The Huawei P9 gets the important stuff right. Its main draw is the exceptionally creative and high-quality rear camera, while the solid battery and build also add to its appeal. The poor GPU, display contrast, and video output hinders the overall experience.
The smartphone sports a 5.2-inch IPS-NEO LCD with Full HD resolution, octacore HiSilicon Kirin 955 SoC, Android OS 6.0 (Marshmallow) with Huawei’s Emotion UI 4.1, as well as the 3000 mAh battery, and several design options featuring various materials.
The spec sheet suggests a very impressive smartphone. It’s too bad there are some shortcomings, as you’ll see in this Huawei P9 review.
It is clear at first glance the Huawei P9 is a premium smartphone. Its industrial design is familiar to the line, and while it’s not the most inspired look, the P9 is still a very elegant, modern and credibly constructed smartphone. It seems exceptionally light and slim for a 5.2-inch device, even though its dimensions (5.71 x 2.79 x 0.28 inches) and weight (5.08 ounces) are ordinary.
P9 comes in several colors, depending on the material. There’s a ceramic P9 (white), sanded metal P9 (gold) and an aluminum P9 (various shades of gold and silver). Regardless of the finish, our only objections, which the P9 shares with many other devices, is that it’s a little too slick when held.
The back features two plastic antenna stripes, with the slimmer of the two located along the lower portion, with the thicker located on the upper. That upper portion also houses two rear cameras, LED flash and the Leica logo. The fingerprint reader sits in the middle. As we’ve stated before, Huawei has one of the most consistent fingerprint readers on the market.
Display
The 5.2-inch Huawei P9 smartphone runs Android 6.0.
With most flagships pushing Quad HD or even
4K, Full HD resolution (1920 x 1080 pixels) is not the top end of the spectrum,. But on the Huawei P9 smartphone’s 5.2-inch display it results in a density of 423 pixels per inch, and that’s more than enough for an exceptionally sharp image. The device has an IPS-NEO LCD display, which is characterized with evidently better contrast sustainability than a regular IPS; however, we found that the basic contrast is still not on the same level as other devices on the top of the market, like the
Samsung Galaxy S7 edge.
To be precise, black tones should be slightly darker, while white tones have a dirty hue to them. The colors are well saturated, but are not precisely interpreted by default. Fortunately, Huawei included the option of manually calibrating colors to its display settings.
Overall brightness is exceptional, and can cut through overhead glare as well as almost any smartphone. We give the
iPhone 6S, Samsung Galaxy S7 and Lumia 950 the edge over the P9, however.
Performance
Hisillicon Kirin 955 is one of the first chipsets to use Cortex-A72 architecture. Its performance is approximately 15 percent better per megahertz than those offered by Cortex-A57 cores, and is much more energy efficient. Kirin 995 has four such cores running a 2.5 GHz clock and four Cortex-A53 cores running a 1.8 GHz clock. According to synthetic benchmarks, the CPU scores comparable to contemporary SoCs from rival camps. The model with 32GB of memory storage offers 3GB of RAM, while the 4GB model secures 64GB. Kirin 995 supports four 2G frequencies, seven 3G frequencies and eighteen 4G frequencies. The device will have no trouble operating on all global mobile networks.
It is a shame then that the graphics performance from the Mali-T880 GPU is far poorer. The Huawei P9 smartphone performs fluidly during all tasks that don’t rely on its GPU, but it struggles running demanding games. To get around this, the P9 features a ROG power saving mode that reduces the display resolution to 720p (HD). Its primary task is to lessen battery demand, but better game performance is the added benefit (or a compulsory solution).
Battery
The 3000mAh battery is solid. P9 offers above average autonomy for a 5.2-inch smartphone, particularly during stand-by, when it requires exceptionally low power. Playing HD videos with maximum brightness enables 7 hours and 30 minutes of continuous playback. The
Huawei Mate 8, with its larger battery, lasted just 37 minutes longer.
The rapid 2A USB-C charger ships with the phone, which recharges the battery up to 40 percent in just 30 minutes. Battery life can be extended by switching to Ultra Power Saving mode or the mentioned ROG mode.
Software
Huawei P9’s Android OS 6.0 (Marshmallow) and Emotion UI 4.1 combine Goggle software platform with slight iOS impersonation. The greatest difference between pure Android and Huawei’s UI is the lack of an app drawer. All apps are arranged across the home screens (there are up to 18 Home screens), just like on iOS. Of course, the applications can be grouped into folders as well.
Some of the more likeable quirks are the option of using rotating cover photographs for the lock screen (a different image displayed every time), turning the camera on from stand-by mode by double-clicking the volume down button, and other iOS-inspired swipes and shortcuts. We like Emotion UI, and those that don’t can turn to the Google Now launcher, available in the Play Store, for a more stock Android experience.
Camera
The Huawei P9 has a dual Leica-camera setup.
The two rear Leica cameras are the P9’s most interesting feature. Both feature identical 12-megapixel Sony sensors, with one monochromatic and the other in color. The monochromatic sensor doesn’t recognize colors as it lacks the Bayer filter. The tradeoff is that it receives three times the light, and it can take excellent photographs in dark settings. They are black and white, but they feature little to no noise.
The double back-facing camera enables other great photographer options. The device ‘knows’ how far the objects are from the phone, and it is possible to add a high-quality optical background defocus effect. What’s more, live-previews are also possible, making the P9 the only smartphone to offer this feature.
The P9 also has hybrid autofocus, which includes laser autofocus too, while the software offers three predefined color capture modes in collaboration with Leica. These include Standard, Vivid Colors and Smooth Colors, which come with the Leica-specific shooting sound. Standard mode offers usual color interpretation; Vivid Colors powerfully saturates the warmer areas of the spectrum; while Smooth Colors offers something in between.
Images look great, especially compared to Huawei’s previous handsets. Compared against
other flagships, the P9’s photographs offer comparable exposure and detail level with well-lit day shots, while night shots taken with the color camera are a step below. Night shots taken with the monochromatic camera are better in this regard, however, but remember, they are black and white. The P9 is in many ways the artist’s smartphone camera.
The P9 doesn’t fare so well with video. It lacks 4K recording, and its overall output is anemic. And the camera software is confusing. So many options are not easily accessible, and Huawei does little to inform users some of the options are just a swipe up or down in landscape mode away. Finally, the 5-megapixel selfie camera is average, offering a gimmicky “facelift effect.”
0 comments:
Post a Comment