It's
no secret that Samsung needed to do something big with its new phone,
to unleash something to stop the rot that the Galaxy S4 began two years
ago.
I just didn't expect the Galaxy S6 to be this good.
Yes, there are still some elements that prevent it from
being the perfect phone (this is Samsung after all, a brand that likes
to cram as much into the phone as it can get away with) but to leap to
this point from the plastic-clad nonsense of the Galaxy S5 is a really, really impressive feat.
Samsung didn't take this task lightly, beginning almost completely from scratch and replacing key members of its design team to make sure it created a standout phone.
Perhaps the S6 is a little too similar
to the rest of the competition (it looks stunningly like an iPhone at
the bottom) but at least there's the Galaxy S6 Edge for those that want a really unique-looking device.
The
big issues are price and battery life: the former being wincingly high.
We're talking £575 / $750 / around AU$980 SIM free for the 32GB version
– and at 64GB, it's more than an iPhone 6 in the UK, costing £660
(although in other countries it's a little cheaper).
And
there's a smaller battery on board than last year, which instantly
makes me worry when the screen resolution has been bumped up to give us
the sharpest display on the market.
But Samsung's been at
this smartphone game for a while now, so can it justify that high price
tag by cramming in loads of amazing technology… and make the battery
last more than a day?
Design
Samsung's gone bold
on the design of the Galaxy S6, taking away the usual plastic covering
that festooned previous models and finally stepping into the world of
metal for its flagships.
It's dallied with a more premium design ever since the Galaxy Alpha
was brought out in the middle of last year. But with a higher price and
lower spec, that model didn't really catch on, despite feeling really
premium in the hand.
So this time Samsung's gone one step
further, adding an all-metal band to a strong glass case and, really,
making a phone that couldn't be much further from the Galaxy S5.
If you want to see the price of this Samsung Galaxy S6 click here
That's not to say the brand hasn't kept some of the design heritage in there - after all, Samsung is a company that's big on tradition. The front of the phone harks back to the Galaxy S4 days, with a rounded and bland fascia combined with the lozenge home button.
That's not to say the brand hasn't kept some of the design heritage in there - after all, Samsung is a company that's big on tradition. The front of the phone harks back to the Galaxy S4 days, with a rounded and bland fascia combined with the lozenge home button.
The biggest
shame is that I didn't get to fully review one of the colored variants
rather than 'White Pearl' that you can see here.
The
other colors have a jewel-like sheen, reflecting the light in a luxury
way. The white is just rather boring, and looks like older devices
again.
The reason for sending reviewers the white version
first is pretty clear though: this thing is a fingerprint magnet. I
know I've said that before about other devices, but it's never been
truer than on the Galaxy S6.
The rear of the phone will
just become marked and smudged within seconds of handling it, so like a
silver car the white chassis on the S6 serves to hide those ugly
blemishes.
In
the hand the Galaxy S6 is a very nice device to hold, with the 5.1-inch
screen taking up most of the front. It's compact yet elegant, with a
clear feel of premium quality when you're holding it.
That
said, it doesn't feel like the most expensive on the market - whatever
reason Samsung is giving for charging this high premium, it's not coming
through in the design - but it does feel like a device that can be
mentioned in the same breath as the HTC One M9 and iPhone 6 in terms of
build quality.
The metal band around the side is split by
strips of plastic to allow the antenna and other radios to make their
connections - and if it looks familiar, well, it's a very similar design
to that used on the iPhone 6.
These strips are needed
as metal is very inefficient at letting phone signal pass through, and
Samsung isn't alone in including them. However, with the glass front and
rear I was surprised to see them make an appearance.
Combined
with the fact the bottom of the phone, where the speaker and headphone
jack live, looks almost identical to what Apple is doing, this seems to
be a risky line Samsung is treading.
The general layout
of the phone is well designed though. The volume buttons on the
left-hand side and the power button on the right are perfectly
positioned, and the home button has been massively upgraded to deliver a
very solid click.
That might not sound important, but
it's not been the case with previous Galaxy phones so I'm pleased to see
Samsung finally step up.
The back of the phone yields
one of the less aesthetically pleasing elements though, with the camera
protruding quite significantly from the rear of the Galaxy S6.
The
reason is obvious: to allow for a higher power optical system and
you'll see in the camera section that this was very, very much worth it.
But
again, I'm left wondering what Samsung is doing here. In the
desperation for a flat phone, the battery capacity is reduced and the
camera left sticking out, exposing it to possible scratching.
Why
not slightly round the rear, make it sit more nicely in the hand and
improve the space for a battery? HTC does it to terrific effect on the
One series, but it seems other brands are obsessed with a flat phone. As
a result the S6 doesn't even rest comfortably on the desk, with a
little wobble when tapping it at work.
But don't let the
above make you think this is anything other than a great phone design.
It's not up there with the very best - the HTC One M9's
craftsmanship puts this head and shoulders ahead of the Galaxy S6 in
terms of feel in the hand - but Samsung has finally offered what we've
been hankering after for years, and it's done it well.
Screen
Samsung
has always had brilliant screen technology, and once again, that's the
case on the Samsung Galaxy S6. The Super AMOLED display offers clear,
crisp whites against pure blacks, meaning even dark scenes are shown off
perfectly.
The
5.1-inch display now packs more pixels than ever before - 1440 x 2560
in fact, which matches the Galaxy Note 4 but with a higher PPI of 577 -
which means you're looking at the sharpest display on the market.
If you want to see the price of this Samsung Galaxy S6 click here
The QHD level of screen was started by LG last year with the G3, but as that was based on LCD technology it left the screen a little dark and power hungry, as each pixel caused a heavier strain on the battery.
The QHD level of screen was started by LG last year with the G3, but as that was based on LCD technology it left the screen a little dark and power hungry, as each pixel caused a heavier strain on the battery.
Then the Google Nexus 6
came along, and that really impressed with its larger screen. Despite
the wider display it still looked great, and when the aforementioned
Note 4 came along with the same resolution, the bar was set.
So
combining the pixel count of the Note 4 with a smaller display should
yield an exquisite display, right? Sadly, no. That's not to say the
screen on the Samsung Galaxy S6 doesn't look brilliant - it really,
really does - but I'm not sure the QHD resolution really adds that much
to the mix, especially given the higher power drain it commands.
Watching
some optimized video does look nicer, and held side by side the screen
is clearly sharper than a normal Full HD display.
But
we've gone way past the point of needing any more sharpness in our
phones, and even 720p resolutions don't look terrible (a point well made
by Matthew Hanson in his piece on the myths of screen resolution) so I'm wondering why Samsung bothered here.
The
Super AMOLED technology can make 1080p screens look phenomenal, and has
been for years. And with bigger screens, the improved pixel count helps
make them look next generation. But at 5.1-inch, this seems more
gimmick than anything else as Samsung looks for anything it can throw
into a new flagship to grab headlines.
(Admittedly the improved resolution is needed for the Gear VR
headset, where the phone is the screen and so more pixels are better.
But that's not going to be a real world use for this phone for many).
The
screen on the Galaxy S6 is superb. It does still have all the real
benefits of Super AMOLED, as I've mentioned, with outdoor visibility
particularly strong.
There's nothing that doesn't look
amazing on it - but it does come at the cost of battery life and, well,
actual cost, and I'm not sure it adds enough to warrant those
sacrifices.
There's something perverse in being happy that Samsung has
fewer amazing things to talk about on its new phone, but for years I've
been forced to talk about nonsensical ideas on the latest Galaxy
flagship phone - we'll not go into the Smart Scroll debacle.
This
time around, it's all about refinement, making it really easy to do the
things you need without having to slap around a thousand menus. And the
fancy stuff is kept to a minimum as Samsung finally takes note of what
people like and focuses on the basics.
It might sound odd, given I was just saying the
gimmickry was reduced, but I'm going to start with the heart rate
monitor. It's still as unnecessary as ever, but it's now less prone to
failing at least.
I've
used it at the end of runs to see my heart rate, but that's not really
giving me much useful information unless I can use it at the exact same
moment after each workout. When charting your resting pulse it works a
lot better, allowing you to see how much fitter you're getting by how
hard your heart is working when you wake up.
To that end,
it would be great if the S6 could prompt you to take a reading the
second you wake up - without that data it all becomes a little moot.
If
you do remember though, it's a much more accurate system, and you get
to see the heart rate displayed visually too, which is really cool.
Even
the oxygen and stress tests work better now - on the Note 4 this was
just a car crash of inaccuracy, so while I still have no idea why
Samsung is sticking with the heart rate monitor, at least it works well.
The
S Health app which eats up all this data is improved too. The interface
is so much cleaner, with special place given to heart rate, stress,
running etc.
The cleanliness of the interface extends to
being able to see the graph of heart rate over time, for instance, with
an easy slide across showing the important information.
There's
still not a lot of point to this app, of course - and now it's shorn of
the life coaching ability, which would give handy hints on how to
improve your wellbeing through eating, life goals and more.
It's
now just a hub of slightly inaccurate information (a 100 minute run was
logged as only 70 minutes according to the app, despite being in motion
for the full period).
Fingerprint scanner
The
fingerprint on the Samsung Galaxy S6 is one of the best on the market -
and I didn't think I'd be saying that after the sliding option we had on
the Galaxy S5. I was under the impression that Apple had the monopoly
on decent scanners, but this changes things.
Like Apple,
Samsung employs the single touch way of verifying your print, but after
the simple set up the scanner here is amazingly accurate. A light touch
will be enough to open the phone, and it rarely fails.
The
other benefit is for Samsung Pay as well as using PayPal. The payment
system from Samsung, which is promises will fill in all the gaps left by
Apple Pay, has yet to fully launch (and won't be in the UK for a while,
it seems) and the idea of paying for stuff through PayPal is rather
hard to actually use unless you've managed to find anywhere that will
actually let you pay using the app.
But
it seems like the security side of things here, a situation created by
Samsung's retooling of its fingerprint tech, is massively improved, and
is a great way to get into your phone.
Smart Manager
Samsung's
refined a well-worn app well on the Galaxy S6, allowing you to see all
the important stuff in one place. The Smart Manager lets you track
security on the phone, the battery life, storage and RAM usage. A quick
tap will 'clean' all of these, but it doesn't do a huge amount.
For
instance, you're only going to need to clean up storage once in a
while, with unused app info being deleted, and the RAM usage is still
something that I'm not sure how it works.
If you clear
the RAM, the phone doesn't speed up or slow down much, and it seems that
it could be affecting apps with opening and shutting. Battery usage is
easy to work out, but I've not seen anything happening from asking the
phone to 'clean up' this area.
It's a nice app to have in
one place, and when you do need to have a look through stuff it's a
very good option to have, but I was hoping for more for this idea from
Samsung.
Double wireless
This could be a big one:
Samsung's packed both versions of wireless charging into the thin frame
of the Galaxy S6. When you see how much heft that usually adds to a
phone to have ONE standard on there, having both the PMA and QI on the
phone is amazing.
It shouldn't be this way, with a brand
having to pack two competing technologies in one place. We need a
single, unified, standard for wireless charging, but whatever the
landscape Samsung is ready to service it.
I tested the S6
on the Tylt stand, which promises to let you chuck the phone down any
which way and get it charging wirelessly, and for the most part it's
right. I also tried the Fonesalesman's QiStone+ Wireless charger,
which is a battery pack as well for wireless charging on the go - it's
good, but unless you're in a very still area it's very easy to make it
slide off the pad.
Even the official wireless puck from
Samsung, with a rubber ring to hold the phone in place, doesn't quite
grip it well enough thanks to the protruding camera on the back. Were
this phone flat, it wouldn't be as much of an issue, but it's a slider.
The
wireless charging on the Tylt stand was very quick, similar to what I'd
expect on a normal charger. This was impressive given the input was
only 0.75 amps, which is much less than the phone can handle. However,
the phone does heat up rather significantly on all the wireless pads, so
it's worth keeping an eye on that if you're keeping in your bag near
some sandwiches.
Microsoft's on board
A lot's
been made of the fact that Samsung has bundled the Microsoft suite of
apps onto its phones this year, but in reality it's not something to get
that bothered about.
The only really cool addition is
OneNote, which is a good alternative to Evernote (which was previously
placed on Samsung phones). It allows you to create notes, lists and mini
documents on the fly in an easy to use interface, and is a good
addition.
The
other Microsoft apps added in are Skype and OneDrive - not really the
full suite I was expecting. The former is on many new phones now -
including the One M9 - and is easily downloaded anyway.
What's
more annoying is that the app pops up every so often on the battery
screen, sipping a little bit of power, even when not used. OneDrive is
cool in that it gives you 100GB of storage space, but I'd rather Samsung
had partnered with Google in the same way as HTC to give that space on
Google Drive.
You can see that Samsung knows Google Drive
is the bigger hitter, as you can link your phone's file manager system
to Drive with one tap, with the same option nowhere to be seen for
Microsoft.
Apps disabled
That said about
Microsoft, you can get rid of most of it if you fancy anyway. While
Samsung's not chucked as much bloatware onto the Galaxy S6 as normal,
there are still a fair few apps that come out of the box.
The
good news is these can now be uninstalled with a simple tap - even the
Google Play Store for some reason. Don't get rid of that though, as it
will make getting new apps on there really rather difficult.
It
doesn't seem that these apps are really uninstalled, merely disabled
and hidden from view, but given the capacious storage on offer from 32GB
to 128GB, it's essentially the same thing for most users.
The TouchWiz UI on top of Android 5.0.2 is impressive in
that it's been upgraded well from last year, which in itself was a big
step forward.
The look is more refined than before, with
larger and flatter icons festooning the home screen, and the amount of
menus reduced too. Samsung made a big deal of the amount of clutter it
removed, and while it is reduced, there are still myriad pop ups and
options to play around with.
I don't mind that too much though, as it's a clear and
clean interface to wander through. A tap on the settings icon will take
you to all the options in one place, with your favorite settings on the
top of the screen - it would have been great if this was auto-populated
with most used, but being able to customize it is good enough.
Things
like the camera, which prefers to take options off the screen rather
than instantly give every single setting within one tap, show that
Samsung is trying to clean things up, and for the most part it shows.
Everything
is well laid out, and save for the cartoonish way it's all been
designed (there's still a lot of scope for Samsung to make things look a
lot more mature and cultured here, something I hope will happen soon to
make all criticism of TouchWiz's UI disappear) I'm generally a fan of
TouchWiz.
A lot of people don't like it, but I think it's
as good as many other interfaces out there. It lacks the sophistication
of HTC's Sense, or the simplicity of Apple's iOS, but what it does have
is really great power and obvious buttons.
If I need to
do something, it's not hard to work out where it is, and yet there are
loads of useful settings to play with if I dig in.
If you want to see the price of this Samsung Galaxy S6 click here
It's also been improved through some clever gesture-based tweaks, which are found often by accidentally sliding a finger right or left. The camera now jumps into photos with a swipe more easily than ever and a slide right in the gallery pops open folders.
It's also been improved through some clever gesture-based tweaks, which are found often by accidentally sliding a finger right or left. The camera now jumps into photos with a swipe more easily than ever and a slide right in the gallery pops open folders.
Options to share
items, send your screen to a larger display or just connect to another
device pop up just when you need them, and combined with a reduction in
annoying warning messages the UI is a lot smarter.
One thing Samsung isn't great at is making a responsive UI, and that's evident here on the Galaxy S6 again.
I'm
not saying there's judder or lag in the OS - far from it, this is one
of the most fluid interfaces I've ever used, which you'd expect with
Samsung's own octa-core Exynos CPU running things - but things like the
multi-tasking menu take a second to open when pressed.
Or
waking the phone up from sleep can take a second or two, a problem
that's plagued Samsung phones throughout the ages. I've no idea why
these little quirks exist, and can only assume that it's to do with the
way Samsung constructs its operating system as there's plenty of power
there with the 3GB of RAM backing up the four 1.5GHz and four 2.1GHz
cores.
Generally though the S6 is brilliant in terms of
interface. Double tapping the home button will open the camera wherever
you are in the phone in under a second (0.7 seconds to be exact) and you
can even do it when the phone is locked... although that's not quite as
fast to open.
GeekBench
3 shows us that this is the most powerful device on the market, topping
even the impressive iPad Air 2's A8X chip. Where that came in at 4500,
the Galaxy S6 offered up 4850 as an average score.
It's
worth remembering that Samsung isn't adverse to a little results
manipulation in the benchmarks, but there's no doubt this is a
massively, massively powerful phone.
Messaging and calling
The
other elements of the phone, the bits that make a phone a phone, are
improved once again too. The messaging app benefits massively from the
fact the keyboard is a lot better, learning my typing habits as I go,
although I still would want to download a third party app like SwiftKey
to make the process a little slicker.
The current
keyboard has an annoying issue in that it will correct your words
(accurately), but this includes the capitalization too, meaning it can
override the auto capitalization of words when typing. Not what you'd
hope for in a phone of this quality.
The call quality is
amazing though, with the S6 able to pick up signal in nearly any
scenario (although again slightly bettered by the One M9 in terms of
signal strength).
The
amazing part comes from the range of things the phone can do with
calling: voice over LTE is important as it lets you call while
downloading on 4G, and Wi-Fi calling is going to be a big new trick when
it finally becomes widely available.
It's only months
away from being widespread on carriers like T-Mobile in the US and EE in
the UK, and will let you seamlessly text and call using the Wi-Fi
signal, which is brilliant for houses with low radio penetration or when
underground.
Battery life on the Samsung Galaxy S6. Now we get to the
real issue of this phone. It's not good enough, and that's hugely
frustrating.
Let me put this into context: it's as good as the HTC One M9 and iPhone 6
in terms of being able to last just about through the day. Given that
last year we were seeing phones that could easily make it to bed time
without running out of juice, it's maddening that Samsung, like others,
has gone backwards here.
The reason is simple: the battery pack in the new S6 is
smaller than last year, 2550mAh compared to 2800mAh. The reduction is
there solely so Samsung could make a slimmer phone, focusing on design
over functionality. And unlike previous years, the battery can no longer
be removed, taking away one of the big things fans loved about the
phones.
I'm
not convinced a removable battery is that important any more - I don't
know many people who bother to buy an extra power pack, especially when
portable packs are so widespread now - so I think the need for it is
more a hygiene factor, something that makes users feel safe.
But
it comes at the expense of function and design, and I think dropping it
is fine. HTC, Apple, Sony and more have all done the same thing and
we're not seeing widespread reports of failing units all over the world.
In
terms of the actual battery life of the Samsung Galaxy S6, in moderate
usage you'll get a full working day of around 17 hours out of it. This
means you might have to decide whether or not you want to watch a movie
on the commute home, and that's simply not good enough.
In
2015 we expect phones to be able to last more than a day easily,
especially for the prices Samsung is charging for the S6. To lower the
capacity beggars belief, although I do understand that the design was
the most important thing this time around, given how vociferous the
criticism was from smartphone buyers was.
But the two
aren't mutually exclusive. You can have an efficient phone with a
decent-size battery and not make it ugly... Sony did it well on the Xperia Z3, for instance.
What's
more confusing is that I can't really tell what it is that's sucking
the battery so quickly. The screen is the obvious culprit, and it
doesn't burn a little quickly when turned on, but I'm not seeing the
same drops when tested that I'd expect.
For
instance, playing a 90 minute Full HD video at full brightness showed a
drop of 16%, half that of the HTC One M9 which doesn't have as many
pixels to power. That's a very good result.
Similarly
playing a high power game for 30 minutes only saw the battery drop 10%.
Yes, the phone warmed up a bit, but 5 hours' hardcore gaming on any
phone is a very good result again.
Let's put it in real world context: leaving the phone overnight with a full charge saw it only drop 5%.
A
75 minute commute on train and bike, with wireless Bluetooth headphones
connected to offline Spotify and a fair slug of streaming Netflix, saw
me only go down to 80% by the time I reached the office. That sounds
like a big drop, but apart from gaming there's not much more I could
have done to push the phone hard in that time - it's a pretty good
score.
So there's something in the background that's
chewing the battery. Google Play services is the big issue, with the
phone constantly chattering with servers and downloading updates
throughout our week-long test.
This might calm down over
time, and would dramatically improve the phone's battery performance,
but to still be doing a week in is a bit worrying.
If
only wireless charging was widespread. Then you could throw the S6 down
on nearly any surface and have it sip power in the background, and if
you shell out for a wireless pad or stand at home and work, you'll never
have any battery problems even if you forget to plug in.
But
this isn't good enough for a phone of this caliber. Samsung usually
makes long lasting phones, and battery life is crucial to the needs of a
consumer. Must do better.
Let's
move onto one of the very, very big highlights of the Samsung Galaxy
S6: the camera is simply brilliant. From the instant start to the range
of modes to the extraordinary photos, this has the capability to be the
phone of choice for even the hobbyist photographer.
The
options are simple yet powerful, the choices great
and the ease with which you can get a great picture amazing. There's a
range of ways brands approach the camera technology in their phones,
from the Nokia Lumia 1020 with a 41MP sensor and three camera apps at
launch to the iPhone 6, with an 8MP sensor and limited options.
Both
of those listed above yield great snaps, but Samsung has combined the
simplicity of Apple and the power of Nokia (well, Microsoft now) to make
a really powerful snapper.
The
main thing to note about this phone's camera (other than it protrudes
from the back of the handset quite markedly) is that it's instantly able
to take a good snap.
The colors are rich (although only
on the phone screen - they can look a little washed out on the monitor
as Samsung looks to make them look better on the handset), the shutter
speed instant, and most importantly the auto focus is very quick and
accurate.
That
was one of the big things that got in the way with the HTC One M9, and
I'm glad that Samsung has improved the speed from the Galaxy S5.
The
really powerful thing here is the ability of the S6 in low light. It's
very good indeed, better than the iPhone 6. And yet it's got a 16MP
sensor. This is impressive because the more pixels you pack in, the
harder it is to get a decent shot in the dark.
And
yet Samsung's got something that's better than the rest. The pro mode
is genuinely useful, allowing manual focus and control of the sensor's
sensitivity, and Bokeh effect (letting you take three shots of the same
thing so you can set the focus after the snap) is really strong too.
The
HDR mode on the iPhone 6 is often used as a shining example of the
power of its camera (and if you're not using it, you should be, as it
takes a range of photos of different exposures and intelligently mixes
them together to get bright and clear photos of whatever you're
shooting) and yet Samsung has done it better.
In auto
mode, the HDR option activates more readily, which improves the clarity
of snaps without having to do anything. The macro mode is so good too,
allowing you to get so close to whatever you're thinking of shooting.
Of
course there are some extra elements that aren't needed: virtual object
asks you to walk around something while keeping your camera pointed at
it. This then lets you swipe the picture and see all the angles... but
it's like just taking a video of it and fast forwarding or rewinding.
Not sure what that's for.
It's doubly odd as the cool
thing Samsung has done this year is strip out some of the camera modes
and made them downloadable, with things like Sports Shot not on there
from the start. I'd like to be able to tailor the experience better,
which means getting rid of the superfluous options.
The
fast and slow motion video is OK as well - the latter especially works
at 240FPS, but is nowhere near the smooth clarity Apple brings on the
iPhone 6. It's there as an easy to tag option though, and you'll be able
to take some fun videos with it.
4K video shooting it
also included, but still lacks a real USP given there are few monitors
that can show it off, and eats up valuable storage (a key consideration
given there's no microSD slot on board the Galaxy S6).
The
selfie mode is there, and it's pretty good as cameras go. There's all
the same features you'd expect and more, with HDR, beauty mode, effects,
voice capture and full 1080p video recording, as well as 'wide selfie'
to get more people in. The resulting picture is a wider ratio than the
phone screen, so you'll get more info from it too.
It's
got a decent field of view as well, in case you want to have more people
in the shot... but don't do that. Just focus on how powerful the rear
cam is.
Check out the samples below to see what I mean -
but I've not enjoyed using a camera this much since some of those before
Microsoft took over Nokia, and the pictures are some that I've
genuinely wanted to show off to friends.
The Samsung Galaxy S6 is the second big phone launch at the
moment and as such doesn't have the full compliment of rivals to face
off against - but there are still some good choices in the market.
iPhone 6
The
most obvious crossover for those considering the Galaxy S6 is the
iPhone 6 and not least because the numbers finally match (although the
6S is going to make things confusing).
Both are similarly priced now, which is bad news for
consumers. Both have largely the same battery life and both offer no
expandable memory with three storage options (although the base model of
the S6 is 32GB to the iPhone's 16GB).
Samsung has Apple
beaten on specs: the QHD screen laughs at the pitiful 720p display
Apple's gone for, the chassis size is similar, the camera better and the
range of options so much more extensive.
The iPhone
still has the simpler user interface and better apps to fall back on,
plus a more robust software upgrade plan. It's pretty neck and neck, so
it's really down to which camp you like to sit in.
HTC One M9
I
feel, in many ways, the Galaxy S6 is the Will.i.Am to HTC's David
Bowie. One's more cultured, the other newer with more tricks. One is
based on older ideas, but still has the air of refinement. The other,
well... Actually, no, this analogy is getting too tortured. Basically
I'd rather own an S6 than listen to a Will.i.Am track.
HTC
has launched a very similar phone to the previous year with the One M9,
although it's still a very good handset. The design is still miles
ahead of Samsung's, the battery life the same, and the screen not too
far off - although it lacks the sharpness.
It's in the
base power that HTC suffers - Samsung's got a lot of the basics right,
more so than its Taiwanese rival, with an improved camera the real
highlight.
HTC's offering is cheaper though, despite
being made out of more premium materials, so if you can see past the
fact it's a very similar phone to last year, it's a very good choice.
Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge
This
should be an easy decision for most of those deciding between the S6
and the curved edge variant: can you afford it? It's a lot more money
both on contract and SIM free, and apart from having a battery that's
fractionally larger and a bent screen at each side, there's not a lot of
benefit.
It certainly looks cooler, a spacephone in a
sea of identikit black slabs, but the screen also makes it less
comfortable to hold. It's more status symbol than anything else, albeit
it one with all the brilliant bits of the S6 underneath.
Sony Xperia Z3
The
Sony Xperia Z3 is the oldest phone here (bar the S5) but still has some
decent things to offer. Firstly, the battery life is far above any of
the other phones mentioned here, and the screen a little brighter in
direct light.
I'm not a fan of the interface Sony's put
together, as it's a little heavy and bland, but in terms of raw power
it's perfectly capable. The camera could be better, especially given
that it's got the might of the Sony camera team behind it, but the
ability to Remote Play your PS4 is a nice touch.
Plus it's much cheaper to buy these days - and it's only six months older.
Samsung Galaxy S5
It's
not often that I'd advise against buying the previous model of any
phone, as the price is usually down to a palatable level when the new
one comes out. But the S5 just wasn't a good enough phone.
The
screen was decent, and it's waterproof, which a lot of people liked.
The battery lasted longer, and the price is nearly 2/3 of the current
S6. But the design and the lag inherent in the OS just really put me
off, and saw the phone tumble down our best ranking. Where HTC's One M8
was number one for a year, the S5 disappeared, which highlighted the
need for Samsung to make the reboot.
If you're on a budget, then this is a phone worth looking at, but the One M8 is cheaper and a much better handset.
Samsung
needed something big this year, a phone that could reboot its fortunes
without completely changing what the company stands for. And it's
largely managed to do just that, building on its strengths while
smoothing off some of the rough edges from before.
It's not perfect, and there are some issues (like
battery and price) that still need to be really thought about before
purchase, but Samsung has mostly done what it needed to with the S6.
We liked
When
I first saw the Galaxy S6 I was immediately impressed. It was like
someone walked into the boardroom of Samsung HQ, picked up the S5 and
tore it to pieces, before delivering a more grown up version based on
the things consumers actually want.
The metal and glass
combination is easily the best thing the brand has ever created in the
smartphone space, and needs to trickle down to the lower-end and tablet
ranges too.
The
camera is also a particular highlight, coming up with some of the most
glorious images I've ever seen on a smartphone. It's not the best in
terms of out and out quality, but for a mainstream phone it perfectly
blends photographical prowess with operational simplicity.
The
screen on the Galaxy S6 is still superb, and the QHD improvement does
deliver a few benefits - it's certainly not diminished anything
visually. The ergonomics and weight of the phone mean it sits very well
in the hand, making it perfect for watching a load of TV shows or just
carrying around for music.
It's also got a good gaming
prowess, and the interface is refined to a point where it's much less
intrusive. In short, all the good bits are now gooder and the poor bits
less poor.
We disliked
OK, not ALL the good bits
are gooder. Battery life on the Galaxy S6 isn't good enough for a phone
of this caliber or price. I don't think anyone should be worrying about
whether their new expensive smartphone will still be able to make
emergency calls when it's a bit later in the evening, and that's what
the S6 offers.
I've not talked about Ultra Power Saving
Mode in this review, as I think that it shouldn't be lauded as an
option. If your phone could maybe squeak two days on battery then I
think an option to extend it is a great thing, but given I was
considering turning it on daily I was unimpressed.
The
price has also risen again, which is annoying. I've lambasted Apple for
prices that are too high in the past, and now Samsung has sailed right
past that cost point. There's a lot of technology on offer here, sure,
but not enough to make it this much more than Apple.
The
construction of this thing must cost a huge amount, otherwise Samsung is
just charging more to make the device seem more premium and bolster the
bottom line, and I really hope that's not the case.
Oh,
and if you go for a non-white version of this phone, beware of the
millions of fingerprints you'll get. They just appear all over the phone
instantly. You'll have to get a good case, carry around a cloth at all
times or just not use your fingers ever. Your call.
Verdict
When
I first walked into the subterranean hotel room and caught sight of the
Galaxy S6, I was entranced. This was the phone that I'd wanted Samsung
to make for years, and it was finally here: a perfect blend of design
and extreme power.
The only worries I had back then were
the battery life and price, and sadly these are the big reasons why it
can't get a perfect score. You'll be able to get around them if you
really want the phone (kidneys can still be sold, right?) but for a
flagship phone I expected better, especially in terms of battery life.
Nobody
has convinced me that we need QHD screens yet, and it seems that could
be one of the real problems with the S6 and it running out of power so
easily.
But don't let the above take away from the
utterly brilliant bits of this phone: the camera is SUPERB, the build
quality excellent and the speed under the finger second to none at
times.
This is the best Android phone on the market right
now, and well worth thinking about if you're after a really cutting
edge device (and can afford it).
Score
Score