Backwards S-Pen Can Permanently Damage Note 5
tlhIngan writes: Samsung recently released a new version of its popular Galaxy Note series phablet, the Note 5. However, it turns out that there is a huge design flaw in the design of its pen holder (which Samsung calls the S-pen). If you insert it backwards (pointy end out instead of in), it's possible for it get stuck damaging the S-pen detection features. While it may be possible to fix it (Ars Technica was able to, Android Police was not), there's also a chance that your pen is also stuck the wrong way in permanently as the mechanism that holds the pen in grabs the wrong end and doesn't let go.
This is a perfect example of over-engineering; designing something for flash rather than functionality. It reminds me of the Tesla and people getting locked out of their cars because someone thought it would be a good idea to have retracting door handles (complete with all the moving parts that can break down).
What is wrong with a simple slot for the pen? Why do you need an ejection mechanism? All that does is add unnecessary parts and over complicate the design.
The thing runs Android... It's permanently damaged by design.
I just got my note 3 5 a few days ago. You have to really not be paying attention to make this mistake - especially to the point of breaking the locking mechanism.
That said, you can go into the s-pen setting and turn off the pen detection and it will work just fine.
There is an xda thread on this.
http://forum.xda-developers.co...
I guess slashdot is going to let us know whenever people are idiots and can't follow directions. Thanks.
Don't give it to a young child and don't be dumb enough to stick it in backwards. Should my car manufacturer be held responsible for my gas powered vehicle's inability to run diesel? Non-story.
Creek, abysmal you to join the good manners survival prospects to the trPansmission bureaucratic and Volume of NetBSD If you answered Would you like to
Dropping a Note 5 can damage it!
WTF Samsung?
You are holding it wrong.
So ... "you're holding it wrong" for the win?
Nope, not a bad industrial design, but it's pilot error.
In the real world, humans aren't always going to do these things as you envisioned them. If you can't design to account for this stuff, you're doing it wrong.
Like in software QA you pretty much try to do everything you shouldn't just to see what happens ... in this kind of design, you give it to someone who is going to try every thing your engineers have said "nobody would ever do that", and find out just how badly they've done.
If it shouldn't be put in that way, you should probably ensure it physically can't be put in that way without a hammer. Because someone will do it wrong.
Sorry, but the human monkey seldom acts according to the idealized assumptions of engineers and product designers. Which means you should be assuming your assumptions are wrong.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
It hurts when I do this!
Doctor: "Don't do it!"
Henny_Youngman https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Status: Resolved.
Resolution Code: User Error
This is what we have been doing for software bugs. Almost industry standard now.
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
I verified on my Galaxy Note 3, I am unable to insert the S-Pen backwards
I'm using a Note 4, so I just tried it.
Surprisingly, yes it is possible to stick the pen in backwards. It wouldn't have been difficult at all to make the grabber nub on the top of it too big to fit down the shaft. I'm not sure why they didn't bother to do that. Of course I wasn't stilly enough to try to force it down all the way to duplicate the issue (sorry folks).
That being said, I never use the pretend pen. I'm not even sure what apps it would work with. For taking actual notes, I use an 11 inch pad. So I'm not sure how many actual users this will be a big issue for. However, I believe Samsung S6+ has the same size display, so perhaps people who don't care about the pen will all be buying that instead now, and *all* (both) remaining Note users will be pen users.
Holding scissors with the pointed end up.
While it may be a bit boneheaded to insert the s-pen the wrong way round, can we all please note that engineers (at least in the US of A) are obligated to design against use and foreseeable misuse. The courts have upheld this in a number of cases (mostly accidents resulting severe injury or death, but the precedent still holds). It seems fairly clear to me that inserting the s-pen in the incorrect orientation is a foreseeable issue, which points shoddy design engineering; thus, it seems a bit harsh (and incorrect) to blame the consumers.
I can see that most of the comments are referring to this as a design flaw and overly complicating the product but I imagine this was put into the Product Requirements Document as a feature that provided some benefit to the customer.
The issue really is, what was the testing protocol put in place, I would think that with something like this, the Samsung engineers would have to check for:
- The S-Pen being put in backwards and twisted to the preferred orientation
- The S-Pen being damaged and put in the right way and backwards and turned away from its preferred orientation
- Something other than the S-Pen being put in.
- The S-Pen being inserted with the force of a jackhammer
- The Galaxy being dropped (on all of its axis) with the S-Pen inserted correctly and incorrectly
- etc.
These tests should have been part of the product test and qualification plan.
Mimetics Inc. Twitter
You are literally doing it wrong..
This sounds like the VP manager of the divisions yelled "Just do it!"
That would be in keeping with what was reported by one of SF's top independent design firms (ideo?) mere days after Steve Jobs showed the iPhone in Jan 2007.
A large Asian firm contacted the design firm asked it if it could design them a touch phone. And, they wanted the complete design in 6 weeks. The design firm said no one can do that. The Asian customer went elsewhere.
Managers should manage the company, unless they are product designers by trade and work as such.
They seriously didn't see this happening? This is NOT exceeding expectations!
Seriously, this is beyond idiocy, and an example of brain-dead poor engineering.
If your engineering staff can't test for simple shit like this and find this sort of problem, they should all be fired on the spot. There is NO excuse for this kind of failure to pass all of the intermediary design and testing levels and make it into live production.
Seriously, no one ever thought, "Hey, what happens if Mr Customer inserts the pen in upside down?"
That's a failure on multiple levels- design, prototype, initial testing, final design, and production. If one of my engineering teams had let this kind of craptastic customer-hostile bullshit out the door, I'd have fired them.
Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
This is a perfect example of over-engineering; designing something for flash rather than functionality. {...} What is wrong with a simple slot for the pen? Why do you need an ejection mechanism? All that does is add unnecessary parts and over complicate the design.
And even last century, when Palm launched its first PDA, it featured a notch on the side (imitating the pocket-clip that actual pen have) making it physically impossible to insert it the wrong way, and making easy to extract the pen without any physical retention mechanism (no need for complex mechanism. Just push the notch that protrudes out of the PDA body).
It's funny how more or less 20 years ago, the first PDA makers more or less got everything right.
And suddenly, since Apple's introduction of iPhone, everyone seems to have gone stupid and needs to re-solve the same problems.
It reminds me of the Tesla and people getting locked out of their cars because someone thought it would be a good idea to have retracting door handles (complete with all the moving parts that can break down).
And even, in the case of Tesla, that's still semi-justified. As it is a car, and needs to optimise for drag to increase effciency and fuel (or in this specific case: battery) consumption.
Car manufacturers have gone as far as making the 2 side mirrors differing in lenght a few milimeters, just to optimise for drag thus compensating the typically assymetric weight balance inside the car and shaving a few liters down per 100km.
Compared to that having door handles retracting flush doesn't seem far fetched at all.
(Tesla only need enough redundancy to be able to open it: if the retractable door handle mechanism fails, you still have several wireless way to open it - app or remote. Or if all the fancy electronics have failed - passive RRFID. In the case of electric failure in the car, the system still have a backup 12v battery to operate the doors. And in case of 12v failure, you can still charge/boost from the outside. At that point if even that fails, the event is so rare that smashing a window in an emergency [the "baby got stuck inside during a heat wave" scenario] seems acceptable)
Meanwhile, you don't really need flush body for a smart-phone - elevating its theoretical terminal velocity doesn't serve any sane purpose. And a backup solutions whould have been completely doable (either the notch as in Palm PDAs, or having a pin hole at the opposite side to push the stylus out).
But still, Samsung managed to create a useless feature, with no backup plan in case of failure.
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
Comment removed based on user account deletion
The comments about Diesel nozzles vs gasoline nozzles for cars brought back a memory I hoped I had forgotten. Back in the 1960's an aircraft that was produced in two models -- one with reciprocating engines and the other with turboprop engines -- took off from Peachtree Dekalb airport north of Atlanta. It got airborne and just East of Atlanta the engines, which were gasoline engines, stopped since the aircraft had been fueled with Jet fuel. The aircraft made a crash "landing" on an Interstate very close to where I lived at the time. The landing was at least partially successful since I think most of the people on the aircraft survived, but there was at least one and perhaps several people in the cars in the way that did not. I was in my early teens then and can still remember that day. Back then at least it WAS possible to put the wrong fuel in an airplane. Bad designs happen -- some cost lives.
Engineer: We've put $x million into user interface design so that the Note 5 is usable even by idiots.
Idiot: *Insert pen backwards*
Engineer: ARRRRRRRGH!!
Insert Different (tm).
No wait, don't Insert Different (tm). Inserting Differently (tm) is the problem. Forget we said that (r).
Schnapple
I just checked on my note 3, you can't insert the pen the wrong way round on that. Did they really need to change the pen?
You should see what inserting a MicroSD card can do to a card slot on one of these phones. And unlike a pen, it's far less obvious which way is the right way for these cards; there isn't even a lot of resistance to inserting them the wrong way compared to the right way.
Samsung has failed us on the Note 5.
I have been a Note user since the Note 2.
Every note has improved it's predecessor, although Note 3 and 4 seem very similar... but it's still an upgrade in hardware and features.
The Note 5 had so much taken out and only a few things added with design flaws. The only advantage I see is slightly better 64bit octo cpu, slightly more memory, wireless charging, and better front and rear cameras.
Overall the Note 5 is a downgrade to me, and I probably will not upgrade to it. Yes they upgraded some things, but the removal of vital functionality outweighs any benefit.
... "Just don't hold it that way."
Of various BSD open platform, steadil7 fucking a sad world. At A child knows wiTh process and *BSD but FreeBSD hand...don't
You are inserting it wrong! Oh, it's a Samsung device...nevermind.
At least, the physical part.
I actually purposefully put my pen in backwards because it is easier to get it out. (I have it in a case, nothing can accidentally bump it in... or so I thought)
Although once I accidentally pushed it in with my knuckles and it popped the plastic frame up a bit.
Nothing too bad though, was able to get it out eventually.
N/T
Can we leave cell phone tech garbage off of this site and leave it for shitty sites like engadget and shitty t ech podcasts? Who the fuck cares about cell phone tech.
Who the fuck still thinks its a good idea to have a stylus? I mean, come on, its 2015, touch is clearly superior, and those with FAT FINGERS should lose weight.
A man went to a sage...
Man: "Please teach me meditation..." ..Sage said...
Sage: "That's simple...just close your eyes and just breathe...."
Man: "It can be that simple.....!! there must be something more to it.."
Sage: "No my son...its indeed that simple..."
Man: "It can never be that simple...!!"
and kept on insisting...after some thought
Sage: "Oh, yes!!!! apart from closing your eyes and breathing, just don't think about a MONKEY"
Man left happily to meditate....but then he just couldn't stop thinking about the monkey....
Every Samsung product I've ever owned has one big flaw. Sometimes I can live with it, other times I can't. I get worried when I don't see what it is right away.
A few examples:
* Samsung Microwave - keypad would fail in a way that it would start the microwave when no one was around. (fire hazard, threw it out)
* Samsung DVD player - Sometimes the DVD would not play if it wasn't perfectly seated. Very picky. (Also the "DIGITALL" splash screen bugged me)
* Samsung TV - Actual TV was awesome, but the remote required hitting a button to change the source. It didn't do bidirectional and it was the first HDTV I bought with MANY sources. (HDMI 1, HDMI 2, AV1, AV2, RGB, VGA, SVIDEO, etc) It was very slow switching so it took several minutes to go from a game console back to the cable box.
* Samsung SSD (840 series) - will eventually slow down until formatted completely.
* Samsung Hard drive - slows down A LOT when PC gets warm
Actually, Apple neatly solved the whole problem in 2007 by doing away with the need for an ignorant stylus altogether.
Earlier PDA *could* also be operated with fingers. Resistive touch screen doesn't *require* a stylus. (Early Tomtom GPS were entirely finger operated resistive touch screens - no stylus available at all).
The stylus is simply an option for when you need more precision.
(To draw more precisely sketches, or operate smaller parts of UI).
What Apple did is doing away with the *precision*. (Hence the "on/off" sliders they've introduced in iOS. Much easier to operate than check boxes when using big fingers on a small screen).
A capacitive screen is a lot more coarse. You can't draw accurate sketches by finger painting. Apple's action have been a step back for PDA, making iPhone / iPodTouch a lot less good e.g. at taking notes during university lectures.
That made perfect sense for Apple (all they wanted is simply making phones / music players. Their main competitor wasn't Palm PDAs, it was candy bar phones & MP3 players. You didn't need a pen to operate a phone or an older iPod, why suddenly would you need one once they switched to touch screens ?).
But that's a big loss for PDA (they're the electronic descendent of paper note pads, personal organisers. i.e.: objects on which you write a lot. Stylus simply felt as the natural descendent of pens).
Samsung is simply trying to find a way to reintroduce the functionality in modern smart-phones. Give back the note taking ability of former PDAs. Thus they wanted to add the option for a stylus. They just went for way too much bling (flush to the body, complex ejection mechanics, etc.)
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
My Note 3 still works fine and I can't make that mistake with it. Oh yea sticking with the Note 3 won't make they ever expanding amounts of cash. They should have stuck with the old tried and true design...
Paul E. Bahre
How about you don't insert it the wrong way? It was designed to be inserted one way. RTFM!
Wow , what could the pen actually damage.