Samsung Galaxy Tab S7 Plus hands-on: killer screen, great sound, messy DeX – The Verge

The 12.4-inch OLED screen has a 120Hz revitalize rate for smooth interactions.

The other day, Samsung revealed a considerable amount of brand-new items, including the most recent variation of its popular Note smart device and the next folding phone in its portfolio. In the mix was the brand-new Galaxy Tab S7 and S7 Plus, the companys latest high-end Android tablets developed to go blow-for-blow with the iPad Pro.

As expected, the Tab S7 duo stack the spec sheet, a minimum of as far as Android gadgets go. They have everything from 5G to 120Hz screens to quad-speaker systems. They also cost a stack, starting at $649.99 for the 11-inch Tab S7 and $849.99 for the 12.4-inch S7 Plus. Adding Samsungs keyboard folio case to the mix adds another $199.99 (11-inch) or $229.99 (12.4-inch) to the tally, indicating you can quickly spend over a grand on among these tablets.

Ive been able to test-drive a Tab S7 Plus for a few days, and here are my thoughts on the highs and lows of the experience. Do not take this as a complete review; this is a preproduction unit, and Samsung isnt preparing to ship it up until this fall, so an official review will need to come later on. I can give you an idea of what its like to use the Tab S7 Plus for both work and play after a few days. Lets begin with whats great.

Oh my god, this screen

The Tab S7 Plus display is considerably smaller than a 12.9-inch iPad Pro screen.

My only gripe is that its considerably smaller sized than the 12.9-inch iPad Pro due to its more rectangular shape and shorter diagonal measurement. When Im trying to get work done, it feels a bit more cramped. However when it comes time to see HDR video, Samsung wins whenever.

Unsurprisingly, the absolute best thing by far about the Tab S7 Plus is its display. Yes, the iPad Pro has actually had this function for 3 years, but its simply as much of a delight here as it is on Apples tablet. Offered that this is an OLED panel, I may even argue that this is the nicest screen Ive ever seen on a mobile device.

Efficiency is fast

The Tab S7 Plus has Qualcomms latest and biggest Snapdragon 865 Plus processor within, plus 8GB of RAM. In my three or so days of utilizing the tablet, Ive never ever had a slowdown or down, even when Im bouncing in between several apps and running a handful of tabs in the browser. I had the ability to talk with my coworkers in Slack, make up posts in our CMS, browse Twitter, view Doug DeMuro videos, and stay up to date with my RSS feed similar to I do on a laptop every day of the week. Yes, technically Apples processor is faster than the Qualcomm in a benchmark test. In the genuine world, the Tab S7 Plus feels no slower than the iPad Pro.

The speakers are loud and sound fantastic

Samsung put 4 speakers into the Tab S7 models and dolloped a little Dolby Atmos and AKG tuning on top. The result is a loud, full experience that sounds fantastic whether Im enjoying a YouTube video, listening to some Spotify, or dialing into a Zoom call. The last time I was this pleased with the speakers on a tablet was on the iPad Pro, so I d state Samsung succeeded here. They are nearly good enough for me to forgive Samsung for not consisting of an earphone jack.

There are four very loud, extremely nice-sounding speakers on the Tab S7 Plus (2 on each side).

The front video camera is in the best spot

Look, one of the most annoying aspects of utilizing an iPad as a main computer is that when you have to be on a video call, the video camera is off to the side. You can either look at the electronic camera or look at individuals youre speaking to, but not both at the very same time. Samsung was clever enough to put the video camera on a different edge of the screen, so when youre using it in the keyboard case the electronic camera is on the top, not the side, much like a laptop. Its not the best electronic camera Ive ever seen, however it does run laps around most laptop cams at this moment. Heres a filthy and quick sample I took as Im writing this short article:

A shot taken with the front-facing video camera on the Tab S7 Plus.

The keyboard case looks great however has defects

The keyboard case has as lots of aggravations as it has good qualities.

All right, heres where I started running into some hiccups on the Tab S7 Plus. The keyboard case, which costs $229.99 (no small sum), has some good concepts however simply as numerous inflammations.

I like how the keyboard can be separated from the tablet and theres still a part of the case protecting the back and offering a kickstand for enjoying video or drawing. Its way more versatile than Apples Magic Keyboard, which generally forces you into having all or absolutely nothing.

The trackpad also has dreadful palm rejection, which sends my cursor flying across the screen unpredictably all day, and you cant disable the inverted (or “natural”) scrolling on it, which frustrates me.

The keyboard and trackpad have great feel and action. The number of times per day I need to press F9 is around zero, while Im adjusting volume all day long.

But that flexibility comes at a cost when I attempt to use the Tab S7 on my lap, where its all kinds of wobbly and unstable. I can make it work, but its way less comfortable than an iPad Pro, Surface Pro, or standard clamshell laptop on my real lap.

DeX is, well, still a mess

The truth that I cant use the trackpad to select text in a webpage irritates. There are the bigger problems, like when apps refuse to open in DeX mode (hey there LastPass) or do not want to cooperate with Samsungs hacky window resizing controls (looking at you, Pocket). Apps often just crash when Im in the DeX environment, and if I close up the tablet and open it up later on, I can anticipate that all of the apps I was working in will be gone.

Of course, there is the fact that the large majority of Android apps simply kind of look foolish on such a huge screen. Samsung has done a good job of making sure its own apps work well on the canvas, a minimum of. If you bail on DeX and utilize it in the standard Android mode, you can use Samsungs feature that lets you run 3 apps at the exact same time (similar to you can on the Galaxy Fold). Thats great, however it cant make up for the truth that the majority of apps appear like stretched-out phone apps or dont use assistance for keyboard shortcuts.

Photography by Dan Seifert/ The Verge.

Youll probably improve battery life if you just utilize the Tab S7 to watch videos, read articles and ebooks, or lightly search the web, but I have not had it enough time to actually check those scenarios fully. When we do a formal evaluation, Stay tuned for more on that.

There are other parts of the Tab S7 Plus experience that will have to wait for the complete review. Samsung hasnt yet revealed a precise release date (just that its coming “this fall”), and there is time for it to deal with some of the problems I experienced this week, such as the trackpads poor palm recognition and minimal customizability.

The Tab S7s extremely rectangle-shaped shape makes it more awkward to use in portrait orientation.

Its not a controversial statement to say that the weakest part of Samsungs tablet offerings is that they run Android, which hasnt really worked well on tablets in, well, ever. To attempt to overcome some of Androids large-screen imperfections, Samsung developed DeX a couple of years ago to offer a more conventional desktop-like experience, complete with overlapping windows and a taskbar at the bottom.

They likewise cost a stack, beginning at $649.99 for the 11-inch Tab S7 and $849.99 for the 12.4-inch S7 Plus. I can give you an idea of what its like to utilize the Tab S7 Plus for both work and play after a couple of days. The Tab S7 Plus has Qualcomms most current and greatest Snapdragon 865 Plus processor inside, plus 8GB of RAM. Samsung put four speakers into the Tab S7 models and dolloped a bit of Dolby Atmos and AKG tuning on top. Im not sure if its the high-res, high-refresh display screen, the reality that Im bouncing between at least 6 various apps all day long, or what, but Ive been consistently able to kill the battery in less than four hours when I use the Tab S7 Plus as a laptop.

Be prepared to charge it up frequently if youre preparing to utilize the Tab S7 as an everyday workhorse. Im uncertain if its the high-res, high-refresh display, the reality that Im bouncing in between at least six various apps all day long, or what, however Ive been regularly able to kill the battery in less than four hours when I use the Tab S7 Plus as a laptop computer. Luckily, theres 45-watt fast charging support, due to the fact that I have to plug it in about two times every day.

( Also, this is extremely pedantic, but the mouse pointer is rotated counter-clockwise a couple of degrees more than the one in Windows or macOS, and it looks odd and off-putting to me.).

The battery will not last a whole workday.