However, not all apps have been update to take advantage of the 120Hz display. With 120Hz and laminated display, lines now appear directly and almost instantly beneath the pen tip. With 60Hz display, lines when drawn often appear bit by bit, in chunks. ![]() Animation such as scrolling, zooming, navigation and the strokes appearing when writing or drawing are smoother. Tab S7+ is the first Android tablet to match the 120Hz refresh rate that has been on the IPad Pro since 2017.Īnimation is noticeably smoother with the 120Hz refresh rate. There's also the white haze created by the anti-glare that I find most annoying. Applying a matte screen protector may provide a more textured surface to draw on and improve control but will degrade the displays' image quality, e.g. You can choose to hide the palettes but it's more useful with the palettes around but in exchange you see less of the working canvas.īoth Apple Pencil and Samsung S Pen slide equally smoothly on glossy reflective glass of both displays. For example, Concepts app works great on all tablets due to its minimal user interface elements.Ĭlip Studio Paint works better in landscape mode on the Tab S7/S7+ because the palettes will take up way too much space when tablet is in portrait orientation. User interface elements, icons, menus, palettes, fonts are all sharp.Īspect ratio of the iPad Pro is 4:3 which makes it more usable in both landscape and portrait orientation.Īspect ratio of the Tab S7/S7+ is 16:10 which makes using it in portrait orientation slightly more awkward unless the app you're using has minimal user interface element. Resolution on all the tablets are high to the point where pixelation is not noticeable when working from normal distance away. If I do need to work on the files on my computer, I'll be setting the screen mode to Natural permanently.īoth are laminated displays so there's no gap between the pen tip and the lines drawn. This can be a problem if you switch between working on your tablet and LCD monitor. However when you view your art from Tab S7+ on a LCD display, you'll notice the colours are muted, less vibrant, because the LCD is unable to match AMOLED display. When you create art on an LCD monitor and view it on your LCD desktop monitor, the colours should look similar. Samsung Tab S7+ on left, BenQ SW2700PT AdobeRGB LCD monitor on right. Tab S7+ has the Natural screen mode option for mimicking LCD colours and it works well. IPS LCD display colours look more natural while the colours on the AMOLED display can be extremely vibrant. The iPad Pros and the Tab S7 use IPS LCD displays whereas the Tab S7+ uses Super AMOLED The smaller 11-inch models are more portable and suited for one handed use, meaning you can actually stand and draw, at least for a longer period of time before your hands get tired. ![]() ![]() The 12.9-inch iPad Pro and 12.4 inch Tab S7+ are noticeably heavier than their smaller models.Įven without a case, when drawing I need to set them down on a surface, either on a table, or when I'm outdoors on my lap. Only you can decide which is more suitable for your workflow.ĭesign for both tablets look great and build quality is excellent. The two tablets have their own strengths, weakness and functionality so it's difficult for me to say which is better. In this comparison I'm comparing the 12.9-inch iPad Pro (2018) with 4GB RAM and 12.4-inch Samsung Tab S7+ with 8GB RAM. The iPad Pro (2018 & 2020) and Samsung Tab S7+ are probably the best tablets currently for digital artists.Īfter using the Samsung Tab S7+ for a few weeks, I finally enough to do this comparison. Years ago, the best tablet that digital artists could bring around was clearly the iPad Pro but with the release of the Tab S7+, Samsung has finally caught up.
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