Ah, main big name in the field of Chinese smartphone technology, known for their big specifications and their own Android distribution called fly me OS, which this phone uses now we're checking out their m6 node model, which cost us $300: dual camera, 4?m power, battery, 4 gigabytes of RAM and a Snapdragon 625 chipset with an 8 core 2 gear, Hertz processor $300, is maybe a bit too much. We won't know until we take a look. The design of this phone reminds me of one plus 3t, with the rounded home button front, camera positioning and the antenna lines on the back for its size. The m6 note feels pretty heavy in hand. Its glass is very slightly curved, which is a nice touch and I like how they put the flush inside the antenna line on the back. It fits nicely in hand and the buttons on the side are fairly extruded and easily located.
Pressing them feels good, but it could be better. Their clique is loud and tactile, but they seem a bit too hard to press. It's also kind of unfortunate that the power button isn't textured beyond the home button. The volume and power buttons are the only ones this phone doesn't have any capacitive buttons in this case, they're replaced with navigation bar despite this phone having a physical home button. Very weird combination, if you ask me it looks like they tried the iPhone approach to navigation.
They either put their fly me OS on this phone, which differs quite a lot from the stock Android design and has some elements which greatly remind me of Apple's iOS. Also, it still has Android 7.1 points too, even though order is in the game for quite a while. Now, lime is a pretty well-designed and sleek skin, even though it's maybe a bit over designed in some aspects. Big problem here is navigation because of the lack of back and task switch buttons. Navigation can get pretty confusing, since it's done using the fingerprint gestures.
Of course, Mesa solved that problem by putting a navigation bar on the bottom, and it's true that it solves the problem. But then we have two home buttons. I feel like such a redundancy, because of lazy design is completely unnecessary when it comes to bloatware fly me is somewhere in the center. They put their own application store alongside Google Play and also their own memory. Cleaner.
Most of the other applications are also theirs, but I don't count that as bloatware since their elementary system applications like a calculator or a gallery and write purists stay away, but those who don't feel the need to have a stock Google experience feel free. Today again, fly me shouldn't cause. Any problems to um6 note comes with a nice four thousand William hours under its hood paired with a battery efficient, Snapdragon, 625 chipsets. We should keep our expectations quite high. Like I expected.
The battery life is great with the full battery in the morning and average used without too much video gaming. The battery can last up to two days without many issues. Of course, if you are a more active smartphone user chances are that you'll be going to bed with a battery at 30 to 40% in half hour that I played asphalt, 8 the battery depleted 11%, which means you probably got a bit less than 10 hours of gameplay on a full charge. Since this is a phone and not Nintendo's new handheld breakthrough, 10 hours is more than enough to cover that long line in dentist's office. First, let's do the benchmarks on Geek bench.
This phone has got an 844 for single core and 4139 for multi-core for a render script compute test. It got 3119 points with an antidote benchmark. It's called seventy-five thousand three hundred and thirty-eight points with regular usage. This one is very snappy. There may be a bit too many animations for some, but they somehow managed to make them all smooth.
No matter what's running in the background. Multitasking is also working perfectly still. Android has four gigabytes of RAM at its disposal, which is more than enough for a regular user. It's all fast and smooth. Until we get to the video games, I took a graphically intensive game as rotate for a test, and I can say that it was kind of playable at the highest settings playable, but not much more.
The FPS was somewhere around money, and it didn't change a lot when I put the graphics on medium. If you're planning to buy this phone for modern mobile games, it might be smarter to consider some other options for everything else, though the performance is great and poses no problem. The camera on this phone is quite the hit-and-miss case some photos look great while others, bland and unsaturated. Of course, since we've got two cameras at our disposal, let's check out what can we do with them? In the case of m6 note, we can use the second camera only for the depth of field effect because of its lower resolution. I personally feel like adding a second camera for gimmicky effects is a bit wasteful and this example doesn't help.
The effect on its own is a bit too accentuated, and it cuts corners kind of imprecisely. In most cases, it'll work fine unless it encounters a sharp edge which it will blur like it's the part of the background. The camera also has a manual pro mode, which could be better. You can only change the white balance to a few rough presents, which is a big no-no since that impacts the photo greatly. Thankfully, you can change the shutter speed to some pretty extreme values, which is a big plus because it allows shooting in bad light conditions beyond the white balance issue.
This manual mode isn't too limited just like it should be. The camera also has a 120 FPS mode, which films in some weird interpolated 720p format, take a look for yourselves.4K video recording has also snuck in there, and it's pretty good, just like it's full HD recording its 4k, isn't the sharpest that I've seen, but I don't see any signs of it. Interpolation m6 note has a single speaker in the lower right corner next to the charging port, its speaker, although not winning any competitions, does it shop great. It has some extra vigilance, but it's all within tolerance on phone speakers there's not much bass but the bass. That's there makes the phone's case vibrate the mid are nicely accentuated and even though the highs are the loudest here, the whole sound signature is nice.
There is no distortion on the highest volume, but the volume isn't too high anyways. The audio out is great on paper. If we ignore the weird spikes in Distortion, I also measure the frequency response and stereo crosstalk, the sound is OK with a pair of big headphones, albeit not too loud. There are no problems with earbuds, though last but may be the most important thing. The headphone jack there's not much to be said there.
The connector is tight, and your cable won't fall out. Bravo Metal m6 note uses a classic full HD IPS LCD panel. The brightness goes to some pretty low levels, which is great for night usage, but there's a bit of a problem on the flip side of that story. The screen on this phone isn't too bright on maximum brightness. It can be used in sunlight, but it can get quite stuff beyond that.
The screen doesn't really have any problems. The colors are like we'd expect them to be on an IPS LCD panel, normal and not too accentuated. Maze m6 note is a phone which doesn't bring anything new to the table, it's jack of all trades, but master of none. It has a good bang for the buck. Blimey system isn't bad, and it has a few interesting features.
Hardware is pretty decent, the phone is built nicely, and it all seems. Ok, I just believe that for the price of $300 there may be some more enticing options, thanks for watching major droid reviews, if you like this video leave a like, and if you want more subscribe to our Channel.
Source : Major Droid