Tag: canvas gold

  • Micromax Canvas Gold A300 Review

    Micromax Canvas Gold A300 Review

    Micromax has recently transitioned into a newer dimension of phones, from bulky and dated phones running older versions of Android, the trend is now to get shapely, sleek devices with Android KitKat out of the box. The current flagship, aka the Micromax Canvas Gold A300, is a testament of that, and while the Canvas Knight was burning our desires (quite literally), the Golden boy here may have turned our mood around. Let’s see how it holds up.

    canvas gold a300 review 6

    Overview

    [pullquote_left]The oddly questionable gold colour is far from that of the iPhone 5s[/pullquote_left]

    The Canvas Gold A300 is yet another flagship Canvas phone from the company that promises a roundup of interesting elements. A good set of specifications, great build quality, design and good optics, giving it a big thumbs up on the premium look and feel. Even though most have called it a replica of the iPhone 5s in a bigger version, the oddly questionable gold colour is far from that of the iPhone 5s.

    Hardware and Build

    Running the Canvas Gold A300 is an Octa-Core Mediatek 6592T chipset clocked at 2.0 GHz tied up with 2 GB of RAM and 32 GB of Storage. 25GB of the 32 GB is available to dump your media, games and files. The rear camera is a 16MP shooter with a 5MP front camera which does an impressive job with selfies (see camera section)

    canvas gold a300 review 14

    The front has an impressive and vivid 5.5 inch 1920 x 1080p display this is surprisingly visible outdoors and has good viewing angles. The phone has dual SIM capabilities and can run data on 3g on both cards. The Sim slots comprise of a full size SIM slot and a micro SIM slot on either side of the device.

    The phone is manufactured out of a “single billet” of aluminium alloy with slots for antennas in plastic on the rear of the device. The phone is readily available in two variants, a Gold+White and the Gold+Black, the only difference being the plastic inserts and the colour of the bezel.

    canvas gold a300 review 20

    Apart from the exceptionally golden – gold colour the phone has a pretty good design, and the metal is nicely finished to give a great feel in the hand. The beveled edges of the phone quite replicate the iPhone look, seen specifically iPhone 4 and up. The flat lay-on-the table design will be appreciated by owners quite a lot, although a fatter lip for the front would have given a strong protection to the screen albeit taking away a bit of the slim profile of the smartphone.

    Phone and Networks

    The phone is unique in many ways, instead of selection your data network, you can have data on either SIM, which is great. The weird combination of Sim card sizes may work for some people, especially if they don’t want to cut/get micro SIM cards vs. regular sized ones.

    canvas gold a300 review 4

    The networks are strong and audio in and out of the phone is impressive. The network remains positively active even during tower switches, and we didn’t see a huge problem with dropped calls.

    The WiFi seemed a bit low to us, and in our initial tests seemed weak.

    Multimedia, Display and Camera

    For most media is playable on the Canvas Gold A300, and we found nothing to complain about, the audio could be a little bit louder in our opinion. The music output from the headphones is a lot more impressive when compared to any previous handset, the “flaming knight” included.

    As far as the video playback goes, the display does a fantastic job, jitter-free vibrant video playback. The phone is capable enough and will deliver a good experience to most users.

    canvas gold a300 review 3
    The camera system is a good hardware and software upgrade, and the 16 MP sensor is big enough to give a noise free low light performance. The day shots are noteworthy and brilliantly saturated to give a larger than life photography experience. The camera app is simplistic and new features like 99 shot continuous burst along with tap-hold to track subjects actively will come in handy for video.

    Video capture frame rates are slow to display on the screen, in fact when you are capturing video there seems to be a lag in the screen aka the viewfinder. But, we were testing a pre-production software and apparently this has been fixed in the final build. Video is captured at a resolution of 1920 x 1080p at 30fps just like many other handsets in this bracket.

    Performance and Gaming

    The Canvas Gold A300 is a star performer scoring great results on benchmarks and showing excellent performance in daily use overall. You will be happy multitasking on this handset as it can handle app switching very well and thanks to inbuilt RAM management the phone automatically drives resources to the active application. The apps in the background use the adaptive suspend from Android KitKat.

    Thanks to all this software and management goodness, the gaming experience is excellent, with heat at a minimum. The device does heat up from around the camera with extended periods of use, however the minute you are done you will be happy to put the phone in your pocket and move out. Games have a superfluid experience along with excellent touch screen feedback and responsiveness.

    Battery Life and Conclusion

    The battery on the Canvas Gold A300 lasts a good full day of use, and thanks to KitKat and power management you will not be searching for the charger in a hurry. The bloatware on the Canvas Gold A300 has been brought down to a minimum, and most of the preloaded apps useful, those which are not required can be gotten rid of.

    With a software update thanks to FOTA, the device may get Android L (hopefully) and with the company working to fix their service issues the Micromax Canvas Gold seems like a good overall product. With little or no complaints from the hardware and excellent UI including a new keyboard (Swiftkey) pre loaded for use, most will be happy with the device out of the box.

    With more options in this price bracket including Gionee Elife S5.5,  the Moto X and the Desire 816 it will mostly come down to user requirements.

    Review Video

    [tw-column width=”one-half”]

    GOOD THINGS

    • Build Quality is Impressive
    • Powerful Hardware
    • Great Battery
    • KitKat and FOTA Updates
    • Cameras are sharp

    [/tw-column]

    [tw-column width=”one-half” position=”last”]

    BAD THINGS

    • Strange Gold Colour
    • No Lip around Display
    • No Included Case

    [/tw-column]

  • The Android War : Gionee S5.5 Vs HTC Desire 816 Vs Sony Xperia M2 Vs Micromax Canvas Gold

    The Android War : Gionee S5.5 Vs HTC Desire 816 Vs Sony Xperia M2 Vs Micromax Canvas Gold

    Android market has come up with some of the best devices this season. The flagship Android segment has always been on war, and these four are in their most bloody mood. HTC Desire 816, Micromax Canvas Gold, Gionee S5.5 and Sony Xperia M2 are the front runner in the INR 20-25,000 category.

    The international brands Sony and HTC have been challenged quite effectively by the domestic contenders Micromax and Gionee.  Let’s have a quick blow by blow of where each phone bests its opponents.

    Phone Gionee S5.5 HTC Desire 816 Sony Xperia M2 Micromax Canvas Gold
    Price Gionee Elife S5.5
    INR 21,500
    HTC Desire 816

    INR 23,990

    Sony Xperia M2 Dual
    INR 19,300

    Micromax-Canvas-Gold-A300-150x150

    INR 21,799

     

     

     

    Operating System Android (4.2) Android (4.4) Android (4.3) Android(4.4.2)
    Display 5 inches
    Screen Type: Super AMOLED Capacitive Touch Screen
    Details: 16M Colors
    Screen: 1920 X 1080
    5.5 inches
    Screen Type: Super LCD2 Capacitive Touch Screen
    Details: 16M Colors
    Screen: 1280 X 720
    4.8 inches
    Screen Type: TFT capacitive touchscreen
    Details: 16M Colors
    Screen: 960 X 540
    5.50 inches
    Screen type Capacitive
    Resolution 1080×1920 pixels
    Camera 13 MPTouch Focus, Face & Smile Detection

    13 MP

    Geo-Tagging, Touch Focus, Face Detection, Simultaneous HD Video and Image Recording, HDR

    8 MP

    Geo-Tagging, Touch Focus, Face and Smile Detection, Image Stabilization, HDR, Panorama

    16 MP

    Architecture, Electronic Image Stabilization, Cheese, Burst, Face Beauty Mode, Live Photo Mode, Auto Gesture Mode, HDR Mode

    CPU 1.7 GHz MediaTek MT6592, Octa-Core 1.6 GHz Qualcomm MSM8928 Snapdragon 400, Cortex-A7, Quad Core 1.2 GHz Qualcomm MSM8226-0 Snapdragon 400, Cortex-A7, Quad Core 2 GHz octa-core MediaTek MT6592T processor
    RAM
    2 GB
    1.5 GB
    1GB 2GB
    Internal Storage 16 GB 8 GB  8 GB 32GB
    Battery 2300 mAh, Non-Removable, Lithium-Ion 2600 mAh, Non-Removable, Lithium-Ion Polymer 2300 mAh, Non-Removable, Lithium-Ion Li-Polymer 2300 mAh, Removable, Lithium-Ion

    All phones are the best their manufactures offer in this price category. Gionee certainly gets an extra point for its ultra slim S5.5, but Desire 816’s build quality steals the show. The new Micromax Gold offers a 16MP camera with a wide range of features it doesn’t have much competition against the 13MP in S5.5 and Desire 816; and the 8MP in Xepria M2. Also, the Micromax Gold champagne-colored body makes it a great looker, with 32 GB of internal storage and 2 GB RAM. In the end, the efficiency of the device is based on the needs of the user.

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