Friday, November 14, 2014

BlackBerry, Samsung Join Forces on Mobile Security

By 


Partnership Could Help Both Companies Win More Enterprise Customers







BlackBerry Ltd. and Samsung Electronics Co. agreed to sell each other’s mobile-security technology in an effort to win more enterprise customers.
The deal was the highest-profile of several partnership and distribution agreements BlackBerry announced Thursday to drive sales of its new mobile-security software—dubbed BlackBerry Enterprise Service 12. BES12 is the anchor of the company’s strategy to double revenue from software sales to $500 million and return to profitability in its next fiscal year by winning back corporate and government business.
BlackBerry also announced deals with customer-management software provider Salesfore.com Inc., mobile-device distributor Brightstar Corp. and several wireless carriers including Orange SA, Verizon Wireless, and Vodafone Group PLC, all aimed at getting BES12 in front of as many potential customers as possible.
BlackBerry’s share of the global smartphone market has shrunk to a sliver, and the Canadian company is losing ground to rivals in sales of mobile-security software. The tie-up with Samsung, the world’s largest mobile-phone maker, will give BlackBerry access to a larger customer base to sell BES12, and comes as many companies seek one security solution to manage their employees’ various mobile devices.
“We have slipped,” BlackBerry Chief Executive John Chen said, but BES12 gives the company an opportunity to “recapture that [lost share] and build on it.”
Samsung, meanwhile, stands to benefit from BlackBerry’s stronger reputation for mobile security. That could help the South Korean electronics company accelerate its efforts to expand in the enterprise market, where it has struggled to gain traction.In an interview, Mr. Chen also said more than 90% of BES12 licenses will sell as subscriptions to ensure a source of recurring revenue. “I want a business that is not only growing but predictable,” he said.
Selling more devices to corporate customers could also relieve some pressure on Samsung as its dominance in the consumer market comes under attack from less-expensive handsets made by Xiaomi Inc. and other Chinese vendors.
Samsung and BlackBerry are often characterized as rivals in the enterprise market, but their security technologies can be complementary. Samsung’s security platform, Knox, comes embedded in certain Samsung Galaxy devices, allowing users to separate personal and work data to ensure corporate security and employee privacy. Meanwhile, BlackBerry’s technology allows companies to remotely manage devices to prevent security breaches and data loss as content and applications move between those devices and corporate networks.
BES12 works on non-BlackBerry operating systems, including Apple Inc. ’s iOS, MicrosoftCorp. ’s Windows and Google Inc. ’s Android, which is used by Samsung devices. That means BlackBerry can win business from sales of the software even if business customers don’t use its devices.
The partnership will allow BlackBerry and Samsung to generate revenue from companies that choose to adopt Knox-embedded Samsung devices for their workers and want BES12 to manage these devices. BlackBerry and Samsung will split the revenue from these sales, but the companies didn’t disclose how.
The deal “isn’t about one company displacing the other,” said John Sims, head of BlackBerry’s enterprise business. “This is about one and one makes three.”
For Samsung, the BlackBerry deal is the latest in a string of alliances it has forged with enterprise players, most recently in a partnership with German software company SAP SE announced on Tuesday to better integrate Samsung’s range of mobile devices with SAP’s enterprise mobile offerings.
“Combined with BES12 we will offer more options for customers,” Injong Rhee, a Samsung senior vice president, said in a prepared statement.
Annual global revenue from enterprise mobility-management software is expected to more than quadruple to $5.75 billion in 2018, driven by greater use of mobile devices at work, a surge in mobile apps and increased security threats, according to Radicati Group Inc., a market-research firm.
But BlackBerry has been losing share in this market. Last year it led the enterprise mobile-management sector with an estimated 14.4% share of the market, according to International Data Corp. But rivals, including MobileIron Inc., VMware Inc. -owned Airwatch and Citrix Systems Inc., are eating into BlackBerry’s business.
BlackBerry wasn’t “on a growth path from 2012 to 2013” and it appears it will see declines this year, said Stacy Crook, an IDC analyst. Revenue could stabilize in 2015 if BES12 proves to be a hit, she said.
Samsung’s Knox has also struggled, partly because it is considered too costly, some analysts said. In addition to the extra cost companies pay to have Samsung devices installed with Knox, they also need to adopt mobile device-management software to oversee the devices on the corporate network. Samsung in May indicated that it had 87 million devices installed with Knox, but only 1.8 million were actively using the platform.
BlackBerry’s challenge is to ensure BES12 lives up to its billing. BlackBerry’s current mobile-management offering, BES10, also is meant to work across device types, but it isn’t as effective for non-BlackBerry devices, according to some companies and analysts.
The Canadian arm of U.S. broker Investment Technology Group Inc. uses BES10 software for the BlackBerry phones on its network, but relies on Citrix technology to manage its employees’ iPads, since Citrix allows users to more effectively separate personal and work data on Apple devices, said Daljit Bhartt, the unit’s information-technology head.
ITG’s Canadian arm would consider adopting BES12 for all devices used by the firm’s 105 employees, provided it works equally well across operating systems. “If we can consolidate the [mobile device management] solution, we will take a look at it,” he said.
BES12 won’t replicate BES10 problems, BlackBerry’s Mr. Sims predicted. “BES12 was built from the bottom up to be a cross-platform solution,” while BES10 was built to manage BlackBerrys before additional features were added, he said.
—Jonathan Cheng contributed to this article.

Nokia will not make smartphones anymore

by Luke Jones 



Today could spell truly an end of an era, not just in mobile but in the tech world as a whole. It seems that Finnish company Nokia will not be making mobile phones again, despite being able to in 2016. Nokia's new CEO Rajeev Suri said "We are not looking to a direct consumer return to handsets per se," during a talk today. However, should we really be saying goodbye to the Nokia brand?
Nokia was one of the first manufacturers of mobile phones and during the late 1990's boom in mobile technology was well placed to ride the crest of a wave. And that's what the company did, becoming the world's largest mobile phone vendor for several years. The age of the smartphone hit the company hard as it stuck with Symbian while consumers raced to Android and iOS. Nokia's market share collapsed and the company struck an alliance to build Microsoft's Windows Phone devices. It was a good accord for both companies and Nokia proved itself by putting the platform on the map and continuing to build good products.
Microsoft announced its intentions to buy Nokia's devices division in September 2013 and closed the deal earlier this year, for a reported $7.7 billion. The result was a new subsidiary called Microsoft Mobile and the writing being painted on the wall. During the summer Microsoft announced that it would ditch Nokia branding with future devices, starting with this week's Lumia 535. The Nokia name was left in limbo, but per the agreement with Microsoft, the company could start building devices again in 2016, under the Nokia name or something else, but there had been no confirmation of that.
Suri confirmed today that Nokia would not be making devices anymore, although his words had a short term feeling about them. I still personally hold the hope that Nokia will return to the spotlight with some new handsets. While Suri suggests otherwise, he did say that the company would "will return to the consumer world." That could mean that the Finnish giant licenses the Nokia brand to other manufacturers to build the hardware, and they supply the software and services.
Indeed, services is an avenue Nokia is now focused on pursuing. Networks, Technologies, and Mapping are three businesses the company is pushing and while it will issue software for all platforms, having a dedicated device to drive its software seems logical. So maybe Nokia will return in smartphone phone, but it will not be built be Nokia.

Forget the app; Microsoft rolls out Skype for Web

By Sharon Gaudin




Beta version means users will no longer need an app to videochat with friends

Microsoft announced today that it's launching a beta of Skype for the Web, allowing browser-based video chats that don't require a separate app.

"We've made Skype available on computers, mobile phones, TVs and even games consoles," wrote Jonathan Watson, Skype product marketing manager for Microsoft, in a blog post. "Expanding to different platforms has helped us grow to over 2 billion daily minutes (that's over 33 million hours) of voice and video calls.... Now, not only can Skype be used on just about any screen you lay your hands on, but you can also enjoy Skype on a browser."

Skype for Web, which is expected to roll out in the coming weeks, will be available via Internet Explorer, Chrome on Windows, Firefox or Safari.

"If you already use Skype, go to Skype.com and sign in to see all your contacts and latest conversation history," wrote Watson. "We're making Skype for Web available to small number of existing and new users to begin with, and gradually rolling out worldwide in the coming months -- look out for an invite when you sign in to your Skype account on Skype.com."

Zeus Kerravala, an analyst with ZK Research, said this is a good move for Microsoft because it opens Skype up to more users in more places.

"The requirement to have a client means one might not always be able to use Skype," he said. "For example, if I'm on a shared computer, say in an airport, I can't use Skype.... Maybe I can't get on the airport Wi-Fi, but there's a public Internet terminal or I might want to use a friend's computer. But with Skype Web, now I can. So now Skype can be pervasive across all devices, not just ones that I happen to own."

However, Patrick Moorhead, an analyst with Moor Insights & Strategy, said this is a better move for Microsoft than for Skype users. By enabling people to access Skype on Web browsers, there's less pressure on Microsoft to quickly keep various apps updated.

Skype, for instance, has to maintain apps for Apple's iOS platform -- both on tablets and smartphones. There are also apps for Windows XP, touch Windows 8, Windows 7, Xbox and Android phones and tablets.

"You have no idea how many implementations of Skype apps are out there," said Moorhead. "You're maintaining the code and you're constantly having to make changes and invest dollars into making the experiences good and consistent between so many platforms. Instead, you could put your development dollars into making it run really, really well in a browser, with just minor changes for the different browsers."

He added that Microsoft has worked hard on all of Skype's different apps, but they still vary slightly between environments.

Beam Messenger App Shows Your Friends' Texts as They Type

By John Nassivera

Beam Messenger App Shows Your Friends' Texts as They Type Them
A new messaging app debuted Thursday with the goal of forcing you to be honest with the texts you send to your friends. (Photo : Facebook )

A new messaging app that was designed to show bring honesty and real-time expediancy to texting debuted this week and it's already making people nervous. With the Beam messenger app, your friends will be able to see everything you type in a text as you type it, such as corrections and what you choose not to send, according to The Daily Mail.


Users won't have to wait for the texter to send a message. They can comment or inject themselves iinto conversations in real-time and ultimately be able to talk to their friends without actually sending their texts. And the texts aren't stored on a network, so the conversations will remain secure.
Toronto-based Beam makes sure the texts are readable with help from an error-checking mechanism, which will allow users to send texts without spelling or grammar mistakes, Daily Mail reported. The encryption part of the error checking is currently in development to prevent information from being leaked in case a third party intercepts the texts.
Alec Gordon, CEO of Beam, said the messages sent by the user aren't monitored, and the company said users won't experience any delays between typing and seeing the words appear on the screen, giving them the chance to "beam in" and interrupt or comment within conversations.
"While you are texting inside a bubble, without breaking, you are allowed to backtrack and jump forward at will," Beam said. "Also you may delete the whole text altogether, gone from both devices in true real time fashion."
Gordon said Beam is almost 65 percent done with an iOS version for the app, and that app fans should expect to see a PC version as well, The Huffington Post reported.
Those who own an Android device can download the Beam Messenger app now for free.




How Apple, Samsung and BlackBerry are fighting to win the enterprise


Samsung Electronics’ deal with BlackBerry and Apple’s efforts to make it easier to configure and deploy massive numbers of iPhones highlight how the smartphone makers are battling for supremacy among enterprise users.
As the smartphone market becomes saturated in the U.S. and Europe, enterprise users will be big winners. To continue to grow, manufacturers are courting CIOs more aggressively by making products more secure and easier to manage.
“The big benefit we are seeing is that costs are coming down for managing these devices,” said Leif-Olof Wallin, research vice president at Gartner.
Samsung has been trying to replicate its consumer success in the enterprise, but has so far struggled to make much headway. The company is hoping to change that by joining forces with BlackBerry to integrate BES (BlackBerry Enterprise Server) 12 with Galaxy smartphones and tablets. The devices will still be protected using Samsung’s Knox technology, but BlackBerry will add its network infrastructure and management capabilities, the company said in an announcement Thursday.
On paper, the deal plays to their respective strengths; Samsung is better at developing smartphones people want to buy while BlackBerry is still the gold standard for mobile security and management. But they still have to prove the integrated solution is as secure BlackBerry’s existing products.
“Just because you take something that’s proven and certified doesn’t mean the new platform is as secure,” Wallin said.
It is important for both companies for the partnership to succeed. For BlackBerry, the deal comes just over a year after John Chen took over as CEO, with the goal of saving the struggling vendor by turning it into a more software-centric company with products for Android and iOS, as well as its own OSes.
Samsung, on the other hand, needs enterprise revenue to help make up for less-than-stellar smartphone sales. During the third quarter, Samsung smartphone market share dropped by over 10 percentage points year-over-year.
BES12 is expected to start shipping on Samsung’s Galaxy devices early next year. As part of the partnership, Samsung will resell BES12 to joint customers and BlackBerry will offer Knox support as part of the Gold category of BES12 subscriptions. Pricing will be announced upon availability, according to BlackBerry.
But even if the partnership looks like a step in the right direction, success is far from certain as Apple continues to accelerate to compete in the enterprise market on multiple fronts. The company’s partnership with IBM is a statement of intent, showing that it is going after enterprises more actively.
This week, Apple expanded its DEP (Device Enrollment Program) to 25 additional countries and regions, as well as to authorized resellers and carriers. Previously it has only been available in the U.S., which now has been joined by the likes of Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Japan and the U.K.
The program eases the initial setup of iPhones, iPads and Macs by automating mobile device management enrollment, letting the IT department configure the devices without touching them. To further simplify the process, some Setup Assistant screens can be skipped so employees can start using their devices right out of the box, Apple said.
For Apple, the increased number of countries is a step in the right direction, but DEP needs to be expanded further to let enterprises buy compatible devices from more sources than just Apple, authorized resellers or carriers, according to Wallin.
The growing competition for enterprise dollars isn’t likely to cool off anytime soon, as Apple gets ready to deliver the first apps as a result of its partnership with IBM, and Samsung and BlackBerry get to work.

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Samsung Galaxy Note Edge review: Innovation, experiment or gimmick?

by 



Just because you can do something, should you? Samsung thinks so. Its secondexperimentally screened phone taps into its hardware R&D and production clout to offer something not many other companies can make, let alone bring to the public outside of a fuzzy proof of concept. And so, following the Galaxy Round, here's the Galaxy Edge. If you take the basic shape and concept, it's the spitting image of the curved-screen Youm prototype spied at CES a little less than two years ago. Now, though, it's a for-real smartphone you can buy. I've been testing it out in Japan, where it launched instead of the Note 4, although both the Note 4 and the Note Edge will eventually be available in the US. Fortunately, despite the unusual, (addictively stroke-able) curved screen, it still packs all of the good things that made the Note 4 such a strong choice. But bragging rights aside, is there enough of an argument for a curved screen? Should you just get the Note 4 anyway?

GALLERY|23 PHOTOS

Samsung Galaxy Note Edge review

85
Samsung

Galaxy Note Edge

PROS
  • Beautiful, high-resolution curved display
  • Long battery life   
  • Good camera
  • Pretty much a Galaxy Note 4
CONS
  • Not enough uses for the curved edge
  • Not ideal for left-handed users
  • Pretty much a Galaxy Note 4
SUMMARY
The Galaxy Note Edge is an experiment, yet it's one that's able to stand on its strengths, despite any reservations you might have about that curved display. In short, you get all the benefits of the Galaxy Note 4, but with a hardware twist to set it apart. Unfortunately, there's that price.

    HARDWARE

    The Galaxy Note Edge grabs your attention. Its curves are subjective and divisive; my friends and colleagues have offered up reactions ranging from outright bemusement to adoration. The screen looks great, with the punchy contrast and sharpness that's been a Samsung flagship mainstay for years. We'll get back to that edge, but it's the headline part of a 5.6-inch Quad-HD+ display. ("Plus" here, in comparison to the Note 4, means an additional 160 rows of pixels.) This means a little chunk of extra screen makes the phone just less than 4mm wider, and around 2mm shorter, than the Note 4.

    The screen is marginally smaller than the Note 4, despite the cranked-up pixel count. Like the Note 4, text pops a little more, and pictures you take with the 16MP camera are obviously better replicated on the Note Edge's screen. Color purists: Yep, the shades are still a little overdone, but you can choose from a few custom color palettes if you're not a fan of high-contrast menus and photos.
    Regardless, you get the feeling that this is the bleeding edge of Samsung's phone-making skills, right here in your hand, and that's because of the curve. Samsung's explained, officially, that it put the curve to the right to replicate how we read books. Lefties aren't going to be too happy, but the one-sided design is what gives the phone a kick. (For the 10 percent of our readers that are left-handed, you can flip the phone around and the screen will follow, but the physical home button, ports and volume controls (let alone the mic for voice calls), will all be in nonsensical places. We drafted in lefties to compare it with the Note 4 and the latter was deemed much more comfortable. (What's the use in a curved screen if it's in the wrong place?)
    The company was able to curve the display using the same technology it featured on the Galaxy Round, but there's more emphasis here on giving purpose to the uniqueness of the Edge. Samsung's crafted what's best described as a special kind of edge "widget," but I'll explain what sort of value it adds in the software section. There's some purpose to it -- but perhaps not quite enough.

    One of the best things about the Galaxy Note Edge is how much it resembles the Note 4. In fact, barring that giveaway right edge, from nearly all angles it looks like the Note 4, and that's a good thing. It has nearly all the same design touches and material finishes as the Note 4. As my colleague Brad mentioned in his review, the leather-like backing on Samsung's phones this year is much improved: It looks and feels much classier, and the fake stitches are gone too.
    There are also machined-aluminum buttons to match the sides, an IR remote and headphone socket up top, and a USB charger, a downgrade from the Note 3, at the base. This means slower transfers, but I can cope for the aesthetics. In time-honored Samsung style, there's also a physical home button with capacitive multitasking and back buttons balancing out the lower bezel. Lastly, there's a built-in heart rate monitor nestled alongside the flash, while a single speaker grille sits in the lower-left corner, ready to be obscured by your hand when you hold it. Whoops.


    There's been no corners cut with regards to specifications -- fantastically, it goes toe to toe with the Note 4. It's the same high-resolution (2,560 × 1,600) screen -- we're certain a mere 1080p "Plus" curved display would have been cheaper to make -- as well as a 2.7GHz processor, 3GB of RAM and 32GB of storage (and a 64GB option), with a microSD slot for expansion. On paper, the only place that's been limited is the battery: a smaller 3,000mAh pack powers this special edition Note, compared to 3,220mAh in Note number four.

    The stylus is another product of Samsung's collaboration with Montblanc: Multiple sensitivity levels and a nice grippy surface are the highlights. I'd point you to our Note 4 review for a closer look, but suffice to say that the stylus has turned into a real selling point for the Note series, with one caveat: There's a steep learning curve to using it. After using the Galaxy Note 2 for some time, the extra features and changes meant I came often unstuck at the start. My personal favorite, which I used a surprising number of times, was Image Clip, which allows you to copy and paste parts of your screen -- maps, parts of an image -- and save it for reference or use later. Combining my scraps with a messaging app was simplicity. The new pen even lets you batch select parts of text or even files and pictures -- yes, a real productivity tool!

    ONE-HANDED USE

    Disclaimer: Your hand is different from mine, but it seems only fair to do the same comparison we did for the Note 4. The Note Edge is wider than the Note 4, and although I've only spent a brief time with the latter, the curved, tapered side of the Note Edge seemed to fit rather snugly into the corner of my palm. I never found it uncomfortable, but please don't forget it remains a big phone. Both come with software tricks like shrinkable keyboards as well as a new, tiny floating menu that can be stuck to the outer edge of the screen. This duplicates the capacitive button row, which could be a solution of sorts for lefties. I can even make this secondary menu transparent, allowing me to maintain all that screen space. The ability to shrink the likes of Chrome and Google Maps to a popup window and layer it on top of other apps is also useful; I'd love to see something similar on the iPhone 6 Plus.

    And how does Apple's biggest phone compare to the Note Edge? Well, both remain unwieldy to grip, and the Note Edge is wider. However, the edged screen nuzzles into my hand better and those software tweaks mentioned above give it the advantage. However, just like the stylus, there's a while before you get the knack of all the little provisions Samsung's made to ease users into this screen size.

    SOFTWARE

    If you're looking to learn more about the stylus' uses, I'd advise a quick read of Brad's Galaxy Note 4 review, because the setup is identical here. Yes, there are TouchWiz bits running on Android 4.4 KitKat, but Samsung continues to clear away unnecessary bloat and options. It's still a work in progress, though, and I feel the settings menus are particularly obtuse compared to other Android phones -- and especially iOS. It takes some getting used to.
    But let's focus on what's different here: that edge. There are two display modes you can flit between: a slender, unassuming bar that can display a customized message and a more substantial column that attempts to offer extra functionality, notifications or context-dependent menus for certain apps, like the camera. When it's expanded, the UI is a basic row of icons, which you can navigate with a little swipe. This may look a little unusual, but swishing through the various mini-screens (you can configure what it shows, and even install third-party "edges"), is immensely satisfying.
    While you can cycle through up to seven edges (why the limit?), each can also be toggled off, so you could strip it down to simply a notification and app shortcut bar. Or you could keep seven different things there: weather, stocks, bizarre memory-matching game, your pedometer stats or a Japan-only navigation bar that'll offer traffic alerts and your nearest train station. Predictably, there's a way to go on these edge apps -- did Samsung not learn from those early wearables? The edge could be so much more useful with Spotify controls or a Gmail notification bar that offers more than just a number of unread emails.

    The edge of the screen also comes into its own when Samsung went to the effort to add dedicated menus. For the camera, this means your viewfinder isn't obscured, which is nice. Similarly, when playing video, you get the fullscreen playback, and tapping the screen brings up controls along the curved edge. Notifications will also appear here, which is a nice touch. However, app-dependent edge functions stop there, and the camera and video player both seem like the most useful scenarios for it.
    I ended up using the edge screen differently. I felt like my apps belong better on the side, and customized the favorites edge to include all my regular apps like Chrome and Maps. Rather than squeeze as many of these vital apps onto a home screen (or two), I can house them on that swipeable side. The screen can then showcase wallpaper, or suitably pretty widgets. Apps are then not a button press, but a swish away. Samsung (and Apple) might not like it, but it reminds me very much of my Mac setup.

    You can also turn the edge into a centimetered ruler. Not sure how much you're going to use that function -- I didn't use it once. Something I did like was the night clock setting, which, when it hits a certain prescribed time, will light up the edge with a simple clock readout.
    These might be the best parts, but the marvel remains the technical accomplishment of the curved screen. The applications for it don't quite amount to enough -- at least right now. What does the edge lack? What do I want? I'm not even sure, but when text scrolls down the edge and you're facing the right side, the edge, of the phone, it's upside-down. If Samsung were to reverse it, then it'd be upside-down when you're using the thing. It's particularly frustrating for the Twitter widget, which scrolls through highlights.

    CAMERA

    Again, Samsung didn't cut any corners when it came to the phone's imaging prowess. The Note Edge packs a 16-megapixel camera, with Samsung's "smart OIS" intended to eke the light (and detail) in tougher lighting. The front-facing camera is also a top-end sensor compared to the competition, 3.7 megapixels with an f/1.9 lens. There's also a (bizarre-sounding) selfie mode that stitches a trio of pictures together for widescreen, "best friends!" capture -- when you have more than two BFFs.
    GALLERY|17 PHOTOS

    Samsung Galaxy Note Edge photo samples



    While I'm not a huge selfie taker, you'll have to ask our Senior Selfie Editor, but I do take a whole lot of photos with my smartphone, so I was interested to see how Samsung's newest smartphone camera handled (yup, it's in the Note 4, too). Fortunately, I spent time with the Note Edge in Tokyo and New York: two places where sample photos can be done pretty much everywhere.

    All told, it's an excellent camera. The image stabilizing works well on all the neon lights that pepper Tokyo, while even people were neatly captured. There's some noise, but it compares favorably against older Galaxy phones. Daylight meant effortless captures and some really nice shots, if I say so myself. Focus was swift, and auto white balance seemed to gauge scenes perfectly. If you have a proclivity for HDR, rest assured the Edge does an excellent job there.

    PERFORMANCE AND BATTERY LIFE

    SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE EDGESAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 4SAMSUNG GALAXY S5IPHONE 6 PLUS
    Quadrant 2.023,86124,42524,714N/A
    Vellamo 3.01,8821,8081,656N/A
    3DMark IS Unlimited19,91220,69217,95417,902
    SunSpider 1.0 (ms)788793820388
    GFXBench 3.0 Manhattan Offscreen (fps)18.418.811.518.2
    CF-Bench40,14343,23433,351N/A
    SunSpider: Lower scores are better.
    It bears repeating: Samsung's treated the Galaxy Edge buyer to some of the best components underneath that curved display: 3GB of RAM to ensure multitask windowing runs smoothly, and a quad-core Snapdragon 805 processor to back it up. Like the Note 4, lag and slowdown simply didn't happen. However, there were the occasional hiccups where the edge widget would refuse to cycle to the next page. The only fix I found was to reset the phone. It's a shame, as it's a minor issue that stops the phone getting full performance marks.
    The Edge goes toe to toe with the Note 4, because well, it's pretty much the same phone. But how about the smaller battery, one of the only hardware differences? With a little more screen resolution and less capacity on the cell, we feared the worse. Well, in our battery of... battery tests, it lies somewhere between the Note and Galaxy S series. It's not quite as good as the former, but better than the latter: A very heavy day of use (lots of maps, lots of photos) will tucker out the phone before bedtime. That said, in our video-loop battery test at half brightness, the Note Edge's 3,000mAh cell ran out after just over 10 hours. With more moderate use, the phone would arrive back at my house with around 20 percent left, enough to notify me that I needed to charge. The fingerprint sensor to unlock the phone is more sensitive and accurate than preceding Galaxy devices, although the heart rate sensor on the back of my Note Edge didn't seem to pick up my pulse at all. I wasn't dead, and a second Note Edge we picked up for testing did offer up readings swiftly inside the phone's S Health app.

    THE COMPETITION

    When it comes to big smartphones, we've never had quite as many strong options. What was once the domain of only Samsung and LG now has competition from Apple and even smaller upstarts like OnePlus. Samsung has launched the Note Edge mere months after its own Note 4, and the phones are identical in so many ways. The major difference isn't that the battery's smaller on the Edge, but the price: off-contract the Note 4 comes in at around $800. The Note Edge, meanwhile is priced at $950 -- just shy of 200 bucks more. On-contract pricing on AT&T comes to around $400, while the Note 4 and the iPhone 6 Plus ring in at $300. Apple's iPhone 6 Plus, lacking a stylus, but coming with the slicker iOS 8, starts at $750 off-contract for a 16GB model. Unlike both of this year's Galaxy Notes, however, you can't upgrade the storage -- something worth bearing in mind. Then there's the OnePlus One: a lower-resolution (but still gorgeous) 5.5-inch 1080p display, no stylus, no add-on storage, but you could buy three and have spare change for cases compared to the Galaxy Note Edge. It boils down to how much you want a stylus, and how much you're willing to pay for a phone that's not like anything else.

    WRAP-UP

    Is the Note Edge a gimmick? It's hard to say, but I don't think the curved display is a bad thing. The best part is that even without the edge, you've still got, for all intents and purposes, a Galaxy Note 4, with a stylus, power, long battery life and a capable camera. The more I used the Note Edge, the less the edge part seemed to matter: I'd use the shortcuts to apps from the edge, but gradually disabled most of the widgets. Pervasive uses for the curve aren't quite there. What did remain was how gosh-darn eye-catching the display was, augmented by that curved AMOLED glow. And if foldable smartphones and tablets are going to happen, if devices with more useful, innovative displays are to appear, phones like the Note Edge are the iterations that need to happen. If you liked any of the previous Galaxy Notes, or were at least intrigued by them, then the Galaxy Note Edge deserves the same amount of attention -- even if, at $980 off-contract, you're really paying for that progress.