Software UX

As is always the case, there’s a perpetual debate over the role of the OEM when it comes to Android devices. For better or worse, Samsung seems to believe that they need to add their own framework and UI over Android. To some extent, I suspect that most users are going to find stock Android to be rather spartan out of the box, so it does make sense for OEMs like Samsung to continue adding their own custom applications and frameworks to help differentiate themselves from the competition.

With the Galaxy S5, it was evident that Samsung had dramatically changed their design direction for TouchWiz, but I would argue that their design aesthetic still wasn’t quite perfect, and performance wasn’t completely there either. With the Galaxy S6, Samsung had gotten closer to the mark in some ways, but the continued use of excessively neon colors just made parts of the UI feel off at times, and performance still wasn’t perfect.

With the Galaxy S7, performance has improved noticeably, but it’s really hard for me to say whether this is because Samsung has improved their codebase, or if a faster SoC is just making it harder to notice areas in need of optimization. At any rate, while the Galaxy S7 isn’t perfectly smooth - dropping frames now and then - it is sufficiently performant that you’re not going to find distracting lag.

The default theme of the Galaxy S7 continues to feel pretty similar to the Galaxy S6, so for the most part things are acceptable here, but the use of color is still a bit excessive as a number of icons still use neon colors rather than more neutral pastel colors. Of course, the theme store now has a number of Material Design themes, which greatly improve the situation. I installed one pretty much immediately, which helps make the device feel a lot better in everyday use. However, I’m still of the opinion that this is something that a user shouldn’t need to do out of the box, so this is an area where Samsung can improve.

The other features that Samsung touted for the Galaxy S7 are interesting, but I’m not really sure they’re all that well executed. Always-On Display is nice to have, but for some reason it's quite reluctant to turn off the display when the ambient light sensor and proximity sensor are covered. As a result I turned it off as it’s clearly going to be contributing to idle battery drain in situations where it shouldn’t.

I also found that the fingerprint scanner is pretty much identical to the one in the Galaxy S6, which isn’t entirely surprising as both identify themselves as a Synaptics fingerprint scanner. Both still seem to be quite sensitive to the initial training period and in my experience won’t really work all that well if you don’t cover your entire fingerprint effectively during that period.

Other than this, TouchWiz doesn’t really stand out in any way as of now. Of course, Samsung Pay will be interesting for me to try as I still regularly run into terminals that don’t support NFC in any shape or form, but I haven’t really been able to spend much time testing Samsung Pay yet. I don’t really find TouchWiz to be a bad thing at this point, but I’m not really sure it’s a good thing either. With a serious emphasis on optimization and a major aesthetic overhaul, it’s entirely possible that I could find myself saying quite differently in the near future, but for now if you found the Galaxy S6 and Note 5 OEM UIs to be usable you’ll find the Galaxy S7 to be usable as well.

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  • lilmoe - Thursday, March 10, 2016 - link

    + resolution
    + drivers
    + software/engine
    + thermal headroom
    + etc, etc, etc.....
  • theduckofdeath - Tuesday, March 8, 2016 - link

    If it's that trivial to make a faster GPU, I'm pretty sure Apple would have gotten a faster GPU in their phones. Faster GPU's in mobile, where battery life is really relevant is probably the trickiest part to succeed with. As you said, it basically requires you to add a ton of extra cores to make it noticeable for whichever hardware platform you're doing it on. GPU's are after all the biggest power consumers in tech these days. doubling the size of the Apple GPU would literally wreck the iPhone battery life, which I'm pretty sure you're also aware of yourself. They did after all gimp the GPU on the iPhone compared to the iPad for this exact reason.
  • tuxRoller - Tuesday, March 8, 2016 - link

    Do you mean Apple vs adreno or PVR vs adreno?
    I'd expect PVR to always be the most efficient GPU due to being a true tbdr.

    http://blog.imgtec.com/powervr/a-look-at-the-power...
  • realbabilu - Wednesday, March 9, 2016 - link

    You forgot the user experience. Throwing 30 fps onscreen is the minimum requirement, no need higher than that, unless Apple follows the resolution war.
    Apple always resolution fan in their macs, but they still think that crazy resolution is not needed, I think still true.
  • ciderrules - Tuesday, March 8, 2016 - link

    Looks like Qualcomm spent their time creating a quality core instead of just adding more cores. Half the cores of the 8890 and by all accounts at least as fast (CPU, not GPU where it's quicker).

    I just wish you did a series of tests to check throttling.
  • tipoo - Tuesday, March 8, 2016 - link

    He said part 2
  • tuxRoller - Tuesday, March 8, 2016 - link

    XDA already did a throttling test with a bunch of phones (6s, note 5, Nexus 6p, s7, etc). The results were that there was no throttling for the s7.
  • retrospooty - Tuesday, March 8, 2016 - link

    Nice... Mine is on pre-order now. I almost cant believe Samsung finally got it together and started making better devices with better build quality and bigger batteries and much less bloat, but I am very happy they did.
  • anactoraaron - Tuesday, March 8, 2016 - link

    The lack of an IR blaster is the only thing holding me back from buying the s7 edge. I use the IR blaster every day on my G4, and I assume everyone with young kids would as well. Remotes just seem to always be missing...
  • Speedfriend - Tuesday, March 8, 2016 - link

    No IR blaster!!!!! Samsung have just lost me as a customer. It is one of the best features of my S6.

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