Ditengahpasar tablet yang tengah lesu, Samsung dengan percaya diri meluncurkan Galaxy Tab S3 with S Pen di Scenic Lounge and Resto. Tablet kelas premium ini dirancang guna mendukung produktivitas dan multitasking penggunanya. DijualTablet murah di Indonesia, temukan listing Tablet terbaru hanya di OLX pusat Tablet terlengkap di Indonesia. Tablet / Samsung / Tablet Murah di Indonesia - Tab S3. Kategori. Tablet. . Sections Page 1 Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 Review Page 2 Performance, S Pen, Software and Camera Review Page 3 Battery Life and Verdict Review Verdict Pros Amazing HDR AMOLED display Slim and light Impressive S Pen included Cons Software lacks polish Multitasking is janky Glass back is a fingerprint magnet Key Specifications Review Price £ Snapdragon 820 CPU 4GB RAM QXGA, Super AMOLED display 6000mAh battery 13-megapixel, 5-megapixel front cameras Android with Samsung UI Included S-Pen What is the Samsung Galaxy Tab S3? A new top-end Android tablet is a rare occurrence these days, and after using Samsung’s Galaxy Tab S3, I can sort of see why. This iPad Pro-chasing tablet is good-looking, fast and has a gorgeous screen, but I can’t fully recommend it because the Android user experience on a tablet still isn’t quite up to scratch. Samsung has tried its best, but the future for high-end Android tablets isn’t looking too rosy. Who knows, maybe the Samsung Galaxy Tab S4 will fix the S3’s issues, but for now this is far from the best tablet experience around. Related Samsung Galaxy Tab S4 vs Tab S3 Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 – Design The Galaxy Tab S3 is a mixture of the very best and the very worst of Samsung’s industrial design. It’s thinner than an iPhone 7, with a flat back and slightly curved sides that make it a pleasure to hold. Weighing in at just 429g it’s also noticeably lighter than the latest iteration of the regular iPad. Related Best Android tablets The Tab S3 is about the same size as an iPad Pro but the all-black colour is a hue I’ve been wishing Apple would introduce for its tablets since the matte-black iPhone 7 arrived. There are clicky volume and sleep buttons on the side, while the headphone jack and USB-C port sit slightly off-centre on the bottom. Like the iPad Pro, four speakers are dotted around the tablet and they have some software trickery that angles the sound depending on how you’re holding the device. There’s also a very fast fingerprint scanner below the screen, flanked by two capacitive back’ and overview’ buttons. It’s a stunning piece of kit, until you start using it. The glass back, for me, is a wrong step for a tablet. After using the Tab S3 for a few minutes the behind becomes completely covered in oily fingerprints. I also expect tablets to be much more durable than a phone, mainly because they spend a lot of time being bunged inside a bag or passed around a group of people. An iPad can comfortably live inside a full rucksack without getting damaged, but I’m already starting to see tiny marks appearing on the Galaxy Tab S3. I understand a glossy, glass back might be a flashier design choice, but I’d prefer a matte metal back. Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 – Display and speakers Samsung has knocked it out of the park with the display on the Galaxy Tab S3. The screen is so good that it sits in the same league and in some ways surpasses the iPad Pro True Tone panel, which is one of the best I’ve ever seen on a tablet. The thing that really gives it the edge over Apple’s tab is the screen tech used. While Apple uses IPS LCD panels, Samsung uses AMOLED, which allows for much richer colours, deeper blacks and a more immersive screen for bingeing on media. The tablet packs the same 2048 x 1536 resolution as the Tab S2, but it’s now HDR-enabled when you’re watching supported content either through Netflix or Amazon Prime. HDR high dynamic range gives much greater peak brightness, with blacks appearing deeper and more natural as a result. Related What is HDR? The demo HDR footage I’ve seen looks tremendous. It’s a shame neither Netflix or Amazon has updated their mobile apps to support it yet, and there’s no word on when that might happen, which means for now the HDR support feels a little superfluous. The screen’s much more colourful and saturated than the iPad Pro display, which can look a tad dull when they’re both side by side, but this is where the S3’s lead ends. The Tab S3’s screen doesn’t perform as well in bright light due to its overly reflective coating, which I’ve found is particularly annoying on trains. It also lacks any of the True Tone tech found in the iPad Pro, which alters the colour temperature depending on your environment and makes reading in the dark easier on the eyes. Luckily, the media experience is made even better thanks to the four speakers. There are two on the bottom and two on the top, and they’re tuned by the audio gurus at AKG. They’re decent speakers, with plenty of volume and the positioning means noise will come out in all directions, but they do have a tendency to feel like the sound is far away from you and being pushed the wrong way. This might have something to do with the software that’s supposed to alter the sound depending on which orientation you’re holding it in. Even with this issue, they’re much better than the majority of tablet speakers. Related Best Android Tablets How we test tablets We test every tablet we review thoroughly. We use industry standard tests to compare features properly and we use the tablet as our main device over the review period. We’ll always tell you what we find and we never, ever, accept money to review a product. Find out more about how we test in our ethics policy. Used as our main tablet for the review period Reviewed using respected industry benchmarks Ongoing real world testing Tested with various games, apps and services TechRadar Verdict The Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 is headlined by an HDR-ready screen, four powerful speakers and an upgraded S Pen that’s included in the box, although you’re going to have to pay for the keyboard. Just don’t expect Android meet all of your 2-in-1 tablet needs next to a similarly priced laptop. Pros +Samsung’s best tablet design yet+Includes the S-Pen stylus for free+HDR-ready future-proofed screen Cons -Keyboard is a costly extra-Just as expensive as iPad Pro-Tablet multitasking can't replace a laptop Why you can trust TechRadar We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test. Update The Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 has more competition than ever with the likes of the iPad Pro 11 and Samsung's own Tab S4 now on the market, but it's also now cheaper than it once was and remains a top Android Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 remains the best Android tablet you can buy, despite the launch of the newer Samsung Galaxy Tab can do just about anything the iPad Pro 11 can, yet it costs far less. In fact, watching the dystopian alternate-history Amazon TV series The Man in the High Castle on the Samsung Galaxy Tab S3’s HDR screen prompts an analogy what if Apple’s iPad Pro ran Android?That’s pretty much what we have here. It’s Android’s first worthy competitor to the iPad Pro and the rest of the Pro range, though that one especially as it has the same screen size, with strong specs to match, and it pairs well with the elegant-looking Samsung Galaxy S9 and Galaxy Note 9 – also feature-packed and enveloped in Galaxy Tab S3 is easily the best Android tablet you can buy right now thanks to its all-glass design upgrade, future-proofed HDR-ready display and included S hardly a difficult call for us to make – other than the flawed Tab S4, the older Google Pixel C and the not-quite-as-premium Asus ZenPad 3S 10 are its only real challengers at a similar is a challenge is determining who the Tab S3 is right for. It launched at $599 £599, AU$780, and while it comes with the S Pen Apple’s tablet does not offer a stylus in the box, the keyboard is separate. When you add it all up, it borders on cheap laptop prices, and there’s no cheaper 8-inch Tab S3 to give you an affordable entry-level this is slightly less of a problem now, as prices have dropped to a more palatable $470 / £400 / AU$600 in some are also getting the first though no longer only HDR-ready tablet with better brightness and contrast ratio with the Samsung Galaxy S3 Galaxy Tab S3 is Samsung’s best travel-friendly 2-in-1 tablet that can pull off productivity – if you’re willing to pay for the separate keyboard. It’s thinner and lighter than the equally tempting 2-in-1 Samsung Chromebook Pro laptop, which doesn’t have a detachable keyboard and includes a smaller S Pen, and it finally gives the iPad Pro some meaningful Galaxy Tab S3 price and availabilityTablet with the S Pen launched at $599 £599, about AU$780Can now be found for around $470 / £400 / AU$600The keyboard is separate at $129 £119As mentioned, the Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 launched for $599 £599, about AU$780, however it can now be found for around $470 / £400 / AU$ more of a mid-range price than the high-end, iPad Pro-rivaling one it launched at, and is in line with the 128GB iPad model, which costs $429 / £409 / AU$599 though a cheaper 32GB version is also available.No 'PC load letter' error messages here The real value over Apple’s tablet comes from the S Pen, which is included with the Tab S3 – the Apple Pencil costs an extra $99 £99, AU$145. You also don’t need to worry about recharging Samsung’s S Galaxy Tab S3 keyboard is a separate purchase, with Samsung charging $129 £119, though as with the slate itself this can now be found for less if you shop for the Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 release date, it became available in US stores on March 24 2017, while the UK wasn't too far behind with a March 31, 2017 launch designed glass and metal tablet designMore comfortable to hold than its plastic predecessorOtherwise looks exactly like the Galaxy Tab S2The Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 touts a small but likable design upgrade over the Galaxy Tab S2, even if it’s easy to mistake it for Samsung’s year-and-a-half-old tablet from the best changes happen round back, where the Tab S3 sports a new glass back panel in either black or silver. It looks and feels better than the rubberized plastic cover of the Tab S2, and the glass is more comfortable to hold; while you’re trading instantly collected sweat marks on the older model for fingerprints and smudges on the Gorilla Glass back, you’re ending up can technically still claim that the Tab S3 is thinner and lighter than an iPad Pro, with dimensions of x 169 x 6mm and a weight of 429g the iPad Pro is thick and weighs 437g. But don’t be fooled; the variations are hardly noticeable. The Tab S2 is and 389g, and we felt barely any difference between the three slates. The Tab S3 looks and feels like a blown-up Samsung Galaxy S7 phone, with a useful physical fingerprint sensor home button, and 'back' and 'recent' capacitive buttons aligned at the bottom. Without the keyboard attachment, it excels at being an entertainment device first and real difference is seen and heard in the HDR display, which pumps up the contrast ratio, and the four speakers, which pump out the volume better than a tablet with a mono previously got a taste of HDR on a mobile device with the short-lived Samsung Galaxy Note 7 and it came back to Samsung phones with the Galaxy S8 and Galaxy S8 Plus, as well as subsequent S and Note display and quad speakersBrilliant HDR-ready screen awaits HDR video contentFuture-proofed as the world's first HDR-ready tabletIts four speakers can get loud and are finely tuneSamsung tablets and phones already have the best screens going, with bright and pixel-dense Super AMOLED display panels. Now, by including HDR technology, Samsung is making them even Dynamic Range HDR gives the same 2048 x 1536 Quad HD resolution higher contrast ratios and brighter highlights. This is especially important in darker movie scenes in which you tend to lose too much of the picture to Tab S3’s support of the new HDR10 standard is actually a bigger deal than if Samsung packed a 4K screen into a tablet. The expanded brightness range does more than extra pixels would at this small size – more pixels matter when you’re dealing with a larger 4K the problem there’s not a lot of HDR video content available today. It’s being rolled out with streaming video services like Amazon Video and Netflix already on board on Samsung, LG and Sony TVs, but we weren’t able to find HDR video on these services at the tablet's launch. Instead, we had to rely on Samsung HDR demos and movie trailers to enjoy what’s ultimately the future of video. It’s definitely a jump up in quality, but as the content isn't here yet, you’re paying in advance for a tablet that will deliver that improved quality soon, but not right now. That makes the Tab S3 an amazing technical feat, but a hard sell to average consumers at you can take advantage of right now are the quad speakers on the Tab S3. They reach a more powerful volume than what we've heard from the mono Tab S2 and so many other tablets. Better yet, they’re calibrated to your movements, so as you rotate the tablet the stereo speaker orientation changes, so you’re never holding it the wrong way for sound. As long as you’re not expecting deep base, these AKG-tuned quad HD speakers go ear-to-ear with the those on the equally-rich-sounding iPad Pro You can get some bass out of the Tab S3 with the right headphones, which you’re probably going to use more often when roaming with this tablet in good news this tablet has both a headphone jack on the bottom of the frame, and supports Bluetooth No one is getting rid of headphone jacks in tablets – PenLarger than the S Pen in Note phones, tablets and ChromebooksStylus design is flat and has a clip – it won't roll away on youBut there's nowhere to holster it without buying the keyboardThe Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 transforms in look and potential with the included S Pen and keyboard attachment. They’re the must-have accessories to unlock the full potential of this 2-in-1 S Pen is an upgrade from the thin stylus we’ve been using on Note phones and the Samsung Chromebook Pro. At thick it’s bigger and easier to hold, and makes the previous S Pen look like a toothpick by comparison. It still has a fine tip this time made of rubber instead of plastic, and a clickable side button for bringing up the familiar Air Command the usual S Pen tools are here, including Notes, Smart Select create cropped or lassoed screenshots and GIFs, and Screen Write write directly on a screenshot. There are also three newer functions that can be added to the fanned-out shortcut list Translate, Magnify zoom in and Glance dock and quickly view an app.Handwriting and drawing are naturally better on a tablet using a thicker S Pen, too. It’s around the same width as the Apple Pencil, but shorter and boasts four times as many pressure levels. It really captures every angle, which can be great for shading, depending on the app you’re using. Samsung includes two apps – Notes and the coloring-book-like – and there are more in the Google Play S Pen doesn’t slot inside the thin tablet, so you can’t seamlessly hide the thicker stylus when it’s not in use. Instead, Samsung has added an pen holder loop for the keyboard – if you buy the keyboard. The good news is that the S Pen doesn’t need to be charged, and doesn’t roll away constantly, as it has two flatter sides and a clip. The Apple Pencil likes to roll off tables because there’s nowhere to put it and, if frequently used, is always at risk of being out of attachmentDoubles as a case that wraps around both sidesDoesn't require charging or pairing – it just worksEnd flap can't shut off the screen or close magnetically The Samsung Galaxy Tab S3's keyboard attachment is worth the extra money if you’re looking to substitute this tablet for a laptop. Its cramped layout a necessity is still useable, with decent travel when you hit the plastic keys – and all the important keys are missing? There are no function keys along the top we’re okay with that, and it’s sorely missing a home button, requiring you to reach for the fingerprint home sensor on the tablet and possibly knocking your coffee over in the process. We’d also like to see the search key bring up Google Search instead of Google Now On Tap, requiring an extra screen press for the search good amount of travel on these plastic keys Everything folds up nicely, enveloping the tablet in a soft plastic cover on both sides. That’s a big plus. Apple’s iPad Pro keyboard cover only protects the front screen – and aluminum does dent, much like glass shatters. Samsung basically throws in a back cover for of all, there’s no need for Bluetooth pairing or charging. The keyboard has six Pogo pins above the top row of keys, and these magnetically clip to the Tab S3’s side frame. Samsung has its own version of the Smart just wish its magnets were stronger. Picking the tablet up by the screen often detaches the bottom part of the keyboard luckily the back, where there are more magnets, stays secured. The end of the screen cover should also be magnetic, and should turn off the screen when closed. It doesn’t – instead, it can flap open if you’re not careful. Current page Introduction, design and accessories Next Page Software and performance Most Popular

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