Jump to content

Samsung Galaxy S7 & S7 Edge User Thread


SturgeonGeneral

Recommended Posts

 

Last charged 10 am PST yesterday.  Today still clinging through.  Yesterday was streaming Nascar, streaming Pandora, using navigation through Google Maps, web surfing, and e-mails on LTE.  Today, usual work day, e-mails, text messages, chat and surfing the net.  I can consider myself an average user.

 

6QBEzQ1l.pngd4XozNSl.png

 

McuqHz7l.pngOtHQpPyl.png

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Last charged 10 am PST yesterday.  Today still clinging through.  Yesterday was streaming Nascar, streaming Pandora, using navigation through Google Maps, web surfing, and e-mails on LTE.  Today, usual work day, e-mails, text messages, chat and surfing the net.  I can consider myself an average user.

 

Screen on Time?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Last charged 10 am PST yesterday.  Today still clinging through.  Yesterday was streaming Nascar, streaming Pandora, using navigation through Google Maps, web surfing, and e-mails on LTE.  Today, usual work day, e-mails, text messages, chat and surfing the net.  I can consider myself an average user.

 

6QBEzQ1l.pngd4XozNSl.png

 

McuqHz7l.pngOtHQpPyl.png

 

 

I can't wait to show how fast a power user can kill one of these.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Screen on Time?

 

So far 4 hours from this test.  Next test will keep screen on.  How can I keep my screen on all day for this test?  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So far 4 hours from this test.  Next test will keep screen on.  How can I keep my screen on all day for this test?  

 

You tube and queue up a bunch of documentaries.

Search on military or wwii

 

Then you only have to check it every hour or two.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

if I may ask since I cannot find, how many LTE bands does sprint S7 edge have ?, I really need a world phone like ipone 6S plus

Edited by udithadj
Link to comment
Share on other sites

if I may ask since I cannot find, how many LTE bands does sprint S7 edge have ?, I really need a world phone like ipone 6S plus

 

Different countries have different bands, there's no true "World Phone".  Even the 6S has multiple models.

 

 

That said, the S7 has all the same "world phone" bands the iPhone 6S does.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

so you mean once s7 edge is unlocked all the other lte bands will appear?. I have an upgrade I need to use and thinking whether S7 edge or iphone 7 plus

 

The FCC documents show what bands are supported.

 

A majority of the bands around the world are supported by the S7 Edge.  But not all of them.  If you're planning on going to Africa where they use some weird bands you may have issues, I guess.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm upgrading from a Galaxy S5.

 

 

I can say that signal strength is way, way better with the S7 Edge.

 

I could never get LTE from my desk and would occasionally push to Roaming on my S5.  I get a decent LTE signal from my work desk on my S7 Edge, however.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

if I may ask since I cannot find, how many LTE bands does sprint S7 edge have ?, I really need a world phone like ipone 6S plus

 

 

READ ME!!

 

http://s4gru.com/index.php?/blog/1/entry-405-updated-teaser-samsung-galaxy-s7-and-s7-edge-one-of-us-one-variant-each-for-all-of-the-us/

 

 

That firmware on the Sprint "P" variant, for example, will enable CCA/RRPP compliant bands 2/4/5/12/25/26/41 but disable VZW band 13, AT&T bands 29/30, and VoLTE. Similar segmentation applies to the other domestic variants, such as the AT&T "A" variant and T-Mobile "T" variant, both of which disable CDMA2000 and Sprint bands 25/26/41.

 

Thus, the single SKU aspect for the "US" hardware variants of the Galaxy S7 and Galaxy S7 Edge will be limited to their respective FCC IDs. At the retail and end user levels, separate SKUs and model numbers still will exist for the operator specific airlink/band firmware packages.

 

(I kinda assumed everyone that who had wanted this phone had also read this article on the S4GRU wall.)

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Last charged 10 am PST yesterday.  Today still clinging through.  Yesterday was streaming Nascar, streaming Pandora, using navigation through Google Maps, web surfing, and e-mails on LTE.  Today, usual work day, e-mails, text messages, chat and surfing the net.  I can consider myself an average user.

 

 

1 Day 9 Hours.  Not bad.

 

Crb0cFWl.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Now how long to charge and on what charger?

I got my Samsung Qi flat pad wireless charger today.

which one? Fast wireless charger charges really fast while the other will charge like a traditional charger which is slow.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

which one? Fast wireless charger charges really fast while the other will charge like a traditional charger which is slow.

 

 

ROTFL!!  I shouldn't have to clarify this.

 

The question is how long on average (in real numbers) does it take to recharge from specific locations on the line, 50%, 30%, zero, or near zero using the common methods?

 

Flat pad Qi charger, and standard sammie wall outlet cord, is there a special qi cord that charges faster than the "normal" white outlet adapter/cord?

 

The one that came with my QI was marked different (I'll add a photo tonight)

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

PSA:  You will not get the free 6 apps from the Oculus store until 3/11 even if you got the device early!

 

 

There's a post on the Oculus site about it (if I can find the link).

Edited by jnadke
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

PSA: You will not get the free 6 apps from the Oculus store until 3/11 even if you got the device early!

Can't wait to see what the free apps are! Looking forward to trying this out. I'm sure it a way different experience than cardboard.

 

Sent from my SM-G925P using Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

ROTFL!! I shouldn't have to clarify this.

 

The question is how long on average (in real numbers) does it take to recharge from specific locations on the line, 50%, 30%, zero, or near zero using the common methods?

 

Flat pad Qi charger, and standard sammie wall outlet cord, is there a special qi cord that charges faster than the "normal" white outlet adapter/cord?

 

The one that came with my QI was marked different (I'll add a photo tonight)

Oh

 

Sent from my SM-N920P using Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Can't wait to see what the free apps are! Looking forward to trying this out. I'm sure it a way different experience than cardboard.

 

Sent from my SM-G925P using Tapatalk

I have bought so many apps already. I got mine back in November when finding one seemed impossible

 

Sent from my SM-N920P using Tapatalk

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

ROTFL!!  I shouldn't have to clarify this.

 

The question is how long on average (in real numbers) does it take to recharge from specific locations on the line, 50%, 30%, zero, or near zero using the common methods?

 

Flat pad Qi charger, and standard sammie wall outlet cord, is there a special qi cord that charges faster than the "normal" white outlet adapter/cord?

 

The one that came with my QI was marked different (I'll add a photo tonight)

P=VI

The wireless fast charger(Must say fast charger on it) is 9V and 1.67 Amp so that is close to 15 watts. The S7 edge battery is 13.86 Watts so almost an hour to charge from zero. Many plugs are 5V 2A meaning 10 Watts and some are only 1A meaning still slower recharge to almost 3 hours with a 5V 1A plug.

 

The real question is do you want to use fast charge all the time? Some say it kills the battery total life faster.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I can definitely say the camera focusing is super fast and very consistent.

 

My Galaxy S5 was getting frustrating not being able to focus on close things in poor lighting.

 

 

As far as battery life, it'll be easy to hit 5 hours SOT consistently.  I'm at 81% right now with 1 hour SOT (with heavy usage due to still setting stuff up) and Always on Display turned on (and all Google syncing, location reporting, Android Wear).

 

My work's wifi network also drains it a bit extra due to some weird quirk with authenticated wifi networks (it destroys iPhones too), so it's doing especially well (where my S5 would be at 75% or less right now with far less usage).  I was on cellular for 50% of the time.

 

 

 

The fingerprint sensor works very well, just make sure to move your finger around and register from multiple angles when you first set it up.  Make sure to register the sides of you finger.

 

Fingerprint unlocking is insanely fast.  If you register the fingerprints properly you will have 0 issues when you unlock it.

 

 

I like the double-tap home button to open the camera.  It opens very fast.  You can even do it from the lock screen and it'll unlock with fingerprint and open the camera.

Edited by jnadke
Link to comment
Share on other sites

A few tips:

 

-In the Camera, under "Mode" at the bottom, at the top is "Download".  You can download more camera modes (Sport mode, GIF mode, and Dual camera mode)

 

-I got sick of the rounded icons quickly (a mix of rounded icons and Material icons), but I replaced it with a Material theme.  Long press home screen > Themes > More Themes > "More" (top right) > Search > "Material Design" (by Cameron Bunch - it's FREE).

 

The Material theme makes the UI much more consistent.

 

-I like RSBrowser (general tip):  https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.rsbrowser.browser&hl=en

It runs an older version of Chrome (open source Chromium), but has a built-in ad-blocker and supports Google bookmarks/password syncing and auto-fill.  It's also custom-compiled to run faster on Snapdragon.

 

(On Marshmallow it's a little janky since it doesn't seem to ask for permissions properly, I had to go into the Application Manager and turn on the permissions, then I could add my Chrome/Google account to it and give it permission.  For some reason the permission notification stays on top until you reboot).

Edited by jnadke
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • large.unreadcontent.png.6ef00db54e758d06

  • gallery_1_23_9202.png

  • Posts

    • So, in summary, here are the options I tested: T-Mobile intl roaming - LTE on SoftBank, routes back to the US (~220ms to 4.2.2.4) IIJ physical SIM - LTE on NTT, local routing Airalo - LTE on SoftBank and KDDI (seems to prefer SoftBank), routed through Singapore (SingTel) Ubigi - 5G on NTT, routed through Singapore (Transatel) US Mobile East Asia roaming - 5G on SoftBank, routed through Singapore (Club SIM) Saily - 5G on NTT, routed through Hong Kong (Truphone)...seems to be poorer routing my1010 - LTE on SoftBank and KDDI (seems to prefer KDDI), routed through Taiwan (Chunghwa Telecom) I wouldn't buy up on the T-Mobile international roaming, but it's a solid fallback. If you have the US Mobile roaming eSIM that's a great option. Otherwise Ubigi, Airalo, or my1010 are all solid options, so get whatever's cheapest. I wouldn't bother trying to find a physical SIM from IIJ...the Japanese IP is nice but there's enough WiFi that you can get a Japanese IP enough for whatever you need, and eSIM flexibility is great (IIJ as eSIM but seems a bit more involved to get it to work).
    • So, the rural part of the journey still has cell service for nearly all the way, usually on B18/19/8 (depending on whether we're talking about KDDI/NTT/SoftBank). I think I saw a bit of B28 and even n28 early on in the trip, though that faded out after a bit. Once we got to where we were going though, KDDI had enough B41 to pull 150+ Mbps, while NTT and SoftBank had B1/B3 IIRC. Cell service was likewise generally fine from Kawaguchiko Station to Tokyo on the express bus to Shinjuku Station, though there were some cases where only low-band LTE was available and capacity seemed to struggle. I also figured out what I was seeing with SoftBank on 40 MHz vs. 100 MHz n77: the 40 MHz blocks are actually inside the n78 band class, but SoftBank advertises them as n77, probably to facilitate NR CA. My phone likely preferred the 40 MHz slices as they're *much* lower-frequency, ~3.4 GHz rather than ~3.9, though of course I did see the 100 MHz slice being used rather often. By contrast, when I got NR on NTT it was either n28 10x10 or, more often, 100 MHz n78. As usual, EMEA bands on my S24 don't CA, so any data speeds I saw were the result of either one LTE carrier or one LTE carrier plus one NR carrier...except for B41 LTE. KDDI seems to have more B41 bandwidth live at this point, so my1010 or Airalo works well for this, and honestly while SoftBank and NTT 5G (in descending order of availability) have 5G that's readily available it may be diminishing returns, particularly given that I still don't know how to, as someone not from Hong Kong, get an eSIM that runs on SoftBank 5G that isn't the USM "comes for free with the unlimited premium package" roaming eSIM (NTT is easy enough thanks to Ubigi). In other news, I was able to borrow someone's Rakuten eSIM and...got LTE with it. 40 Mbps down, 20 Mbps up, 40ms latency to Tokyo while in Tokyo...which isn't any worse than the Japan-based physical SIMs I had used earlier. But not getting n77 or n257 was disappointing, though I had to test the eSIM from one spot rather than bouncing around the city to find somewhere with better reception. It's currently impossible to get a SIM as a foreigner that runs on Rakuten, so that was the best I could do. Also, I know my phone doesn't have all the LTE and 5G bands needed to take full advantage of Japanese networks. My S24 is missing: B21 (1500 MHz) - NTT B11 (1500 MHz) - KDDI, SoftBank B42 (3500 MHz) - NTT, KDDI, SoftBank n79 (4900 MHz) - NTT Of the above, B42/n79 are available on the latest iPhones, though you lose n257, and I'm guessing you're not going to find B11/B21 on a phone sold outside Japan.
    • T-Mobile acquiring SoniqWave's 2.5 GHz spectrum  Another spectrum speculator down! T-Mobile is acquiring all of their licenses and their leases. Details are lacking but it looks like T-Mobile might be giving them 3.45GHz in exchange in some of the markets where they're acquiring BRS/EBS to sweeten the deal and stay below the spectrum screen. Hopefully NextWave is at the negotiating table with T-Mobile so NYC can finally get access to the full BRS/EBS band as well. 
    • Maybe. The taller buildings on one side of the street all have Fios access and the NYCHA buildings are surrounded by Verizon macros that have mmWave. I don’t think this site will add much coverage. It’d be better off inside the complex itself.
    • Looks like a great place for for FWA. Many apartment dwellers only have one overpriced choice.
  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...