Display

The 2014 Edition features a 10.1-inch 2560 x 1600 Super LCD display. Looking at the subpixel structure of the panel we get an idea for exactly what Super LCD means: RB,GW.

Instead of a standard RGB stripe we get a combination of red, green, blue and white subpixels for each pixel. The white subpixel helps increase light throughput, an obvious problem with these ultra high resolution displays. The downside is that you get a lower subpixel density than a traditional RGB stripe. At these ultra high pixel densities however, the theory is that you wouldn’t notice the difference - hopefully making the power savings by having better light transmission, particularly when displaying lots of white (e.g. web pages), worth it.

In practice the display looks pretty good, although a carefully trained eye will be able to recognize that this isn’t a standard RGB stripe. I quickly realized something was different about the display, something I later verified when looking at the subpixel structure.

Display Brightness - White Level

Display Brightness - Black Level

Display Contrast Ratio

Color accuracy is pretty decent on the Note 10.1’s display. As always I’m reporting color data using Samsung’s Movie mode, which remains the most accurate setting of those offered. Grayscale performance is excellent, but our GMB and saturations tests put the Note 10.1 on par with the original Nexus 7. It’s definitely a better calibrated display than any other Samsung Galaxy Note tablet we’ve reviewed. Not quite on par with the new Nexus 7, but getting very close.

CalMAN Display Performance - White Point Average

CalMAN Display Performance - Grayscale Average dE 2000

CalMAN Display Performance - Gamut Average dE 2000

CalMAN Display Performance - Saturations Average dE 2000

CalMAN Display Performance - Gretag Macbeth Average dE 2000

Camera

The 2014 Edition features a rear facing 8MP camera with AF and LED flash and a 2MP front facing camera. Image quality out of the rear camera was pretty good for a tablet. I took some photos using the tablet and tossed them in the gallery below, as well as embedded a sample 1080p video recorded using the tablet. 

 

Battery Life & Charging

The Galaxy Note 10.1 (2014 Edition) ships with an integrated (non-removable) 31Wh battery, that’s substantially smaller than the iPad 4’s 42.5Wh battery - helping it maintain a more svelte figure. The question is how power efficient the combination of RB,GW panel and Exynos 5420 are in combination with one another.

We’ll start with our typical WiFi web browsing battery life test. Here we see a good combination of regular spikes in CPU usage with idle time, hopefully simulating constant, reasonably paced usage.

Web Browsing Battery Life (WiFi)

The 2014 Edition does a bit better than the Nexus 10, but clearly worse than the original Note 10.1 (and obviously worse than the much smaller Nexus 7). There’s not much you can do here other than to point out that we’re talking about an extremely high resolution panel, with an extremely power hungry SoC. The fact that we’re talking about more cores running at a higher frequency than the Exynos 5250 used in the Nexus 10 is good news, but Exynos 5420 also enjoys the benefits of being on Samsung’s 28nm LP process as well.

The video playback story is much better however. With the power hungry Cortex A15 cores able to power down (and hopefully remain there), we’re really testing the display and video decode engines here:

Video Playback Battery Life (720p, 4Mbps HP H.264)

The Note 10.1 beats the new Nexus 7 and is only 10% behind the iPad 4, despite having a much smaller battery.

Like the Nexus 10, the Galaxy Note 10.1 (2014 Edition) takes an incredible amount of time to charge with the bundled 2A charger. A full charge from 0 to 100% took just over 7 hours.

Charge Time in Hours

GPU & NAND Performance Final Words
Comments Locked

97 Comments

View All Comments

  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Tuesday, October 1, 2013 - link

    Yep, I believe so (need to confirm with Brian since I don't have the device in front of me) - all modern non GPe Samsung devices (as well as those from other OEMs) do the same manual DVFS setting upon benchmark detect unfortunately.
  • Squuiid - Tuesday, October 1, 2013 - link

    Anand, I do hope you'll consider flagging this issue more prominently. You obviously have your reasons for not calling out Samsung explicitly, so instead include the other cheaters in your expose, be it Microsoft, Apple, Nokia, HTC, along with Samsung.
  • Sarav - Tuesday, October 1, 2013 - link

    Hey guys, was wondering how good the screen on the Note 10.1 is in terms of colour reproduction compared to the Nexus 10?
  • bleh0 - Tuesday, October 1, 2013 - link

    Is there a baytrail tablet with digitizer support? I was thinking about the surface pro 2 but that is out of my price range and while the note 10.1 does seem decent the programs that I use just aren't available on android.
  • nerd1 - Tuesday, October 1, 2013 - link

    One japanese tablet has 2560*1440 display, wacom and waterproofness. :D
  • TheEvilBlight - Sunday, October 6, 2013 - link

    Which tablet would that be?
  • darkich - Tuesday, October 1, 2013 - link

    Anand, why didn't you point out that this very SoC will get the likely software update for enabling the simultaneus octa-core operation, hence probably a pretty dramatic improvement in both efficiency and compute?
  • abazigal - Friday, October 11, 2013 - link

    Because, like you said, it will "likely" get the update.
  • Taracta - Tuesday, October 1, 2013 - link

    Being that this is a pentile display with pseudo square pixels I would put the DPI/PPI at ~232 when compared to an actual RGB display of the same resolution and size which would have ~299 DPI/PPI. So how much of a difference does the Nexus 10 display and this have in rendering graphics, text, etc.? This is what I would like to know, especially as these are larger displays compared to the smartphones.
  • name99 - Tuesday, October 1, 2013 - link

    "The latest iteration of Samsung’s Galaxy Note 10.1, aptly named the 2014 Edition"

    So Samsung copies Apple yet again! :-)

    (For those who don't understand the joke:
    http://support.apple.com/specs/
    Note how pretty much every item has a name and year number...)

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now