The Galaxy Note 7 will come with an iris scanner, which matches patterns in your eyes with what was detected by your phone during setup. It offers an alternative to fingerprint ID, which doesn't work well when fingers are wet. Of course, the four-digit passcode will still work.
Beyond that, though, the updates in the Note 7 are mostly enhancements, such as a stronger glass screen, rather than anything revolutionary. Even the iris technology isn't new, as Microsoft's Lumia 950 phones had it.
The Note 7 comes with a better camera but it's the same one that the smaller Galaxy S7 phones got in March, save for interface enhancements to access settings and switch between the front and rear cameras more easily.
Samsung typically releases its regular-size phones in the spring and jumbo phones in August. This time, Samsung has just one large model, which stays at 5.7 inches. It will have curved edges, a well-liked feature limited to a special "Edge" model before. The Note 7 will be available in the U.S. starting Aug. 19. Prices haven't been announced.
As with past Note phones, the Note 7 comes with a stylus. It expands on a feature that lets you magnify text and images by hovering the pen over it. With the pen, people will have ways to easily create and share GIF animations.
In previous phones, Samsung's Private Mode merely hid files and worked only with selected apps. Samsung says Secure Folder stores sensitive documents and even entire apps in a separate, secure location.
