Skip to main content

Ungainly Galaxy View 2 is a TV that’s too small, and a tablet that’s too big

Remember the Samsung Galaxy View? No, we had to go back and check, too. It was a massive, odd, not-a-tablet-honest … um, tablet-like device that was supposed to be used as a TV released at the end of 2015 and cost $600. Now, Samsung has made a sequel, the Galaxy View 2, which arrives more than three years after the first version. Nothing says pent-up demand like a three-year gap between versions.

Samsung Galaxy View2 Full features and specs | AT&T

What is the Galaxy View 2? It’s a 2-in-1 style tablet with a Galaxy Fold-style curved hinge along the top edge that’s designed to operate as a portable TV with both a 4G LTE and a Wi-Fi connection, or as a big-screen tablet. How big? The screen is 17.3 inches and has a 1080p resolution, while the body is considerably larger than a big tablet like the 12.9-inch Apple iPad Pro. While Apple’s large slate is 11 inches by 8 inches, the Galaxy View 2 is a giant 16 x 10. It’s also very heavy at 2.2 kg, compared to Apple’s 631-gram iPad. Make no mistake, the Galaxy View 2 is huge.

It’s a good thing the screen is attached to a full-size kickstand, which, when folded down, does not lay flat against the back of the screen, and instead still angles the device for typing, scribbling with a stylus, or watching videos. The kickstand has a big hole in the middle, and not the weird built-in handle on the original Galaxy View. Part of the size and weight of the Galaxy View 2 is because of the 12,000mAh battery for 45 hours of standby.

A portable TV needs content, and this comes from AT&T’s DirecTV service, which has a dedicated button on-screen, and there’s 64GB of internal memory and a MicroSD card slot to increase this further. The rest of the technical specifications include a Samsung Exynos 7884 processor — also found in Samsung’s Galaxy A20 smartphone — and 3GB of RAM. It doesn’t have a rear camera, because that would be silly, but it does have a video call camera on the front. Four speakers and Dolby Atmos support takes care of the audio.

The Galaxy View 2 can be purchased through AT&T, where it’s available outright or on a monthly plan. Pay for the Galaxy View 2 outright and it’s yours for $740, or opt for a contract and you’ll spend $37 per month over the next 20 months for it. Order now, and the Galaxy View 2 will arrive the same week. It’s a difficult time for Samsung, and announcing a new mobile product that folds, just not in the way we expect in 2019, may help take some of the attention away from the now-delayed Galaxy Fold. The Galaxy View 2 is bizarre enough to do that, but how many people have been waiting for a larger, thicker, less-portable tablet, which is more like a TV that’s too small or a tablet that’s too big?

Updated on April 29, 2019: Added official release news.

Editors' Recommendations

Andy Boxall
Andy is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends, where he concentrates on mobile technology, a subject he has written about for…
The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 just got more interesting
A person holding the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 5, showing the back of the phone.

The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 5 Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

We are likely just a few weeks away from Samsung revealing the Galaxy Z Fold 6. And a new leak surfaced today that makes this foldable phone sound even more exciting.

Read more
The Samsung Galaxy Watch 7 will get a small (but critical) upgrade
Someone wearing the Samsung Galaxy Watch 6.

Poor battery life is often one of the biggest hurdles for a smartwatch. Samsung knows this and is about to address it on its upcoming Galaxy Watch 7. According to filings with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ,the new watch will feature improved charging capabilities.

The FCC filings include listings for at least three new Samsung watches. As spotted by Droid Life, the listings for the SM-L300, SM-L305, SM-L310, SM-L315, and SM-R861 are for the Galaxy Watch 7 (Bluetooth only), Galaxy Watch 7 (LTE), and Galaxy Watch FE. Some new watches are expected to support charging up to 15 watts, which is 50% faster than the current Galaxy Watch 6 and Galaxy Watch 6 Classic models that only support charging up to 10W. This means the new watches might only take 45 minutes to charge from 0% to 100%, compared to the current 90 minutes for the Galaxy Watch 6.

Read more
The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 may fix my biggest issue with the Z Fold 5
A person holding the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 5, seen from the side.

I ordered my first folding smartphone, the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 5, in February of this year. I was excited, but I was also more than a little apprehensive. This was an entirely new form factor for me, as I'd never used a folding smartphone before. I'd used phones, I'd used tablets, but I'd never used both of them at the same time.

At the start of my experience, I was worried principally about how much I'd use the phone's headline feature: the big inner display. After all, if I didn't end up using it, didn't that defeat the whole point of the device?

Read more