HUAWEI Honor 5x

Honor made a last minute swipe at CES and blew all of us away with what its 200 dollar phone could offer: a metal body, a large 3000mAh battery, quick fingerprint unlock, and a 5.5" 1080p screen. Honor is also entering the US market with the launch of the Honor 5X, selling it as an unlocked and dual-SIM smartphone.
Honor is a sub-brand of Huawei, but it is not a totally separate company seeing as the charger in the box says "HUAWEI" on it. Also, as seen on some of the built-in apps, "Huawei" and "Honor" are used almost interchangeably.
 
The Honor brand has grown quite fast and will grow even faster with its US launch. As of now, Honor only sells the Honor 5X through Amazon, Newegg.com, and directly from Honor's own online store.
Honor has started focusing on making mid-to-low end hardware for the low-cost markets. With this iteration of Honor's X Series, there is a fresh new design language and a reason for it. It wants to give you bang for your buck. The Honor 5X is targeted at the millennial demographic, younger adults who would like to individualize themselves while also making a statement (or maybe college students who can't afford an iPhone).

Key Features

  • Dual-SIM functionality
  • Full metal body design
  • 5.5-inch LCD IPS 1,080 x 1,920px resolution, 401ppi
  • Qualcomm Snapdragon 616 - Octa-core 1.5GHz Cortex-A53 w/ Adreno 405
  • Android 5.1.1 with Huawei's EM UI 3.1 on top (plans for Android 6.0 Marshmallow)
  • 13MP rear-camera sensor, f/2.0, dual-LED flash, 1080p@30fps video, 5MP front-facing camera sensor
  • 16GB of storage, expandable up to 128GB via microSD
  • LTE Cat.4 150 Mbps, Wi-Fi a/b/g/n, GPS/GLONASS, Bluetooth 4.1, FM radio
  • 3000mAh battery
  • Fingerprint reader

Main Disadvantages

  • No NFC
  • No 5GHz Wi-Fi
  • No Marshmallow (yet)
  • No Quick Charge support
For this price, the lack of 5 GHz Wi-Fi and NFC are more than forgivable, though the lack of the latter would mean no Android Pay support. We can live without both, but we wish this device came with support for Qualcomm's Quick Charge 2.0. Some might wish it had a removable battery, that's one compromise you have to accept.
While the Honor 5X currently does not have Marshmallow, the company has promised an update down in the line.
On the positive side, the Honor 5X has a fingerprint scanner and a metal backside, features that other phones of this price range do not offer.
The Honor 5X comes in 3 colors: Silver, gold, and gray (not pictured). The gray unit is the only one that has a black front side which the metal backing is a few shades darker than the silver unit.
Compared to the Honor 4X, its predecessor, the 5X comes with a bump in the display resolution from 720p to 1080p, increased internal storage of 16GB, a modest increase in processing and graphics power, and greatly improved hardware design that no longer looks generic and boring.

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Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 to Be Made Available in Open Sale Today

 Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 to Be Made Available in Open Sale Today
Xiaomi's popular Redmi Note 3 budget handset will be available via its first open sale on Wednesday. The open sale, which doesn't require users to register in advance, will kick off at 2pm IST via Mi.com.
(Also see: Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 Review)
To recall, at its India launch, the Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 was announced to be available via Mi.com as well as Amazon, and was promised to be made available via more e-commerce partners including Flipkart and Snapdeal. The open sale is only applicable to Mi.com as for now. Other products available in the open sale include the Xiaomi Mi 5, and the 20000mAh Mi Power Bank.
The Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 is available in two RAM and storage versions - one including 2GB of RAM and 16GB of inbuilt storage, and other 3GB of RAM and 32GB of inbuilt storage. The 2GB variant is priced at Rs. 9,999, while the 3GB variant is priced at Rs. 11,999.

The highlight of the new Redmi Note 3 is that it packs a hexa-core Snapdragon 650 processor (four Cortex-A53 cores clocked at 1.4GHz and two Cortex-A72 cores clocked at 1.8GHz). Other specifications of the smartphone are identical with the original version, including a 5.5-inch full-HD 1080x1920 pixels IPS display and offers 178-degree viewing angle. It runs MIUI 7 based on Android Lollipop and supports dual 4G SIM cards (Micro + Nano).

The Redmi Note 3 packs a 4050mAh battery with fast charging support that can charge up to 50 percent in 1 hour. The front camera sports a 16-megapixel rear camera with phase detection autofocus (PDAF) and two-tone flash. It also houses a 5-megapixel front camera. It measures 150x76x8.65mm and weighs 164 grams.

For connectivity, the handset supports 4G LTE (compatible with Indian LTE bands), VoLTE, Bluetooth, 3G, GPRS/ EDGE, GPS, Glonass, Wi-Fi, and Micro-USB options.


Good
  • Great looks and build quality
  • Vivid display
  • Strong CPU performance
  • Very good battery life
  • Offers good value
Bad
  • Expandable storage limited to 32GB
  • Camera could have been better

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Oppo, Vivo Now Among Top 5 Smartphone Vendors; Oust Lenovo and Xiaomi: IDC


 Oppo, Vivo Now Among Top 5 Smartphone Vendors; Oust Lenovo and Xiaomi: IDC
The latest data released by the International Data Corporation (IDC) shows that the smartphone shipments in the first quarter, saw the smallest year-over-year growth in the records. The greatest change that the new data from IDC reveals is that Chinese smartphone makers Oppo and Vivo in Q1 2016 for the first time made it to the top 5 smartphone vendors based on the number of units shipped.
Oppo (fourth) and Vivo (fifth), also replaced the previous fourth and fifth vendors Lenovo and Xiaomi respectively. According to IDC, smartphone vendors shipped 334.9 million smartphones worldwide in Q1 2016 which was slightly more from the 334.3 million units shipped in the first quarter of 2015.
The company attributed the drop in shipments to smartphone saturation in developed markets. The data explicitly said that the Chinese market matured and the demand for smartphones had drastically slowed down in the market. It also said that top smartphone vendors like Samsung and Apple also recorded a year-over-year decline.
Samsung maintained the lead in the worldwide smartphone market though it recorded a year-over-year decline of 0.6 percent in shipments. It shipped 81.9 million units in Q1 2016 compared to 82.4 million units in Q1 2015. The report said that the new high-end Galaxy smartphones from Samsung sold "vigorously in the month of March" and helped the company to push the volume. Talking about the emerging markets, IDC said that Samsung performed well with its more affordable Galaxy J-series. Apple saw a huge drop in shipments and saw 51.2 million units shipped in Q1 2016 dropping from 61.2 million units in Q1 2015 - a decline of over 16 percent. Apple recently reported it's first-ever decline in iPhone sales and also announced its first revenue drop in 13 years.
Chinese smartphone maker Huawei saw a boost in smartphone shipments with 58.4 percent year-over-year growth. The company shipped 27.5 million units increasing from 17.4 million in Q1 2015. IDC says that Huawei's strategy to focus on both premium and budget segment saw impressive response in China as well as European markets.
vivo_x5_pro_front.jpgOppo's entry into top 5 smartphone vendors is credited to its year-over-year growth of over 150 percent. The Chinese company shipped 18.5 million units in Q1 2016 while the company managed to ship 7.3 million units in Q1 2015.
Vivo also saw year-over-year growth of over 100 percent. The company managed to ship 14.3 million units in Q1 2016 while last year same time Vivo shipped 6.4 million units.
Commenting on the new figures, Melissa Chau, Senior Research Manager with IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker said, "Along China's maturing smartphone adoption curve, the companies most aligned with growth are those with products serving increasingly sophisticated consumers. Lenovo benefited with ASPs below US$150 in 2013, and Xiaomi picked up the mantle with ASPs below US$200 in 2014 and 2015. Now Huawei, Oppo, and vivo, which play mainly in the sub-US$250 range, are positioned for a strong 2016. These new vendors would be well-advised not to rest on their laurels though, as this dynamic smartphone landscape has shown to even cult brands like Xiaomi that customer loyalty is difficult to consistently maintain."
Anthony Scarsella, Research Manager with IDC's Mobile Phone team said, "Outside of China, many of these brands are virtually unknown and the ability of these rapidly growing Chinese vendors to gain entry into mature markets such as the United States and Western Europe will be essential if they have aspirations of catching Apple or Samsung at the top. Huawei has proven that it can sell increasingly premium devices."

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Docoss X1 Smartphone Launched at Rs. 888

docoss_x1_front.jpg

The Indian smartphone segment saw a buzz in February when Ringing Bells unveiled its Freedom 251 smartphone at an incredible price of Rs. 251. The smartphone made headlines for few weeks, and caught attention of the entire nation. The Freedom 251 from Noida-based start-up Ringing Bells however soon lost its sheen. The smartphone was surrounded by controversies that even lead to an FIR registered against the makers. The biggest highlight of thesmartphone was its pricing rather than any specifications under the hood. The company received close to 60 million registrations in few days but after taking initial bookings for the handset, the Freedom 251 makers announced pre-booking money to be refunded to users and also confirmed that it would take cash on delivery, upon delivery. The first orders will be delivered in June.
Since then, another India-based brand - mPhone - made headlines about its range of smartphones, offering great specifications at good prices. Unlike with Ringing Bells, the controversy surrounding the makers of the mPhone 'Mango' smartphones was due to the financial state of the proprietors, who were reportedly arrested at the launch of the brand in India for bank fraud.
It is in this atmosphere of doubt for new Indian brands that a Jaipur-based company named Docoss has announced an entry-level smartphone for as little as Rs. 888. Deliveries of the smartphone are in the company's promotions said to begin from May 2, while pre-bookings close on Friday. 
The Docoss X1 is now available to pre-book, however, we recommend users stay away from the deal for now - as the transparency level of the makers in this case is even worse than Ringing Bells or mPhone. Apart from website issues, the entire pre-booking process is a little fishy, and the customer care evaded most of our questions.
After failing to pre-book the smartphone via its website (we were shown an error), Gadgets 360 tried to reach out to the company via its customer care numbers. We were informed that customers will have to use the SMS booking system, detailed on the company's social media handles.
On checking about the delivery of the Docoss X1, a company representative repeated the steps to pre-book without talking about the availability of the handset. Much like Freedom 251, the Docoss official site keeps crashing but opens up after several refreshes. We tried to understand why the company isn't accepting the bookings via its official site, and the representative said that the pages are under maintenance. The launch was first reported by Phoneradar.

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Lenovo Vibe K5 Plus



 
Introduction

Affordable smartphones with good specs don't just scratch the spec sheet surface - those are getting quite popular, and Lenovo is keen on being a part of it with the Vibe K5 Plus.
A 5-inch Full-HD screen, last year's top-selling mid range chip set rehashed for 2016, 2GB of RAM, a 13MP camera, dual-SIM connectivity, and a dedicated microSD slot sound like Lenovo's been paying attention to what's in demand. Certainly not going to shake up the Galaxy S7, but at around $130 or Rs 8,700 , it's a whole different piece of the pie the Vibe K5 Plus is after.

First things first- the name calls for a little clarification. The K5 family consists of three models so far, the Vibe K5, the Vibe K5 Plus we are gonna review, and the Vibe K5 Note. While some makers use the Plus to identify a larger screen, here it denotes the Full-HD resolution higher than the the regular K5's 720p, and a Snapdragon 616 instead of a Snapdragon 415. And that's the entire list of differences.
It's the Vibe K5 Note that stands out, being a phablet from the bunch. A 5.5-inch Full-HD screen, Helio P10 chipset and a fingerprint sensor, an 8MP selfie camera and a larger battery clearly put the Note a notch above its siblings. It's a whole different matter why Lenovo has the K4 Note and the K5 Note both at the same time with only marginal differences in specs.
Back to the task in hand - the Lenovo Vibe K5 Plus.

Lenovo Vibe K5 Plus key features:-

  • Dual-SIM support
  • 5.0-inch LCD IPS 1,080 x 1,920px resolution, 441ppi
  • Snapdragon 616 chipset: Quad-core 1.5 GHz Cortex-A53 & quad-core 1.2 GHz Cortex-A53, Adreno 405 GPU, 2GB of RAM
  • Android 5.1 Lollipop
  • 13MP rear-camera, f/2.2, autofocus, single-LED flash, 1080p@30fps video
  • 5MP front-facing camera, f/2.8
  • 16GB of storage, expandable by up to 32GB via microSD (dedicated slot)
  • LTE Cat.4 150 Mbps, Wi-Fi a/b/g/n/ac, GPS/GLONASS, Bluetooth 4.0, FM radio
  • Removable 2,750mAh Li-Ion battery
  • Noise canceling dedicated secondary microphone, rear-firing stereo speakers, FM radio

Major disadvantages

  • Limited regional availability
  • No Marshmallow
  • Effectively 48GB of maximum storage
For $130 that's a very long list of features, and the disadvantages are far from deal-breakers. Perhaps the Android version is the one that stands out. With budget phones rarely getting updates, Lollipop is likely what the Vibe K5 Plus will spend its entire life with.

 - Lenovo Vibe K5 Plus review - Lenovo Vibe K5 Plus review - Lenovo Vibe K5 Plus review - Lenovo Vibe K5 Plus review
The limited availability is more like the reason for the Vibe K5 Plus' existence, rather than an issue with the phone itself - after all, it was made to compete in emerging markets where price is a decider. The storage cap is but a minor hassle that is having to swap 32GB microSD cards, but we're not seeing it as a major turn-off.

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Vivo V3, V3Max specification and price

Chinese smartphone brand Vivo has launched two new smartphones in India - the V3 and V3Max, priced at Rs. 17,980 and Rs. 23,980 respectively. This is the first time the company has unveiled the smartphones globally, and is touting their 'premium features' and speedy fingerprint recognition.
The Vivo V3 runs the company's Funtouch OS 2.5 based on Android 5.1 Lollipop. It sports a 5-inch (720x1280 pixels) display, and is powered by an octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 616 SoC coupled with 3GB of RAM. The smartphone bears a 13-megapixel rear camera, and an 8-megapixel front-facing camera. It sports 32GB of inbuilt storage that's expandable via microSD card (up to 128GB). It offers the standard connectivity features, including 4G LTE support in India. It runs on a 2550mAh battery.
The Vivo V3Max is nearly identical to the Vivo V3, with differences in battery, display size, memory, and processor. It sports a 5.5-inch (1080x1920 pixels) display complete with 2.5D Corning Gorilla Glass, runs on an octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 652 SoC, bears 4GB of RAM, and is powered by a 3000mAh battery. The other specifications appear to be identical to the Vivo V3.
Apart from the fast fingerprint unlocking, the company is also selling a newly-incorporated split-screen feature that allows users to multitask - for example, watching a movie while chatting with a friend.
Commenting during the launch, Alex Feng, CEO of Vivo India said that , "The V Series designed with creativity and equipped with state of the art technology will be a landmark for Vivo India. India remains our prime focus and the launch of these models is a testimony to our commitment to cater to the ever growing demand of meticulous customers in India and worldwide. The V3 and V3Max offer an unbeatable position of cutting edge technology, impressive looks, and Hi-Fi music quality in the industry."

General
Form factorTouchscreen
Dimensions (mm)143.60 x 71.00 x 7.50
Weight (g)138.00
Battery capacity (mAh)2550
Removable batteryNo
SAR valueNA
 DISPLAY
Screen size (inches)5.00
TouchscreenYes
Resolution720x1280 pixels
HArdware
Processor makeQualcomm Snapdragon 616
RAM3GB
Internal storage32GB
Expandable storageYes
Expandable storage typemicroSD
Expandable storage up to (GB)128
CAMERA
Rear camera13-megapixel
FlashYes
Front camera8-megapixel
SOFTWARE
Operating SystemAndroid 5.1
SkinFuntouch OS 2.5
CONNECTIVITY
Wi-FiYes
Wi-Fi standards supportedNA
GPSYes
BluetoothYes
NFCNo
InfraredNo
USB OTGYes
Headphones3.5mm
FMYes
Number of SIMs2
SIM 1
GSM/ CDMAGSM
3GYes
4G/ LTEYes
Supports 4G in India (Band 40)Yes
SIM 2
GSM/ CDMAGSM
3GYes
4G/ LTEYes
Supports 4G in India (Band 40)Yes
SENSORS
Compass/ MagnetometerYes
Proximity sensorYes
AccelerometerYes
Ambient light sensorYes
GyroscopeNo
BarometerNo
Temperature sensorNo

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Micromax Canvas Spark 2 Plus specification

Micromax, as promised, has unveiled its new Canvas Spark 2 Plus smartphone in India. Priced at Rs. 3,999, the new Canvas-series smartphone will be exclusively available to purchase via Snapdeal, an e-commerce website, from Friday.
To recall, Micromax showcased the Canvas Spark 2 Plus at the Canvas 6 and Canvas 6 Pro launch last week and had promised that it will be revealed in the coming weeks.
The domestic handset maker said that the Micromax Canvas Spark 2 Plus is targeted at first-time smartphone users. The biggest highlight of the handset is that it runs Android 6.0 Marshmallow out-of-the-box and is also the company's first smartphone running the OS. The smartphone will be available in Metallic Grey, Copper Gold, and Champagne Gold colours.
For specifications, the Micromax Canvas Spark 2 Plus features a 5-inch FWVGA (480x854 pixels) display and is powered by a 1.3GHz quad-core processor. It comes with 1GB of RAM and 8GB of inbuilt storage. The smartphone supports expandable storage support via microSD card (up to 32GB). There is a 5-megapixel rear camera with flash and a 2-megapixel front camera also on board. It is backed by a 2000mAh battery. Connectivity options on the handset include GPRS/ EDGE, 3G, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and Micro-USB.
Shubhajit Sen, Chief Marketing Officer, Micromax, said that, "With the launch of the Canvas Spark 2 Plus, we are offering first time users, with a smooth transition at a wallet-friendly price. Our objective is to convert feature phone users into smartphone users, and synthesize technology and affordability in for this device. Through our partnership with Snapdeal for exclusive Spark series, we have very successfully expanded the overall entry smartphone market and created a favourable impact in the e-commerce channel capturing over 11% of the exclusive online market last year."
GENERAL
Release dateApril 2016
Form factorTouchscreen
Battery capacity (mAh)2000
Removable batteryYes
ColoursMetallic Grey, Copper Gold, Champagne Gold
SAR valueNA
DISPLAY
Screen size (inches)5.00
TouchscreenYes
Resolution480x854 pixels
HARDWARE
Processor1.3GHz  quad-core
RAM1GB
Internal storage8GB
Expandable storageYes
Expandable storage typemicroSD
Expandable storage up to (GB)32
CAMERA
Rear camera5-megapixel
FlashYes
Front camera2-megapixel
SOFTWARE
Operating SystemAndroid 6.0
CONNECTIVITY
Wi-FiYes
Wi-Fi standards supportedNA
GPSYes
BluetoothYes
NFCNo
InfraredNo
USB OTGYes
Headphones3.5mm
FMYes
Number of SIMs2
SIM 1
SIM TypeRegular
GSM/ CDMAGSM
3GYes
4G/ LTENo
SIM 2
SIM TypeRegular
GSM/ CDMAGSM
3GNo
4G/ LTENo
SENSORS
Compass/ MagnetometerNo
Proximity sensorYes
AccelerometerYes
Ambient light sensorYes
GyroscopeYes
BarometerNo
Temperature sensorNo

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Micromax Canvas 6 Pro

Micromax Canvas 6 Pro smartphone was launched in April 2016. This phone comes with a 5.50-inch touchscreen display with a resolution of 1080 pixels by 1920 pixels at a PPI of 401 pixels per inch. 

The Micromax Canvas 6 Pro is powered by a 2GHz octa-core MediaTek MT6795m processor and runs with 4GB of RAM. The phone packs 16GB of internal storage that can be expanded via a microsd card. As far as the cameras are concerned, the Micromax Canvas 6 Pro packs a 13-megapixel primary camera on the rear and a 5-megapixel front shooter for selfies. 

The Micromax Canvas 6 Pro runs Android 5.1 and is powered by a 3000mAh removable battery. 

The Micromax Canvas 6 Pro is a dual SIM (GSM and GSM) smartphone that accepts Micro-SIM and Nano-SIM Connectivity options include Wi-Fi, GPS, Bluetooth, FM, 3G, 4G (with support for Band 40 used by some LTE networks in India). Sensors on the phone include Proximity sensor, Ambient light sensor, Accelerometer. 


About Micromax
The largest Indian mobile manufacturer, Micromax is a major player in the budget segment. Apart from feature phones and smartphones, the company also manufacturers tablets and two-in-one devices. Micromax recently launched a sub-brand called Yu, whose products were made available only on e-commerce portals in India. Through the Yu brand, Micromax stepped into the health and fitness gadgets segment as well.

specifications
GENERAL
Release dateApril 2016
Form factorTouchscreen
Battery capacity (mAh)3000
Removable batteryYes
ColoursEbony Black
SAR valueNA



DISPLAY
Screen size (inches)5.50
TouchscreenYes
Resolution1080x1920 pixels
Pixels per inch (PPI)401
HARDWARE
Processor2GHz  octa-core
Processor makeMediaTek MT6795m
RAM4GB
Internal storage16GB
Expandable storageYes
CAMERA
Rear camera13-megapixel
FlashYes
Front camera5-megapixel
SOFTWARE
Operating SystemAndroid 5.1
CONNECTIVITY
Wi-FiYes
Wi-Fi standards supported802.11 b/ g/ n
GPSYes
BluetoothYes, v 4.10
NFCNo
InfraredNo
USB OTGYes
Headphones3.5mm
FMYes
Number of SIMs2
SIM 1
SIM TypeMicro-SIM
GSM/ CDMAGSM
3GYes
4G/ LTEYes
Supports 4G in India (Band 40)Yes
SIM 2
SIM TypeNano-SIM
GSM/ CDMAGSM
3GYes
4G/ LTEYes
Supports 4G in India (Band 40)Yes
SENSRS
Compass/ MagnetometerNo
Proximity sensorYes
AccelerometerYes
Ambient light sensorYes
GyroscopeNo
BarometerNo
Temperature sensorNo

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BlackBerry's priv review



We've been following BlackBerry's journey from the top of the smartphone market to the bottom, and it was extremely tempting on multiple occasions to declare the company waseffectively dead. Poor decisions after poor decisions had resulted in the company's products - which were the absolute "must-have" status symbols of an entire generation - being watched now as relics from the distant past. There are holdouts, no doubt, but their number is diminishing every day.

BlackBerry, the company formerly known as Research in Motion, has had many chances over the past few years to set its course right, but has instead launched one outlandish product after another; trying anything that might work. We liked the unusually shaped Passport (Review | Pictures), but it never went to be a mass-market success. Further, the Classic (Review | Pictures) represented a U-turn in strategy to cater to everyone who hated BB10's touch interface, and the Leap(Review) tried to appeal to budget-minded fans but missed that mark spectacularly.
Now we have yet another strategy shift by BlackBerry, in the form of the BlackBerry Priv. The company has finally caved to pressure and adopted Android, turning its famous business-first ecosystem into a collection of apps and services. However, priced at Rs. 62,990, this phone has its work cut out for it. Will the Priv finally give BlackBerry the success it wants badly, or is it too little and too late?
Look and feel


The Priv immediately feels like a super-premium device, but this is more about its build quality than its looks. At first glance, it doesn't have the "wow" factor that, for example, the Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge (Review | Pictures) has, but that changes the very next moment when you flick the screen up to reveal the keyboard. It's been a really long time since we had anything other than a flat candybar phone to play with, and everything about the mechanism from its sound to its smoothness feels really, viscerally satisfying. It's way too easy to keep absentmindedly flicking the screen up and down when the phone is in your hands, and we didn't have even the slightest doubt about the durability of BlackBerry's design.
The front is nearly all glass, with curved edges on the sides. The screen itself doesn't curve like the one on the Galaxy S6 Edge; the space to the sides is mostly the screen border. This means there's no need to strain to read what's at the screen's outer edges, but you'll still have to deal with reflections which are impossible to avoid.
A large BlackBerry logo is placed front and centre above the screen, with a programmable multi-colour notification LED the front camera further to the right. When the screen is off and the phone is plugged in, you'll see a coloured bar indicating the current charge percentage along the screen's right edge. Apart from this, there is no real way in which BlackBerry has integrated the curves into its software or user experience.
Beneath the sliding screen is a lip that lets you push it up with one hand. Unfortunately, we often hit the on-screen Android home button when trying to do this. The bottom of the phone's lower half is thick enough to accommodate the phone's loudspeaker. The power button is on the left and the volume buttons are on the right.
The phone's rear has a carbon fibre finish which is smooth and has a good grip. There's a thick silver ring around the camera lens, which protrudes quite a bit from the rear. The two-tone LED flash is right next to it. The Nano-SIM and microSD trays are located on the top of the phone's lower half, while the Micro-USB port and 3.5mm socket are on the bottom.
We were concerned about the Priv's size and weight, especially its balance when open. While not it is not the best, but BlackBerry has done well. What surprised us was that this phone is really uncomfortable to talk on - the protective ridge on top dug into our ears and no amount of adjusting made it even worse.
Specifications
The BlackBerry Priv is a high-end phone with suitably high-end specs. Unfortunately, it was launched just few weeks before the entire Android world was refreshed, with every top companies expecting to launch a new flagship at MWC 2016 in late February. The Priv will sound like last year's news very soon....

The hardware of this phone is quite strong. There's a Qualcomm Snapdragon 808 processor, with six CPU cores, 3GB of RAM, 32GB of storage with the option of up to 2TB more using a microSDXC card, LTE support on Indian frequencies, NFC, GPS, and dual-band Wi-Fi ac. The display measures 5.43 inches diagonally which has a resolution of 1440x2560 pixels.
There's a 3410mAh battery with Quick Charge 2.0, but the bundled charger does not support quick charging. The Micro-USB port on the bottom supports SlimPort accessories such as video output adapters. The camera on the rear has an 18-megapixel sensor, Schneider-Kreuznach optics, a two-tone LED flash, and optical image stabilisation. Video recording goes up to 4K at 30fps. The front camera is only 2 megapixels, so don't expect for great-looking shots or video calls from it.
Software and usage
Rather than fork Android, which other companies have attempted to do, BlackBerry has gone with the whole Google package, apps and all. The Priv runs Android 5.1.1 though a Marshmallow update should be released by the end of March. There are lots of tweaks and modifications, but surprisingly not a custom skin that might replicate the BB10 experience more faithfully. To a casual user, BlackBerry's involvement in the software of the Priv won't seem any deeper than other manufacturer's go, with just a few preloaded apps and cosmetic touches.
There are many security-centric features under the hood. BlackBerry knows what its enterprise and corporate customers demand - as we've been told, the name "Priv" comes from "privilege" and "privacy". BlackBerry promises that it has "hardened" Android to protect your data and defend against malware and intrusion attempts. An app called DTEK gives you an overview of your security settings and what your apps have been up to.
The first thing you'll notice in the Android home screen is the trademark red BlackBerry "splat" badge on app icons, letting you know that you have notifications. While catching up with your eyes, you might lose the ability to see how many notifications you have in each app. The badge is also incorporated into the notifications in the lock screen and in the pull-down shade: a strip of icons along the top lets you see alerts for each individual app or phone function, and for some reason there is a numerical count next to each one here, even though they're much smaller.
In addition to widgets and app icons, you can also have shortcut icons in the home screens as well. These are very handy, but might confuse some users. These help you perform specific actions, and have descriptive names such as "Check battery level", "Turn Wi-Fi on/off", "Schedule BBM meeting", and "Text contact". This still doesn't quite make up for the relatively sparse selection of quick toggles in the notifications shade.
One very neat feature is that you can call up home screen widgets related to specific apps by swiping up or down on their icons. This lets you quickly pull up your Chrome favorites or VLC's playback controls, see messages between you and a particular contact, or even check the contents of your Google Drive. It's really convenient and lets you avoid cluttering up your home screens. The app drawer scrolls vertically, and there are tabs for widgets and shortcuts beyond what you choose to have outside in the home screens.
There's also a semi-transparent tab on the right, and if you swipe inwards from the edge, you'll be taken to a screen that shows you your upcoming calendar events, unread messages, to-dos, and favorite contacts. You can turn it off if you do't want it, or swap it to the left. It doesn't serve very much for the purpose it is made for because it duplicates a lot of other functionality.
You can navigate through the OS just as you would with any other Android phone. That means BB10's confusing gestures have thankfully been dispensed with, but you don't get to quickly dip into the BlackBerry Hub to check activity. The hub still exists, but as an app, not a seamless part of the underlying OS. It's a powerful way to sort through emails and messages, especially if you juggle between multiple accounts and services, and it really does make use of the large screen. However, the floating buttons everywhere are really distracting.
Long-pressing the on-screen Android home button brings up a row of shortcuts to the device-wide search function, Google Now, and the BlackBerry Hub respectively. Unfortunately, it's way too easy to trigger this accidentally, especially when trying to slide the screen up to reveal the keyboard.
It seems as though BlackBerry put a lot of thought into porting its native experience over to Android, and in some ways it feels as though this is what BB10 should always have been like. Frankly, some of the little touches are so nice that we hope Google steals them and bakes them into Android natively. On the other hand, other manufacturers have done more to take advantage of similar hardware, such as allowing split-screen multitasking or floating windowed apps.
The keyboard
The Priv's biggest draw is obviously its keyboard, but there is definitely a bit of a misconnection between the device's hardware and software when it comes to actually using it, because BlackBerry has tried to cater to its legacy users as well as new ones who are already familiar with Android. You can also assign shortcuts to each letter and activate them just by long-pressing that key, like on any classic BlackBerry. Shortcuts within the Hub also work as expected.
As far as typing comfort goes, the keyboard is excellent. It isn't as large or spaced out as the legendary Bold series' keyboards, but it has the right contours and you can get used to it in no time. It flexes a little in the center, but that won't slow you down.
The main problem is the keyboard layout - it has the classic BlackBerry four-line layout with numbers in a block on the left rather than across the top. The Alt key is where you'd expect Shift to be, and Shift is on the bottom row. Enter and Backspace are also in different positions. All this suits BlackBerry users just fine, but the problem is that this layout is not reflected in the soft keyboard - if you want to just quickly tap something out, you'll have to use the more standard BB10 layout.
The Priv's keyboard regains the track pad-like abilities which we first saw and loved on the BlackBerry Passport. You can swipe to the left while typing to backspace entire words, and double-tap to move the text cursor around, which are both wonderful features. You can also swipe down to pull up the on-screen Symbols panel, or swipe up to "fling" autocomplete suggestions into your text.
Speaking of autocomplete, the Priv shows suggestions overlaid on keys when using the soft keyboard (BB10 style) and in a Passport-a bar across the bottom of the screen while using the physical keyboard. This makes other elements on screen to jump around when it pops up.
Another thing to consider is that with a standard 16:9 screen, the Priv becomes very, very tall with the keyboard out. BlackBerry has managed to get the balance just right so it isn't top-heavy, but you will have a tough time reaching for buttons and fields on-screen with your thumbs positioned on the keyboard. You can swipe around to scroll, and sometimes use Enter or Backspace to do things, respectively, but there's no cursor and no way to select things and navigate around without constantly shifting your hands around. One-handed use is completely out of the question.
There are definitely people in this world who still refuse to give up their old QWERTY phones, and many more who have had to settle for a touchscreen but would go back given half a chance. The Android world has been sorely lacking physical keyboards for a long time. BlackBerry might have found itself a profitable niche here, but we'd advise anyone interested in this phone primarily for its keyboard to give it a test run at a store before spending a lot of money on it.
Performance and camera

The BlackBerry Priv handles itself very well, and we wouldn't have expected anything less considering its pedigree. Day-to-day tasks posed no problem, and we found ourselves much more at ease moving around Android than we ever did with BB10 - though of course BlackBerry loyalists will need time to get used to it. The only problem was that the middle-rear of the phone got hot even while we were doing absolutely mundane things like setting up email accounts.
Benchmark scores were good: we got 60,780 in AnTuTu and 22,271 in Quadrant. 3DMark's Ice Storm Extreme preset was maxed out, and the Unlimited preset gave us 19,288. Similarly, we saw 24fps in GFXbench which reflected the smooth gameplay we were able to get in 3D titles such as Dead Trigger 2. There's more than enough horsepower for all your business and road warrior needs.
However, BlackBerry is also showcasing the Priv's entertainment capabilities, and in light of that we have to say the screen was great in terms of sharpness, brightness, and color reproduction. However, reflections on the curved sides made it difficult to enjoy gaming and movies except in darkened rooms. The speaker on the bottom is excellent, pushing loud, rich sound that didn't distort even at high volumes.
The camera app is a bit cluttered, and requires multiple taps to do basic things like switching to video recording. We liked the fact that the slide-out keyboard gave us a good grip while taking photos, and the space bar acted like a shutter too. You get live filters, a panorama mode, a timer, and an option to crop to 1:1 square photos. Picture quality was good, but not really impressive considering this phone's status as a flagship. Daytime shots felt a little washed out, and fine details didn't really make it while examining photos at full size.The front camera is quite awful, but 4K videos taken with the rear camera looked good.
Battery life was excellent. We ran through at least a day and a half with multiple email and messaging accounts active, a bit of gaming and video playback, and plenty of 4G data usage. Our video loop test lasted for 9 hours, 32 minutes before the Priv needed to shut down.
Verdict
Will BlackBerry users be happy transitioning to Android, or will they lose what they cherish he most? That's the unfortunate question that anyone still clinging to their Bold or Curve will have to answer for themselves. The Priv isn't quite the single-minded business tool that its predecessors have been, and while we understand the trade off in favor of versatility, the Priv doesn't do very much that other high-end Android phones don't already do. The massive advantage of native Android apps makes the Priv more attractive than BB10 devices, but not more so than, for example, the Samsung Galaxy S6 which now costs about half as much. In fact, without today's conveniences such as a fingerprint reader and a decent front camera, the Priv actually comes across as a little old-school.
For you to choose to spend Rs. 62,990 on this phone, you'd have to be majorly invested in BlackBerry's keyboard and promise of security, or just really be a fan of the brand. That also means that there's very little to tempt those who are perfectly happy with their iPhone or Android phones. The target audience of die-hard BlackBerry fans who are willing and are able to afford this seem much like a minority within a minority, and it might not be enough to pull this company back from the brink.
If BlackBerry would have trimmed some features and delivered an Android phone with a keyboard at a lower price point, we'd have been far more enthusiastic, and the company might have found itself some new fans. However, everything launched since the Z10 seems pointlessly overpriced, chasing an audience that might not even exist. All predictions of BlackBerry's demise have thus far not come to pass, but we're not sure how long that can continue at this rate.

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