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Huawei Ascend P8 wins important European smartphone award

Review: Huawei P8 smartphone
Jul 23, 2015

It's championed as having the best smartphone camera technology on the market - Dana Johannsen puts Huawei's new P8 through its paces on a trip to London.



bfe0ee867c558feb39380714c94e1b285ba4d7e2_620x310.jpg

Huawei have focused plenty of attention on the camera in the creation of the new P8 smartphone.
These days it seems like you haven't been on holiday unless you have the smug picture postcard snaps to share on social media.

Our pics are getting all the more professional looking too, thanks to improvements in camera technology, particularly on mobile phones, and apps like Instagram, which make cutesy faux-Polaroid filters only a click of a button away.

Given our obsession with snapping and sharing everything these days, it is on the camera that Huawei (pronounced Wah-way) has focused much of its attention in the creation of their slick new P8 smartphone. The P8, which will be released on the New Zealand market later this month, is Huawei's flagship product as the Chinese company looks to take on Apple and Samsung in the smartphone space.

The P8 is being championed as having the best camera technology of all the new whizz-bang smartphones on the market, with the 13MP camera coming with all sorts of added features from the clever to the ridiculous (more on these later).


Huawei claims the P8 has best-in-class OIS (optical image stabilisation) and the world's first four-colour RGBW imaging sensor which, for the benefit of the tech illiterate (me), improves brightness in high contrast conditions, reduces noise in low light and produces pictures with more natural colours. There's also a whole heap of other letters and numbers that, truth be told, I don't really know what they mean.

Fortunately, Huawei also make the bold claim the camera functions on the P8 are "idiot-proof". There's probably no better person to put that theory to the test than a humble sports hack, so I was dispatched around London following the global launch of the new phone to get snapping.

8eb40c536ba969d3214572fa3693a6c6ed9220c3_620x311.jpg

Flowers at Columbia Road Flower Market taken on a Huawei P8. Photo / Dana Johannsen
The difference in the clarity and colour of picture quality was immediately obvious when shooting with the P8. Photos of London all tend to look one colour: grey. On the P8 the images look brighter with more depth of colour, who, but for E.L. James, knew there were so many shades of grey?

Beyond the point and shoot functionality, it gets a little tricky. To get the most out of the added features of the phone it takes a bit more tinkering. There is a "light painting" mode, which is essentially a long exposure, allowing you to create artistic-looking night-time shots, but this was tough to master in one afternoon walkabout with the phone.

In a nod to the pervasive selfie culture, the P8 also claims to have the best "selfie camera" on the market. The 8MP forward-facing camera, means better picture quality, particularly in low light, for those all-important selfies.

93f0ccf2e3f56d109230b3f20600741d915de19f_620x310.jpg

Regents Park, taken on a Huawei P8. Photo / Dana Johannsen
Where things get really weird are with the "beauty mode", which allows you to preset your own "beauty enhancement settings". You can make your skin tone more even, your face slimmer, your eyes bigger and brighter. There's even a function where you can programme the phone to recognise your face in photos and it will automatically airbrush you so you look better than all your friends.

It's all a bit disparaging when you think too deeply about it. If it isn't bad enough, models and celebrities are airbrushed to within an inch of their life in advertising campaigns; now it is rolling into our social feeds as well. But if nothing else, it provides hours of entertainment for friends and family as you see how closely you can resemble a wax figure.

Beyond the camera, there are other bonuses to travelling with the P8. Huawei promises less lag time in picking up local networks when you land, connecting three times faster than other phones. There's also room to place two SIM cards in the phone, allowing you to easily switch between SIMs without fumbling around putting one in and taking the other one out.

SCCZEN_090715SPLHUAWEI13_620x310.jpg

An East London hipster, captured on a Huawei P8. Photo / Dana Johannsen
So, once you land you won't have to wait long at all to upload that photo of the clouds you took from the plane seat on to Instagram.
 
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Huawei Kirin 950 chipset outperforms Samsung Exynos 7420 in benchmark test

Sanjit Dutt Aug 18, 2015 11:07 AM

huawei-corporate-logo.jpg

Huawei Corporate Logo (Reuters)

The first benchmark test results of Huawei's upcoming Kirin 950 chipset have revealed that it has outperformed Samsung's Exynos 7420 system on chip (SoC).

Huawei's Kirin 950 chip is built using TSMC's 16nm FinFET process and will be powered by an octa-core processor, with a quad ARM Cortex-A53 + quad ARM Cortex-A72 configuration. The four cortex A72 cores running at a speed of 2.4 GHz makes the Kirin 950 capable of outperforming the four cortex A57 cores, currently powering Samsung's current flagship devices.

In a Geekbench single-core test, the Huawei Kirin 950 chipset achieved a score of 1909 points, as compared to the score of about 1400 points recorded by Samsung's Exynos 7420 processor. The Huawei Kirin 950 also outperformed the Exynos 7420 in the multi-core test with a score of 6096 points, as against a score of 4900 points recorded by Samsung's chipset.

Huawei is expected to include the Kirin 950 chipset in its upcoming flagships to be launched by the end of the year. Meanwhile, Samsung has already begun working on a new Mongoose SoC, which will be highly powerful and could be featured in its upcoming flagships in 2016.

The Geekbench test results of other next-generation chipsets have been posted on Chinese social website Weibo in the form of a graph comparing their scores. According to the listing, the Nvidia Denver achieved the highest single-core score of 2599, while the highest multi-core score of 7497 was recorded by Samsung's Exynos M1. The Apple A9 chipset achieved single and multi-core scores of 2090 and 3569, while the A9X achieved a single-core score of 2109 and a multi-core score of 5101.

The scores achieved by the next-generation chipsets indicate that the flagship devices coming next year from Apple, Samsung and Huawei will be packed with powerful processors for extreme multitasking and gaming activities.

Huawei Kirin 950 chipset outperforms Samsung Exynos 7420 in benchmark test
 
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Huawei, Lenovo, and I would have to add Xiaomi in there too as global player. The rests are small players fighting for scrap. Don't underestimate Xiaomi. They have the best marketing campaign, and most memorial and friendly UI, and are slowly expanding into other electronic businesses. Once they gain the capital of other big players, they will use the brand awareness to dominate. However that remains to be seen. My favorite is Lenovo due to their brand quality and reliability of their laptop brand especially in IT. But Lenovo kept choosing the wrong partnership and global icons such as using aging Kobe and down the hill actor Ashton Kutcher to represent their brand in the global market.


What the hell you are talking about buddy? There is only two slots. You can either use two slots for sim cards or split it up, one for sim and one for microSD.

Well in laptop lenovo is good. But in smartphone business they still lag far behind. I have never seen any chinese smartphone phone brand in shops here apart from huawei who is ptesent in almost all electronic/smartphone shops i have been to. I have never seen a lenovo phone in my life, much less xiaomi(which i had never heard of before i red it in PDF.lol). Lenovo is big on laptop and tablet here though, not just on smartphone.

You cant compare huawei with Xiaomi, its a joke and an insult to huawei. Xiaomi is more about hype for now. It still needs to prove that it can sustain its model in the coming years, and also invest heavily on R&D to differentiate its products and make more critical/high end parts in house, instead of relying on low cost supplies from foreign parts makers. When it looses it low cost advantage then its game will be over(in case it doesn't move up the value chain and be seen more as a high end brand and bought for that image, not just price). So Xiaomi's model remains to be seen. Seems even Oppo and One plus one makes better phones and are more global than Xiaomi , from what i have red online. :)
 
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Well in laptop lenovo is good. But in smartphone business they still lag far behind. I have never seen any chinese smartphone phone brand in shops here apart from huawei who is ptesent in almost all electronic/smartphone shops i have been to. I have never seen a lenovo phone in my life, much less xiaomi(which i had never heard of before i red it in PDF.lol). Lenovo is big on laptop and tablet here though, not just on smartphone.

You cant compare huawei with Xiaomi, its a joke and an insult to huawei. Xiaomi is more about hype for now. It still needs to provr that it csn sustain its model in the coming years, and also invest heavily on R&D to differentiate its products and make more critical/high end parts inhouse, instead of relying on low cost supplies from foreign parts makers. When it looses it low cost advantage then its game will be over(in case it doesnt move up the value chain and be seen more as a high end brand and bought for that image, not just price). So Xiaomi's model remains to be seen. Seems even Oppo and One plus one makes better phones and are more global than Xiaomi , from what i have red online. :)

Xiaomi's business model relies on their software environment, not their hardware. Their hardware is just a platform. They sell content. Huawei is a pure hardware company from chips to cell phones.
 
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I am not sure about Xiaomi, but its US$50B market value set by investors says something, after all those investors vote for Xiaomi with their money , you have to take it seriously. Now Xiaomi also goes vertical, they started to design their own CPU.
 
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Huawei announces Honor 7i in China

Prasad, 20 August, 2015

Huawei has announced the new Honor 7i. The biggest feature of this phone is the rotating camera module that can be plucked out and pointed forward to take self portraits. Using the main camera for self portraits will result in much higher quality images, and the rotating camera also allows taking photos from different perspectives by simply pointing the camera module instead of turning the entire phone. The module is supposedly rugged and Huawei claims will last for two years even if you open it 132 times a day, which is quite a lot. Powering the camera is a Sony 13 megapixel BSI sensor with 28mm f2.0 lens.

gsmarena_001.jpg


The Honor 7i is also the first phone to have a fingerprint sensor on the side of the phone. The sensor is on the left of the phone and Huawei claims it is the smallest sensor on any phone. The sensor can be used to unlock the phone and take pictures by touching with your thumb.

The phone has an aluminum frame on the side with glass on the back and covering the 5.2-inch 1080p display on the front. Inside is the new Snapdragon 616 with 3GB RAM and 32GB storage although there is also a version with 2GB RAM and 16GB storage. Both variants have a microSD slot. Powering it is EMUI 3.1 and a 3000mAh battery.



Huawei announces Honor 7i in China - GSMArena.com news
 
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when is P7 coming to Canada? Right now the only Huawei is the Y536

In the price range of P7, you have many top Chinese competitors:

OnePlus 1,
low end of OnePlus 2,
Meizu MX5,
Huawei P8 Lite,
Huawei G7,
Oppo R7.
Xiaomi Mi note,

Even Asus Zen phone and Moto X.

I think OnePlus and Huawei G7 are even better than P7 for the bang of bucks and looks. Oppo R7 is not bad either.

Personally I hate Xiaomi, and don't like the design of Meizu MX5.

I know that cuz I am in the process of upgrading my own gears and did some research. I'll buy OnePlus 2 and Huawei G7 as the backup.

Review: Huawei P8 smartphone
Jul 23, 2015

It's championed as having the best smartphone camera technology on the market - Dana Johannsen puts Huawei's new P8 through its paces on a trip to London.



bfe0ee867c558feb39380714c94e1b285ba4d7e2_620x310.jpg

Huawei have focused plenty of attention on the camera in the creation of the new P8 smartphone.
These days it seems like you haven't been on holiday unless you have the smug picture postcard snaps to share on social media.

Our pics are getting all the more professional looking too, thanks to improvements in camera technology, particularly on mobile phones, and apps like Instagram, which make cutesy faux-Polaroid filters only a click of a button away.

Given our obsession with snapping and sharing everything these days, it is on the camera that Huawei (pronounced Wah-way) has focused much of its attention in the creation of their slick new P8 smartphone. The P8, which will be released on the New Zealand market later this month, is Huawei's flagship product as the Chinese company looks to take on Apple and Samsung in the smartphone space.

The P8 is being championed as having the best camera technology of all the new whizz-bang smartphones on the market, with the 13MP camera coming with all sorts of added features from the clever to the ridiculous (more on these later).


Huawei claims the P8 has best-in-class OIS (optical image stabilisation) and the world's first four-colour RGBW imaging sensor which, for the benefit of the tech illiterate (me), improves brightness in high contrast conditions, reduces noise in low light and produces pictures with more natural colours. There's also a whole heap of other letters and numbers that, truth be told, I don't really know what they mean.

Fortunately, Huawei also make the bold claim the camera functions on the P8 are "idiot-proof". There's probably no better person to put that theory to the test than a humble sports hack, so I was dispatched around London following the global launch of the new phone to get snapping.

8eb40c536ba969d3214572fa3693a6c6ed9220c3_620x311.jpg

Flowers at Columbia Road Flower Market taken on a Huawei P8. Photo / Dana Johannsen
The difference in the clarity and colour of picture quality was immediately obvious when shooting with the P8. Photos of London all tend to look one colour: grey. On the P8 the images look brighter with more depth of colour, who, but for E.L. James, knew there were so many shades of grey?

Beyond the point and shoot functionality, it gets a little tricky. To get the most out of the added features of the phone it takes a bit more tinkering. There is a "light painting" mode, which is essentially a long exposure, allowing you to create artistic-looking night-time shots, but this was tough to master in one afternoon walkabout with the phone.

In a nod to the pervasive selfie culture, the P8 also claims to have the best "selfie camera" on the market. The 8MP forward-facing camera, means better picture quality, particularly in low light, for those all-important selfies.

93f0ccf2e3f56d109230b3f20600741d915de19f_620x310.jpg

Regents Park, taken on a Huawei P8. Photo / Dana Johannsen
Where things get really weird are with the "beauty mode", which allows you to preset your own "beauty enhancement settings". You can make your skin tone more even, your face slimmer, your eyes bigger and brighter. There's even a function where you can programme the phone to recognise your face in photos and it will automatically airbrush you so you look better than all your friends.

It's all a bit disparaging when you think too deeply about it. If it isn't bad enough, models and celebrities are airbrushed to within an inch of their life in advertising campaigns; now it is rolling into our social feeds as well. But if nothing else, it provides hours of entertainment for friends and family as you see how closely you can resemble a wax figure.

Beyond the camera, there are other bonuses to travelling with the P8. Huawei promises less lag time in picking up local networks when you land, connecting three times faster than other phones. There's also room to place two SIM cards in the phone, allowing you to easily switch between SIMs without fumbling around putting one in and taking the other one out.

SCCZEN_090715SPLHUAWEI13_620x310.jpg

An East London hipster, captured on a Huawei P8. Photo / Dana Johannsen
So, once you land you won't have to wait long at all to upload that photo of the clouds you took from the plane seat on to Instagram.


Huawei P8 is the best all-around Chinese premium range handset in the int'l market.

If one wants a top-line premium phone with the best value other than Samsung S6 and iphone 6, it's either Huawei P8 or OnePlus 2.
 
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Review: Huawei P8 smartphone
Jul 23, 2015



SCCZEN_090715SPLHUAWEI13_620x310.jpg

An East London hipster, captured on a Huawei P8. Photo / Dana Johannsen
So, once you land you won't have to wait long at all to upload that photo of the clouds you took from the plane seat on to Instagram.

Huawei P8 is extremely beautifully-designed, probably the most elegant phone out there.

I think it must lure a lot of female middle-class buyers.


BTEKT is a very sharp reviewer.


This is a Spanish reviewer on P8. Having made P8 his own primary phone, he was crying for its beauty: :lol:

 
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In the price range of P7, you have many top Chinese competitors:

OnePlus 1,
low end of OnePlus 2,
Meizu MX5,
Huawei P8 Lite,
Huawei G7,
Oppo R7.
Xiaomi Mi note,

Even Asus Zen phone and Moto X.

I think OnePlus and Huawei G7 are even better than P7 for the bang of bucks and looks. Oppo R7 is not bad either.

Personally I hate Xiaomi, and don't like the design of Meizu MX5.

I know that cuz I am in the process of upgrading my own gears and did some research. I'll buy OnePlus 2 and Huawei G7 as the backup.




Huawei P8 is the best all-around Chinese premium range handset in the int'l market.

If one wants a top-line premium phone with the best value other than Samsung S6 and iphone 6, it's either Huawei P8 or OnePlus 2.

I do not like the one plus marketing in Canada. You have to be referred by someone, pay and wait for the phone to be manufactured.
 
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I do not like the one plus marketing in Canada. You have to be referred by someone, pay and wait for the phone to be manufactured.

if it's not urgent for you, you can wait half a year, then i guess that you could pretty much get OP2 without an invitation.

if it's urgent, I'd go for Huawei G7 or even oneplus 1 (still good) instead. I just love G7's all medal body look and powerful specs! Say my own pecking order in terms of best value/spec/look Chinese phones is like this:

- Oneplus 2 (for tech geeks) or Huawei P8 (for ladies mainly IMO? - it's just tooo beautiful).

-Huawei G7, OnePlus 1

-Oppo R7, Huawei P8 Lite,

-Huawei P7, Meizu MX5, P6, lenovo, ZTE, elephone, xiaomi etc
 
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HuaWei should stop of using USA-made software and SoC's. The heart of the hardware of smartphone/router/etc is the SoC (System On a Chip), and backdoors at hardware level are too dificult to detect and impossible to avoid once detected.
At the software level, remember things like "stagefright" bug/backdoor in Android.

I think Chinese companies will continue using Android because it's free, and in consequence the only way to avoid that is that China government will support the creation of a own linux-based SO like Android and make it free for Chinese companies.

When you don't pay for the product (Android) it means that you are the product, i.e. sheep on a farm don't pay for food :D.
 
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