DOES IT REALLY WORTH THE CLAMOUR....?
Edward C. Baig, USA Today
Is the Galaxy S5 worth all the
excitement? Touting new features like a fingerprint reader, heart rate
monitor and a high-speed camera, Samsung's new flagship Android phone
makes some impressive steps forward. The first reviewers seem especially
impressed with the S5's water-resistant shell.
However, the
device faces some stiff competition in the Android market, especially
from the excellent HTC One M8. Plus, many are finding the heart rate
monitor and fingerprint reader to be inconsistent. Is the Galaxy S5
going to be another hit? Here's what the critics are saying. Stay tuned
for Laptop Mag's in-depth review.
Geoffrey Fowler, The Wall Street Journal
The Good:
"The Galaxy S5 has a waterproof exterior that survived a dunking in a
margarita, a plunge in to a toilet, and left overnight in strawberry
Jell-O. (Yes, I tried.)"
"The
Galaxy S5 is easier to use than the S4. Samsung is playing down a long
list of the dubious and confusing services it touted with the previous
model, like "air gesture" controls to manipulate the screen without
touch. It also no longer pre-installs some space-hogging apps like the
Samsung Hub for buying music and video."
The Bad: "The
heart rate sensor, one of the Galaxy S5's advertised breakthroughs,
worked about half the time in my tests. Sometimes it reported rates that
were way off."
Jessica Dolcourt, CNET
The Good:
"I like what Samsung did to clean up the camera experience, but
theGalaxy S5's expanded editing tools are my favorite. Not only do they
get a spiffier look, there are a lot more of them, including the ability
to resize images, tweak portraits, and decorate, even annotate,
pictures."
"If performance clinches the deal for you, the Galaxy S5 is one mean speed demon."
The Bad:"I
would, however, skip the Galaxy S5 if you like metal covering your
smartphone, if you don't need every feature under the sun, or if you
prefer a cleaner version of Android."
Gareth Beavis, TechRadar
The Good: "The screen on the Samsung Galaxy S5 is one of the best on the market, and easily the best feature of the phone."
"I'm just going to come out and say it: battery life on the Samsung Galaxy S5 is excellent."
The Bad: "Despite
the fact Samsung is probably going to sell a record number of Galaxy S5
units, I can't help but think it's missed a massive trick by popping
out another phone clad in plastic."
"I
wasn't always impressed by the speed of the phone either - the camera
could take a while to load, games sometimes showed lag and opening the
gallery will always be a sticking point for me."
Harry McCracken, Time
The Good:
"Much of whats new in the S5 isnt all that inventive, but involves
stuff that every smartphone owner cares about, such as physical
durability, display and camera quality and battery life."
"Im
smitten with the new Ultra Power Saving Mode, which you can switch on
in case of dire emergencies such as your battery gauge dipping below 10%
when youre attending a conference and wont be able to top it up for
hours."
The Bad: "Sadly, the fingerprint scanner
is nowhere near as well done as Touch ID. You need to drag your finger
or thumb across the entire home button in a precise, vertical swipe; if
you do it carefully, the odds that the scanner will recognize your print
are high, but its a two-handed job."Edward C. Baig, USA Today
The Good: "The S5 has an eye-popping 5.1-inch Super Amoled 1080p display that can adapt to its lighting environment."
"This
latest flagship arguably goes further than any rival device in pushing
health and fitness and a connection to wearable computers such as
Samsung's own new Gear Fit."
The Bad: "Alas, I had trouble with the first test unit Samsung supplied my fingerprint batting average was no better than 30%"
"HTC still gets the nod over the Galaxy for its external stereo speakers."
Bottom Line
Based
on these early reviews, the Samsung Galaxy S5 is shaping up to be a
speedy and durable S4 successor that packs lots of useful features
without overwhelming you with options. However, it seems that many
reviewers are having trouble with the handset's fingerprint reader and
heart rate monitor, both of which are new to the Galaxy series and may
take some updates to iron out the kinks.
The
Galaxy S5 releases Apr. 11 and will be available on AT&T, T-Mobile,
Verizon and Sprint. The 16GB version of the handset will run you $199
with a two-year contract, and you'll be able to choose between black,
white, gold and electric blue depending on your carrier. We look forward
to bringing you our full review of the Galaxy S5.
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