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Samsung at the beginning of August introduced its new flagship Galaxy Note20 smartphone, which will compete with Apple's upcoming iPhone 12 models. We're going to do an in-depth comparison when the iPhone 12 comes out, but for now, we thought we'd take a look at the new Galaxy Note20 to highlight some of its best features.


Many of the Galaxy Note20's best offerings are major Samsung features that have been used in prior Galaxy devices, but they're what makes Samsung stand out as well as being features that we wouldn't mind seeing in a future iPhone.

Displays with 120Hz Refresh Rates

Samsung's Galaxy lineup, including the Galaxy Note20, is known for sharp, vibrant OLED displays with minimal bezels. The Note20, like some prior Samsung models, has a 120Hz refresh rate option that makes that super sharp OLED display even better. It's super smooth, as people who own an iPad Pro might be familiar with because Apple has had 120Hz maximum refresh rates on the iPad Pro for a couple years now.

note20120hz.jpg

Samsung hasn't quite perfected the higher refresh rate and it still presumably has a major impact on battery life, which is why it's limited to Full High Definition resolution (1080p) and does not work when the phone is set to the higher QHD+ resolution (1440p).

Apple is rumored to be working on 120Hz display technology for the iPhone, but as with Samsung's phones, battery life is a concern. There have been a lot of mixed rumors on whether the iPhone 12 lineup will support 120Hz ProMotion displays, but it may be a feature that Apple needs to wait to implement until there's more battery efficient LTPO display technology available. It's definitely a feature that's on the horizon, but we may not get it until 2021.

Wireless Powershare

For the past couple of years, Samsung devices have offered a Wireless Powershare feature, which is also included in the Note20. With Wireless Powershare toggled on, the Note20 becomes a Qi-based wireless charger and can provide power to other smartphones, headphones, smart watches, and more.

note20wirelesspowershare.jpg

It would be nice to have this feature in an iPhone for charging up the Apple Watch and the AirPods, or even sharing power with other iPhones. There were actually rumors in 2019 that suggested the iPhone 11 lineup would include bilateral charging functionality, but it's not something that Apple ended up implementing.

Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo speculated that the charging efficiency of the two-way charging feature might not have met Apple's requirements, leading to it being scrapped. Whether this is a feature that will pop up in a future iPhone remains to be seen, but we haven't heard it rumored for the iPhone 12.

Multitasking Windows

Samsung's Galaxy devices have long offered a version of split screen multitasking, allowing multiple apps to be used at once, and the Galaxy Note20 is no exception. It's a useful feature on the 6.7 to 6.9-inch displays offered in the Note20 and Note20 Ultra.

note20splitscreen.jpg

Apple has long had a split view multitasking feature on the iPad, but multiple app usage has never been brought to the iPhone. That made sense when iPhones were smaller, but now that iPhone displays are getting larger and larger, many iPhone users would likely prefer to be able to use two apps side by side.

In iOS 14, Apple did add Picture in Picture support so you can watch videos or make video calls while doing other things on the iPhone, but there's still no true multitasking functionality.

S-Pen

The S-Pen stylus that comes with the Galaxy Note has long been what differentiates the Note lineup from the standard Galaxy devices. The S-Pen is pretty much akin to an Apple Pencil for the iPad, with super low latency and some useful note taking features.

note20spen.jpg

The S-Pen attaches right to the Galaxy Note20, and popping it out lets you automatically start writing a note even when the display is off. The S-Pen also lets you do things like create a note, write on the screen, select elements on the display, translate selected text, and more.

There's been a rumor here and there over the years that Apple might add Apple Pencil support to the iPhone or develop an Apple Pencil specific to the iPhone, but there's never been any concrete suggestion that a stylus for the iPhone is the plan. It would be nice to have the option to use the Apple Pencil with the iPhone, though, for those who already have an iPad and an Apple Pencil.

DEX

Samsung devices have this neat feature called DEX that lets you dock a smartphone to a PC or a Mac to turn the smartphone into the computer, allowing for direct control with a mouse and a keyboard.

note20dex.jpg

Early versions of DEX required a dock and an external monitor and keyboard, but now you can just plug a smartphone like the Note20 into a computer and finish working on something that you started on the phone.

Apple has Handoff and Continuity features that work in much the same way if you have multiple Apple devices, letting you start something on one device and pick it up on another, but that's limited to Apple devices and it would be nice to just be able to plug in to access what you need without having to fuss with Continuity, or connect to an external monitor, keyboard, and mouse for a MacBook-like experience on the iPhone.

Would you like to see any of these Samsung features in the iPhone? What's your favorite Galaxy Note20 feature that you wish Apple would implement? Let us know in the comments.

Article Link: The Best Features in Samsung's New Galaxy Note20 That Apple Should Adopt
 
I'm not sure what the difference is with DEX compared with Continuity, Handoff and being able to plug your iPhone or iPad into a monitor with an HDMI cable. I set up a friend that way; he didn't have a computer so I got him a Bluetooth keyboard. His iPhone acted as his mouse. The iPhone was connected to an HDMI screen in landscape mode, and he was able to use it very much like a standard computer.
 
By far for me it would be the pencil/stylus. If you never used a Samsung note device you can’t understand how handy a stylus is. I have my own business and constantly speak with people whenI’m out and about. Grabbing phone numbers or addresses is so simple with a stylus especially now that you don’t even need to turn on the device to use it. I use a iPhone 11Pro Max and Bear Notes (Which works great and has watch app also) but it is stil quicker to pop out the stylus and jot down info from a contact/potential client.

I believe Apple could learn a thing or three from Samsung. Stylus, smaller bezels, customizable homescreens.
 
I’ll agree with everything here expect the S-Pen. I don’t want stylist support on my iPhone. Although as long as they don’t integrate a Apple Pencil into the body of the iPhone and just add support for the Apple Pencil itself I’d be okay with that. I won’t use it, but I’m sure someone will find it useful.
 
It would be nice to have this feature in an iPhone for charging up the Apple Watch and the AirPods, or even sharing power with other iPhones.

When was the last time your AirPods completely ran out of juice to the point where you had to use a device that has a more *precious* battery to inefficiently charge? The orange light on the AirPods remind you to charge many times before it reaches 0% and for the past 3-4 years, I've never had the case run down to 0%.

Charging other people's phones make sense, but I don't get why a lot of people are gravitated to seeing an AirPods being charged from a phone.

I guess the only use case here is if you only have 1 charger, you can plugin to your phone and leave your AirPods on the back of your phone so that both devices will be ready in the morning.

If anything, I'd love to have AirPods/Apple Watch send power to my phone in emergency situations, though battery physics suggest that's probably not do-able.
 
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I'm not sure what the difference is with DEX compared with Continuity, Handoff and being able to plug your iPhone or iPad into a monitor with an HDMI cable. I set up a friend that way; he didn't have a computer so I got him a Bluetooth keyboard. His iPhone acted as his mouse. The iPhone was connected to an HDMI screen in landscape mode, and he was able to use it very much like a standard computer.

I believe Dex, like the prior SideSync and Flow, also allow you to mirror or see the phone screen on a PC, in addition to connecting screens and keyboards like you describe. This would be great to have for iOS so I could connect to my iPhone from my Windows PC at work to respond to Messages and the like. Continuity and Handoff only work with Apple devices.
 
with the arrival of Apple Silicon, think about a real desktop experience when an iphone is plugged into a monitor. It would be real great, especially with the power of upcoming chips.

yes. Like how the phone turns into CarPlay when plugged into a car screen, when you plug it into a desktop screen it turn into macOS’s
 
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I'm so glad that I want none of these things.
  • I turn off ProMotion on iPad because it makes me sick
  • My phone battery definitely lasts less than AirPods, so I more would see using an Airpod case as an external battery.
  • Multitasking wouldn't be better than just improving app switching that got worse and caused reloads upon switching apps starting in iOS13
  • Apple Pencil is great for art on iPad. S Pen is for people who need dextarity, seems like 3rd party styluses already fill that need. Not sure people who truly are artists want a tiny screen for that.
  • Maybe Dex is for people who can't afford a computer, but iPad with external keyboard, mouse and monitor is far cheaper than a phone of either brand.
 
Stylus support is the ONLY feature that matters to me on a phone.

I don't get how 'artist-centric' Apple has missed this boat so many times.

BUT, I just learned about the Moto G Stylus. It's a phone the size of an iPhone 8+, and has a stylus. I picked one up for $300. And honestly, it's not too shabby. The stylus isn't as good as the one on the Note series though.

-Chilton
 
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