If you own a Samsung, Galaxy Note, 8 you're, probably wondering if the brand new Galaxy Note 9 is worth the upgrade. If you couldn't already tell the note, 9 is an incremental update, but there's still some significant changes over the note. Eight that are worth talking about all the changes that Samsung has made to the note.9 are aimed at refinement, but most of them are pretty minor. The overall design looks almost identical, but there are some small details that make the note nice design feel a little better. The sides are much flatter now and there's a chambered edge that runs around the entire body, making the phone feel a lot less slippery. The other big change to the design is the fingerprint sensor isn't a much more convenient and comfortable location under the camera.
Instead of that awkward side, placement of the note 8 you get a slightly bigger six point: four-inch screen with slightly smaller bezels on the note 9, but otherwise the displays are completely identical. With the same HD+ resolution and Super AMOLED technology, the S Pen is still the same S Pen that it was on the note 8, with all the same features and functionality, but is Bluetooth capable now which lets you do things like remotely control the cameras shutter button. The internal hardware is where you'll find the most significant upgrades. You've got a faster snapdragon, 845 processors, on the note 9 and the base model starts at a hundred and twenty-eight gigs of storage and six gigs of ram the fully maxed out Note nine will bump you up to eight gigs of RAM and four times e storage at 512 gigabytes. In comparison, the note 8 has last year's 835 six gigs of ram and tops out at 256 gigs of storage.
The biggest upgrade is the four thousand William hour battery, which is a pretty big deal. Considering last year's Note 8 played it pretty safe with a 3300 William hour battery with the note 9 Samsung has also added the dual aperture mode from the s9, and the camera now has built-in scene recognition. Although this is probably a feature that could come to the Note 8 in a future update with the exception that the note 9 has a more recent version of Oreo with Android 8.1 instead of 8.0 on the note 8, the software experiences are virtually identical. Most of these changes probably aren't enough to warrant an upgrade. If you already a note 8, but if you're coming from something much older, it could be worth it if you're willing to shell out 8,000 dollars or more to get one.
That's it for this quick comparison between the Samsung, Galaxy, Note, 9 and Galaxy Note 8. Let us know your thoughts down in the comments section below and as always, if you enjoyed this video, please give it a thumbs up. We definitely appreciate it subscribe to the channel, which is also down below and hit that notification bell. So you don't miss out on future videos and, of course, check us out on social media Instagram, Twitter Snapchat. All that good stuff is linked down below and check the website as well for more in-depth coverage and rathole decor, because we are your source for all things.
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Source : Android Authority