Samsung Galaxy S6 edge: Six things you can do with the curved screen
The screen of the Galaxy S6 edge curves over both the left and right sides of the phone
The Galaxy S6 edge has a screen which curves over the left and right
sides of the phone. Samsung first experimented with this on a single
side of the limited-run Note Edge last year, but now the technology has
arrived globally on its new flagship, what benefits does it bring?
Is the edge display merely an interesting design quirk with a £100
premium, or is it genuinely useful? Here are six things you can do with
the new phone's curved screen.
1. A place to find five of your ffavorite contacts
The icons of up to five favourite contacts can be accessed by swiping onto the screen from one of the curved edges (you can pick which side in the settings app). Tapping on a friend then gives you a shortcut to call or text them. Contacts' photos are automatically placed here, and for any without a photo the icon will be their first initial instead. Any five contacts can be placed here and each has their own colour - more on this further down...
Swipe in from the edge to see five favourite contacts, then quickly text or call them if you miss their call
2. Where missed calls from your favourite contacts appear
Missed calls from your five favourite contacts appear on the edge (in this case, the darker blue line)
3. Subtly tell you when a favourite contact is calling
Placed face down, the edge display lights up in one of five colours to tell you when a favourite contact is calling
Pick the phone up to answer, or press the heart rate monitor (next to the rear camera) for two seconds to text a pre-written reply. Something like "I'm meeting a client, will call you after" could work for your boss, or "Just leaving now, will be home soon" for your significant other.
4. News ticker, tweets, stocks and notifications at a swipe
news headlines, trending Twitter topics and stock prices can be added to the edge display
5. Act as a bedside clock at night
The time, alarm and battery level can be set to appear n the edge display for up to 12 hours each night.
The edge display can be set to show the time, plus notifications like
missed calls, permanently each night. Set a time for it to start and
end, and when the phone is locked the edge will subtly show the time.
The edge's position means it can be seen from the side - useful when
it's on your bedside table - but the edge isn't as large as it is on the
Galaxy Note Edge, so the effect is less impressive here.
Because only a small portion of the display is lit up and used, this feature uses only a time amount of battery - around 5% per night.
It's a shame Samsung didn't call this the regular S6 and ditch the flat-screened model completely. But for those who don't mind the extra outlay, the S6 edge is a fun departure from everything else on the market. The features may be limited, but the aesthetic is as attention-grabbing as Samsung needed it to be after two years of uninspired design.
Because only a small portion of the display is lit up and used, this feature uses only a time amount of battery - around 5% per night.
6. Draw attention to itself
Not a feature as such, but a by-product is how the edge display draws attention to itself. It's just so different - both to look at and feel - and attractive that people are drawn to it in a way I haven't seen with Samsung phones before. Even iPhone users said the edge was a cool addition, but universally balked at the £760 asking price - £100 more than the regular S6 and £161 more than an iPhone 6 with the same 64GB of storage.It's a shame Samsung didn't call this the regular S6 and ditch the flat-screened model completely. But for those who don't mind the extra outlay, the S6 edge is a fun departure from everything else on the market. The features may be limited, but the aesthetic is as attention-grabbing as Samsung needed it to be after two years of uninspired design.