This hybrid is a decent tablet, but a mangled laptop
Thin; Dazzling screen; USB-C
No other ports besides USB-C; Dreadful keyboard-screen cover; Stylus not included as standard
Manufacturer: Samsung
This hybrid is a decent tablet, but a mangled laptop
Thin; Dazzling screen; USB-C
No other ports besides USB-C; Dreadful keyboard-screen cover; Stylus not included as standard
The good Samsung wisely includes a keyboard cover in the box. Battery life is excellent, and the AMOLED display is better than the screens in much more expensive systems. The bad The single configuration is stuck with a sluggish Core M processor, and the keyboard cover allows only two screen angles,...
The price fits the average; making it affordable; and targeting a diffrent group compared to apple
ITS NOT APPLE; samsung intend to use re-furbish products; cutting the cost yes, and quality
When Microsoft first released the Surface several years ago, it was pretty clear that the company was on to something. It wasn't a perfect device, but the portability and flexibility of the design – primarily a tablet but capable of transforming into a semi-functional laptop through a keyboard cover...
Slim, light, and attractive build; AMOLED displays of this size are always a treat; Very respectable battery life; Keyboard cover is included in the price
The keyboard cover, a crucial part of the package, is substandard due to its limited angles and cheap construction; USB-C can be restrictive; No option to buy a more powerful version
The AMOLED screen on the Galaxy TabPro S is the key feature here. It's bright and punchy and if you're careful you can get impressive efficiency from it. Style plays a big role too.
stylish; compact design; good keyboard included; fast SSD; good cameras; impressive screen; great battery life
screen can be a power drain at times; one USB-C port for data and charging; some CPU throttling under heavy load
Uncompromising design with compromised raw power and plug sockets make for a tasty vision of the laptop future.
Super-punchy AMOLED screen; Good battery life; Laptop-scale keyboard; Windows 10 flexibility
Expensive in the price:performance stakes; Keyboard is a bit shallow; Ultra-limited connectivity is not handy
The TabPro S is a great Windows tablet, but a poor Windows 2-in-1 PC.
Extremely thin and light; Keyboard accessory is no extra charge; Wide display color gamut and high contrast ratio; Decent battery life
Display suffers poor viewing angles; Keyboard is cramped; Very limited connectivity
Samsung's latest attempt at a a laptop and tablet in one device is the Galaxy TabPro S. See what we make of it in our full review after it was premiered at CES 2016.
The Galaxy TabPro S is a decent first attempt at a 2-in-1 hybrid from Samsung, but it's not without its flaws
I have purchase 3 Samsung Tablets in the recent 3 years and this is diffidently the best experience from Samsung. The tablet feels solid and lacks very little. I'm used to the android format and operating system. Still learning the benefits of Windows over Android.
Purchase 2 weeks ago and the tablet performs very well; The Intel graphics are great and fast for a tablet; The Intel M3 process is fast; I wish it would have been an I3 or I5; The screen resolution is the best in its class.
The windows selection of apps is abysmal; That is not Samsung's fault; The operating system 10,1 is taking a little longer to learn then I initially thought it would; Battery life could be a little better; No sd smart card slot; Design to be living on the cloud.
The Galaxy TabPro S is a beautiful device. In a way, it reminds me of other tablets Samsung has made in the past, but looks and feels more modern. The tablet has its pros, but also has its cons. Here's what I've noticed after a week using this device.
Fantastic battery life; Beautiful screen; Practically no bloatware
Odd keyboard spacing; Only two standing positions; Protruding back camera
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