الثلاثاء، 18 يوليو 2017

Samsung Galaxy S8 – Performance and Software

Samsung Galaxy S8 – Performance and Software

SAMSUNG GALAXY S8 – PERFORMANCE

Under the stunning body is a serious amount of power, although where you live in the world will determine the SoC (system-on-chip) at the heart of the device. Brits, and those in Europe and Asia, will get Samsung’s own Exynos 8895 chipset, while folk in the USA will get a device with the Qualcomm Snapdragon 835.
Whichever CPU you end up with is unlikely to make a huge difference on performance. But considering I've so far used only the Exynos version, I can’t say too much about the 835.
Both are the fastest CPUs out there, built using a 10nm production process for improved efficiency. There’s 4GB of RAM – any more is basically pointless for a phone at this stage – and it has a roomy 64GB of internal storage with support for up to 256GB microSD cards.
During my time with the Galaxy S8, I can’t say that it’s been noticeably faster than a Snapdragon 821 device such as the Pixel XL or LG G6. However, the latest processors do add in a few features that are aiming to future-proof devices such as this.

There’s Gigabit LTE support, better battery life relative to the cell used, and the ability for quicker charging. Having more power also makes it possible to enlist DeX, Samsung’s way of turning the S8 into a mini-computer that can be plugged into an HDMI monitor.
Another future-looking feature is Bluetooth 5.0, which you won't be able to take advantage of fully until relevant devices with it are released. But, for now at least, you can finally pair two Bluetooth-enabled devices to the S8 at once and play music through both of them.
Nothing seems to make the Galaxy S8 break sweat – but that in itself isn’t a big deal any more. The £400 OnePlus 3T will handle most tasks you throw at it, as will the £160 Moto G5.
Games run as you'd expect from a flagship phone running the latest GPUs – the Mali G71 for the Exynos model and the Adreno 540 for the Snapdragon; they load quickly and play without any dropped frames. However, there hasn’t been a huge jump in the quality and power needed to run these intensive games since the Galaxy S7 arrived. DeX will be a real test of the phone’s power, but I haven’t had much time to test this yet.
There's a bigger gap in performance in synthetic benchmark tests, where the Galaxy S8 scores 2013 in the Geekbench 4’s single-core test and 6659 in the multi-core version. That’s on a par with results from a test Snapdragon 835, and slightly above phones running the Kirin 960, which scores 1935 and 6237 in the same tests.
I would have liked to have seen better single-core scores, since the majority of daily tasks utilise only this. The iPhone remains at the top in this category, with its 3434 single-core score.

In the AnTuTu benchmark, which tests everything from 3D performance to RAM speeds, the S8's 173,292 score is among the best. Notably, its 70,546 score in the 3D gaming tests put it above the iPhone 7 Plus and LG G6, which both scored 60,000.
Unfortunately, speakers still don't appear to be a priority for Samsung – the downward-facing one here is terrible. It’s easy to block with your hand when you’re watching landscape video, and the sound itself is tinny and distorted at higher volumes. With the diminishing bezel, it's likely that speakers will continue to get worse. Phone-call quality is fine, as is Wi-Fi performance, but neither is revolutionary or better than what you'd experience on much cheaper phones.
The Galaxy S8 is a fast handset – but I increasingly expect that, rather than being surprised by it. The chip-makers are advancing much faster than the apps for these flagships, and it does feel as though much of the power available here is probably wasted.

SAMSUNG GALAXY S8 – SOFTWARE

Software used to be one of Samsung’s weaknesses, and although far from being one of the company's strengths in the S8, improvements are clear to see.
In fact, the software layer on top of Android 7.0 is good-looking and functional. Icons are more mature, and the on-screen buttons – a first for a Samsung S-series phone – are angular and edgy. I'm particularly a fan of the haptic feedback you get when you push the virtual home button, which can be accessed even when the display is off.
The stark white colour scheme is clean and crisp, and all of Samsung’s native apps have adapted that look. Google Assistant is on board, although there’s no Daydream support, since that sort of clashes with the newly updated Gear VR and its snazzy motion controller.
The biggest software addition for the Galaxy S8 is Bixby, Samsung’s rival to Siri – and it’s probably the biggest disappointment, too. This digital personal assistant pops up everywhere, plus there’s a dedicated Bixby button on the side, so you don’t need to call out an awkward phrase to get it going. The thing is, it feels half-baked and not quite ready yet.

The left-most homescreen is Bixby’s home – but mostly, it just mimics Google Now. It will throw up some news, maybe a reminder to ring Mum, and push some funny YouTube videos, but we’ve seen this all before. You can’t even talk to Bixby yet, which appears to be a basic omission – and when it finally does arrive later in the spring, it will be limited to US English and Korean.
Bixby does have one redeeming feature. In the camera app, it will let you snap a picture of an item and use the AI to either find similar items, or get you a link to buy it. Again, this isn't new, but at least there's some use there.
Bixby feels like multiple different features thrown together, each of which is already part of Android. Maybe in the future it will improve, but for now there’s a handy option to turn it off.
Another new software feature is ‘DeX’. I like to think of this as 'Microsoft Continuum, if it wasn't terrible'.
Like Continuum, DeX requires a sold-separately dock that connects to an HDMI-equipped monitor and turns your Galaxy S8 into a mini-PC. The dock also has power, two USB-A ports and an Ethernet connector, along with a smattering of fans in the base to keep the phone from becoming too hot.
If you connect the phone via the USB-C port inside the cradle, a new desktop – which looks a lot like Windows 10 – pops up. Your apps are displayed in a very familiar layout and there’s a software dock along the bottom that lets you access all the phone and text functions of the phone.

What makes this so much better than Continuum is app support. Apps are resizable and bounce between phone and tablet versions depending on how much you stretch them, and you can multiple apps open at the same time.
My time with DeX so far has been limited, so I'm going to use it a little more before I deliver my final verdict on it.
Samsung has done a great job to make the transition from a 16:9 aspect ratio to the 18.5:9 here as seamless as possible. Most Android apps scale perfectly, but you can manually stretch those that don’t. Most of the games I've tested needed to be manually stretched, but I'd happily take this over having two black bars at each end.
Video has the potential to be the stickiest area – but again, clever software tricks provide a solution. Take YouTube, for instance – a place where most videos are displayed in 16:9 On the S8, when you’re watching a YouTube video, a box will pop up and give you the option to crop in to fill the whole screen and make better use of the space. As with anything cropped, you’re likely to lose some parts of the picture, but at least the option is there. There’s less of an issue with movies, though, since these tend to already be shot at wider aspect ratios.
Samsung has been playing about with a few different biometric methods of unlocking the phone for a while now, but they all seem to finally come together in the Galaxy S8. And they sort of need to, especially if you dislike the position of the fingerprint scanner as much as I do

The iris scanner from the Note 7 is present, but it’s much faster; and there’s a less secure – but even quicker – face-recognition tool. The iris scanner is good, but I find having to look directly at the camera every time I unlock the phone something of a chore. The facial recognition is faster, when you’ve finally got it to recognise your face, but it can easily be fooled by a photo. Neither is perfect, but at least you can combine them with the fingerprint scanner and a more traditional pattern unlock.
Would I like an easier-to-reach fingerprint sensor and none of the extra stuff? Of course. But it wouldn’t stop me from buying, or recommending, this phone.
Go To Page 3 camera

Samsung Galaxy S8 – Camera

Samsung Galaxy S8 – Camera


SAMSUNG GALAXY S8 – CAMERA

The S8 is a sizeable improvement over the S7 in almost every area, but the camera has received the fewest upgrades – on paper, at least. There’s no dual-sensor system here, no wide-angle lens or variable aperture. Instead, there’s a single 12-megapixel sensor behind a wide f/1.7 lens that uses the same Dual Pixel tech as the S7.
The only obvious addition is a new multi-frame image processor that takes three shots every single time you snap, reducing blur and leaving you with a sharper shot. But simply looking at the spec sheet reveals only half the story.
The Galaxy S8, like the Google Pixel, shows it’s as much about the optics and sensor as how the software and image signal processor (ISP) work together. The photos achieved by the Galaxy S8 are truly stunning, and it’s a huge jump from the already excellent Galaxy S7.
The first thing you’ll notice about the camera is just how fast it is. A double-tap on the power key opens the camera quicker than any other phone, and focusing is equally snappy. I've probably taken over 1000 photos with the Galaxy S8, and no more than two or three have had to be deleted because they were either out of focus or the sensor had focused on the wrong spot. That’s incredible for a phone – even Google’s Pixel.
It’s a versatile camera too, whether you’re taking landscape shots or portraits in daytime or at night. The fantastic auto-HDR mode – something that’s turned on by default and I would suggest keeping on – levels out exposure and contrast when there’s bright sunlight, leaving you with intensely colourful shots. Sometimes you’ll find the colours more vibrant than they actually are, especially on the already quite saturated display, but that isn’t something I necessarily dislike.



The level of detail is fantastic

Landscapes have plenty of depth and the auto-HDR mode balances exposure well

Natural bokeh is much better than a fake effect

Pictures have plenty of depth
Detail is some of the best around too, even though there are phones with much higher megapixel counts. Whether it’s dew on a blade of grass, a raindrop on a leaf, or a single hair on a dog – they’re captured perfectly.
The wide f/1.7 aperture lens might not be any wider than the Galaxy S7's, but it lets enough light through to create that lovely shallow-depth-of-field look. There are no fake aperture modes to give a blurry background, but the camera gets a much more natural-looking bokeh effect all by itself.
That wide aperture helps with low-light shots too, with more light getting into the sensor, giving you better results. The shutter and autofocus are still fast, while optical image stabilisation does give the S8 the upper hand over the Pixel for pub and club shots.


Even with poor lighting shots looks good


Colours look strong even at night
I can’t say enough good things about the camera on the Galaxy S8 – it's reliable, versatile and churns out shots that need little to no tinkering pretty much every time. The app is great too, and it’s functionally comprehensive yet easy to use. You can save photos as RAW files, stabilise your videos, or add a Live Photos-esque moment of movement before the actual photo. There’s a pro mode too, but the auto mode is so good that you probably won't need it.
On the front there’s a new 8-megapixel sensor with an f/1.7 aperture. It has autofocus, which remains a rarity on selfie cameras, and takes great pictures too. If you like Snapchat-style augmented filters, then Samsung includes a bunch of them.
Video tops out at UHD, but stick to 1080p and you’ll benefit from HDR and impressive tracking autofocus.
 Go To Page 4 Battery Life and Verdict

Samsung Galaxy S8 – Battery Life and Verdict

SAMSUNG GALAXY S8 – BATTERY LIFE

The biggest concern I had about the Samsung Galaxy S8 was the battery life. Considering the fallout from trying to cram a big battery inside the slim Note 7, it’s probably no surprise that Samsung has been a little conservative with the cell inside the Galaxy S8.
But can a phone with a 5.8-inch quad-HD+ HDR-ready display really last the whole day on a 3000mAh battery? That's the same size of battery that managed to make it through just a day on the 5.1-inch Galaxy S7.
The answer is yes – but it isn't so straightforward. The fact is that, more than ever, how long the battery lasts will depend on how you use the phone. You can change the performance, the screen resolution, whether or not brightness is boosted when you’re watching videos, and each of these will affect the battery in different ways.
Out of the box, with the screen resolution bumped to quad-HD+ and the brightness at a very viewable 30%, I managed a comfortable day of use – 4hrs 30mins screen-on time – with about 10% left when I went to bed. That’s a busy day, and quite an impressive result. Dropping the resolution to 1080p got me about an extra 5-6% at the end of the day; turning off the Always-on Display bought me another 3-4%


Watching a video stored on the device with the Video Enhancer on? Well, that will eat through the battery pretty darned quickly. An hour of downloaded Google Play Movies content took it down about 20%. It’s a similar story with Netflix.
This isn’t an amazing battery, and my conclusion is that you’ll need to charge it every night. But the deep customisation and battery-saving modes all work well, and by using them I have yet to have a dead device come evening.
Like the S7, the S8 uses Samsung’s own Adaptive Charging rather than Qualcomm’s Quick Charge. It isn't the quickest charger either, taking about 1hr 40mins to fully charge from dead. Samsung has switched to the reversible USB-C port – making it probably the biggest phone so far to switch – but wireless charging remains an option.

SHOULD I BUY THE SAMSUNG GALAXY S8?

The Samsung Galaxy S8 is a new beginning for flagship phones. It’s a gorgeous sliver of tech that utilises its power for extending the experience beyond the 5.8-inch display, but manages to still be a phone that's easy to use.
It crams a huge screen into a compact body, without sacrificing features such as water-resistance and expandable storage, and takes phone design to the next level. Once you’ve picked up a Samsung Galaxy S8, all other phones will somehow feel less interesting.
The screen, the camera, the design are all top-notch; there really isn't anything missing here. Slightly small battery aside, there isn’t an obvious compromise.
Not everything hits the mark, but considering there’s so much here and Samsung is trying all these different things, that’s not surprising. I could live without the iris scanner and I could live without Bixby, but they don’t really diminish anything by being included.
The only true negative is the awful fingerprint sensor, but I'm sure after a few months even that might become second nature.
In the end, however, whether you need to spend £600/$700+ on a phone is really the biggest barrier here. You can have a perfectly serviceable phone for £160 with the Moto G5, or for £200 with the Lenovo P2, or for £400 with the OnePlus 3T.
But, the Galaxy S8 genuinely feels like an upgrade from any other phone I've used in a long time. And for me, that makes it worth splashing out.
Unless Apple finally innovates again with the iPhone 8, right now the Samsung Galaxy S8 is the best phone you can buy this year.

VERDICT

Easily the best phone around right now. The Galaxy S8 feels like the future.


SAMSUNG GALAXY S8 review

                                                                           Hello every body

today i want to talk about a new version in samsung and the fantastic phone in the technology world
                                                  it's (SAMSUNG GALAXY S8)

KEY FEATURES

  • 5.8-inch quad-HD Infinity Display (AMOLED)
  • Samsung Exynos 8895 (Europe and Asia) or Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 (USA)
  • 4GB RAM, 64GB storage (microSD up to 256GB)
  • 3000mAh battery with wireless and fast charging
  • Rear camera: 12 megapixels, f/1.7 aperture and Dual Pixel sensor
  • Front camera: 8 megapixels, f/1.7 and autofocus
  • Iris and fingerprint scanner
  • Samsung Bixby personal assistant
  • Android 7 Nougat with Google Assistant
  • Manufacturer: Samsung
  • Review Price: £689.00

WHAT IS THE SAMSUNG GALAXY S8?

Phones have become a little stale. Whether it's an iPhone 7, Huawei P10, Sony Xperia XZ Premium or any other flagship phone, they all look and feel the same. But just when I thought a phone couldn't surprise and delight me any more, the Samsung Galaxy S8 has proved me wrong.
From the moment I picked up the S8 – and its larger, 6.2-inch sibling the Galaxy S8+– I realised it was even more special than I expected. This is a phone that feels innovative, a phone that I can’t help but recommend – even if it will set you back £689/$720.

SAMSUNG GALAXY S8 RELEASE DATE AND PRICE

The Galaxy S8 goes on sale globally on April 28 and is priced at £689 in the UK or $720 in the US .\

SAMSUNG GALAXY S8 – DESIGN

Nothing comes close to the Galaxy S8 design-wise. It's the best-looking phone I've ever seen, leaving every other handset trailing in its wake.
The curved rear, as seen on the Galaxy S7, nestles perfectly in your palm, while the glass shimmers as the light hits it. The device is available in three colours – a dark black, bright silver and a grey with a blueish tinge – with no ugly white front plate in sight.
My review unit is the black option, and it’s properly black all over, with shiny sides that blend into the display. It feels like one complete piece, with the glass, screen and metal combining all together.

The volume rocker and standby switch are joined by a new button on the side. This is a dedicated Bixby button – which I'll cover in more detail in the Software section – and while it shows Samsung is taking its new virtual assistant seriously, it feels too much for Bixby to have its own button.
The S8 is thin and incredibly light at 155g, but it feels sturdy and precisely made. The last time Samsung opted for a huge change of direction with its flagship, many of the basic features were lost in the transition. Thankfully, this isn’t the case here. A microSD slot continues to sit tucked away with the nano-SIM, the criminally underrated Qi wireless charging is also present, and the device is IP68 water- and dust-resistant too, so it will survive a dunk in water for 30 minutes to depths of 1.5 metres.
Samsung has also retained the headphone jack; I'd be very surprised to hear that anyone thinks that’s a bad idea. Apple’s decision to remove a physical headphone connection looked like it might signal the demise of the 3.5mm jack, but Samsung has gone in the other direction, by including a pair of very good AKG wired buds in the box.
Like the recently launched LG G6, the front of the Samsung Galaxy S8 is almost all screen – and it's this that really makes the S8 stand out. Unlike with the G6, though, the display here melts into the sturdy metal rim.

It’s a much subtler curve than on the Galaxy S7 Edge; far more like the ill-fated Galaxy Note 7 in fact, which makes it a lot easier to use. Accidental touches were common on older Edge phones, with your hand hitting the screen when you were just holding the device, but I haven't experienced this with the S8. There’s still a bit of extra reflection on this portion of the screen, but it’s a small trade-off for such an eye-catching look.
As with any phone, though, not everything is perfect. Having such a big display and tiny bezel means there’s no room for the fingerprint-sensing Home button to sit on the front.
Instead, it’s on the back, next to the camera, and I hate it more every time I use it. First, it’s tiny, meaning those times I actually hit it, it doesn’t recognise my finger. But its real issue is the positioning; it’s so unintuitive. You have to wiggle your finger around the camera – which, incidentally, throws up a message on opening the app to remind you to clean dirty smudges of the lens – and guess where the scanner is?
I don’t understand why it isn't at the centre, as it is every other phone that has a rear-mounted fingerprint scanner. I suspect Samsung wanted to build it into the display, but just ran out of time.
I’m also not convinced about how well this phone will hold up after months and years of use. The addition of Gorilla Glass 5 on both the front and back should offer a little more protection, but I've ended up with both a cracked Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S7 after drops onto carpet from barely 2ft high. Hopefully, things will be different with the Galaxy S8 – but it feels like a delicate phone.
The strange position of the fingerprint scanner
The phone is also prone to showing fingerprints, but that's par for the course with this amount of glass and shiny metal. I'd go with the Midnight Grey colour option if you’re really averse to smudges.

SAMSUNG GALAXY S8 – SCREEN

Not only has Samsung crafted what is, in my opinion, the best-looking phone out there, but it's slapped on the finest display too. Although, when you consider that Samsung has demonstrated the best screen tech for a number of years, this isn't really a surprise.
There’s more to the display than just the curves. First, it has a new aspect ratio of 18.5:9, rather than 16:9. This means it’s taller, essentially giving you more space in a body that isn’t that much bigger than that of the S7. While the Galaxy S7 had a 5.1-inch display, the S8 bumps that to 5.8.

It sounds huge, but the phone itself is compact and Samsung is keen to point out that it can still be used comfortably in one hand. I wouldn’t say that you can do quite 'everything' with one hand – especially reaching to pull down the notification tray – but this is far from a phablet.
The 5.8-inch display size is in some ways deceiving, however. Don’t pick up this phone thinking it will have the same size of screen as the Nexus 6P or HTC U Ultra in a much smaller body. This is a tall screen and it’s bigger than the S7, but it’s much narrower than proper phablets. Width-wise, it’s barely wider than an iPhone 7 and noticeably narrower than the Pixel XL.

Like the majority of Samsung phones, the panel is AMOLED and has a slightly odd quad-HD+ 2960 x 1440 resolution. It’s also ‘Mobile HDR Premium’ certified, so you’ll be able to stream HDR (high dynamic range) shows from Amazon Prime and Netflix when those apps are updated. Arguably, HDR is the most important evolution in TV tech is recent years, offering better contrast and a brighter picture.
Colours are gloriously vivid, but it manages to avoid oversaturating brighter shades while still displaying the deepest black. Like the iPhone 7, it covers the DCI-P3 cinema-grade colour gamut for a much wider spectrum of colours, and in certain situations, the brightness can break the 1000-nit barrier. Considering most phones, including the LG G6, only go up to about 650 nits, this is seriously impressive stuff. In fact, this screen is so bright that I can keep it on 25% brightness and it’s perfectly visible indoors.
In a move that’s surely to try to stretch out the fairly small 3000mAh battery, when you unbox your Galaxy S8 it will be set to display at 1080p rather than quad-HD. Most people probably won’t notice the difference – and that’s fine. But I'd suggest hopping into Settings and switching things up. Downscaling can leave some apps with oddly big fonts and a softer look on texts and icons; considering you’re spending £600/$700+ on a phone, you'll probably want it to look its best.
The Samsung Galaxy S8 is the best phone out there for media binging, and I've started picking it up instead of my iPad when I want to watch something on the go. There’s a clever mode called ‘Video Enhancer’, which boosts the contrast and brightness in certain apps – Netflix, Prime Video, YouTube and so on – to give a pseudo-HDR effect. I wouldn’t recommend keeping it on all the time, due to the increased battery drain, but it does make a fantastic display even better.

Go to Page 2 Performance and Software

الأربعاء، 21 سبتمبر 2016

Archos Diamond 2 Note

Hands-on with the budget, yet feature-rich, Archos Diamond 2 Note
Once the brand to beat when it came to personal media players, Archos has struggled to really transform itself into a company capable of making decent smartphones. They’ve often been poorly built and slow, and that just doesn’t cut it in such a crowded market.
But at MWC 2016 in Barcelona, the French company has come out with a new phone that appears to have a lot going for it. It has the specs to match even theSamsung Galaxy S7 and LG G5, but at a fraction of the cost.

5 THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE ARCHOS DIAMOND 2 NOTE

1) It’s a big, big phone
After the Motorola-made Google Nexus 6, really, really big phones seem to have taken a step back. Most now agree that the screen sweet spot is somewhere between 5.1 and 5.7 inches, but Archos is thinking otherwise.
The Diamond 2 Note packs a 6-inch panel, which makes the whole phone enormous. One-handed use? No way. A slight curve to the aluminium back and some rounded-off sides does make it feel comfortable initially, but it’s also weighty.
Archos has done a good job putting this thing together, though, even if there is a slight whiff of the HTC One series to the back. It’s clean and metallic, without any unnecessary design choices.
2) An impressive display
Speaking of the display, the 6-inch screen boasts a quad-HD resolution – that’s 2560 x 1440 pixels – making this the highest-res Archos phone to date. It’s an IPS panel too, so viewing angles are good and it’s laminated right on to the glass, which makes it look even more vivid.
There’s also Corning Gorilla Glass 3 on the front, adding an extra bit of protection.
As screens on budget phones go, this is very impressive.
3) An unskinned version of Android
Ah, now this is what we like to see. Instead of smearing an ugly over the now-beautiful Android 6.0.1 Marshmallow, Archos is keeping things simple and giving us Google’s OS just as the search giant wanted.
The version I got my hands on was still running Android 5.1, but only because it’s a pre-production unit.
The only additions Archos will make will be to install its rather good media player that’ll play a whole load of file types. That aside, you’ve got all the features ofMarshmallow. The updated permission settings, Now on Tap and lots more.
4) Ticks all the specs boxes
Archos phones have often lost out in the past for feeling oh-so slow. That doesn’t seem to be the case with the Diamond 2 Note – at least on first impressions.
Running the show is an octa-core Mediatek X10 processor – that’s a new 64-bit chip running at 2GHz – paired with 3GB of RAM and 32GB of internal storage.
On the back there’s a 16MP camera with a Sony sensor that’ll shoot 4K video, while there’s a wide-angle 8MP selfie camera around the front with a flash. The camera app started up fast and autofocus seemed quick enough, though I can’t yet say for sure what the photos will come out like.
You’ve also got a microSD slot, and a pretty big 3,610 mAh battery that, Archos tell me, should easily get you through the day.
5) It’s seriously affordable
This is the biggie. While the specs of the Archos Diamond 2 Note can match up to the big boys, it massively undercuts them with its price tag.
When it hits the UK in the coming months, you’ll be able to pick up this phablet for £249. That's about a third of what the Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge will likely cost, which is impressive by anyone's standards.

ARCHOS DIAMOND 2 NOTE IN PICTURES

archos 11The 2K display goes almost edge to edge
archos 13There's an 8MP wide-angle front camera
archos 15The back looks a bit like the HTC One M9's
archos 7

ARCHOS DIAMOND 2 NOTE: PRICE AND RELEASE DATE

The Archos Diamond 2 Note will cost £249 when it goes on sale later in 2016.

ARCHOS DIAMOND 2 NOTE: OPENING IMPRESSIONS

To be honest, I didn’t have high expectations when I rocked up to the Archos booth after trudging around a packed and sweaty convention centre for three days. But I came away pleasantly surprised.
Archos no longer has the brand exposure for this to be a massive hit, but it’s offering a load of specs in an attractive metal body for a price that can’t be sniffed at.
For the first time since it focused solely on PMPs, I’m a bit excited about getting an Archos product in for review.

الاثنين، 19 سبتمبر 2016

archos 50 platinum

                                                     HELLO EVERY BODY
NOW I TALK ABOUT (ARCHOS 50 PALTINUM)


KEY FEATURES

  • 1.2GHz quad-core CPU
  • Dual SIM
  • 5-inch IPS display
  • Manufacturer: Archos
  • Review Price: £210.00

WHAT IS THE ARCHOS 50 PLATINUM?

The Archos 50 Platinum is a 5-inch Android smartphone that features dual-SIM functionality for those looking to better segregate their work-life balance. A mid-range handset with a price more akin to an entry-level device, the Archos 50 Platinum is available for just £210 on a SIM-free basis. It runs a stock version of Google’s Android 4.1 Jelly Bean OS, has a 1.2GHz quad-core processor, 1GB of RAM and an 8-megapixel primary camera, but is this enough to compete with the big boys?
Archos 50 Platinum

ARCHOS 50 PLATINUM: DESIGN

The Archos 50 Platinum’s design is markedly similar to that of the Samsung Galaxy S3. The gloss plastic device features softly curved edges and is just 8.9mm thick, a mere 0.3mm thicker than Samsung’s past flagship phone. It is what you would expect from a wallet-friendly handset manufacturer by a bit-part player on the smartphone scene - it looks relatively cheap, basic and functional without ever really standing out from the crowd.
Like the S3 before it, the design of the Archos 50 Platinum is cheapened by the gloss plastic finish. It quickly becomes smeared with fingerprints, grease and grime. The Archos 50’s body looks grubby almost as soon as it is taken from the box. Short of handling the phone in gloves there is no way to counteract this, though it’s hardly a problem unique to it.
Archos 50 Platinum
Despite weighing in at a considerable 160g, 30g more than the similarly sizedSamsung Galaxy S4, the Archos 50 Platinum does not feel particularly heavy. Its weight is spread evenly across the phone’s full 5-inch form leaving it feeling well-balanced and sturdy in the hand. It feels well made, too, with only a small amount of creak in the body when put under pressure and none of the serious issues we often see in cheap phones.
The physical buttons on the Archos 50 Platinum are not ideal and highlight the phone’s cheap nature. Both the volume rocker (left side) and power/sleep button (right side) are positioned in the way of your fingers when holding the phone in either a left or right-handed manner. What’s more they sit loosely in their housings and as such wobble and slide when held.
Archos 50 Platinum

ARCHOS 50 PLATINUM: SCREEN QUALITY

There are few, if any, 5-inch phones in the Archos 50 Platinum’s £200 price bracket. Size doesn’t always mean quality, though, and the Archos 50 is testament to this. It features a 960 x 540 pixel resolution which, when stretched over the 5-inch panel results in a disappointingly low 220 DPI image quality. The end product of having a 5-inch screen that falls short of modern HD expectations is slightly grainy visuals with pixelisation effecting both video content and text equally.
Watching the Dark Knight Rises on the Archos 50 Platinum is a reasonably enjoyable experience. The expansive on-screen real estate undoubtedly helps make the Archos 50 a suitably entertaining platform for multimedia content, but it doesn’t possess that wow factor and pop we would have hoped for.
The explosion on the football field looks flat and hollow with colours and contrast throughout feeling washed out, bleak and lacking that little something extra found on high-end handsets. The phone’s blacks range is shallow, with expected subtleties in the colour spectrum not quite picked up.
Browsing the web sees text heavy pages suffer from slightly soft edges. The lack of a HD display becomes increasingly apparent the more you use the phone. For those after improved visuals at a similar price, the 4.7-inch Google Nexus 4 will be a better option, assuming you can do without dual-SIM capabilities that is.
The Archos 50 Platinum’s screen quality is not all doom and gloom, however. Viewing angles are strong and the screen is highly responsive with the IPS panel reacting promptly to all touch-based controls.

ARCHOS 50 PLATINUM: SOFTWARE

Unlike many Android smartphones, Archos has not bestowed the 50 Platinum with its own custom skin. Instead the 5-inch device runs stock Android. The French manufacturer hasn’t left Google’s OS completely alone, however. There are a pair a bespoke apps pre-installed on the device in Archos Music and Archos Video. Unlike Samsung and HTC, which both offer their own digital content stores, the Archos music and video services simply let you store your existing media collections in a slightly different location, hardly the most useful of additions.
Overall, the Archos 50 Platinum’s software setup is simple and efficient with a functional and almost utilitarian air to it. Transitions between the multiple homescreens are fluid with no stilted movements or stumbling. There is an array of pre-installed widgets available to let you personalise the phone’s homescreens to your wants and needs. The traditional Android app menu keeps the masses organised.
The Archos 50 Platinum comes pre-installed with two browser options. The stock Android browser lines up alongside the smartphone rendition of Chrome and, although the possibility of choice is sure to appease some, in truth it is largely unnecessary. Both offer fast load times and the usual array of bookmarking, favouriting and multi-tabbed browsing options. The only major difference between the two is that Chrome frequently throws the formatting of a web page out of kilter. The result is squashed and stretched content and web pages that are not conductive to relaxing reading.
Avoiding the mass of bloatware that comes pre-installed on many Android smartphones, the Archos 50 Platinum is powered by the ever-present array of Google branded apps. While this keeps things simple, it leaves the phone lacking that edge which separates it from the masses. The Archos 50’s UI is an all too familiar presence and one which fails to grip your imagination or provide that one must-have feature missing from its competitors.

ARCHOS 50 PLATINUM PERFORMANCE

The Archos 50 Platinum is not underpowered but neither does it set the smartphone world alight. For the most part things run smoothly and efficiently with a 1.2GHz quad-core CPU running the show alongside 1GB of RAM. Basic multitasking requirements are handled with consummate ease and app launches are not hit by the same faltering stutter as found on many similarly priced phones.
Gaming is smooth and engaging too thanks to the Archos 50’s strong spec. The likes of Real Racing 3 and the Temple Run-esque Despicable Me all run without issue or interruption other than slight display degradation and pesky download requirements. A microSD card will be required to install most games given the phone’s limited internal capacity.
Featuring just 4GB of internal storage, the Archos 50 Platinum’s capacity is extremely restrictive. It is made worse by the user available figure being significantly lower than this billed offering. Fortunately, Archos’s cost cutting has not forced it to overlook microSD expansion, with up to 64GB memory cards accepted. Unlike many modern smartphones, the Archos 50 Platinum does not possess either NFC or 4G connectivity options. Although sure to restrict some, the phone’s dual-SIM options act as a party-piece replacement of sorts.
The phone’s inbuilt speaker is a mixed bag of tricks. Audio quality is relatively strong, even at higher volumes, with little distortion or tininess. It does, however, feature one major, unexpected fault. Using the speaker causes the whole handset to vibrate. A problem we haven’t experienced before, this issue is rather severe with the phone physically moving in our hand during use.

ARCHOS 50 PLATINUM: CAMERA

On a camera front the Archos 50 Platinum is a pretty generic mid-range offering. It features an 8-megapixel rear-mounted camera with a secondary 2-megapixel camera on the front. The primary one benefits from an integrated LED flash, autofocus options and 720p HD video recording capabilities.
As with many mid-market phones at a near entry-level price point, the Archos 50’s camera suffers from familiar white balance and light management issues. In changing light conditions or in areas of mixed light and shadow, the Archos 50 Platinum struggles to find an appeasing balance. It frequently over exposes bleak skies, turning landscapes into white-topped images with little definition to foreground detail. Focus times are longer than expected and can cause you to miss that all important shot. The Archos 50 Platinum’s camera produces images that are flat and lack a depth of colour and detail.

Although the integrated LED flash is an addition often omitted from lower priced phones, its integration on the Archos 50 Platinum is met with mixed emotions. It’s not powerful enough to illuminate entire dimly lit rooms, it frequently overpowers people within shots, whiting out faces. The phone’s forward-facing camera has even worse colour management. It casts a greyish tinge to all shots, causing you to look ill in anything but ideal lighting conditions.
The Archos 50’s rear-mounted camera is positioned extremely high on the centre of the phone’s back. Stray fingers can easily creep into shot when holding the phone in a landscape stance forcing extra care and consideration to be taken.


READ:- Archos 35 Home Connect and Smart Home Phone

الأحد، 18 سبتمبر 2016

Archos 35 Home Connect and Smart Home Phone

                                                               HELLO EVERY BODY

NOW I TALK ABOUT A NEW PHONE (ARCHOS 35 HOME )

Alongside its two new G9 Android tablets, Archos has launched the Home Connect and Home Phone, two other Android devices that are a little out of the ordinary. One is a DECT home phone with smartphone aspirations, the other a bedside alarm clock radio that takes a few design cues from game controllers. What do we think? Is Archos crazy or are these two slices of genius?
Archos Smart Home Phone

The Archos Home Connect is one of just a few devices that really strays from the Android norms of smartphones and tablets. It's an odd blend of bedside alarm clock, kitchentop internet radio and handheld games console.
To each side of the 3.5in touchscreen sit fairly large (for a diddy device) speakers, qualifying this as a portable radio-like gadget. The busy demo room we tested out the device in wasn't the optimum place to assess sound quality, so we'll wait to get a review unit in to test its sonic skills.
Archos Smart Home Phone 2

The screen uses a resistive touch layer, and so doesn't feel hugely responsive under your fingertips. The Home Connect's design encourages two-thumbed usage, its back curved ergonomically to accommodate the rest of your digits. In this sense it's rather like a handheld games system of old - like a Sega Game Gear, without the buttons. Unlike a Game Gear, it won't guzzle up all your AA batteries. It uses an internal rechargeable battery, letting you take it outside for barbecues or days out at the park, and so on. On the back are the Home Connect's small collection of sockets and ports. There's a 3.5mm headphone jack, full-size USB port, microSD card slot and the power button.
A key feature, in Archos's eyes, of the Home Connect is internet radio, which will require a Wi-Fi network as there's no 3G connectivity packed-in. This is powered by the TuneIn Radio app, so it's not really Archos's doing. It has simply provided a form that allows the app to shine a little more brightly than it does in a smartphone.
Archos Smart Home Phone 1

Archos's notion of the Home Connect as a baby monitor is a similar deal. Archos has tweaked the settings within Google Talk so that you can use the Home Connect's user-facing camera to look over your kids. It's simply a case of making the device respond to video calls automatically. Simple when you think about it, but not something we could imagine this Android gadget will be used for a great deal.
Is Archos clutching at straws for uses for something that's something of an uneasy fit in the busy consumer electronics space? Perhaps. Although the Archos 35 Home Connect's Android OS makes it wonderfully flexible, at £120 it has to take on a lot of competition, including the Squeezebox Radio, Nintendo DSi, iPod Touch and others. And like many non-phone Android devices, it doesn't have full Market access. Convergence in a smartphone is one thing, but convergence in a larger device that has to be moved about between various jobs is something else. Disagree? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.
The Archos Home Phone is something we expected to see pop out into the market sooner. It's a DECT home phone that runs the Android OS, giving it access to thousands of apps that other home phones couldn't possibly start to contemplate dreaming about.
It doesn't have Android Market access though - common for Android 2.x devices that aren't smartphones. Although not entirely compatible with the Android experience, it claims to be able to work with just about any DECT base station, as it uses standard DECT protocols. The £129 package comes with a base station for that proper home phone look.

Archos Smart Home Phone 4

Aside from the DECT innards and the dock, the Smart Home Phone looks much like any Android smartphone. It has a 3.5in touchscreen, used to make calls as well as all those other Android tasks (yes, including playing Angry Birds).
Archos Smart Home Phone 3

Unfortunately, it uses a resistive touchscreen though, so lacks the super-slick feel of a device like the Apple iPod Touch. The display isn't great quality either, looking a little dull in out preview, not helped by the capacitive layer it peeps out from under.
Archos Smart Home Phone 6

There are plenty of tasks that make use of Android and don't demand touchscreen or display perfection. It'll make video calls, become a personal calendar and pull-down emails from the net. It makes us wonder though - how many people gagging for this kind of functionality have managed to avoid the lure of the smartphone, now that they're available for so little money? Pre-pay Android handsets are available for half the price of the Smart Home Phone.
Archos Smart Home Phone 5

If there's still space in your gadget life for an Android home phone, this has much of what's needed to make use of the Android basics. There's a 3.5mm headphone jack, microSD slot and the usual navigational soft keys, plus access to the AppsLib app store for additional app downloads. We still don't know everything about this intriguing device though. The CPU and built-in memory (we can't imagine there's much) are a mystery, but its average performance suggests that this device isn't particularly high-powered.
The Archos Smart Home Phone will be available towards the end of September, and will retail for around £129.
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