Showing posts with label Huawei P9 Plus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Huawei P9 Plus. Show all posts

Huawei MediaPad M3 8.0 review



The Huawei MediaPad M3 is a small tablet. It's slim, it's light, and it's handy – and the 4G version can even double as a gigantic phone, as long as you don't mind all your calls coming out at speakerphone volume.
For years the MediaPad series has pootled along in the background, never winning the acclaim, or the sales figures, of a Samsung tablet or an iPad.






This is comfortably the sleekest MediaPad to date; however, by matching an ultra high-res screen with a so-so processor, Huawei has ensured that the M3 can't keep up the demands of the prettiest games that well.
So is this just another also-ran from Huawei's tablet department, or something more impressive that could make potential buyers – and the competition – sit up and take notice?

Design and features

Build is one of the Huawei MediaPad M3's strongest elements. A very slim, low-flex aluminium casing makes the tablet feel expensive and strong. It's like an iPad mini in this sense, but the shape is a little different – a widescreen aspect ratio makes the M3 a bit less stubby-looking than the 4:3 iPad.
It's a good design, once again proving that 8-inch tablets like this are a great size for most people: big enough to offer a much larger display than any phone, but still light and small enough to take with you everywhere.






The MediaPad M3 is also light enough to hold in one hand, perhaps for reading an article or two on the way to work, to make your work commute that bit more bearable. Our review model weighs just 322g.
The fingerprint scanner is the clue that tells you the MediaPad M3 is a tablet of 2016 rather than, say, 2014. Looking quite a lot like the one used on the Samsung Galaxy S7, this sits below the screen as part of a button.
It's not a clicky button, though, just a touch-sensitive pad. Used while the MediaPad M3 is awake, it's a back button; when the device is asleep, of course, it wakes the little guy up.






This isn't the fastest fingerprint scanner Huawei has ever produced, taking around a second to turn the tablet on from sleep, but it's reliable.
There are just a couple of bits to the Huawei MediaPad M3 that are a little less high-end than similar-looking features you might see in a top-end Huawei phone. For example, the band that holds the rear camera seems to be topped with plastic rather than Gorilla Glass. Crucially, though, the M3 still gives off the whiff of a top-end tablet.
Huawei sent us the 4G version of the MediaPad M3, which has a SIM tray on the bottom edge that also takes a memory card, enabling you to add to the 32GB of built-in storage.






With a SIM inserted you can almost treat the M3 like a phone – the only thing holding you back is the lack of a proper call speaker.
The MediaPad M3 does have good tablet speakers, though. On the top and bottom edges are little 7-pip grilles that let the stereo Harman Kardon drivers sing.
Getting an audio brand involved is no guarantee of good sound quality, but here you get some of the loudest speakers we've heard in a tablet. It's the kind of volume you'd expect from something much larger, like a laptop. The case vibrates a bit at higher volumes, which is hardly surprising.







At the highest volumes the upper mid-range can become a little searing with some material too, but the sound is relatively thick and full; it's impressive stuff for a small, slim tablet. And as the grilles are set to one side, rather than slap-bang in the middle of the top and bottom edges, they're not too easy to block with your hands.
That's your lot in terms of extra hardware, though. There's no IR transmitter, which has featured in some previous Huawei devices – one of these would enable the MediaPad M3 to be used as a universal remote.

Screen

The big change compared to the 8-inch MediaPad M2 is that the Huawei MediaPad M3 has a true high-res screen. It's an 8-inch 2560 x 1600-pixel screen, with an IPS LCD panel. The upshot is that pixel density and sharpness are both excellent, and even up close the screen looks sharp.
Brightness is also very good, and there's an ambient light-sensing Auto mode, a feature that's sometimes omitted from tablets. Viewing angles are strong, with minimal brightness loss when you view the screen from an angle.






Huawei has plugged loads of customisation into the MediaPad M3's screen too. First, there are two colour modes. Normal is a classic sRGB mode that looks quite natural, while Vivid mode amps up the colours for a little more energy at the expense of colour accuracy.
As on most of Huawei's phones you can also fiddle with the colour temperature, which changes the character of the M3's screen quite a bit. There's an Eye Comfort mode as well, which, like the iPhone's Night Shift mode, makes the screen more yellow in order to cut down the amount of blue light emitted.
Contrast isn't as good as that of the OLED Samsung Galaxy Tab S2's display, but this is a good screen.
The Huawei MediaPad M3 runs Android 6.0 behind Huawei's Emotion UI interface, which is used in just about every Huawei and Honor mobile device – Android 7.0 Nougat was released right before the M3 was announced, so we wouldn't have expected Huawei to have been able to include it.
And, as it happens, EmotionUI actually adds one of the main features of Android 7.0: multi-window app multitasking. Long-press the square soft key and you can boot up two apps at once. Not every app can be launched like this, but Netflix, for example, can – so you could watch a movie while keeping one eye on your Facebook feed.



It works in portrait or landscape orientation too – the landscape option is particularly useful for taking notes while you read something.
The rest of the Huawei MediaPad M3's software is standard Huawei fare. That means you don't get a separate apps menu, just a bunch of home screens onto which all your apps drop. If you want to keep organised, you can lump apps into folders. It's really the only way to avoid using loads of home screens, unless you don't use that many apps.



Some people end up really disliking Emotion UI in phones, but we find it a bit less contentious in a tablet. We tend to flick between apps a bit less rapidly than when using a phone.
Despite Emotion UI altering the look of Android quite a bit, the Huawei MediaPad M3 isn't weighed down by lots of superfluous apps. There's a set of 'Tools' apps including a voice recorder, virtual mirror and compass, but they're filed away in a separate folder, designed to be more-or-less ignored unless you need them.
The WPS office suite is installed too. This isn't something Huawei has created, just one of the more popular Android office suites.



The other more Huawei-specific element of the MediaPad M3's software is themes. This is an important feature of Emotion UI, but on this tablet you only get two choices, a black theme and a blue one; more may become available to download through the Themes app after a software update, but right now you can only use these locally-stored ones.

Performance

Some versions of Emotion UI can make a phone or tablet feel pretty slow to use, but the Huawei MediaPad M3 is pretty fast in day-to-day operation. It packs a generous 4GB RAM, and uses the HiSilicon Kirin 950 CPU.
The Kirin 950 is a fairly high-end member of the HiSilicon CPU family, with four Cortex-A53 everyday cores and four Cortex-A72 performance cores, which are matched with a Mali T880 GPU.



We found the Huawei MediaPad M3 nippy enough when using everyday apps and just flicking through the Android interface. However, things started to come apart when we tried playing high-end games.
Despite the impressive-sounding specs, the Kirin 950 just doesn't seem powerful enough to keep up with serious polygon-flinging given the demands of the high-res 2560 x 1600 screen.
At the default High graphics setting Asphalt 8 is painfully slow, and choppy enough to make the game much less fun to play. Even at the Very Low setting there's the occasional frame rate dip.



As one of Android's prettiest games, Asphalt 8 is a pretty reliable way to test a tablet's limits; however, there are signs of slow-down in less demanding titles too.
Gameloft's Modern Combat 5 suffers from some juddery moments during intense action scenes, and even Dead Trigger 2's frame rate is less than optimal – and Dead Trigger 2 tends to scale very well to different devices.
The Huawei MediaPad M3 should be a great tablet for gamers, but it isn't.

Camera

These days some tablets have cameras as good as those in phones – the iPad Pro 9.7 is a good example. However, the Huawei MediaPad M3's rear camera is rather pedestrian.
It's an 8-megapixel sensor with an f/2 lens: fine for a tablet, but probably not as good as your phone camera, unless you have a fairly old mobile.
In bright sunlight you can get some decent pictures, but images become quite noisy in lower light – and there's no flash to help out.




The Huawei MediaPad M3's camera is also pretty prone to chromatic aberration, or colour fringing – this is where high-contrast edges are outlined in colour, in this case purple. If you shoot into the sun lens flare can cause discolouration in large areas of images too.
You can minimise these issues by avoiding very high-contrast subjects and direct sunlight, but we've been using the Huawei MediaPad M3 alongside the Honor 5C phone (Honor is basically a Huawei sub-brand), and its 13-megapixel camera is a significant step up.
The M3's camera can be fun to use, though. There's a half-second shutter lag, but the camera app features loads of extra modes to play with.




You may only ever touch half of them, but there are a few interesting options. All Focus lets you select the focus point after shooting by taking several shots in rapid succession at different focus ranges, Pro mode offers manual control over settings such as shutter speed, and Light Painting lets you take those shots in which the lights of moving vehicles become colourful trails.
All these features would be more effective in a slightly higher-quality phone camera, but they've nice to have anyway.
The Huawei MediaPad M3's front camera is very similar to the rear one, but where the sensor makes a so-so rear camera, it's a pretty good selfie one. Self portraits have lots of detail, and fairly lifelike colours.




Focusing is the big difference between the two cameras. The back camera has standard autofocus, while the front one has a fixed-focus lens.
Having a higher-res front camera also lets you video chat at 1080p resolution, rather than just VGA or 720p, not to mention making your Snapchats look a bit better. There's no 4K video capture with either camera, though.

Battery life

Thanks to its ultra high-resolution screen the Huawei MediaPad M3 was always unlikely to have amazing battery life – it's not one of those low-end 1280 x 800 tablets that can play the whole Lord of the Rings movie trilogy off a single charge.
The TechRadar battery test, which involves playing a 90-minute video at maximum brightness with accounts syncing over Wi-Fi in the background, drained 19% from the M3's battery. This suggests you should be able to enjoy between seven-and-a-half and eight hours of video off a full charge.




This sort of test is low-drain on the CPU side, but maxing-out the brightness means the screen sucks a decent amount of juice. To switch things around, we tried Real Racing 3 using Auto brightness rather than maximum brightness; 20 minutes of play took 6% off the battery, suggesting around five and a half hours of gaming off a full battery.
Neither of these results is remarkable, but the gaming numbers in particular show that the Huawei MediaPad M3 lasts a respectably long time under strain.

Huawei has nailed a few elements in the MediaPad M3, but the tablet falls short when it comes to gaming performance, making a few other tablets out there better options for gamers.



We liked

One of the best things about the Huawei MediaPad M3 is its build. The slim, light aluminium frame looks and feels good while being seriously practical.
The screen is good too. It's sharp, and has colour modes that provide both more natural and saturated tones. The speakers are another high point, delivering impressive volume for a tablet this slim.

We disliked

The big problem with the Huawei MediaPad M3 is that its chipset doesn't seem to be able to make Android's fanciest games run well. Many run much slower than they should.
Its rear camera is nothing special either. We're not huge fans of tablet photography when most phone have better sensors, but some users will demand better phone performance than this from their slates.

Verdict

The Huawei MediaPad M3 is a tablet with lots of admirable qualities. High screen resolution, ultra-low weight and speakers that go loud enough to become an anti-social menace in some situations earn a big thumbs-up.
It's a pity, then, that the M3 is thrown off balance quite so dramatically by oddly poor gaming performance with high-end titles. The casual games everyone gets obsessed with for weeks at a time run fine, but those with console-like graphics tend to struggle to an extent that's quite rare for a tablet of this quality.
You'll need to think carefully about whether this is going to be an issue for you before choosing the Huawei MediaPad M3 over an iPad mini, Samsung Galaxy Tab S2 or cheaper ASUS ZenPad Z580C.

Huawei P9 Plus review


Hot on the heels of the newly launched Huawei P9, its bigger brother the Huawei P9 Plus offers up the same dual-camera smarts with a larger screen, more storage and better sound.
As with its smaller brother, the Huawei P9 Plus sports a rather familiar design with its rounded corners, metal body, visible antenna bands and slender build reminiscent of the iPhone.

While the similarities are noticeable, there are a few differences too. Huawei has managed to keep bezels to a minimum, allowing the 5.5-inch handset to sport more compact dimensions.
Measuring 152.3 x 75.3 mm the Huawei P9 Plus is smaller than the bezel heavyiPhone 6S Plus which has the same size display.



Also, at just 6.98 mm thick it's also thinner than the 6S Plus (7.3mm) and the 5.5-inch Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge (7.7mm), but the Samsung is shorter and narrower.
This, along with the phone's 162g weight, means the P9 Plus isn't too tricky to handle, and I was able to use it one handed relatively easily. Those with smaller hands will still find it rather large, but the compact design should be applauded.
The metal frame looks and feels premium, while a splash of glass on the rear is home to the phone's dual 12MP cameras, laser autofocus, flash and Leica logo.
You also get Huawei's new fingerprint scanner, which is faster than the already excellent offering found on the Mate 8. This should result in super quick recognition and unlock, and it's able to cope with moisture too.



It's those dual 12MP cameras which are the main talking point though, with a color sensor joined by a black and white snapper, sitting happily side by side on the rear of the P9 Plus.
The two cameras work in unison to improve your shots, and Huawei claims that with the addition of the data collect from the B&W camera, photo brightness can be boosted by 200%, and contrast by 50%, over a standard, single RGB snapper.
They're joined by a laser autofocus, one of the reasons Huawei droped OIS (optical image stabilization) on the P9 Plus, with the phone's fast shutter helping keep things smooth.
The B&W lens can also be used independently by selecting the monochrome mode within the camera app - but you can't use the color snapper on its own.



Another nice feature with the cameras is refocus - something we first saw with the dual cameras on the HTC One M8. This allows you to focus on an object and blur everything around it.
It's easy to do on the P9 Plus, and you can even adjust the focus after taking the photo, as well as applying filters (such as black and white) to the blurred area of the shot.
The Huawei P9 Plus takes some strong photos, but you'll have to wait for our full review to see how it stacks up against the competition.
Huawei has embedded 'Press Touch' into the 5.5-inch full HD screen on the P9 Plus, which is pretty much the same technology as 3D Touch found in theiPhone 6S and 6S Plus.



This gives you a press sensitive display, allowing you to perform additional functions depending on the level of pressure you apply to the screen. Currently 18 native applications support Press Touch, but the functionality is limited.
In the gallery for example, you can hard press on an image to get a magnifying glass bubble on screen, allowing you to see an area of an image in more detail. In practice though I found the zoomed mode was pixel heavy, while Press Touch wasn't overly receptive.
The hope is third party developers will build Press Touch features into their apps and games, but in its current state it doesn't appear to match up to Apple's 3D Touch.
The display itself is a step up from its smaller brother. Both handsets pack a full HD resolution, which means the P9 Plus has a lower pixel density, but it benefits from being a Super AMOLED panel. In the standard P9 you're stuck with a less vibrant IPS offering.



On screen action is bright and clear, but it's not the same level of clarity as the QHD-toting Galaxy S7 Edge and LG G5.
Under the hood Huawei's own Kirin 955 octa-core, 64 bit processor runs the show, backed up by a sizable 4GB of RAM. That's more than enough power, and Android Marshmallow flowed nicely under finger during my time with the handset.
It's not stock Android however, with Huawei coating it in its own Emotion UI - version EMUI 4.1 to be exact. This sees the removal of the app drawer, redesigned app icons and a slightly altered notification panel.
It won't be everyone's cup of tea, and while the version on the P9 Plus is an improvement over previous iterations of the software it doesn't feel quite as polished as Google's stock platform or the interfaces by Samsung and HTC.



On top of the Huawei P9 Plus you'll find an IR blaster, allowing you to control infra-red appliances such as TVs, set top boxes and home entertainment systems.
Meanwhile 64GB of storage is joined by a microSD slot on the side of the device allowing you to build on the space with cards up to 128GB in size.
When it comes to battery life Huawei is promising big things from the 3,400mAh power pack it's managed to squeeze inside the P9 Plus' slender body. It claims with 'normal usage' you'll get two full days from a single charge, while heavy users can expect 1.35 days. I'll be putting those claims to the test in the in-depth review.
Fast charging is also present via the USB Type-C port on the base of the P9 Plus. It sits next to one of two speakers on the P9 Plus, with the other located in the earpiece location, for stereo sound.
If you fancy getting your hands on the Huawei P9 Plus it goes on sale in Europe and Asia on May 20, with a SIM-free price of €749 (around £600). It will arrive in four colors; Quartz Grey, Rose Gold, Haze Gold, Ceramic White, although it's unclear which countries will receive each color.



Early verdict

The Huawei P9 Plus is an accomplished smartphone. It's got a great feature set, impressive performance and a premium design - trouble is the competition is also excellent.
In the past Huawei's flagship handsets have had a lower price than the likes of Samsung, Apple, LG, Sony and HTC, but the P9 Plus is priced at a similar level. You then have to look to see if it offers a better experience all round than our current best phone in the world, the Galaxy S7 Edge.
The early verdict is no, it doesn't - the Samsung still seems to be the top of the pile, while iPhone users are highly unlikely to opt for a P9 Plus over the iPhone 6S Plus.
For those looking for something a bit different, and a unique camera experience though, the Huawei P9 Plus could fit the bill nicely.