Dinner out with a side of car exhaust? Yes\, please

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Dinner out with a side of car exhaust? Yes, please

I last ate out in – when was it? June? I’d have to check the credit card statement to be sure, but it was somewhere back in that slim window between Melbourne COVID-19 lockdown 1.0 and 2.0.

What's so bad about eating outdoors?Credit:AP

The venue was a favourite local, with a Sicilian-inspired menu that varies in the seasonal vegetable details more than the big-picture mains, but I like that because you basically know what you are going to have before you sit down to order.

It’s a Friday-night go-to when you can’t be bothered cooking and want a spritz before you eat, and if it’s heaving – which it always was on a Friday night pre-COVID – they find us a couple of stools at the bar.

On this inter-lockdown night out we shared our pre-booked time slot with half a dozen other diners in a room that normally seats 40. The bar stools were off-limits, the waitstaff wore masks, and the vibe was mutual relief that we’d survived lockdown and they were still in business.

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Flash forward to Premier Daniel Andrews' announcement that we wouldn’t be eating out anywhere any time soon, and Melbourne felt a collective heartsink – not just for the months of tepid takeaway stretching to the horizon, but for the havoc we felt it would wreak on Melbourne’s already battered hospitality businesses and their workers.

On Monday the state government and the City of Melbourne announced a $100-million plan to get us back eating out, albeit outdoors.

Exactly what I'd been thinking. Block off some side streets where it won’t bother the neighbours, get rid of some car parks and have tables and planters and awnings instead. Go for it.

Now, I am not going to pick a fight with Stephen Downes, who wrote this week that Melbourne wouldn’t buy this eating outside caper. Melbourne is not New York or Paris or Rome, he wrote, and Melburnians are not New Yorkers or Parisians or Romans, who like the show-off factor of eating on the street. We are sober suburbanites who take our very fine dinners out very seriously, and indoors.

He may be right about the dollar details of the government’s plan. But his vision of what Melbourne diners want felt like the golden years of The Good Food Guide circa 1980. This is 2020, circa COVID-19. This is a public health and eating out emergency. Compromises will have to be made.

After what seems like the best part of a year spent eating lukewarm takeaway out of soggy compostable cardboard containers, I’ll take some meals out with a side of car-exhaust and tram-rumble. As long as the food comes straight from the kitchen, on a plate, and even if the waiter-person is wearing a mask. Bring it on, please.

Matt Holden is a Melbourne writer.

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Dinner out with a side of car exhaust? Yes\, please

Apple iPhone 11 256GB Review
Apple iPhone 11 256GB Review

Apple iPhone 11 256GB Review

Subhrojit Mallick   |  24 Oct 2019
DIGIT RATING
82 /100
  • design

    90

  • performance

    90

  • value for money

    80

  • features

    65

  • PROS
  • Wide-angle camera offers more flexibility
  • Night Mode in camera takes sharp low-light photos
  • CONS
  • Android and Windows integration still patchy.
  • Subject separation in portrait mode not 100 percent accurate

Verdict

The iPhone 11 is the best smartphone to buy if you aren't willing to spend over a lakh. With improved cameras, faster processor and a familiar design, the iPhone 11 takes right after the predecessor and makes it better.

BUY Apple iPhone 11 256GB
Buy now on amazon Available 76900

Apple iPhone 11 256GB detailed review

While the more expensive flagships got the ‘Pro’ moniker, the iPhone 11 is the default iPhone for the masses. If you look at the set of features, it’s not a massive upgrade over the iPhone XR considering the screen and the design largely remain the same. But the iPhone 11 is more tightly integrated with the features of the two more expensive flagships. For instance, its dual rear cameras are the same as on Pro models, and the hardware inside is also the same as the iPhone 11 Pro. On paper, you are losing out on the OLED display and the extra telephoto lens while gaining a larger display and a larger battery.

The fact that the iPhone 11 is a good phone to use is more or less established. For whatever the iPhone 11 offers and doesn’t offer, let’s see if it’s worth spending your money on.

Performance

If you compare spec-sheets, the iPhone 11 will not match up to the Android flagships. Most high-end Android phones offer up to 12GB RAM, UFS 3.0 storage, and the likes. Apple never had to pack so much in the iPhones, and yet, the iPhones have outperformed Android flagships year after year. It’s the same with the iPhone 11. You get the best performance ever on a smartphone. What’s more, the performance is more or less the same as the more expensive iPhone 11 Pro. The reason is the Apple A13 Bionic chip. The chip itself bears many similarities with the A12 Bionic in the iPhone XR last year, but as Apple mentioned at the launch, there are now 8.5 billion transistors as against 6.9 billion in the previous generation. It’s still a six-core SoC made on the 7nm manufacturing process, along with a four-core GPU and an eight-core Neural Engine. However, Apple claimed a 20 percent boost in performance and 20 percent boost in graphics rendering, made possible primarily by improving the performance of each transistor.

Sure enough, the benchmark results pits the A13 Bionic on iPhone 11 higher than all other Android chipsets, and the A12 Bionic from last year. On AnTuTu, the iPhone 11 scored 408397, 14 percent higher than the Samsung Galaxy Note 10+, and as advertised, 20 percent higher than what the iPhone XR scored last year.

On Geekbench 4, the iPhone 11 showed similar results with 5473 in single-core performance and 13765 in multi-core performance. Both these scores are around 20 percent higher than the Galaxy Note 10+ and the iPhone XR.

Clearly, the CPU performance is better than the best Android phone of the year, as well as the iPhone XR last year. As for GPU performance, the 4-core GPU works in tandem with Apple’s Metal API which improves textures and supports HDR in gaming. On 3DMark Slingshot, the iPhone 11 scored 5102, slightly higher than the score achieved by the Galaxy Note 10+, and around 29 percent higher than the iPhone XR. The results are similar on GFXBench Metal as well. Interestingly, the iPhone 11 scored higher than the iPhone 11 Pro in this test, but that’s primarily because the iPhone 11 has lesser number of pixels to render owing to the HD resolution of the panel.

Now benchmark numbers do peg the iPhone higher than the competition, but you don’t really need to run benchmarks to understand how fast the iPhone 11 is. In the real-world, the iPhone 11 works flawlessly. That’s in part because of how well Apple optimises the software, along with the improved hardware. No task is daunting and stressful enough for the smartphone, be it editing RAW files on Adobe Lightroom or playing Call Of Duty: Mobile or shooting 4K videos at 60 FPS. On Gamebench, the iPhone 11 clocked 59 FPS in both Asphalt 9 and PUBG Mobile, with 99 percent stability in both cases. The quality of graphics is visibly better than most other high-end Android phones we tested this year.

Now there used to be an argument on how there’s nothing in the Apple App Store that really stresses out the hardware. Apps and games common to both iOS and Android run equally well on the best Android phones as well as the iPhones. But with the new Apple Arcade, there’s now a good reason to demand superior hardware. The Arcade games have much better graphics and complex gameplay, with requires high usage of the GPU and CPU. Even there, on Redout Space Assault (an Apple Arcade exclusive title) the iPhone 11 delivers smooth 60 FPS with 99 percent stability. Interestingly, peak GPU usage is lesser at 77 percent as compared to 88 percent in PUBG Mobile, despite the former offering much better graphics than PUBG. The reason could be better optimisation considering how closely Apple works with game developers.

Software

The iPhone 11 runs on iOS 13.1 out of the box. If you are coming from an Android device (like I did), this is where you might feel a little lost. But the interface is designed to make things as simple as possible. As a result, the learning curve is not all that steep. Apple users will feel right at home considering devices as old as the iPhone 6s have received the update to the latest version. There is now a system-wide dark mode and most of the popular apps are compatible with it. FaceID is now visibly faster and there are more granular controls of privacy including notifications for when an app is using location services, Wi-Fi and the likes. The Photos app have been consolidated further and it's much more intuitive than before and as such, there’s some change or the other in every native iOS feature.

iOS 13.1 brings new features like a swipe keyboard, a file browser, support for USB OTG, and more. Apple also suggests Siri shortcuts that can be useful for you based on how you use your phone. Most of these features have been missing from iPhones while even the budget Android phones now ship with them, but now that it’s there, iPhones are now even more intuitive and useful.

Like every year, it’s more beneficial to be on iOS if you’re further invested in the Apple ecosystem. iOS is known to work seamlessly with macOS as well as the new iPadOS. However, integration with Windows and Android is still a bit patchy. For instance, your backups are made on iCloud instead of Google Drive, so apps like WhatsApp cannot restore data from an Android device. Furthermore, sharing photos from the iPhone 11 to another Android device is a pain. AirDrop only works with other Apple devices and you cannot transfer files via Bluetooth. As a result, you have to rely on third-party apps like ShareIt and Xender, both of which are riddled with ads and might not be very safe, privacy wise.

Battery Life

As we mentioned earlier, the A13 Bionic is more of an incremental ugprade from a performance standpoint. But in terms of efficiency, the new chipset is far more effective, offering longer screen-on time and performance per wattage. The iPhone XR last year offered excellent battery life, and with a larger 3110mAh battery, the iPhone 11 lasts even longer.

The iPhone 11 lasts 5 hours 9 minutes on the Geekbench Battery Test, and in real-world it easily lasts a day and a half. The difference is primarily because of how the iPhone 11 conserves power when the phone is in standby. When not in use, the battery discharge is minimal. However, if you put it to heavy use, the battery will drain in half a day.

We noted around 6 percent battery drain during 15 minutes of playing PUBG Mobile, while on Netflix, the drainage is around 7 percent watching content that supports Dolby Vision for 30 minutes. The iPhone 11 also comes with a fast charger out of the box that tops up the battery in around an hour and a half.

Camera

Smooth performance and stable software have been characteristics of an iPhone for a long time now. But what has really improved is the camera performance. There’s more flexibility in the way you shoot and also for when you shoot photos and videos. For one, it now comes with two cameras at the back instead of one. The second lens is a 12MP ultra-wide lens with f/2.4 aperture. The primary 12MP sensor might seem the same as the iPhone XR with f/1.8 aperture, but the teardown of the phone reveals it’s actually a new sensor that comes with 100 percent focus pixels. There is a dedicated Night Mode that gets triggered when the scene you’re shooting is poorly lit. You can expose up to 7 seconds when the scene has minimal lighting, but usually, the phone will suggest exposure of around 2-3 seconds. You can even turn it off. The new ultra-wide lens offers a sweeping 120-degree field of view with very little barrel distortion. You get the option to zoom out to 0.5x, stay at the default 1x or use digital zoom to go up to 5x closer.  The viewfinder shows what you’re missing out when you’re not shooting in ultra-wide and the iPhone 11 can shoot a photo from both the lenses and let you choose the one you like later in post-production. But this requires shooting in the High Efficiency format which is not supported everywhere.

We have uploaded a bunch of photos in their original resolution in our Flickr Gallery and used some of the samples resized for the web to highlight why the iPhone camera is one of the very best out there —

Shot on primary lens

Shot on ultra-wide lens

The above samples were taken from atop the Burj Khalifa in Dubai during sunset. You can get a pretty good idea of how much more area the ultra-wide lens is able to cover. More than that, what’s notable is the dynamic range, especially from the ultra-wide lens. Even with the sun in the background and a haze hanging from the sky, the buildings are sharp and clearly visible.

Shot on primary lens

Shot from the ultra-wide lens

Once again, an example of the extra area that the ultra-wide lens covers, but more importantly, you can see the uniformity and consistency of both the lenses. I’m yet to see an Android phone switch from one lens to the other without altering the white balance, colour reproduction and exposure. In the iPhone 11, there’s practically no difference between the two photos apart from the wider field of view, be it in the form of sharpness, dynamic range, exposure and colour reproduction.

This is taken using the iPhone’s new Night Mode that automatically triggers when the scene is dark. Taken with the timer at 3 seconds, the resulting image is one of the sharpest we have seen from a smartphone in low-light. Every individual light from the buildings and the streets are clearly visible.

This is a low-light photo taken from the ultra-wide lens. Unfortunately, night mode does not work in this case, and as a result, the photo is underexposed near the bottom. However, even without night mode, the camera is able to bring out the curves of the building, control the light from the windows and darken the sky without resulting in much noise.

While dynamic range and low-light capabilities have improved, the iPhone 11 maintains the superior colour reproduction we have seen in previous generations. The sample above is a testament to that.

Speaking of colours, this sample shows how well the iPhone is able to handle varying shades of blue and contrasting brown and grey, with the textures of both the rocks and the sea intact.

We even tried out the ultra-wide in the desert to see the dynamic range and here too, the iPhone 11 left us amazed. Most smartphones with the ultra-wide lens tend to lower the details in the shadows while exposing the highlights. But not this one. And that’s what makes this camera a cut above the rest.

The iPhone 11 also went from taking portrait photos of only humans to now pets. The falcon in the photo was my subject, and it seems there’s work that needs to be done on this aspect. The edges of the falcon’s wing are blurred out indicating that the depth mapping of the subject is not 100 percent accurate. Having said that, the details that the portrait mode can generate is pretty astounding.

Lastly, we took an indoor shot of the hotel room with the afternoon sun pouring in from the windows. Here too, the phone was able to capture the details of the couch, the bag on the floor as well as what’s outside the window.

Design and Display

The iPhone 11 retains the design that Apple debuted with the iPhone X, replete with a wide notch. As a result, it can now be easily distinguished amongst the crop of full-screen Android phones, not as much among older iPhones. Apple has improved the glass protection on the front and the back while the camera module is now housed in a huge square module in the top corner. The module, when we first got a glimpse of it, looked quite out of place, but in the final commercial unit, the camera module is nicely flushed with the glass body. The iPhone 11 is also IP68-rated water and dust resistant.

The iPhone 11’s display also remains the same as before. The 6.1-inch LCD panel which Apple calls LiquidRetina is one of the brightest panels at that price. Even the relatively lower resolution of the display doesn’t make it look inferior as compared to other phones at that price. In fact, the sunlight visibility of the iPhone 11 is the best we have observed among the OnePlus 7T Pro, Galaxy S10 and the likes. At its peak, we recorded brightness levels of 666 nits while the minimum brightness went all the way down to 4 nits. Despite an LCD pane, the iPhone 11 also supports Dolby Vision HDR. On supported content like in Netflix, Dolby Vision works to enhance the details in the darker areas, resulting in videos that look a lot more life-like.

Bottomline

The most affordable iPhone this year is perfectly good for majority of people (who can afford it). The Pro variant offers an OLED display and adds a third camera at the back that offers optical zoom, and as such, a little more flexibility to the camera. If you can live without them, the iPhone 11 is more than enough. It’s also a great entry-point into Apple’s ecosystem considering the Rs 64,900 price-tag of the 64GB variant is near the same as the OnePlus 7T Pro, Samsung Galaxy S10e or the Galaxy Note 10. With the Google Pixel 4 not releasing in India and Huawei’s flagship Mate 30 Pro missing out on Google services, the iPhone 11 has a clear advantage this year.

The phone itself is quite flawless and unlike last year, Apple hasn’t compromised on the camera. The battery life of the iPhone 11 is also reassuring enough to skip the Galaxy S10 while the camera on the iPhone 11 makes it a class above the OnePlus 7T Pro. The only reason to not go for the iPhone 11 is the heavily guarded Apple ecosystem. If you have to work closely with other Android devices or Windows PCs, it’s better to stick to an Android phone for better inter-connectivity.

Apple iPhone 11 256GB Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 10 Sep 2019
Variant: 64GB , 128GB , 256GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    6.1" (828 x 1792)
  • Camera Camera
    12 + 12 MP | 12 MP
  • Memory Memory
    256GB/4 GB
  • Battery Battery
    3110 mAh

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Subhrojit Mallick

Eats smartphones for breakfast.

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Dinner out with a side of car exhaust? Yes\, please

Infinix Hot S3 Review

Infinix Hot S3 Review

By Hardik Singh | Updated May 22 2019
Infinix Hot S3 Review
DIGIT RATING
59 /100
  • design

    68

  • performance

    52

  • value for money

    48

  • features

    66

  • PROS
  • Good battery life
  • Android 8.0 Oreo
  • Univisium display
  • CONS
  • Heating issues
  • Camera focusing issues

Verdict

The Infinix Hot S3 has some potential on paper, but in the ends up being as the third or fourth choice. The phone does offer a good 18:9 aspect ratio display and features Android 8.0 out of the box, but the performance and the camera does require some overhauling.

BUY Infinix Hot S3
Buy now on flipkart Out of Stock 9999

Infinix Hot S3 detailed review

There is no shortage of good smartphones these days if you have a modest budget. From dual cameras to big batteries or even 18:9 aspect ratio displays, you have plenty of options which cater to your varied needs. Among them is the Infinix Hot S3 smartphone which features some of these options. The phone is competitively priced at Rs. 8,999 and on paper (spec-wise) and in appearance the phone looks just as good as its competitors. That said, the Hot S3 trods on highly contested grounds and will face tough competition from the likes of Xiaomi Redmi Note 5, Lenovo K8 Plus and more. Can it hold its ground? Let’s break down the results in this review.


Build and Design

There was a time when budget smartphones were ugly and felt cheap, but not anymore. Most budget smartphones, these days, come with a unibody design and some even feature metal backplates. The Infinix Hot S3 features only the former, but that plastic back has a smooth matte finish to it, which does feel good in the hand. The 18:9 aspect ratio is a growing trend across smartphones and it’s quite useful in watching supported content. The Infinix Hot S3 is one of the few phones to offer that in the sub 10K bracket. The phone is not particularly good looking like the LG Q6, but the display is a distinguishing feature for now. The overall build of the phone seems average and the ergonomics even with that fairly large 5.65-inch display is quite good (in one hand). That said, we would have preferred if the phone offered a metal back to give it a more premium feel.

Furthermore, Infinix has tried to add some nice touches here such as the chamfered edges (on the plastic back) and the textured power button. A Type-C USB port would have been appreciated but maybe we are over-expecting.

Display and UI


Like most smartphones, the Infinix Hot S3 also features a trusty IPS LCD display, which has good viewing angles and does get quite bright. The colour fidelity is very good, but the only problem we find with the display is the resolution. On a 5.65-inch display, you are only getting a 1440 x 720 HD+ resolution. This seems fine considering the low price tag, but in our experience, something just below 1080p resolution on a display this size is just about usable, nothing stunning.

As we observed before in our first impressions, the XOS interface looks a bit dated and our opinion hasn't changed after using the phone for longer. We appreciate the fact Infinix is providing Android 8.0 out of the box and the UI does not try to imitate iOS. However, the UI does not feel as refreshing or new as Android Oreo’s stock interface. The functionally, however, remains quite simple, with the standard no app drawer approach. You get a small set of pre-loaded applications such as PHX browser, Flipkart, etc. and some native apps such as music player, theme manager and more. While this is all simple and easy to use and understand, we think the UI integration could have been better. Apps like theme manager ask for calling permissions, which seem out of place. There is a memory cleaner button which gamifies the simple RAM cleaning experience to a neat animation. We do get the appeal of it, which gives users the false sense of achievement, but we think Infinix could have easily integrated this in the background instead. The other thing we noticed is the slight stuttering felt during scrolling. This is especially visible while browsing.

Performance

Even more than stuttering, during our use we encountered persistent lags during app switching. We even had a few screen freeze moments during our use which did not instill any confidence in the UI. However, we think part of that problem is also the older Qualcomm Snapdragon 430 SoC. Combined with a 3GB RAM, our test unit kept up with day-to-day use, but it is not exactly fast. The performance it provides is good enough for low or medium workloads, but in 2018 the expectations from a budget phone have grown.

That doesn't mean you can't play games on it or can't stream videos and download music in the background at the same time. You can do all that, but you would have to be patient as you would encounter slightly longer load times than most of its competitors.

We also observed that the phone does get a bit warm while playing games or while recording a video, or even when the camera app is open. However, the phone never became uncomfortably hot in any test scenario.

We would also like to point out that the fingerprint scanner at the back works as it should but is a tad bit slower than what we are used to.

Battery life


 

The battery life of the phone, on the other hand, is just average. Don’t be skeptical just yet as the category average is one day and this phone manages that easily. The phone only uses more battery while gaming and while using the camera, but that is true for most phones regardless of the price. Besides that, with Android 8.0 Oreo on-board, you do get better management of apps in the background, which again helps in the overall battery life. There are separate battery saver modes within settings which can be toggled on or off, should you need more juice out of the 4000mAh battery.

Camera


On the camera front, you have a 13MP rear camera, which for the most part is not that consistent. It sometimes takes decent images and sometimes, the images tend to suffer from focusing issues. If you do get the focus right though, you get slightly oversaturated images, which most users would like. The image quality is satisfactory under normal lighting conditions, offering a good amount of details and decent subject separation. However, as soon as we moved indoors, the images lose most of their sheen with the level of details dropping significantly. Furthermore, the slower focus means you need an extra steady hand to nail that image capture. This makes it extra difficult to take images in HDR, where the camera takes even longer to capture the image. The good part is that the camera maintains colour consistency while capturing images in low light conditions, and the level of detail also lesser. You also need to take into account that you might have to take multiple images due to the lower focusing issues.

The front camera seems to be the main focus here though as Infinix Hot S3 markets this as a more selfie-focused device featuring a 20MP front-facing camera with flash. It does a really good job with better subject separation than almost everything we have seen in the price segment, but the inconsistent focusing issues persist. The colour saturation is good, but like most selfie phones, the camera relies on a softer focus by default to give you a more blemish-free look. You can put an extra effort by cranking up the beauty mode toggle, but we feel ‘être naturel’ is still the best. Anyway, the images are good enough for social media at best. Images in low light are average and like most smartphones with a front facing camera blinds you before it takes the image. The front-facing software enabled portrait mode is again something very similar to what you may find on other selfie centric devices and is definitely not a first for the price category either.

Bottomline

The Infinix Hot S3 then does not make any big waves. It simply tries to do the same things many have tried and are trying. For the price, it does offer some good things like a usable selfie camera, 18:9 aspect ratio display and Android 8.0 out of the box, but all-in-all it's just good enough. You can definitely get better performance on other devices around the same price and a more consistent camera as well. There is no contest in terms of battery life as the Redmi brothers will win that easily. Hence, the Infinix Hot S3 ends up as just another phone which can be considered if you are unable to buy the Lenovo K8 Plus or a Xiaomi Redmi 4.

Infinix Hot S3 Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price: ₹8999
Release Date: 07 Feb 2018
Variant: 32GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    5.65" (720 X 1440)
  • Camera Camera
    13 | 20 MP
  • Memory Memory
    32 GB/3 GB
  • Battery Battery
    4000 mAh

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Nokia 5.3 Review

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Microsoft Lumia 950 XL Dual SIM Review

Microsoft Lumia 950 XL Dual SIM Review

By Prasid Banerjee | Updated May 22 2019
Microsoft Lumia 950 XL Dual SIM Review
DIGIT RATING
71 /100
  • design

    71

  • performance

    72

  • value for money

    60

  • features

    77

  • PROS
  • Good camera
  • Good display
  • CONS
  • Sub-par design w.r.t. price
  • App availability is an issue

Verdict

The Lumia 950XL isn't the phone that'll bring Microsoft the sales that it's looking for. The phone lacks good design elements for the asking price and there are just not enough apps on the Windows Store to recommend the phone to anyone. A lot of work needs to be done still.

BUY Microsoft Lumia 950 XL Dual SIM
Buy now on flipkart Available 17999
Buy now on amazon Available 19990

Microsoft Lumia 950 XL Dual SIM detailed review

Microsoft has been undergoing change for a while now. From a new CEO, to Windows as a service, to its first laptop ever, to a game changing augmented reality headset and so on, the company has been talking the talk. However, what’s never change is the state of Windows Phone. With Windows 10 though, Microsoft showed us some impressive features, enough to have us excited about the new Lumia flagships. However, the numbers have been dwindling for a while now. Microsoft sold only 4.5 million Lumia phone last quarter, with a year-on-year decrease of 57 percent. In short, the future of Windows for mobile doesn’t look good.


So, in the face of such adversity, is the Lumia 950XL the right phone to bring Microsoft back? Here’s the review.

Build and Design

When it started making Windows-based smartphones, Nokia once proved to all of us that metal doesn’t define premium. The company proved that a premium and good looking phone could be made out of polycarbonate material and be sturdier than many phones with metallic designs. But it’s not Nokia anymore is it?

Phones like the Lumia 830, 920 and 1020 will never be questioned on the design point of view, but frankly, the Lumia 950XL is a plastic brick that should just not cost as much as it does. It’s not that the phone is heavy, or the fact that it lacks metal. The Lumia 950XL, to me, just doesn’t look good. I understand that Microsoft wants to deliver similar experiences across price brackets, but the fact is that if I’m paying nearly Rs. 50,000, I want more than what Rs. 20,000 would get me.

In fact, the bit about delivering similar experiences across price segments is also changing with Windows 10, but more on that later. From a build point of view, the Lumia 950XL is light and thin enough, but too plasticky to belong in the price segment that it is being positioned in.

Display

While Microsoft may have been stubborn about the build, the display is a different story. Lumia devices have always had some of the best displays in the market, the Lumia 950XL comes with a 5.5 inch AMOLED Clearblack QHD display. Interestingly, it seems while Microsoft did give in to the resolution race, it also made a clear point here. The Clearblack display looks as good in QHD as it did in FHD last year, and that’s just the point Microsoft has been making for ages.

Of course, it’s more effective while watching movies and viewing other content, but only slightly better. Bottomline, the display looks as good as ever and delivers a top notch touch experience, thanks to Gorilla Glass 4.

UI

There’s not much to write when it comes to the UI Windows phones have used. Windows 10, like Windows 8 and 7 before it, delivers one of the smoothest UI experiences out there. It doesn’t look as colourful anymore though, which I think is good. The Windows 10 UI looks better suited to professionals and enterprise users, which I suspect is Microsoft’s target user-base.

What’s also worth noting is that Microsoft has made the experience snappier than before and quite similar to Android and iOS in some areas. While this is good, it just screams for Windows apps to be updated.

The app situation..

Yes, the app situation is still dismal in the Windows Store. Microsoft is trying to turn it around by selling the Universal Apps concept to developers, and with 200 million PCs already on Windows, it may even work. However, Microsoft also needs to get the apps that are already available on the Windows Store to update to Windows 10. In the current version, apps like Zomato, Evernote, Twitter and almost any other, look mismatched with the rest of the UI and the feeling is terrible.

The concept of Universal Windows Platform (UWP) lets developers build for device families instead of a particular OS. Microsoft says it will allow apps to work seamlessly across phones, tablets and PCs and from what I see through Microsoft's own apps and third party apps like Flipkart, it is indeed quite smooth. With over 200 million PCs on Windows 10, Microsoft’s seems to be hoping developers will build apps for Windows PCs, which will just work on mobiles and tablets as well, giving the Windows Store a big boost. Well, it’s going to be difficult with dwindling sales numbers, but one can always hope.

Performance

From a performance point of view, the Lumia 950XL is faster and snappier than any other Lumia smartphone till date. Of course, considering the fact that most of those other phones ran on the Snapdragon 400, there should be a more than substantial jump in performance, and the Lumia 950XL exhibits that from the get go.

Outlook works much faster, load times for apps (especially universal apps) load really fast and the phone just feels much more responsive than any other Windows-powered phone that I’ve used till date. Devices like the Lumia 930, 830 and others do not compare to the 950 XL. 

Having said that, open Asphalt 8 and you once again shudder at the performance. It’s not that the game lags or is unplayable, the experience is just juddery, which is a result of the software and not the hardware. It further reinforces the belief that Microsoft wants this to be an enterprise phone rather than for the regular consumer.

Of course, the fact that this is a powerful phone was never in question ever since we saw continuum running on it. It's just not for gamers.

Continuum

Speaking of which, Microsoft’s take on continuity amongst devices has been the most interesting so far. The Lumia 950XL, when connected to the Microsoft Display Dock, a monitor, keyboard and mouse, can function like a PC. Now here’s the thing, how many of us will really use that? More importantly, how many in India can afford to use that?

Cool and even useful as it is, the Microsoft Display Dock costs about Rs. 6000, which means the effective cost of your phone goes up to about Rs. 56,000. It’s a tough ask given the state of things with Windows is all I’m saying. In addition, the number of Universal Apps will be a big factor in whether continuum will be worth buying this phone for. For now, it works with Microsoft apps and some others, like Flipkart, and for those, it's pretty handy and fast.

Windows Hello

Perhaps the only Microsoft feature in this phone that was really dissapointing was Windows Hello. Microsoft’s Iris-recognition tech is just not intuitive enough. When I’m sitting in brightly lit rooms, it keeps telling me to 'move closer' to the phone, while walking around outside, especially at night, Windows Hello is more or less useless. Most importantly though, even when it does work, it takes much longer than fingerprint sensors or even pattern or pin-based locks. It maybe useful on a Surface, which will be perched on a desk and unlocks in a second or two when you sit in front of it, but on a phone, it's just not intuitive enough to be used regularly. The time taken to type my six digit pin is much less.

Camera

If you ask anyone what they like most about Lumia smartphones, their answer most certainly will be the camera. The 20MP snapper on the Lumia 950XL keeps that legacy alive, but doesn’t really improve on it. If you’re in brightly lit conditions or in outdoor sunlight, the 950XL will take some of the best shots possible and it does well with details and sharpness in indoor conditions also. The low light performance is also above average easily. The problem though is that this is all in the rich capture mode.


(L-R) Studio White Lights, Indoor Fluorescent Lights, Outdoor Bright Sunlight, Outdoor Bright Sunlight, Low Light

While brightly lit conditions are covered, in the auto mode, the Lumia 950XL will often have trouble dealing with unevenly lit conditions, with a glare on one side of the image or slightly lower details. In addition, while Microsoft has successfully reduced the shutter lag and processing time, the photos still do need post processing, which is done by the algorithm in the background, while you continue shooting.

Overall though, the 950XL will definitely rank amongst the best camera phones in the market today and if that’s all you want, it’s worth considering.

Battery

The 3340 mAh battery on the Lumia 950XL is just about fine, meeting industry standards today. The higher screen resolution and more powerful processor are of course eating into it, but the Lumia 950XL should get most users through a full day quite comfortably. It’s not as good as the Samsung Galaxy Note 5, but just a little better than the iPhone 6S

Bottomline

If Microsoft is really serious about selling its phones, then the Lumia 950 XL isn’t the phone that’ll bring it to the fore. The app situation aside, if sales numbers do really matter, then Microsoft has to focus on what’s selling, instead of hoping that consumers will appreciate what it provides. Features like fingerprint sensors, a more premium body etc. are important and whether Microsoft does it or some other OEM does, it just has to be done.

Microsoft Lumia 950 XL Dual SIM Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 03 Feb 2016
Variant: 32GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    5.7" (1440 x 2560)
  • Camera Camera
    20 | 5 MP
  • Memory Memory
    32 GB/3 GB
  • Battery Battery
    3340 mAh

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Prasid Banerjee

Trying to explain technology to my parents. Failing miserably.

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Microsoft Lumia 950 XL Dual SIM

Microsoft Lumia 950 XL Dual SIM

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