![]() ![]() breakable glassĪs you’d expect, the Stylo 4 is made of plastic as opposed to the Note 9’s all-glass design, and while it definitely feels less substantial than Samsung’s thousand-dollar flagship, it has a nice build that feels far from cheap. Benchmarks weren’t so kind, showing around 7 hours, but this a case where real-world use is vastly superior. Rarely did I have to plug in the Stylo 4 before the end of a day, and even then, I generally had more than 10 percent remaining. With a 3,300mAh capacity, I expected it to be so-so, especially coming from the Note 9’s impressive 4,000mAh battery, but I was pleasantly surprised. ![]() I was most impressed with the Stylo 4’s battery life. The Stylo 4 might be slow, but it’s by no means unusable. Besides, most people buying a Stylo 4 will be coming from a similar class of phone, and the Stylo’s Snapdragon 450 is certainly faster than the Snapdragon 429 or 210 they’re likely switching from. I missed the speed of the Note 9 for sure, but it didn’t feel like a $750 difference. I’ve been using Snapdragon 845 phones for the better part of 2018, so I figured the Stylo 4 would be slow to the point of unusable. I can’t help but wonder how much faster the Stylo 4 would feel if it ran Android One like the G7 One. That said, I have a new appreciation for the Note 9’s Adreno 630 GPU, which makes things buttery smooth despite the Samsung Experience UI.Įveryday speed performance is also noticeable slower than it is on the Note 9, but again, I adjusted my expectations after just a few days. The slowness is compounded by LG’s UX skin, which adds unnecessary clutter and interface oddities throughout. But overall, the graphics were more of a nuisance than a hindrance. Auto-rotate was most affected by the Stylo 4’s low-end specs-so much so that I turned on orientation lock. ![]()
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