Category Archives: Android

Honor 6+ – Setting up home screens

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I’ve been experimenting with the Honor 6+ and it’s launcher. It’s different as it doesn’t use an app drawer and to be honest there is no reason to have one. All you need to do is have a home screen on one side for apps in folders if required.

So far the above is my created look. Below are my other screens. I have found the icons a little large for my liking but there are plenty of themes to choose from. A solution to the look and feel would be to use Nova or Google launcher but for the time being I want to experience the Honor setup.

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The one aspect that did annoy me was the folder as free trials. See below.

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That’s 12 apps/games. I’ve removed all but the NFC app. Fortunately you can completely uninstall them. That’s the negative.

In terms of positives there are so many little software tweaks which I will try and cover off in my main review.

Since I’ve started adding my apps and more I am now going to insert 2 sims. A 3 UK and a Vodafone sim to see how the dual sim management works.

So far this is a superb piece of kit.

Read my reviews of the latest 50+ Smartphones & more – S6, G4, M9, 830, Z3 and on

Tablets/Laptops/Chromebooks

Nexus 9 – First Impressions
Nexus 9 Tablet review
Samsung Galaxy Tab S 10.5 Tablet review
Samsung Galaxy NotePro 12.2 – 9 Part Review
Sony Xperia Z Tablet – 12 Part Review
Nvidia Shield Tablet – 7 Part review
Acer V15 Nitro Windows 8.1 laptop review
Acer C720 Chromebook review
Acer Aspire Switch 11 review
Acer Iconia 8 Android Tablet review

Amazon Devices

Amazon Fire Phone – 2 Part review

Apple Phones

Apple iPhone 6 Plus – 24 Part Review

BlackBerry Phones

BlackBerry Passport 10 Part Mammoth review

Android Phones

Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge review
Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge – Hands On
Samsung Galaxy A5 review
Samsung Note Edge – 14 Part Review
Samsung Note 4 – lollipop review
Samsung Note 4 – 17 Part Review
Samsung Galaxy Alpha – 2 Part review
Samsung Galaxy K Zoom – 26 Part Review
Samsung Galaxy S5 – 17 Part Review
Samsung Note 3 – 16 Part review
Samsung Galaxy S4 Zoom – 18 Part Review
Samsung Note 2 – 8 Part review

LG G4 full review coming soon

LG G4 – Hands on and First Impressions
LG G3 review – 31 Part Review
LG G Flex – 3 Part Review

HTC One M9 review
HTC Desire 820 review
HTC Desire Eye – 13 Part Review
HTC One M8 – 11 Part review
HTC One M7 – 20 Part Review

Acer S55 review – 6 Part Review

Yotaphone 2 – 4 Part review

Oneplus One – review

Honor 6+ review coming soon

Honor Holly – 4 Part review
Honor 6 – 12 Part Review
Huawei Ascend P6 Review

Sony Xperia Z3 review coming soon

Sony Xperia Z1 Compact review
Sony Z Ultra views and Camera Samples
Sony Xperia Z1 – 10 Part Review

Motorola Moto X – 4 Part review
Motorola Moto G – 8 Part review

Windows Phone

Nokia Lumia 830 vs Samsung Note 4 camera
Nokia Lumia 830 – First Impressions / What App Shortages?
Microsoft Lumia 535 review
Nokia Lumia 1520 – 6 Part review
Nokia Lumia 820 – 5 Part review
Nokia Lumia 1020 – 10 Part review
Nokia Lumia 925 – 9 Part review
Nokia Lumia 620 – 7 Part review

Other

ZTE Open Review – Firefox OS

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GavGadgets@Amazon

Quick Camera Head to Head – Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge vs Honor 6+ vs Sony Xperia Z3 Compact

Just a quick camera comparison.

Same shot. 3 phones.  Cropped in on mug.

First shot from the Honor 6+.

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Next from the Sony Xperia Z3 Compact.

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And lastly Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge.

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So which one is best. Personally, I prefer the Honor 6+. But what about you?

A more detailed camera comparison will follow shortly between all of the phones too.

Honor 6+ – First Impressions

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So look what magically appeared today. The Honor 6+.

I’m currently setting it up and also experimenting with the camera. In my very early testing of the camera the photos look good. I’ve done some early testing against the Samsung Galaxy S6 camera and will also test it against the Sony Xperia Z3 Compact.  The results vs the S6 Edge are interesting. That’s all I can say at the moment ☺

I’ve also run AnTuTu benchmarking,  and the Honor 6+ scored 44,224 which is a little faster than my Note 4.

I’ll be a good week away from any review but will be interested if you have any questions in the meantime. 

Oneplus One – review

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Welcome to my review of the Oneplus One.

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In my review, I am going to cover off all the different sections of the phone but first let’s take a look at the official specs.

– Dimensions – 152.9 x 75.9 x 8.9 mm
– Weight – 162 g
– SIM Micro-SIM
– DISPLAY LTPS LCD capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
– Size – 5.5 inches (71.9% screen-to-body ratio)
– Resolution – 1080 x 1920 pixels (401 ppi pixel density)
-Multitouch – Yes, up to 10 fingers
– Protection -Corning Gorilla Glass 3
– CyanogenMod 12 (after SW update)
– Snapdragon 801, CPU Quad-core 2.5 GHz Krait 400,GPU Adreno 330
– MEMORY Card slot – No
– Internal – 16/64 GB, 3 GB RAM
– CAMERA – Primary 13 MP, 4128 x 3096 pixels, autofocus, dual-LED flash, check quality
– Features – Geo-tagging, touch focus, face detection, panorama, HDR + more after update
– Video -2160p@30fps, 2160p(DCI)@24fps, 1080p@60fps, 720p@120fps, HDR, stereo sound rec, 4K after update
– Secondary -5 MP, 1080p@30fps
– SOUND – Alert types Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
– Loudspeaker -Yes, dual mono speakers
– 3.5mm jack – Yes
– COMMS WLAN -Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac, Wi-Fi Direct, DLNA, hotspot
– Bluetooth v4.1, A2DP
– GPS with A-GPS, GLONASS
– NFC – Yes
– USB – microUSB v2.0, USB Host
– Sensors -Accelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass
– Messaging -SMS (threaded view), MMS, Email, IM, Push Email
– Browser – HTML5
– ANT+ support
– Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
– MP4/H.264/WMV player
– MP3/eAAC+/WMA/WAV/FLAC player
– Document viewer
– Photo viewer/editor
– Voice memo/dial/commands
– BATTERY – Non-removable Li-Po 3100 mAh battery
– Colours – Silk White, Sandstone Black

First Impressions
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As you can see a lot of attention went to the quality of the contents and it does look really superb. If you have a nano sim it even comes with a nano sim to micro sim adapter. 

The phone either comes in 16gb or 64gb storage with no micro SD card slot. I have the 16gb white and am managing just fine. Despite being a 5.5 inch screen phone it is comfortable to hold due to it’s curved back. So once I opened the box it was time to charge the phone and then I updated Cyanogen from CM11 to CM12. CM12 is a lollipop rom and it improves performance according to many threads on several forums. In fact if you head over to XDA Developers or Oneplus’s own forums there are thriving threads offering so many different tweaking options. This may sound like a complex thing to do, but the Oneplus One is a tweakers dream and many options are simple and as quick as taking a few minutes. Of course, get it wrong and you could brick your phone. 

I mentioned in my first impressions that the firmware options seem to take 3 paths. Cyanogen which in my mid offers an incredible firmware, Color OS and Oneplus’s new firmware offering Oxygen OS.  If you stick with Cyanogen you will have one of the best roms, just take a look at the screen shots at the end of this article.

Audio

The Oneplus One has dual mono speakers located on the bottom edge producing a healthy 87db. Excellent for podcasts. The headphone sound is nothing short of a miracle. It includes MaxxAudio as its EQ option. With this on, a flat EQ but just tweaking the bass and treble controls if you need too, the output is powerful and superb to listen too. The most powerful headphone amp I have heard on a phone which was able to power my AKG K702 effortlessly. In terms of audio quality it is very good, just slightly behind that of the Samsung Galaxy S6. And that is impressive!

Camera

So what is the camera like. Well below are camera samples from the default camera app.

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

The photos look just ok but remember this is in poorish lighting conditions being somewhat overcast. In good lighting the camera performs slightly better. However, it’s weakness is lower lighting or indoors. Shutter speeds drop and so does the quality and noticeably too.This is the real weakness of the whole phone. Indoor shots are poor. Also on the odd occasion I had a couple of issue with anti banding when filming up against florescent lights. It didnt happen all the time, just twice in 5 hours of using the camera. To counter it’s sub par photo quality, it does have endless options from shutter control up to 8 seconds. Installing Camera FV-5 will give you shutter control up to 60 seconds, so light trails and more are possible with this phone. So while low light can be a weakness, it is possible to take long night exposures and get a result just not top notch quality. The Samsung Galaxy S6, HTC One M9 or LG G4 will totally outclass the Oneplus’s camera quality. 

However this being a developers dream phone there are many apps available that offer a better camera performance including the camera app from Color OS and the Oppo Find 7. Just look at the camera options available from the Oppo camera app.
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Below is a HQ shot at 13mp in file size instead of the 4mp. However, I cant see the extra quality with the HQ shot.The super macro mode is insane and combines digital zoom to take some close up shots. But I’ll repeat my point above. In anything but good lighting the quality does drop compared to the top end flagships and even mid range phones. Software does compensate a little (but is no cure) and in other ways offers some artistic creations. 

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Performance

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Whilst I don’t care for benchmarks, the Oneplus One really does fly around the apps and the operating system and this is backed up by the AnTuTu score. The phone comes with a 3,100maH battery which seems to last forever versus my Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge. The S6 Edge manages a screen on time of 3 hours, while the Oneplus One clocked in at nearly 6 hours screen on time. 

Basics

Phone calls and cellular reception were good on the Oneplus One. WiFi and Bluetooth worked fine too. At the end of the day, it is a phone too!

All the Rest

The display is a 1080p affair and with CM12 offers adaptive display, screen colour calibration from hue, saturation, contrast and intensity, sunlight increased visibility mode, adaptive backlight and more. Tap to turn the phone on is present and tapping the status bar will turn it off. The status bar is configurable in the settings, as is pretty much everything on this phone. Cyanogen and Oneplus did a cracking job with this handset. If you like themes Cyanogen has you covered. Gestures are also included although I didn’t find them that useful other than drawing a V when the phone is off to enable the torch. 

Conclusion

Just ask me again how much this phone doesn’t cost! It offers so much as such a small premium. Great sound, excellent headphone audio with only the camera offering a weaker performance than the top flagships that costs £600 upwards. Not bad for a £250 phone!

Finally, I thought it would be good to leave you with some screenshots to give you a feel for lollipop (CM12) on the Oneplus One.

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Samsung confirms how to get shutter control on the Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge plus RAW support latest

I wrote to Samsung asking information on when shutter control and raw support would be added to the Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge.

Below is a response from Samsung (screen shot of email).

Naturally,  I’ve emailed Samsung back trying to be as polite as possible and request proof via a screen shot from their S6 using the camera app , as there is definitely no shutter setting in Pro mode on my S6 Edge.

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Oneplus One Camera Samples

My main review of the Oneplus One should be live at some point tomorrow. In the meantime, have a look at some of the camera shots taken using the default camera app.

There is another camera app available (plus a few others) that helps improve the quality. But just to get you started take a look at the below. The weather was poor for taking these shots as well.

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Random photos around Princetown, Dartmoor with the #OneplusOne

Oneplus One – Midnight shootout vs Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge – Updated with iPhone 6 Plus Shot

I decided to test the low light camera options of the Oneplus One and Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge. Both phones are running android 5.0.2.

The target was Dartmoor Prison. All shots were taken on a tripod. First up the S6 Edge using the default Samsung camera app in auto and pro mode.

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The above shot was in Pro mode on the Edge with ISO 800. Unfortunately no third party apps improve and or work with the S6 Edge.

Next up is the Oneplus One using the default camera app in slow shutter mode at 8 seconds.

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However, I also have Camera FV-5 installed which allows up to a 60 second exposure with the OneplusOne. First up is about 30 seconds.

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Next is a 60 second shutter exposure.

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And finally a 13 second shutter exposure.

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So which phone shots do you prefer?

Updated – not taken at the same time, but this is what the iPhone 6 Plus managed one foggy night –

Dartmoor Prison #lowlight #foggy #iPhone6Plus

Oneplus One – Update

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So it’s been just under a day with the Oneplus One. And it’s been a remarkable day. First up this is the 16gb version running CM12 (android 5.0.2) which provides a slick and speedy user experience. When I first powered up the One it was running CM11 based on android 4.4.4. So I quick download later, into the recovery menu and a flash of the new firmware and voila. 

My thoughts are that the speed of the phone jumping between all the various screens is really smooth. Double tap to wake up works well. Themes are present and offer a nice touch. CM12 offers endless settings tweaks to really create the experience you desire eg Gestures to activate the camera, control music and operate the flashlight. The status bar is customisable too. See photo above and note the circular battery icon and time in the middle of the status bar. These are just two of the items that can be tweaked in terms of style and text options.

So what else have I noticed. The One comes with AudioFX which is an Equaliser powered by MaxxAudio. This is one monster of an EQ and means the phone can power a wide range of headphones really well and also produces excellent music over Bluetooth. Booming sound!

The screen is reasonable. Not a patch on the Samsung Galaxy S6 but then the pay off is crazy good battery life. After starting at 7am it’s only dropped 30% and has apparently 20 hours still left. 

I haven’t tried using the camera properly, but I did notice the default camera app allowed shutter control up to 8 seconds. After installing Camera FV-5 this extended the shutter setting to 60 seconds and a quick as 1/5000. ISO control ranges from 100 to 3,200. It will be interesting to see how good the long shutter photos turn out. As a comparison the Samsung Galaxy S6 can only offer a longest shutter speed of 1/7s. Tonight I shall be filming midnight exposures. 

I have also have had a brief look at various roms and there seems to be a few to choose from. Color OS for example apparently offers a superb camera experience and has better post processing software than that from Cyanogen CM12. There is also Oneplus’s own Oxygen OS to try out as well. 

So this is not only a tweakers dream device, but also a durable, competent and surprising low priced reasonable phone based on my first day experiences. 

To recap my first impressions click here – https://gavinsgadgets.com/2015/04/30/oneplus-one-first-impressions/

To be honest, I acquired the Oneplus One to review and then sell on. Not sure I want to sell it now😄
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