The flagship is expected to be unveiled this summer

Apr 22, 2016 17:58 GMT  ·  By

Fans of Samsung's Note family will be pleased to know that the South Korean company has finally listened to their cries and decided to make some changes in the upcoming model.

It's pretty clear that the technology behind batteries can't really keep up with mobile displays or SoCs (system-on-chip), and as much as handset makers would want to make us believe that their smartphone have been optimized to provide longer battery life time, this is not happening.

That being said, the only solution would be to put much larger batteries inside powerful smartphones that require quite a lot of juice for merely two days of average use.

One of the companies that seem to have understood that, Samsung plans to add a much larger battery inside the Galaxy Note 6 phablet.

We all know that Samsung Galaxy Note 5 comes with a solid 3,000 mAh battery, but after a few months of use, you will barely get one day of heavy use.

But that might not happen with the Galaxy Note 6 since Dutch blog GSMHelpdesk reports Samsung is determined to add a 4,000 mAh battery inside its upcoming flagship, which would make a huge difference.

Samsung is still undecided on whether to launch flat and curved models

Another piece of information provided by the same source claims the Galaxy Note 6 will boast a large 5.8-inch curved “Slim RGB” display, as opposed to the current model that features a 5.7-inch capacitive touchscreen display.

In fact, Samsung hasn't decided whether to launch a single Galaxy Note 6 model with a curved display or to provide customers with the option to choose between a flat and curved version.

Apart from that, rumor has it the Galaxy Note 6 will be powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon 823 processor, coupled with an Adreno 530 graphics processing unit and no less than 6GB of RAM.

According to the latest hearsay, Samsung Galaxy Note 6 will be unveiled this summer and should go on sale a couple of weeks ahead of IFA trade fair, which is scheduled to start at the beginning of September.