The long overdue Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 is now official and due for a global rollout this month. First unveiled at Mobile World Congress back in February, the version that will hit store shelves is substantially reworked from that early prototype.
The Galaxy Note 10.1 shown at CES did not have a slot for an S Pen, and only ran a dual-core processor. The Galaxy Note 10.1 that goes on sale this month will be powered by Samsung’s quad-core Exynos 4112, matched with 2GB of RAM and comes with an integrated S Pen slot.
Other key specs include a 1280×800 PLS TFT display, a 5-megapixel rear camera, while the device will run Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich). In addition to a range of S Pen optimized apps, Samsung has also introduced side-by-side apps on the new Galaxy Note 10.1. This will allow users to, for example, open a web page next to the S Notes app and drag and drop between the two open windows. The S Pen apps also include automatic shape recognition and can also recognize hand written formulas and convert them to text as the video embedded below highlights.
Samsung had success with the smaller Galaxy Note 5.3, showing there is a market for tablets that use a purpose made digitized stylus.
Official pricing for the Galaxy Note 10.1 has not been made available at this time, although it is thought that it will start from around $500.