Saturday, 13 August 2016

The Samsung Galaxy S6 is the most popular-about phone at Mobile World conference this year.




The Samsung Galaxy S6 is the most popular-about phone at Mobile World conference this year, and it’s censorious that Samsung gets this right.  Luckily for Samsung, it looks like it has: the S6 is chock-full of advance, most essentially an all-new design that looks like it came from a totally another different company.
Until last year, Android—and particularly Samsung—has owned the super-sized phone space that was bizarrely retired by Apple. The Galaxy can no longer depend on being the best plus-sized phone; it has to be the very excellent phone all throughout to keep its advocate from jumping ship to iOS-ville.
And there's a very powerful disputation to be made that they've done it: Here are the some features
1. Smart Manager
View and arrange your battery life, your storage, and your security. Delete unnecessary files, or shut down apps; everything you required to limit performance all on one screen.
2. Leading the Charge
Even with Smart Manager to assist you pull your operation, you'll require to charge sometime. With the Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 edge, you can select quickly charging to four hours of battery life in just 10 in minutes.
3. Better Storage
The Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 edge are obtainable with up to 128GB of built-in storage, using the high-speed UFS 2.0 spec so conserving and loading files won't slow you down anymore.
4. Verdict
The Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge Plus is an undeniably stunning phone. It's got some of the best-performing hardware on the market, a great camera, and it's lovely to look at. The  matter is, all that lovely will cost you the  good part of £1,000 - a high premium for a device that's essentially identical to one launched earlier in the year. 
5. Specs and hardware
As you might expect from the follow-up to one of the year’s best-spaced devices, the S6 Edge plus is very, very nippy. Although it’s the same CPU as seen in the basic Edge, the Edge Plus’ octocore Exynos 7420 processor pair with an upgraded 4GB of RAM is an absolute beast, and happily handled anything we cared to theme it to. We’re not shocked, considering it’s got roughly the same amount of memory as a budget laptop. 
6. Serious Multitasking
Technically, you can multitask with any phone, but switching between apps is a discomfort in the ram. The Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 edge use Samsung's Multi Window™ technology to put dual apps on-screen at once, like your computer.
Review
The Good: The upscale Samsung Galaxy S6's smooth glass-and-matte-metal body, advance fingerprint reader, and suitable new camera shortcut key make the phone a stunner.
The Bad: Longtime fans will bristle at the Galaxy S6's have a permanent battery and truant dispensable storage. The phone has a suddenly reflective backing and looks embarrassingly like the iPhone 6. Battery life, while good, falls short of last year's Galaxy.
The Bottom Line: smart looks and top-notch specs make the magnificent, metal Samsung Galaxy S6 the Android phone to beat for 2015.
 Design
I've already expressed my love for the Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge's design, but in truth this is a Jekyll and Hyde device.
Place the S6 Edge face up on a desk and you can't help but be stunning with the extensive sides, rounded metal frame and inclusive premium appeal of the handset.
These are compliments usually reserved for the iPhone range and HTC's one series, but Samsung has managed to haul its design department into the 21st century  deport plastic to the lesser mobiles in its company.
There's no question there are some similarities to Apple's design here. The placement of the headphone jack, microUSB port and machine drilled speaker holes on the base mimic the iPhone 6, while the change from a volume rocker to separate metal keys on the left also suggests a Cupertino influence.
With the edges of the handset tapering to a very limited profile thanks to those dual curved displays there's no space for a SIM tray - plus that glass back isn't coming off.

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