W\u00fcnsche Zum Geburtstag 70 | geburtstagsspr\u00fcche von herzenid=”article-body” class=”row” section=”article-body”> The Note 10 Plus. 

Angela Lang/CNET  At 11:34 a.m. yesterday, the Galaxy Note 10 Plus’ first battery drain test began. At 8:30 this morning, the phone finally shut down. That’s a 21-hour run waschpulver direkt in die trommel a test that loops a long video on airplane mode with the screen forced to stay on, and brightness and audio at the halfway point. This test doesn’t represent how we use phones all day, but it is a good basis of comparison among phones that can indicate long or short life throughout your day. Twenty-one hours is a strong result, though the Galaxy S10 5G ran for 21.5 hours over the course of two tests. We’ll run this again to make sure.

This battery test took the Note 10 Plus out of commission for, well, pretty much an entire day, but testing continues! Before it went into its testing cocoon, I tried out the S Pen’s new gesture controls and another new feature, Link to Windows, which lets you access and interact with the Note 10’s photos, texts, notifications and more from a Windows 10 PC. I’ve also been observing performance on the in-screen fingerprint reader and how well the Note 10 camera’s night mode compares to the Huawei P30 Pro and Google Pixel 3.

It takes a solid week to thoroughly run tests and for all the best and worst parts of a phone to crystallize, so not every observation here is final, especially if an issue crops up. And not every feature is available now. For example, one aspect of AR Doodle wasn’t initially working on my review unit (Samsung says it’s now fixed this) and other features, like 3D scanner, are still to come.