Testseek.com have collected 663 expert reviews of the Samsung GT-N7100 Galaxy Note 2 and the average rating is 84%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Samsung GT-N7100 Galaxy Note 2.
January 2013
(84%)
663 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(91%)
30 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
840100663
The editors liked
Big display means larger
More legible content
Huge battery means about 2 days medium usage
Fastest
Smoothest Android experience to date
Handwriting recognition is surprisingly good
Slimmer
Narrower design than original Note
Incredibly powerful device – processor
RAM
Some of TouchWiz's extra features
Camera
Incredible battery life
Great screen
Enormous battery
Expandable memory
Amazing screen
LTE capable
Blazingly fast
Outstanding performance
Improved S Pen capabilities
Excellent battery life (3G-only model)
Oodles of screen real estate make the Samsung Galaxy Note 2 terrific for videos
Games
And reading
And its improved stylus aids productivity. A blazing quad-core processor
A great camera
And strong battery life round out the advantages of this Android
The editors didn't like
A couple of TouchWiz niggles
Too big for small hands
Learning curve for S-Pen apps
Auto Brightness is still inconsistent
Build Quality
Scuffs
Tears galore
Can occasionally get warm with heavy
Heavy
Heavy use
Expensive
SPen is still complicated
Slow camera shutter
Size may be a barrier
Not enough S Pen apps
Some annoying TouchWIZ issues
The huge display makes the Galaxy Note 2 unwieldy to carry
And hiccups in the S Pen stylus and apps can slow you down. The pricey Note 2 isn't a suitable tablet replacement across all categories
Abstract: The original Samsung Note made quite an impact on the smartphone market back in February of this year; big screen, big size and questions as to what it really was meant to compete with or replace. Upon using it one could see that it was great as a smart...
Fast LTE. Massive high-definition screen. Fast quad-core processor. Includes a pressure-sensitive stylus and well-designed note-taking and drawing software. Runs Android 4.1 "Jelly Bean" out of the box. Stellar call quality.
Very large. A few minor hiccups in gaming performance
With a fast quad-core processor, a big, gorgeous display, and features galore, the Samsung Galaxy Note II delivers everything a huge-screen smartphone should. If you want a phone that doubles as a small tablet, it's the best you'll find....
It's the Samsung Galaxy Note 2. On T-Mobile.You're Samsung. You've survived the early years of Android. You've made it through the awkward teenage years, and the cries of #neveragain, and learned to (or at least learned to spend the money to) keep the upd...
The hardware is, aesthetically, a huge improvement over the Galaxy S III. All of the ugly, design-around-the-iPhone decisions have been tossed out the door, and the result is a logically designed, rectangular device. The top and bottom bezels are impre...
Abstract: Samsung took a big risk with its first Galaxy Note device. At 5.3-in., the device's screen was almost comically large for a smartphone. That, combined with the Note's seemingly retro stylus, led to plenty of skepticism and outright ridicule. Samsung's ...
Abstract: So I have a confession to make. What seems like an eternity ago, I received a Galaxy Note review unit for AT&T, but never quite finished my review. While the reasons for that were no fault of the device and rather the result of some other personal fa...
Published: 2012-10-24, Author: Pete , review by: mashable.com
Abstract: Among tech products — Android devices especially — the customer base is often bifurcated between casual buyers and the so-called “power users.” The Samsung Galaxy Note II is a smartphone that’s catered strongly to the latter group. But for less-demandi...
Large form factor but UI tweaks make it easy to use one-handed, Fast mobile broadband connectivity thanks to 4G HSPA+ or 4G LTE networks, Fast, responsive UI with quad-core Samsung-made Exynos processor and 2 GB RAM, Software enhancements such as pop-out
Large form factor may turn off some users who want a more compact phone, S Pen is more comfortable to hold than 1st gen Note, but new S Pen for Note II doesn't have optional S Pen Holder accessory for better ergonomics, Awkward, but not impossible, to hol
With the Galaxy Note II, Samsung is improving on a form factor that it has helped to popularize. The Note II is more than just a smartphone or a tablet, and the sum of the parts definitely is more ‘valuable' than each individual part as the device's capac...
To answer the question from the beginning of this review, if the Galaxy Note 2 is any indication, the “phablet” is definitely here to stay. The Note 2 offers tons of functionality and deep levels of productivity in a sleek package. Sleek, however, does no...
Last year at IFA, Samsung introduced a new class of handset with the launch of its original Galaxy Note, smartphones with huge displays (5-inch+) that we internally call “phablets”. Its successor, the Galaxy Note 2 features a larger display (5.5”), a fast...