Totally understand.Nope unless I win the lottery or get a huge raise lol
For the first time in a long time I have absolutely no desire to upgrade to the next Note. I am perfectly happy with my Note 9 and plan on keeping it for the next year.
I know the Note is all about the pen... but the Note 10 hasn't shown me anything exciting to get rid of my 8. But if having a pen is not that important and we're talking about basically getting the best flagship phone out (spec-wise)... after seeing this video and the insane specs, especially the 6000 mah battery with other flagship specs, I'd get the Asus Rog 2 phone to be a daily driver not caring about the game aspect of it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3eFXeO62oo
Agreed. The Note 9 is definitely the first phone where I don't feel the need to upgrade to the next/greatest. Also, $$$. What I might do instead is upgrade my old, aging Tab S2 tablet with either the S5e or the new Tab S6. Or wait for the rumored 8" S2 successor.
Yes, I still use a tablet.![]()
Has it been established if Note 10 really has ir blaster or if the ir is only for the spen?
How's that work ? To a carrier you'll trade in , I never did 2 phones same time .Keeping my 2 Note9 and will trade in both my S9 Plus for 2 Note10 Pro with 1 terabyte.
You'll only $300 trade in value for the S9+.Keeping my 2 Note9 and will trade in both my S9 Plus for 2 Note10 Pro with 1 terabyte.
I guess it's because we all knew what the N10 new features would be, but I thought it was a pretty boring unveiling yesterday. More loss than gain, IMO, at least for me. Not the least bit excited about any of the N10's.
It's like the laptop or tablet wars of years ago. When the platforms were young, there were a lot of meaningful changes from year to year, making it easier to justify upgrading often. Better screens/faster/lighter/etc. But then the platforms matured and they were all basically the same. Yeah, they still get a little faster each year, but except to hardcore gamers, that does not really help most of us. It seems we are more into the change for change's sake phase, rather than changes that make them a truly better product.