Samsung Galaxy Note 4, Official Release Date Confirmed, Samsung Reveals Note 4's Drop-Test Video, the new Note is Resilient and Durable
Samsung Galaxy Note 4 is noteworthy for its fully-packed specs and features, made better than its previous Note 3, and its recent drop test shows that the new Galaxy Note 4 is definitely made better.
Samsung recently released a video showing just how durable their new Note 4 is, and it's definitely convincing many of its viewers that their new Samsung Galaxy Note 4 is made to endure pretty much anything.
Also, its release date is now officially set to October 17, as the company recently announced the official release date during their September event in Berlin.
The Note 4 is a 5.7 inch screen phablet, featuring Samsung's very first 1440p display. Its Super AMOLED display comes with a quad HD resolution, and that is 4x the regular HDs out there. The new phablet also comes in black, white, gold, and in pink, and is looking classy. It surely looks better than its previous one, with a lightly textured vibe and metallic rim. It is as big as a phablet can be, but still small enough fit into our pockets, measuring 6 x 3.1 x 0.34 inches and weighing 176 grams. It has a heart-rate monitor and a microSD slot at its back.
Samsung Galaxy Note 4 has a quad-core Snapdragon 805 chipset, and the phablet runs the same OS as the Galaxy S5, but faster with a 2.7GHz processor. It also has a 32GB internal storage that can be expanded to 64GB. It also comes with a 3GB RAM. The Note 4's battery will charge up to 50% in half an hour.
The Note 4 introduces a new 3.7 megapixel front camera. It also has a 16 megapixel back camera, with optical image stabilization, and has a HDR preview mode. Both front and back cameras now performs better even in low-light settings.
The new Note's S Pen stylus is more sensitive and accurate than it was before. The S Pen can also now minimize app windows. It can be dragged around, copy/paste, and define visible words, too.
As for the price, Samsung Galaxy Note 4 should cost around $300 (with contract) to $600 (without contract) in the US.
















