internet Age note or drawing pad experiences with a stylus that serves as a virtual pen or brush.
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“We felt it was a real pain point in terms of input mechanism. With a fat finger you don’t always know if you are clicking the link properly – the S Pen adds a lot more accuracy and control.”
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Software in the tablet lets users hand-write notes or scrawl comments on images or documents and then store them or post them to social networks or send them in e-mail messages.
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“People today still use Post-it notes and notebooks; you still have people drawing maps or making back-of-envelope calculations,” Kolhatkar said. “We feel the tablet can replace all of that.”
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A service in the tablet recommends applications designed to run well on the hardware or which are customized to take advantage of S Pen capabilities.
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“With the S Pen, using pressure, I can get as fine or as thick a line as possible,” Kolhatkar demonstrated. “It is almost like pencil on paper. We really believe this is a game changer.”
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The tablet also knows to ignore pressure from the palm of someone using an S Pen, freeing users to write or draw naturally.
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Note 10.1 software can convert handwriting to text or crudely drawn objects to crisp geometric figures, and even correct written scientific or mathematical formulas, according to the demonstration.
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“You can imagine how students will use this to cheat,” Kolhatkar joked of the unintended consequence of a Formula Correct feature. “I am not encouraging that.”
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Samsung worked with Adobe to make free Photoshop software that allows people to use S pens to edit images on the Note 10.1 with accuracy and ease.
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Movies, games and other entertainment content for devices are available at a Samsung media hub, along with a growing “ecosystem” of applications made by third-party developers.
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Samsung also built “personal computing” power into Note 10.1 by letting users engage in several tasks at the same time, perhaps watching a video while working on a presentation and roaming the Internet.
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“This is the first of its kind when it comes to multi-tasking,” Merrill said. “This is really about being able to do multiple things at once.”











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