As expected, the latest addition to Samsung’s Galaxy Note series arrived last evening.

In a break with tradition and in a bid to align its Note series’ naming scheme with that of its flagship Galaxy S lineup, Samsung opted to call the new device the Galaxy Note 7 instead of the Galaxy Note 6 as many would’ve expected since the device is a successor to last year’s Galaxy Note 5.

Naturally, every new Galaxy Note brings with it a few updates to the Note series that have either already been incorporated in that year’s Galaxy S model or are totally new. The Galaxy Note 7 has a mix of both.
Samsung Electronics East Africa Mobile Business Lead Simon Kariithi (left) shows off the Galaxy Note 5 in Nairobi.

The Old

For instance, it has that same power efficient Quad HD Super AMOLED display found on the Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge as well as the same processors (Exynos 8890 or Snapdragon 820 depending on where you are – the new Snapdragon 821 never made the cut), water resistance, always-on display, the same cameras and the like.

The New

On the side of what’s new, the Galaxy Note 7 is the first device in the world to pack Corning’s new Gorilla Glass 5 and as such its users will at least be guaranteed some better protection for their delicate displays.

It doesn’t end there, with the Galaxy Note 7, Samsung has finally given in and moved to the USB Type-C standard. While this is a welcome change, it means that buyers of the device have to brace themselves for incompatible cables and whatnot. Samsung is including a free USB Type-C to microUSB adapter in the Note 7’s packaging. But there’s still the elephant in the room: compatibility with the Gear VR.



Many speculated that the Gear VR was the sole reason that Samsung opted to forgo USB Type-C in the Galaxy S7 and Galaxy S7 Edge since it can only accommodate devices with microUSB ports. To make sure that is not an issue, the Galaxy Note 7 has its own virtual reality headset, the “Gear VR for Galaxy Note 7”. Using the USB Type-C to microUSB adapter, the new Gear VR can also be used with Samsung’s other compatible devices like the Galaxy S7.

The new Gear VR is basically the standard model we had a look at not long ago but made to play nicely with the Galaxy Note 7. Nothing new. The price stays the same – $99 or roughly Kshs 10,000.

The dual-edge display found on the Galaxy S7 Edge has also made it to the Galaxy Note.



In 2016, even budget smartphones have fingerprint scanners so they are no longer the wow feature they once were 2-3 years ago. So, what’s next? An iris scanner. The Galaxy Note 7 has one.

With the Galaxy Note 7, Samsung has effectively removed the 32GB onboard storage option from the device’s lineup. As we saw with the Galaxy Note 3 back in 2013 when the transition to 32GB memory became permanent, expect no future Galaxy Note to have anything below 64GB internal storage.

What makes a Galaxy Note a Galaxy Note is the pen, the stylus meant, primarily, for note-taking on a device that has more often been pitched as one for the business person. The Galaxy Note 7’s S Pen, according to Samsung, has been improved by getting several new features like support for more pen styles, more pressure sensitivity and, the big one, water resistance.


The most interesting feature is an add-on from what Samsung introduced last year. As we noted (see what I did there?) last year, the Galaxy Note 5 finally let users take down notes even when the screen was turned off thanks to the Screen off Memo feature. Since the Galaxy Note 7 has brought the Always-On feature found on Samsung’s Galaxy S7 to the Note series, users will be able to pin notes taken when the device’s screen is off to the Always-On display.

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