A bit of a background is that I upgraded my television that I had for over 12 years to a nice new 65inch Samsung television and part of that, when you setup the television, is logging into the Samsung Cloud because the television also acts as a hub for your devices such as security cameras (I have two Arlo cameras on the outside of my home). I was at first scepticla about how useful the Samsung Cloud would be given that I tend to go ‘all in’ on one vendor be it Apple or Google but I wanted to give Samsung a chance before drawing any conclusions. Btw, I’m going to talk about them in the order I purchased and installed them in which is why I setup my television before my phone or watch.
I setup my television and I decided that before setting up my Apple TV 4K that I would give One UI a try given that I’ve tried it at the store but to give ia fair chance I wanted to make sure I was running the latest version. The latest version at the moment of writing this post is 1260 and the model of television I bought was a Samsung QN70F 65″ Neo QLED Smart TV (I bought it from my local PB Tech). After configuring it along with linking the YouTube app to my Google account (I’ve got a Workspace account and I’m on YouTube Premium) and then tested it out seeing how smoothly the YouTube app was, searching, switching between different parts of the app and then playing videos. Unlike the Apple TV 4K the software included with my television supports av1 CODEC along side vp9 which is supported on Apple TV 4K.
Regarding how the over all One UI performs, it is very fast and fluid – in fact I find it a lot more responsive than the Apple TV 4K even with the home screen having a lot more content on display vs the tendency of Apple to have a more minimalise approach. i was concerned that because the home screen on One UI is busier than the tvOS interface that maybe I would find it difficult to navigate but I found that after a bit of practice where I found where things were then everything fell into place. There is support through the app store for TVNZ+, ThreeNow, Neon, Amazon, Netflix etc so if you’re using one of the big streaming services then you should have any issues.
I think the big strength the television does have is the fact that there is a built in web browser although one has to keep in mind that there isn’t the ability to install an adblocker on the browser but other than that I found it pretty good when I want to watch ‘Democracy Now!’ which can be streated through their website. One thing to also keep in mind that you can also use your mobile phone as a keyboard in much the same way you can do that with the iPhone and the Apple TV 4K rather than having to use the remote.
Here are a couple of photos of my television in my lounge room (yeah, I know, I’ve got to move the picture on the wall over to the right so that the television isn’t covering part of it – that is a project I’ve got in the planning stage at the moment):


The second part of moving to the Samsung ecosystem was getting the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra, Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra and a four pack of Samsung Smart Tag2 Bluetooth Trackers which I was able to pick up at a good price (bought with the bonus I got from work). Although you can use Google Workspace and Google services with iOS the experience is never as good as running it on an Android device and that kind of makes sense given that the respective platforms are designed from the ground up to integrate into their respective ecosystems.
I’ve setup the phone and updated to the latest version – the whole experience with One UI 8.5 is rock solid and the updates came through smoothly. There are a few preinstalled apps such Spotify but they can easily be uninstalled. I’ve pretty much stuck with the tock apps that Samsung included and added any missing Google apps – Google Wallet doesn’t come preinstalled out of the box so I can only assume that the image that they use for the phone also targets markets which have Samsung Pay because in New Zealand we just have Google Pay and Apple Pay. There isn’t anything remarkable about the phone that other reviewers haven’t covered already but it is a solid phone if you need an Android phone but the Pixel isn’t available in your market.
I setup the Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra and although it does come with LTE support out of the box I’m with a carrier I’m with doesn’t support it (well, technically it is the ‘cheap and cheerful’ sub brand to the main brand (Spark) which does support eSIM for the watch) but it isn’t a main issue since I mainly use it just for workig out. The GPS is pretty accurate with the distance being measured matching the distance if one were to jump into a car and measure it that way or logging into Google Maps to do the same thing. The calorie count is a bit iffy because there are so many factors involved you tend to find that regardless of the brand that there is an inaccuracy from single digits all the way to 20-30%. For me, the main focus is about the number of steps, heart rate and keeping track of my time with the goal being that as long as I stick to 6km per hour then that gets my heart rate up to where it needs to be.
Overall I’m fairly happy with the change. Regarding AirDrop and Android, it is working well although the downside is that you cannot transfer directories so what I’ve found is that I’ve uploaded my music backup and music collection to the cloud and then on my phone I then downloaded it via the Samsung Files app from my Google Drive to my phone. Funny enough, since I’ve got a 1Gbps internet connection the speed of downloading it from Google Drive to my Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra is about the same (slightly faster funny enough from the Google Drive) if I copied the files to my phone via USB cable using OpenMTP.
Regarding the applications I run on my phone, I use Pocket Cast for podcasts because even though I have YouTube Premium I find the podcast functionality of Google Music pretty lousy – 9to5Mac Happy Hour for example that appears in YouTube Music hasn’t been updated since 2020 so you’ll need to add the RSS feed manually to YouTube Music and even then if there is a change in the RSS feed you have to manually find the new address then add it where as Pocket Casts, Spotify and other podcast providers take care of that in the background. I really wish that Google would bring back their old podcast software because that was exactly what worked – simply design without any clutter. The other piece of software that is a must is dbPowerAmp because the YouTube Music is really bad at dealing with large music libraries on local storage not to mention basic things like navigating by tapping on Artists then album is non existent. All the other software is exactly the same as I had on my iPhone such as Reddit, BlueSky etc.
