Showing posts with label MyPhone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MyPhone. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2013

Myphone A818 Duo Review

When we think of local smartphone brands, we can’t help but think that all they sell are rebranded smartphones from overseas. That could be true to some extent, but one company among the others prides themselves as the makers of true Pinoy phonesmy|phone. For years, this company have been producing devices with unique designs and they’re not stopping anytime soon.


The  kind people at my|phone provided us with a black A818 Duo for review. This sleek, 3.5-inch Android looks and feels expensive, but it’s way cheap. See for yourselves if this smartphone would reflect your personality, and maybe raise your patriotism.


Design


The my|phone A818 Duo‘s form is of a typical Android. After all, you can do only so much rectangles and rounded corners. It’s also about as thick as a regular smartphone.


myphone a818 duo review front

The my|phone A818 Duo sports a 3.5-inch capacitive display which very much complements the phone’s profile. The ubiquitous haptic-capable soft-touch buttons are present. A light sensor and a LED indicator are right beside the front camera.


Insofar as the face of the phone is concerned, I’m very glad that my|phone decided against sticking their logo in there, unlike other phone brands locally or internationally. It may be just personal preference, but for me, sticking a logo in the face—no matter how beautiful or prestigious or logo is—would ruin the overall look.


myphone a818 duo review back

The back of the A818 Duo has four main points of interest: 1) the 3.2MP camera; 2) the unique speaker grill; 3) a semi-holographic pattern, and; 4) the logo of the Philippines. These four are well-placed that together they look premium. While some may have to disagree with the Philippine logo being placed there, remember that my|phone markets themselves as Pinoy.


The back is hard plastic and is easily detachable with a snap.


myphone a818 duo review side one myphone a818 duo review side two


The my|phone A818 Duo is lined by a charcoal-grey bezel that is proportional from the bottom to the sides but blows up on the top area to cover the 3.5mm headphone jack, the micro 5-pin USB, and the sleep/wake button.


The only downside I can find with the A818 Duo‘s external features is its glossiness. It gathers too much oil and smudge too fast, both front and back. I need to wipe it clean every now and then because if I didn’t it’s too sticky to handle. Then again, if you have a protective case, I guess that wouldn’t be a problem.


Wrapping up the premium look of the my|phone A818 Duo is its black stock headphones, a 1300mAh battery, a wall charger and a micro 5-pin USB cable, and other documentation.


Display


The my|phone A818 Duo sports a 3.5-inch HVGA TFT capacitive touch display at 320 x 480. With mid and high-tier smartphones quickly moving away to bigger screen sizes, it seems that a 3.5-inch display is the new small.



The A818 Duo‘s display, while still HVGA TFT, is awesome. Sure the iPhone 5′s Retina Display will blow it out of the water, but if I’ll compare it to another entry-level smartphone, I’d say it levels with the Alcatel OT Blaze 985N. The colors are crisp, aren’t washed away by the brightness, has great viewing angles, and is very lively.


The my|phone A818 Duo uses stock Android UI, which is very welcomed by Android casuals and purists alike. Sadly, the lock screen is very unimaginative and needs a lot of work.


Touch sensitivity is not an issue with this Android. But since it picks up rather a substantial amount of smudge and oil very easily, we suggest you apply a screen protector since touch receptivity can be affected.



Performance


The my|phone A818 Duo runs on Android 2.3.6 Gingerbread, has a Mediatek MT6573 650MHz processor, and 180MB of RAM. Needless to say, most entry-level Androids run on this configuration. You can say that this setup belongs to 2009, since the iPhone 3GS ran with power like this three years ago. Still, lots of people are using the latter (meaning its performance is still relevant today, in turn making the A818 Duo also relevant), and because we’re talking about an entry-level phone. To its defense, the my|phone A818 Duo handles pretty well, save for the occasional hiccup of lag while playing games.


Here are the my|phone A818 Duo’s performance benchmarks.


my|phone A818 Duo Review antutu

AnTuTu gives the my|phone A818 Duo a 1895, which ranks it at last place (the Sony Ericsson X10i ranks next). For reference, the Samsung Galaxy Note 2 and the HTC One X+ rank at 15000, while the Alcatel One Touch Blaze 985N is at 1543.


Here are the other results from Quadrant and Vellamo. (Click images to enlarge)


my|phone A818 Duo Review Quadrant my|phone A818 Duo Review Vellamo


Once again, the my|phone A818 Duo gets floor marks on Quadrant. Surprisingly though, it beats the Lenovo P70 by a couple of points on Qualcomm’s Vellamo benchmark.


In real world use, the A818 Duo‘s lack of firepower will be noticeable while playing 3D games. Apps such as City Runner 3D and Fruit Ninja would leave you a bitter taste in the mouth. Simpler games are of no issue and will run like butter. Website rendering is fast and overall UI interaction is smooth. Pair that with the beautiful display and you have a winner.


Audio and Video


Videos are where it’s at with the my|phone A818 Duo. Its simple display brings forward a very nice viewing experience, and I wish I was exaggerating. There’s no hint of pixelization, no ghosting, no lags whatsoever. Even at medium brightness, videos look magnificent, especially HD videos. Either that or I’ve yet to see the iPhone 5′s ultra display.


my|phone A818 Duo Review Video

Sadly, there’s no native YouTube app (you can’t even download one if you wanted to). Your only move is to go to the browser and view YouTube from there.


Sound quality meanwhile is so-so. It’s enjoyable to listen to it, music, movies, and whatnot (it’s sufficiently loud), but there’s a certain quality loss that’s detectable. Bass, for one, diminishes in high volume levels, if not non-existent. Sound direction is also somewhat off; since the speaker is at the lower half of the phone and is small, you can really hear that it beams to wherever the speaker is pointed at, in small waves. The idea is similar to regular earphone in max volume against a dedicated machine with bass at high volume level. The former will hurt the ears while the latter surrounds.


The my|phone A818 Duo is microSD expandable up to 16GB. That’s lots of music and movies for you.


*Video and sound also depend on the quality of files being played


Camera



Most of the time, an entry-level Android’s 5MP camera will let you down. The A818 Duo carries with it a 3.2MP camera without flash. Let the images speak for themselves.


(Click images to enlarge)



These are not the images you’ll be expecting from such a beautiful smartphone. But with proper lighting, timing, and Instagram, I’m sure one can produce spectacular images from the A818 Duo‘s camera.


Battery Life


The my|phone A818 Duo carries a 1300mAh battery. Normal usage at medium brightness (e.g. texting, surfing, playing short sessions of games) would give up to 7 hours of juice.


my|phone A818 Duo Review Internal

Battery is replaceable through the back panel.


Other Features


This Android features a dual-SIM dual-standby feature. It also has an app unique to my|phone—the PINOY App. This app comes in handy for prayers, history projects, trivia, love quotes, and business. Perfect for students, the religious, and voracious readers.


Verdict


If you’re rooting for a Pinoy smartphone packed with features and at the same time light at the pocket, the my|phone A818 Duo might just be for you. With its original design and premium look, people could very well mistake it for a Samsung.


my|phone A818 Duo Review TJ

Sure it has its downsides (i.e. sound, camera, some specs). But for P3,999.00, the my|phone A818 Duo is a guaranteed win. I’d buy it in a heartbeat. You can get it cheaper with recurring trade-in promos.


my|phone A818 Duo Technical Specifications

  • Display: 3.5 inch HVGA Capacitive Touchscreen 320×480 pixel resolution

  • CPU: 650 MHz processor 

  • Memory: 250MB internal storage, 180MB RAM, expandable via microSD up to 16GB

  • OS: Android 2.3.6 Gingerbread

  • Camera: 3.2 MP primary camera, front VGA camera 

  • Battery: 1300mAh

  • Connectivity: WiFi, 3G not supported

  • Features: Dual-SIM dual-standby, PINOY App

Share this my|phone A818 Duo review if you’ve found it helpful. Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus shares would do.


‘Till my next installment.


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Myphone A818 Duo Review

MyPhone A898 Duo Review

With cheap but powerful smartphones pouring into the market at every angle every month, it’s not surprising that people are holding off their purchases to wait for a better release. Well, one smartphone might end all those held purchases because it truly gives the bang for the buck—the MyPhone A898 Duo.


The MyPhone A898 Duo is a sleek Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich device that sports a 4.3-inch IPS display and a 1GHz dual-core processor. The kind people at MyPhone Philippines provided us one and it has been an awesome ride. Read our MyPhone A898 Duo review below, especially if you’re looking to purchase this mean machine for the coming Christmas.


Design


The MyPhone A898 Duo upfront looks like something from Samsung. The glass, the plastic, the contours, it spells Samsung all over. It can pass of as a Galaxy Nexus or a Galaxy SIII when viewed at a distance.


myphone a898 duo front

The MyPhone A898 Duo sports a 4.3-inch capacitive display at its face, which is close to the new 3.5-inch nowadays (4-inches being the new 3.5-inch). The four standard haptic soft-touch buttons are also present, and so are a LED indicator, a front camera, and a light and proximity sensor.


Meanwhile, the rear side of the MyPhone A898  features its 5-megapixel shooter and dual-LED flash. It’s not every month you see a dual-LED flash-equipped Android.


The camera is oriented at the right side, lined by a chrome bezel, and is elevated from the body, presumably to make room for more parts inside. The dual-LED flash, although not bright as other Android flash units I’ve seen, makes up for spreading the light around the image, not directly into it.



The speaker is aligned with the camera, but is located at the lower portion of the body. Regarding the speaker design, two-grills are the what’s fashionable today. I’ve seen it in quite a few local Androids.


The MyPhone A898 Duo‘s back plate itself feels of premium flexible plastic, not the cheap brittle ones that’s used on lower models. It has a black to charcoal black pattern, complemented by the map of the Philippines. In my personal opinion though, the company can do away with the Philippine map for a more cleaner, sleeker look.


The sleep/wake button is placed at the upper right side of the device, the placing of which is surprisingly very comfortable on the hand. Then again, sleep/wake button placements may be relative to a device’s size.


myphone a898 duo topside myphone a898 duo back side


Directly below of the sleep/wake button is the light up button for the haptic soft-touch buttons of the MyPhone A898 Duo. Lastly, at the left side of the device is where the nondescript but perfectly blended volume rocker is found.


Display


The MyPhone A898 Duo sports a 4.3-inch IPS capacitive display, a display size I found very fitting for the device. Unfortunately, the resolution of the display itself falls short on 480×800. It doesn’t mean though that you’ll suffer pixelation on the device’s display (~216 ppi). In fact, it’s so competitive you can pit the MyPhone A898 Duo against international brands of its caliber and you won’t notice the difference.



The advantages of having an IPS display also shows: 1) the MyPhone A898 Duo has no ghosting/trailing effect which is prevalent on large-display phones that aren’t on IPS; 2) it has better viewing angles and is more resistant to sunlight, meaning you’ll get to see more of the device’s display even in sunny conditions and; 3) it produces color more vividly and accurately.


I use the messaging keyboard of Android phones to measure a device’s touch sensitivity. Suffice to say the MyPhone A898 Duo met my display touch sensitivity standard and chances are it’d probably meet yours too.


I’ve played quite a couple of games with this device. More on this below.


The MyPhone A898 Duo uses the stock Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich UI.


Performance


Equipped with a 1GHz dual-core MediaTek MT6577 processor and 471MB of RAM, the MyPhone A898 Duo is very snappy. In fact, it’s such a performer that it is right alongside international brands at benchmark applications. Here are the stats we took off of it.


The Quadrant Standard benchmark  ranks the device at 2671, making it sit pretty at third place, just over the Motorola ATRIX 4G and the Samsung Galaxy Nexus.


myphone a898 duo quadrant standard benchmark

 The more updated Antutu benchmark application places the MyPhone A898 Duo just above the LG Optimus 2X at 5548. At this point, if MyPhone decides to get a quad-core device with a good GPU, it’d be pretty much near the top.


myphone a898 duo antutu benchmark

Qualcomm’s Vellamo app gives the device a 1086 on the HTML5 test and a 352 on the Metal test. With a device bearing the given specs, the scores are just right.


myphone a898 duo vellamo benchmark html5 myphone a898 duo vellamo benchmark metal


Interpreting the data from the benchmark tests, the MyPhone A898 Duo is one solid Android. Yes, it’s powerful, but it can do more on some aspects.


On real life usage, there is no lag at all, and if any, it’s barely, barely noticeable (I might be sounding biased here, but I’m not). Switching from app to app to the homescreen to the appdrawer with background apps, a live wallpaper, WiFi, and notifications on brings no lag. The MyPhone A898 Duo is truly a ground-breaking phone, albeit locally.


Audio and Video


What do you do with a dual-core Android device equipped with a 4.3-inch display? Watch tons of videos on it of course.


The MyPhone A898 Duo completes the mobile viewing experience. With IPS on board and neat sound to boot, HD videos will pop-out as if you’re watching it on a high-end LCD TV. In fairness to the brand, they’ve consistently outed products with good standard since the MyPhone A818 Duo.


myphone a898 duo video

Regarding audio, the MyPhone A898 Duo plays sounds loud and clear (yes, it’s not “canny”). Its speaker is pretty decent actually. You get to play tracks on it from bands such as Maroon 5 and Forever the Sickest Kids and the output is alright. Just don’t expect JBL quality from it.


The MyPhone A898 Duo is microSD expandable up to 32GB.


*Video and sound quality also depend on the format of the file being played


Gaming


Given its specifications, the MyPhone A898 Duo plays games like butter. Angry Birds Space, Bad Piggies HD, Temple Run, Fruit Ninja, Jetpack Joyride, those are all played smoothly.




myphone a898 duo gaming dead trigger
My character died while trying to take this photo.

One game that would test your smartphone’s capabilities though is Dead Trigger. I installed it and played it, and the MyPhone A898 Duo met my expectations to no surprise. Loading times were neat, gun reload was fine, running past enemies were speedy. If you have a game to play, trust the MyPhone A898 Duo to be able to play it.


Camera


myphone a898 duo camera

The MyPhone A898 Duo sports a 5-megapixel snapper, so expect images to be pretty standard. One thing I do like about the device though is its consistency in photos. Autofocus refocuses the lens quickly, giving you enough time to capture moments that would’ve passed away if the autofocus is one second too late.


Here are some sample photos taken using the MyPhone A898′s 5MP camera:


(Click images to enlarge)


myphone a898 duo sample photo


If you’re not satisfied with the photos you’ve captured, use the native photo editor of ICS. Just tap on autofix, adjust warmth, and you’re good to go.


Image quality can increase with proper lighting, timing, and hand steadiness.


Battery Life


The MyPhone A898 Duo‘s battery is rated at 1800mAh and is Li-ion. With regular use (WiFi, 3G, short bouts of gaming, all day texting, Twittering, Facebooking, Flipboarding, medium brightness, etc.), the battery lasts around 8 hours, which is pretty average nowadays.


The only thing I noticed about the device’s battery is even if it’s in full charge, its battery rating quickly degrades to 85% (1% every 30 seconds or so) and from then on stabilizes. It may have something to do with software, but I’m not really sure.


myphone a898 duo battery back insides

Charging time for the device (full charge)  is about 4 hours and 30 minutes give or take.


Other Features


3G Connectivity
Pinoy App
Dual-SIM, dual standby


Verdict


Using the MyPhone A898 Duo was a total joy: I got to surf the internet anywhere, got to see my tweets when I wanted to, and it was as snappy as I expected it to be.  The only thing that fell short was that little glitch on the battery (the 480×800 resolution isn’t even an issue. The display is awesome). But if you won’t mind that like I did, then I see no problem why you would not like this smartphone.




myphone a898 duo
No,that’s not a Galaxy Nexus. That’s a MyPhone A898 Duo.

It may be structurally and internally similar to the MyPhone A878 Duo, but that’s where the similarities end. The MyPhone A898 Duo has a front-facing VGA camera, 3G connectivity, and is a little more expensive. It’s on sale now at PHP 7,499.00, a total bargain when compared to similar performing international devices.


MyPhone A898 Duo Specifications

  • OS: Android 4.0.4 Ice Cream Sandwich

  • Processor: MT6577 dual-core ARMv7 1GHz processor

  • Memory: 471MB RAM, 4GB internal memory, microSD expandable up to 32GB

  • Display: 4.3-inch IPS WVGA LCD capacitive touch panel, 480×800 resolution

  • Camera: 5MP autofocus rear camera, dual-LED flash, 0.3MP VGA front camera

  • Connectivity: 3G, WiFi, GPRS

  • Battery: 1800mAh



MyPhone A898 Duo Review