SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 3 SCREEN
We've seem some huge phone/tablet hybrids, such as the Asus FonePad with its 7in screen, but the Galaxy Note 3 doesn’t look like it’s going to be such a monster.
A source speaking to the Korea Times claimed that the Note 3 will instead have a smaller 5.9in screen, which puts it firmly in phablet rather than tablet territory. However, this is still significantly larger than the 5.5in display on the Galaxy Note 2.
Yet, more recent information from SamMobile points to the Galaxy Note 3 have a 5.99in screen with a Full HD (1,920x1,080) resolution. According to the report, the Note 3 will have a thinner bezel, so it will be the same size as the Galaxy Note 2, only with a larger screen.
That makes sense in a way, as the Galaxy S4 is the same size as the Galaxy S3, but the thinner bezel means that there's room for a larger screen. We'd also agree that the Full HD resolution has to be correct, as Samsung will want the best for its high-end phablet.
SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 3 CHASSIS
Some people were unsure about the Galaxy S4's plastic chassis which, while lightweight and tough, doesn't look or feel quite as classy as the toughened glass of phones such as the Sony Xperia Z or the metal body of the HTC One.
This is apparently giving Samsung cause for concern, so according to news site SamMobile, the Note 3 could break with tradition and ship with a metal rather than polycarbonate chassis.
Samsung will sell replaceable back covers in several different colors, but the phone itself will come in just three: black, white or pink.
SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 3 S ORB
The Note 3 is rumoured to be the first Samsung phone to have the S Orbpanoramic photo feature. This is Samsung's version of Google's new Photo Sphere feature, which lets you take multiple photos in a 360-degree arc around you, and stitch the results up into a Google Street View-style collage to upload to Google+.
The key difference between S Orb and Photo Sphere is that Samsung's version will integrate with Facebook - a far more popular social network than Google+.
SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 3 PROCESSOR
Samsung has unveiled its octa-core Exynos 5 chip, with eight processor cores. Designed as a replacement for the Eyxnos 4 quad-core chip powering the Samsung Galaxy S3 and Galaxy Note 2 devices, and an upgrade to the Exynos 5 Dual found in the Samsung-manufactured but Google-branded Nexus 10 tablet, the Exynos 5 Octa promises significant gains in performance and power usage.
The Exynos 5 Octa combines a quad-core next-generation 28nm 1.8GHz ARM Cortex-A15 processor - an upgrade to the 1.6GHz Cortex-A9 chip found in the Galaxy S3 and the 1.7GHz dual-core Cortex-A15 chip in the Nexus 10 - with a secondary quad-core Cortex-A9 processor running at 1.2GHz.
The idea, Samsung explains, is that when the phone or tablet is doing lightweight work such as playing music, making a phone call or browsing the internet, the more powerful Cortex-A15 cores can be completely disabled and the Cortex-A9 cores used instead. The result, Samsung claims, is an improvement in power efficiency of around 70 per cent compared to the Exynos 4 Quad in the Galaxy S3.
Even if the Galaxy Note 3 were to be available with the eight-core chip, that doesn't mean that this processor will be available world-wide. While the Exynos 5 CPU was launched with the Galaxy S4, the UK instead got a standard quad-core processor instead. The reasons for this aren't exactly clear, but it may be that Samsung follows a similar pattern with the Galaxy Note 3, rolling out the octa-core version in some countries, while others will get a fast quad-core chip instead.
Recent rumours also point to the Note 3 having a Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 quad-core processor. The MK News piece also states that the phone will have 3GB of RAM.
PRICE
When the Note 2 launched last year, it cemented itself as a device for technophiles, with its £550 price.
We would usually expect the next iteration to cost around the same amount (and the Note 2 getting a price drop after the Note 3 lands). The phone will be available at Rs. 45000 in Indian Markets. A larger screen could mean that the new phone ends up being more expensive, which could push the price up beyond £600, though.
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