Category Archives: Android

Huawei Ascend P6 – Review

Nearly a week ago I received the Huawei Ascend P6, currently the worlds thinnest device. Since then I have stress tested the phone to deliver my verdict. Huawei describe the P6 as –

– Slender and beautiful – the Huawei Ascend P6 is just 6.18mm thin
– Incredibly strong – it’s built with an aluminium alloy frame & back cover
– Packed with tech – ­including a lightning fast 1.5 Ghz Quad core processor, and huge 4.7” HD screen all – making P6 ideal for entertainment (like Movies and Catch up TV) as well as over 700,000 apps from Google Play.
-Premium camera experience – P6’s 8 Megapixel camera with Flash, shoots in low light, shoots close ups and is packed with tech to make it simple to use
-It’s all about you – P6 is a social networker’s dream. It has a sensational 5 Megapixel camera on the front – which is ideal for the group shots and video calls you, your family and your friends have to be in.
Huge 2,000 mAh battery with Huawei’s Power Management to optimise battery life

The P6 is insanely thin. Look at the photos below.
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The right hand side has the power and volume buttons, sim card and micro SD card trays. The left side just features the headphone socket.
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The headphone socket normally is covered with a pull out metallic button, which has the pin to open the sim and memory card trays, but if you listen to music and take this button bit out, you will lose it, so it is best just to leave it out and store it in the phone box.
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The bottom of the device just has the microphone. The top has the micro USB slot, which also does USB OTG.
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So, then you read the user manual, all 107 pages, and start setting up the Ascend P6. The user manual reveals a specification sheet off the charts. It just does so much.

So what were the first impressions. Well within 30 minutes I had my first software force close. This was only trying to add 4 new apps, and do a quick setup so that I could go out shopping with it. When I returned back home, I continued to install the remainder of my 90 or so apps.

So, within the next 2 hours, I had 5 software force closes, 1 random reboot, and a reboot I did as I could not access the notification bar to clear the received notifications. The phone screen in bright sunlight is difficult to see. The phone is use gets a little warm. I tried to use Google Maps and Google Navigation. Nothing was happening. Even though the phone said GPS fix had occurred. At this point I was ready to throw the phone in the bin. Then suddenly after 2 hours, the GPS just started to work. I wonder if I had done something wrong with location settings? In the car with outdoor profile selected, Google Navigation running, bluetooth on and connected to my car, the phone got too hot and stopped charging. This is a safety measure implemented by Huawei to prevent overheating. After a while it started charging again. Soon the notification led turned green to indicate fully charged but battery meter said 93%. Clearly with all the few issues I have been having, the phone probably needs a software update which I am sure will come soon.

Despite the camera specification, the camera is just average. Low light or indoors photos are noisy but then so are most smartphone cameras. The camera is fine for social network sharing but as a comparison to the Nokia Lumia 925, the 925 produces better shots than the P6 is every way possible. But here’s the strange part. Adjust the camera settings from 8 to 6mp and the photos are much better. In fact some were quite good.

The P6 comes with its own launcher, which has over 160 customisable options. I quite like it. It also removes the app tray, and just uses home screens. Genius idea and very iPhone like. It also has a permissions manager, and at first when you get these notifications that an app is carrying out a push message, it is rather a surprise, but actually it is a good security feature. You can then allow or deny access. In fact, for every app you can control whether it is allowed to connect to the internet, or access other aspects of the phone. Neat again. The P6 has built in profiles, editable too. The launcher has themes. Each theme from the locks creen to the icons to the wallpaper and sounds are customisable. I could go on and on. The list of tweaks and options is like a battleship.

Then there is the screen which is rather pleasant at 720p. The sound through the rear speaker is above average. Sound through the headphones is rather metallic, but audio components do improve with burn in. And thats what happened with the P6. After 5 hours of listening to music, the sound was marginally better. Not HTC One quality but passable. Audio via bluetooth is poor.

In the box was the usual affair, phone, booklets, usb lead, UK plug AND a silicone case. What a surprise!

I get software force closes daily. Since Google + received an update, opening the app causes a force close. Again, hopefully with a software update these problems will hopefully be fixed.

The P6 has loads of positives and maybe if it received a software update, this might improve matters. For some people this phone is might ideal. At just over £300, you do get a striking piece of hardware, expandable memory with the micro SD card, average camera and sound via headphones, above average loudspeaker and a silicone case.

Sony Honami iL leaks with Camera lens attachment

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Sony’s soon to be released smartphone, the Honami iL, which will feature a whopping 20mp camera, has had a photo of itself released, along with Sony’s intriguing concept of being able to attach a full size lens to it. The lens has a memory card slot for storing the photos, but all the controls are managed wirelessly from the smartphone, including the viewfinder which is the phone’s screen. Photo source courtesy of SonyAlphaRumours.

We are are a few weeks away from Sony officially launching this new device, so the excitement builds until that day on the 4th September 2013.

Doesn’t this attachment look very cool ?

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Huawei Ascend P6 – camera samples

I have had the Huawei Ascend P6 nearly a week. My main review is live tomorrow, so in the meantime I have attached 3 photo samples.

In bright sunset light, using HDR mode.

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Using digital zoom, I zoomed in from about 4 metres away. Then cropped the image slightly to get this shot.

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This is from the 5th floor looking out over a high street. I used on of the photo editing filters to make it slightly more interesting.

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The above were all take at 6mp resolution instead of 8mp. The last shot was taken at 8mp. Oddly, any photos I have taken at 6mp widescreen have looked a lot better quality. Also, no editing of colours etc have been edited on the photo below.

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The photos are passable but I don’t below they are anything better than that. What’s your opinion?

Samsung Galaxy S4 Zoom versus Nokia Lumia 925 – photo comparison

Firstly, the Lumia 925 does not have an optical zoom, so zoomed photos will be difficult to compete with. So with this in mind, I took the same photo in perfect lighting conditions to see which phone took the better shot. Auto mode was used for everything.

S4 Zoom

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And now the same shot with the Lumia 925

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So what do you think? Can you tell the difference. The Lumia 925 looks better, more vibrant colours, but there is more detail in the S4 Zoom shot. The S4 Zoom shot allows you to zoom in on photo and captures more detail at a higher magnification than the photo by the Lumia 925. But I actually prefer the overall shot from the Lumia 925.

Is Amazon preparing it’s own games console?

According to Gameinformer, Amazon is hatching a new plan to take on the console world.

The online giant is planning to take on the likes of Ouya with its own-brand Android console which would tap directly into the company’s own Appstore, with a launch date pegged for the end of the year.

Personally, I just think Amazon will release new Kindle Fire’s that will work with a game controller. 

Samsung Galaxy S4 Zoom – camera review part 3

In this part I will look at the zoom aspect of the phone. If you are interested in the earlier parts, click here.

So below is a photo I took at the weekend, just in auto mode and without zoom.

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And now with a small amount of zoom, about 4 x zoom. This enabled me to zoom much closer to the tor in the middle of Burrator Reservoir, Dartmoor.

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It was taken from a slightly different angle, but on the same walkway.

Its odd, but now I know I can zoom in and take good quality photos, I seem to be using the zoom function a lot more. In fact I would say at least 50% of my photos taken have some sort of zoom used. This was another example of the zoom, but this time at full 10 x zoom. This enabled me to lose some of the power lines on the right side.

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One last point, none of the S4 Zoom photos have been edited on my blog. They are as identical to how the phone shot them.

LG G2 is now official – photos and full specifications – and it’s failures

LG launched the G2 is New York yesterday.

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It features android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean, a 5.2-inch 1080p IPS panel with just 0.1 inch of a bezel. This is achieved using a dual-routing method in which the touch sensor uses two connectors instead of one. This translates into 75.9% of the screen occupying the front of the phone. It also has a 2.26GHz quad-core Snapdragon 800 SoC, a 13MP camera with optical image stabilisation, 2.1MP front-facing, 24 bit/192kHz HiFi playback (that is incredible), a non-removable 3,000mAh battery, 2GB RAM and your choice of 16 or 32GB internal storage.

The volume and power button are on the rear of the device. There are no buttons on the side. The volume buttons are launch the front camera for self portraits and the quick memo function. The phone also features functions like double tap the screen to turn the phone on, or off.

LG has a big launch planned with over 130 countries within 8 weeks. In fact if you read the spec sheet it becomes one long list of drool worthy items.

Except it fails before it even starts. The memory is being offered in 16 or 32gb, and once again a top flagship is ruined by lack of memory. The 16gb is being offered by Three UK, and it only has 10gb useable. It also appears it has no micro SD slot.

So, video, photos, your Real Racing 3, Asphalt 8, Nova 3 installs have just taken all that free memory. Such a fail. 16gb should not be offered on top flight phones. Apple offer upto 64gb on their iPhones and 128gb on their iPads so it is possible. Cloud storage is not always dependable. No Internet connection and you have access to nothing.

Now, lets take one key feature LG were promoting, the high quality audio sound at 24 bit/192khz. Have you any idea how much larger a mp3 file is at this level. Don’t worry if you are not aware, but rest assured they are considerably larger. And LG felt no need for a micro SD card support. Words fail me.

I feel with each new flagship launch, we take 10 steps forwards and 20 backwards.

Google Music All Access Streaming Service Goes Live in the UK today and other countries

Launched in the US, the All Access music monthly music streaming service goes live today in the UK Google Play store. It is also live in 7 other European countries including Spain, France and Italy. New Zealand and Australia are also in luck.

If you sign up before August 31, you’ll get a month free and then pay £7.99 a month for All Access after that. If you wait until September or beyond, you’ll still get a free month but your monthly cost will be £9.99 once that’s up.

All Access works in a similar way to Spotify – there’s a vast library of songs from major labels and indies available to either stream online or cache to your Android phone or tablet so you can listen without an internet connection.

You can also sync your music library up to the service – as long as you don’t have more than 20,000 songs to store online and then stream to your phones and tablets.

No news on iOS availability yet. This is an android only offering at the moment.