Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 Lite Review By MobileTechReview

By MobileTechReview
Aug 15, 2021
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Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 Lite Review

This is Lisa from mobile tech review and this is the Samsung Galaxy Tab s6 light the light version, which means it's a lot more affordable, but it's still pretty nice and in a world where we don't see many Android tablets anymore. It's a little exciting. We're gonna, look at it now, so the tab s6 light is a ten point. Four inch tab of the resolution of 2000 by 1200, which makes for a kind of oddball aspect ratio. One point six, seven to one in practical use: it's fine I-it's, a TFT or IPS display here. Not all that I just have to say that, because Samsung is kind of synonymous with OLED for a lot of folks here, but in this price range, which is starting at $350, you don't get plan, it's fair.

So for $350 you get 64 gigs of storage. The tablet has a micro SD card slot, so you don't have to feel compelled to buy more storage like you do with an iPad. If you want a some more storage, so you can go up to 128 gigs, and that is $400. So the prices are around. That of the 2019 iPad that's competing with and like the iPad, it supports pen input in fact again s-pen in the box, yeah that, and it's not one of those teeny toothpicks that fits in the silo, which means you do have to keep track of yourself, but it also means you're, not gonna, get a hand cramp from using something so ultra tiny.

It's still Wacom EMR technology, just as pens I've been forever same. As with the note, the Pens are interchangeable. You get the idea, and it's an excellent technology, certainly every bit, as goes the Apple Pencil and those of you who watched my tablets for artist reviews and all the pen based tech. It's one of the best pen technologies out there. Besides the 4096 pressure levels, it also supports tilt, feels pretty natural, and it's a glossy screen.

So you'll have a little of skating, but the NIGH is somewhat drippy. There is a pen on a button on the pen, don't get too excited and think that you can assign that to do something. It's there for our Samsung as usual, Air Command functions, so you can launch there. No, it's app or the screen sketch, and all that sort of thing you can still take notes when the screens turn off. Don't just put the pen near and hit the button on and wake up, and you can just jot notes to self which is actually a handy feature.

The only drawback that I found is the pen is not great with Tom ejection so but worse than average for come AMR or s-pen this you can get around there, though some apps actually have an option to turn off touch input like Samsung's own notes, app does, and then you won't end up having extra marks on the screen when your hand touches the glass. So those prices are for the Wi-Fi only tablet. They do say that they will have a 4G LTE cat 11 model available in the United. States I haven't seen that yet they might be waiting for carriers to be ready to introduce that. Obviously, that mount would cost more.

You do have dual-band Wi-Fi onboard, and you have a GPS as well and despite the fact there is no LTE, so that's nice to have yeah Bluetooth 5, and it's Wi-Fi 5 for the price, again fair for biometrics and security. You have, of course, the usual password pin and all that sort of thing, and we have Android 10 here with one UI 2.0, and you have facial recognition. Login. It's not a secure kind, like you know, 3d facial recognition, but if you're not too paranoid about security, it's absolutely fine. It's fairly quick! Furthermore, it works pretty! Well, even in lower lighting situations.

There is no fingerprint scanner here. The tablets available in three colors are oxford gray and there's also a blue and a kind of rose color, and it weighs 1.0 two pounds which is about 460 grams. So it's reasonably light, and it's pretty slim. It's not bad-looking. As tablets go in terms of performance, you have an TO nose, 96 11, CPU, no Samsung's own processor for high power cords for low power cords and performance.

So this was pretty good, even doing something I'm playing Call of Duty mobile. The initial launching sometimes looked a little shaky and jittery, but once I was in the game it performed flawlessly, so I can't say that I feel like this needs a faster CPU. You get four gigs of RAM on board and again the storage we've already covered, but remember it takes micros cards up to one terabyte, so you've got plenty of room to grow with them. The front camera is 5 megapixels. So that's a pretty good resolution compared to your average 720p webcam on your laptop, which no doubt since work at home is starting to feel kind of inadequate.

That said in low light, it's not really very good, even though the lens isn't that slow, I'm yeah, but in better lighting it's ok, it's not bad. It's certainly going to be an improvement, almost laptops for having video conferencing and all that sort of thing. The rear camera is 8 mega and not as good as the regular tab and sinks, which is a more expensive product. So it's fair you're, basically a digital zoom and the single lens on the rear. You can choose between 1x and 2x, but in any case, I noticed that contrast is what's going to have the most problems with it in a partly sunny day like that picture of the pool or on screen right now, you can see how the bushes look inordinately dark in the background when they weren't that way.

But you know it's a tablet: camera. It's not very expensive tablet: it's okay, the speaker's, as is often the case with consumer tablets, are pretty darn good Neo to AKG brand and stereo speakers here, and we've got Dolby Atmos software on board and for a tablet of this size it sounds pretty good I'm, not gonna, say it's going to beat the iPad exactly because I know you folks cross shop, those but good sound, actually pretty pleasant, and there is a headphone jack. Yes, there's a headphone jack there's, also a USB-C port that you use for charging, and it comes with Samsung's own fast charger in the box and that's USB 2.0 protocol that it uses for accessories. Samsung makes a headset the book cover that you can see that they sent us to use in this review and a desk charging stand, and they'll probably see a few third-party accessories out there, but I wouldn't expect a lot. It's not the most immense ecosystem, but it's got you literally covered.

You've got the cover, for example, and you've got a desk charging stand. If you need to have that battery here is 7000 and 40 Williams and like most tablets, battery life is pretty good and we have a high resolution and a crazy high resolution, this Buy, and it's just standard IPS. So it's not like OLED displaying bright things. The battery life can go down, so battery life on this is pretty good for typical users, Khmer measured in days not in hours of use, and it's also pretty comparable to the competing 2019 iPad in that respect. So that's good.

So, as always, the biggest challenge for Android tablets isn't the quality and the features and all that sort of stuff. Because for the price this is pretty nice in all respects. For the hardware, and particularly the pen, is a really nice experience. Overall, it's the app ecosystem for Android apps, on phones world's your oyster. You got everything out there for tablets, because tablets and Android land really have been taken off your selection of tablet.

Optimized apps! Isn't that great, but still you do have things like Microsoft, Office and OneNote, and a few art apps like audit us sketchbook, but no great apps like procreate. Sadly, that is available on the iPad for art. I do have the Photoshop mobile applications available. They might sometimes feature like the iPad ones, but that would still be the drawback finding a wide ecosystem of tablet, optimized apps here, but for everyday productivity, doodling note-taking in this office kind of work, you're good, so that's the Samsung Galaxy Tab s, 6 light and for $350 starting price. This is a pretty nice tablet.

It's reasonably good-looking! You get the S Pen in the box, yeah that so that makes a little more affordable versus the competing 2019 iPad across the drawback with Samsung tablets and all Android tablets. Right now is the fact that the Android ecosystem for tablets is a little weak compared to the iPads. Are a lot weak really, but for those you who preferring Android it's here, I'm Lisa from old tech review be sure to subscribe to our YouTube channel for more cool tech videos and hit the notification bell. So you know about them.


Source : MobileTechReview

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