Thursday, May 29, 2014

Sony launches 2 in 1 Dual Connector USB Drive for smartphones and tablets in India

Sony has announced and launched a very interesting USB storage device that can connect to both PCs and Smartphones. In the days where smartphone storage is becoming increasingly insufficient, Sony has launched a USB device with microUSB port on side and a regular USB port on the other. The tiny device can be used as an external storage for smartphones. Earlier this year, we unboxed a similar Verbatim USB OTG drive and Sony has followed in the footsteps of Verbatim, but have greatly reduced the size of the device making it very compact and easy to use.
sony-usb-otg
The new USB OTG device is very small and can easily fit plug into the device and definitely won’t feel awkward. The USB OTG drive is available in 8/16/32GB variants and the pricing starts from Rs. 746. The USB OTG drive is compatible with Android 4.0.3 + devices and works with PCs.
The tiny little device is made of a metal body which makes it quite durable and there is a strap hole through which you can attach the device to either a keychain or the phone itself. The microUSB port of the Dual Connector USB Drive USM-SA1 is protected by a protective cap cover that not only protects the microUSB port, but also locks into the USB port there by making it easier to plug/unplug from the PC.
The pricing of the USM-SA1 USB drive is as follows
  • 8GB  - Rs 746
  • 16GB  - Rs 1,399
  • 32GB  - Rs 2,633
The USB drive will be available in black color and is available in the market right now.

LG G2 mini specifications surface, qHD display, quad-core Snapdragon 400 CPU and Android 4.4


LG-G2-Unboxing-7
LG D410, a mysterious smartphone has surfaced on GFXBench. The phone is rumored to be launched as G2 mini, which the company is reportedly working on, for 2014 launch. Earlier rumors revealed that the phone would have a 4.7-inch 1080p display, Snapdragon 800 processor and 2GB of RAM, but the leaked benchmark details reveal that the phone would come with a qHD (960 x 540 pixels) display, powered by a 1.2 GHz quad-core Snapdragon 400 (MSM8226) processor with Adreno 305 GPU and run on Android 4.4 (Kit Kat).
Both the Moto G and the Padfone mini 4.3 have a similar processor. Looking at the leaked specifications, the G2 mini might be a mid-range smartphone like the G Pro Lite Dual, a mid-range variant of the G Pro. Even though the screen size is not mentioned, the smartphone is expected to come with a 4.3-inch or a 4.5-inch screen.

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Oppo R1 with 5-inch 720p display, 1.3 GHz quad-core processor


Oppo R1
After teasing the product across their social platforms, Oppo has finally revealed the Oppo R1, the company’s latest mid-range smartphone. The Oppo R1 (R829T) is an upgraded version of the Oppo R819, that we reviewed recently. It comes with a 5-inch (1280 x 720 pixels) IPS display with Corning Gorilla glass 3 protection, powered by a 1.3 GHz quad-core MediaTek MT6582 processor and runs on Color OS based on Android 4.2. The phone is just 7.1mm thick, 0.3mm thinner than the Oppo R819 and weighs 140 grams. It has a 8-megapixel rear camera with f/2.0 aperture and LED flash and a 5-megapixel front-facing camera.
Oppo R1
The phone has a unique design with gold rim on the sides and has a ceramic back, similar to the Oppo N1, which is just 0.5mm thick. It packs a 2410 mAh battery under the non-removable back cover and comes with dual (micro) SIM support with support for TD-SCDMA on one SIM and GSM support on the other SIM. Oppo is yet to announce the global variant of the phone with GSM and WCDMA support.
It has Dirac HD audio technology with customized acoustic optimization for headphones and second-gen Smart PA amplifier. This would compete with the recently launched Huawei Honor 3C that has similar specifications.

Oppo R1 Specifications

  • 5-inch (1280 x 720 pixels) HD IPS display at 294 ppi with Corning Gorilla glass 3 protection
  • 1.3GHz quad-core MediaTek MT6582 processor
  • Dual SIM (TD-SCDMA and GSM)
  • Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean)
  • 8MP rear camera with LED Flash, BSI sensor and f/2.0 aperture
  • 5MP front-facing camera, 80 degree wide-angle lens
  • 3.5mm audio jack
  • 7.1mm thick and weighs 140 grams
  • 1GB RAM, 16GB internal memory
  • 3G, WiFi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0, GPS
  • 2410 mAh battery
The Oppo R1 comes in two colors, white with gold frame and black with silver frame. It is priced at 2498 Chinese Yuan (~Rs. 25,450) 

Conojo Whiteboard is an Interactive Drawing Tool and Collaborative Whiteboard for iPad


Conojo Whiteboard for iPad
Conojo Whiteboard is an Interactive Drawing Tool app for the iPad. This lets iPad users create & share diagrams, mindmaps and presentations easily. Since this is also a collaborative whiteboard, collaborative planning & whiteboarding is easy with real time whiteboarding via Bluetooth & Wi-Fi with other iPad users nearby. It has tools to draw, expand on, and export your ideas and has built-in recording feature that lets you record your creation from start to finish. It has a huge collection of templates and also lets you get template packs via in-app purchase.
Features of Conojo Whiteboard for iPad
  • Real-Time Collaborative Whiteboarding
  • Easy-to- use Drawing Tools & Shapes
  • Huge Variety of Templates Incl. Charts, Graphs, Fishbone diagrams, Flowcharts
  • Powerful Bluetooth Integration and Collaboration
  • 36 In-built Training Videos for Advanced Features
  • 25 Backgrounds and Many Formatting Options
  • 100+ Stylish Fonts
  • Import Any Type of File Seamlessly via Photo Roll, Dropbox, WebDav or more
  • Advanced Tools For Dynamic Creations
  • Easy Export via Email, Facebook, Twitter, Evernote or more
Download Conojo Whiteboard – Interactive Drawing Tool ($1.99 / Rs. 110) – iPad

Friday, May 23, 2014

HTC Desire 400 Dual SIM with 4.3-inch display, dual-core Snapdragon processor


HTC Desire 400 Dual SIM
Remember the HTC Desire L that was released for the Chinese markets back in April 2013? Now HTC has released the phone in Russia as Desire 400 Dual SIM. It has almost similar specifications as the Desire L, including a 4.3-inch (800 x 480 pixels) capacitive touch screen Super LCD2 display, 1 GHz dual-core Snapdragon processor and Android 4.1 Jelly Bean with Sense 4 UI on top. It has a 5MP auto focus camera on the back with LED Flash, BSI sensor for better low-light imaging and comes with Beats audio support.
This also has Dual SIM with dual active support, similar to most of the Dual SIM Desire phones. It has 1GB RAM and packs a 1800 mAh battery.

HTC Desire 400 Dual SIM Specifications

  • 4.3-inch (800 x 480 pixels) capacitive touch screen Super LCD2 display
  • 1 GHz dual-core processor
  • Dual SIM (WCDMA + GSM) with dual Active support
  • Android 4.1.1 (Jelly Bean) with HTC Sense 4.0 UI
  • 8.9 mm thick and weighs 120 grams
  • 5MP auto focus camera with HTC ImageChip, LED Flash, BSI sensor, 720p HD video recording
  • 1GB RAM, 4GB internal, expandable memory up to 64GB with microSD
  • 3.5 mm audio jack, Beats Audio, FM Radio
  • 3G, WiFi 820.11 b/g/n, DLNA, Bluetooth 4.0 with aptX, GPS and GLONASS
  • 1800 mAh battery
The HTC Desire 400 DUal SIM comes in White and Dark Grey colors and is priced at 9990 Russian Ruble (~Rs. 18920)

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Gionee Elife E7 Mini hands on

Gionee has launched the Gionee Elife E7 mini smartphone in India for Rs. 18999. It will also launch the Gionee Elife E7, the company’s latest flagship phone at the event. The mini version of the flagship that will sport a octa-core processor from MediaTek and will have a relatively smaller 4.7inch 720p display.
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We managed to get a hands-on with this device and you can check out the hands-on photos right below. The Gionee Elife E7 mini is powered by the 1.7GHz Octa-core MediaTek MT6592 processor and has 1GB RAM to support multi-tasking. Gionee is known for its build quality and that is clearly seen in the Gionee Elife E7 mini as it is solidly built. One of the innovations in the Gionee Elife E7 mini is its 13MP swivel camera that we already saw in Oppo N1. Like most Gionee top range phones, the Elife E7 mini is a sealed unit and feels quite premium just like the Elife E6.
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Gionee Elife E7 mini runs on a Android 4.2 with Amigo UI on top. The UI was laggy on the Gionee Elife E6 as it had just a quad-core processor and a Full HD 1080p display to power. We expect things to have improved and we are hoping that the performance of Elife E7 mini is excellent.
On the top, we have the swivel camera and hence the microUSB port, the 3.5mm audio jack are found on the bottom part of the device.
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On the left, we have just a microSIM tray.
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On the right side of the phone, we have a volume rocker and power lock button.
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The photos are right below. Let us know what you think of the device.

Gionee Elife E7 Hands On


Gionee Elife E7-2
The phone has a 5.5-inch (1920  x 1080 pixels) Full HD IPS display with corning Gorilla Glass 3 protection. It is powered by a 2.2 GHz quad-core Snapdragon 800 MSM8974 processor with 2GB or 3GB of RAM.
Gionee Elife E7-9
The display is based on One Glass Solution and has 2.33mm ultra-narrow frame. It is bright and looks better than the 1080p display on the Elife E6. The phone has a 8-megapixel auto focus front-facing camera.
Gionee Elife E7-8
It runs on Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) with Amigo 2.0 UI on top. The phone is just 9.5mm thick and is curved on the sides.
Gionee Elife E7-11
The phone has a sealed back, similar to the previous Gionee’s flagships. You can see the large 16-megapixel camera sensor on the top with single LED flash. It can record videos at 1080p full HD resolution and has lots of camera features. Even though the shiny back is prone to finger prints, the phone has solid build quality.
Gionee Elife E7-1
The phone has HDR, Auto Scene and option to reduce the image size, if you need a smaller images. It can also capture full screen images in 16:9 aspect ratio in 12MP resolution. It has 16GB of internal memory and packs 2500 mAh built-in battery. We will bring you more details about the phone, including the pricing for India and the hands-in video soon. In the mean time check out few more images below.

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Spice Smart Flo Mettle 4X Mi-426 with 4-inch display, metal body for Rs. 4299


Spice Smart Flo Mettle 4X
S Mobility launched the Spice Smart Flo Mettle 5X (Mi-504) with metal body earlier this month. Now theSpice Smart Flo Mettle 4X (Mi-426), a budget smartphone with metal build is available from online retailer Saholic, as the company promised. It has a 4-inch (480 x 800 pixels) capacitive touch screen display, powered by a 1 GHz dual-core processor and runs on Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean). It comes with a 3.2-megapixel rear camera with LED flash and a 1.3-megapixel front-facing camera. It has Dual SIM support with Dual Standby and has 2G (EDGE) connectivity, similar to the Mettle 5X.

Spice Smart Flo Mettle 4X Mi-426 Specifications

  • 4-inch (480 x 800 pixels) capacitive touch screen display
  • Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean)
  • 1 GHz dual-core processor
  • Dual SIM (GSM + GSM) with dual standby
  • 3.2MP rear camera with LED flash
  • 1.3 MP front-facing camera
  • 256MB RAM, 512MB internal memory, expandable memory up to 32GB with microSD
  • 2G (EDGE), WiFi, Bluetooth 4.0, GPS / aGPS
  • 1450 mAh battery
The Spice Smart Flo Mettle 4X comes in White color and is priced at Rs. 4,299.

Monday, May 19, 2014

Gionee Elife E7 with 5.5-inch 1080p display, Snapdragon 800 processor for Rs. 29999


Gionee Elife E7-2
The Elife E7 packs a 5.5-inch (1920  x 1080 pixels) Full HD IPS touch screen display based on One Glass Solution from JDI with Corning Gorilla Glass 3 protection and a 2.33mm ultra-narrow frame, powered by a 2.2 GHz quad-core Snapdragon 800 MSM8974 processor and runs on Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) with Amigo 2.0 UI that brings Double tap to wake up, draw gestures on the black screen to go directly into the customized corresponding procedures and wake up the phone with voice control.
Gionee Elife E7-11
It has a 16-megapixel auto focus rear camera with 1/2.3″ 1.34 µm Largan M8 sensor, 5 element Sapphire Lens and a 8-megapixel auto focus front-facing camera. The new new Amigo enables users to use new ways to take photos such as voice control, touch, smile and v-gesture. It has a Photo Album that automatically categorizes photos by time, place, and facial characterizes, and events; thus, enabling users to find a specific photo in seconds.

Gionee Elife E7 specifications

  • 5.5-inch (1920  x 1080 pixels) Full HD IPS touch screen OGS display with Corning Gorilla Glass 3 protection
  • 2.2 GHz quad-core Snapdragon 800 MSM8974 processor with Adreno 330 GPU
  • Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) with Amigo 2.0 UI
  • 16MP auto focus camera, LED flash, 1/2.3″ 1.34 µm sensor, Sapphire lens, 1080p video recording
  • 8MP auto focus front-facing camera
  • Dimensions – 150.6 x 75.0 x 9.5mm-6.2mm; Weight: 150 grams
  • 3.5mm audio jack, FM Radio
  • 3 microphones for noise cancellation
  • 2/3GB RAM, 16/32GB internal memory
  • 3G, WiFi 802.11 b/g/n, WiFi Direct, Bluetooth 4.0, GPS, USB,OTG, NFC
  • 2500 mAh built-in battery
The Elife E7 comes in Meteor Black, Ceramic White, Blue, Green, Orange and Pink colors and is priced at Rs. 26,999 for the 2GB RAM and 16GB ROM variant and Rs. 29,999 for the 3GB RAM and 32GB ROM variant.

Notion Ink Adam II Benchmarks


Notion Ink Adam II Benchmarks
Notion Ink launched the Adam II, the company’s latest Android tablet earlier this month. We already brought you the Unboxing and the Photo gallery of the Tablet. Here we have the benchmarks of the device. The tablet has a 10.1-inch (1280×800 pixels) capacitive touch screen display with Asahi Dragontrail glass protection. It is powered by a 1.5 GHz dual-core RockChip RK3066 Cortex A9 processor and Mali-400 MP GPU and runs on Android 4.2.2 (Jelly Bean). It packs 1GB of RAM.  Let’s find out how this competes with other devices in synthetic benchmark tests.
Quadrant Benchmark
Notion Ink Adam II Quadrant Benchmark
The tablet manages to score 4186 points in the Quadrant Benchmark and lies just behind the Xolo Play 7.0 powered by a Tegra 3 chip.
AnTuTu Benchmark 3.3
Notion Ink Adam II AnTuTu 3.3
It scores 11419 points in the AnTuTu Benchmark 3.3 and lies behind the Xolo Play Tab 7.0. We got 13846 points in the AnTuTu 4 Benchmarks, slightly better than the Tegra 3-powered Xolo Play Tab 7.0 that scored 13821 points.
Vellamo 2.0 HTML5
Notion Ink Adam II Vellamo 2 HTML5
It scores 1941 points and tops the Vellamo 2 HTML5 browser benchmark.
Vellamo 2.0 Metal
Notion Ink Adam II Vellamo 2 Metal
It scored 476 points in the Vellamo 2 Metal CPU subsystem performance test.
Linpack Single Thread
Notion Ink Adam II Linpack Single Thread
It manages to clock around 45.9 MFLOPS in the Linpack single thread benchmark.
Linpack Multi-Thread
Notion Ink Adam II Linpack Multi-Thread
It clocked around 78.1 MFLOPS in the Linpack Multi-Thread benchmark and lies behind the XTRON+.
NenaMark 2
Notion Ink Adam II NenaMark 2
It clocked 62.8 fps in the NenaMark 2 GPU benchmark.
GFXBench 2.7 T-Rex (On screen)
Notion Ink Adam II GFXBench 2.7 T-Rex
It manages to clock just 5.1 fps in the GFXBench 2.7 T-Rex OnScreen Benchmark.
GFXBench 2.5 Egypt HD (On screen)
Notion Ink Adam II GFX Bench 2.5 Egypt
It manages to clock 17 FPS in the GFXBench 2.5 Egypt HD OnScreen benchmark.
Basemark X HD (Onscreen)
Notion Ink Adam II Basemark X HD OnScreen
In the Basemark X HD Onscreen benchmark, the Adam II clocked around 4.85 FPS.
Basemark X HD (Offscreen)
Notion Ink Adam II Basemark X HD OffScreen
In the Basemark X HD Offscreen benchmark, the Adam II clocked around 2.99 FPS

Gionee Elife E7 Mini with 4.7-inch HD display, Octa-Core CPU for Rs. 18999


gionee-elife-e7-mini-4
Gionee has launched the Elife E7 mini in India along with the Elife E7. It has a 4.7-inch  (1280  x 720  pixels) IPS display, powered by a 1.7 GHz octa-core MediaTek MT6592 processor and runs on Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) with Amigo UI 2.0. It packs a 13-megapixel swivel camera, just like the Oppo N1. It packs 1GB RAM and comes with 2100 mAh battery. The phone was leaked last month, but it was not announced at the Elife E7 launch in China.
gionee-elife-e7-mini-9

Gionee Elife E7 mini specifications

  • 4.7-inch (1280  x 720  pixels) IPS display with IGZO
  • 1.7 GHz octa-core MediaTek MT6592 processor with Mali 450-MP4 GPU
  • Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) with Amigo UI 2.0
  • 13MP auto focus swivel camera with LED flash, 1080p video recording
  • 3.5mm audio jack
  • 1 GB RAM, 16 GB internal memory
  • 3G, WiFi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0, GPS, Dual SIM
  • 2100 mAh built-in battery
The Gionee Elife E7 Mini comes in Blue and Pink colors and is priced at Rs. 18,999. It would go on sale in India by mid-January 2014. 

Friday, May 16, 2014

Notion Ink Adam II Review


notion-ink-adam-2-ii-photos-2Notion Ink Adam II Review
Notion Ink is a name that most of us remember for various reasons. Some of us remember it for the innovative wannabe product, a world’s first Tegra 2 chipset on board with an innovative Pixel Qi dual mode display and a rotating camera, that too way back in 2010 when Android 2.1 was doing the rounds. Some of us remember it for the lengthy delays in production and the overall failure to meet expectations due to sub standard retail hardware and experience. Suffice to say, it was deemed a failure.
But the company is now back with another product, the Notion Ink Adam II which was recently released in India for a starting price of Rs. 16,499. We had unboxed it a while back to find out if the device redeems itself from its predecessor’s failure. We were initially impressed, but now after about a week of usage, is the Notion Ink Adam II really worth our time and money? We find out in our full review.
Video Review
Unboxing
The Adam II comes with a big box with minimal number of components. A surprising addition was the DIY kick stand made of card board, here are the box contents laid out in a single picture -
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  • Tablet – Notion Ink Adam II
  • Wall charger – with Indian plug
  • Micro USB cable
  • DIY cardboard Kick Stand
  • Quick Start guide and info on how to make the kick stand
  • Cleaning cloth
You can take a look at our complete unboxing and first impressions post for an idea of how we felt at first look.
Design, build and ergonomics
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The design of the Adam II is refreshing. It is very clear that the company’s message is to make it look like a book, with large bezels on the left hand side when held in portrait. The logo on the back reads in portrait and the box itself was printed in portrait orientation. Coming to the actual use, this design actually makes for a comfortable hold and a very text book like form factor. To match the look, the company even has added a secondary display on the spine for at a glance information. More on that later.
Predominantly made of metal, the build quality is very premium, and naturally is one of the stand out factors of this device. Not many curves exist on the sides, so the flat look creates hard edges. The plastic material used for the buttons too is of good quality and they provide good feedback when pressed but weirdly, they are comfortable to use only in landscape meaning, they are easily accessible in this orientation. The back is completely flat, so it easily picks up scratches and dirt if you are careless, so it is best that you buy a stand in case you are considering this device.
Talking of handling, as we said earlier, due to the hard edges, it’s kinda hard to hold it for longer times in the landscape orientation while we felt it is slightly better in portrait. Coming in at 584g of weight, this also comes as a factor that affects regular usage. It is not too heavy, but again, the hard edges don’t help. This got us thinking whether the form factor itself is in question here. We personally feel that a smaller form factor, like that of a 8 inch device suits this design better, mainly because the device is too cumbersome and impractical to use in landscape as well as portrait which is the way it is primarily intended to be used. Overall, this is a very well designed and built device which we would like to see in a smaller form factor.
Hardware Walkthrough
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“It all starts with the book” says the default wall paper. We see what Notion Ink’s going for here, with regards to the design philosophy and we like it, despite us wanting a smaller form factor of this.
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The tablet, meant to be held in portrait, has a large bezel on the left, which packs stereo speakers. the 3.2 MP front facing camera and a microphone, primarily used for video calls. The display is a 10.1 inch IPS LCD panel with a 1280×800 resolution and is covered by the Asahi Dragontrail glass. It is highly reflective and a finger print magnet too.
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When held in landscape, these components make more sense, or rather feel familiar. As you can notice, the tablet is fully white, making it coherent and minimalistic in design. We really like the grilled speakers and its symmetric placement. Considering this is a tablet meant to be held in portrait, lets go by that orientation for the hardware walk through.
The right side(or the bottom, in landscape) is empty but there are a lot of connectivity options at the bottom(or left, in landscape).
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You have the (from left to right) micro USB slot with OTG support, mini HDMI port for display out, a micro SD card slot for adding upto 32 GB of memory and finally, a SIM slot for data connectivity. You can also notice the screws right here on the side, may be it’s easy to open the tablet.
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You also have the volume rocker sitting at the edge of the same side(left, in landscape and bottom, in portrait).
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You can also notice that this tabled is “Created with love by Notion Ink Design labs in India, Assembled in China”. Yes, the company is based out of Bangalore and is responsible for the conception and design of this product, while it is assembled in China, much like most of the electronic products these days.
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The back, which is flat and minimalistic, sports the Notion Ink Adam logo and also the secondary rear camera on the right. The metallic build is marvelous and is just a sight to behold. It looks way better than how it looks in the photos.
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Over at the top, we have the power/lock switch and the 3.5mm audio jack.
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Over at the left, we have the spine of the device which also sports a two-part LCD screen. This is always on, even when the device is turned off, and acts like a text book’s label. You can configure the message it says on the left and it displays the time on the right. Of course, this works great for at-a-glance information, hence notifications can be configured to be displayed here. A nice little touch, but works great if you just want to see if you have any notifications without turning on the screen, and put the tablet aside. As mentioned earlier, you can configure a custom message from inside the settings to make it show what ever you want.
Display
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One of the prized additions to the Notion Ink Adam was its Pixel Qi transflective LCD screen that turned a lot of heads. It could have dual modes, with backlight on or off, but the successor loses this innovative screen, unfortunately. Here, in place of the Pixel Qi is a 10.1 inch IPS LCD screen with a resolution of 1280×800. With such a low resolution for a 10.1 inch panel, it measures only 150 ppi of pixel density. This is very low for a 10 inch tablet at this point in time as other tablets have moved to hidpi displays, for example the Nexus 10 and its 300 ppi screen.
Aside from the low ppi, the display is also highly reflective and not optimal for use in outdoors, which is practically opposite to the Adam I. Colours are slightly washed out even at head on viewing angles. We feel that this is just an average display. But of course, it is deliberately done due to the price and we can see that.
Internals and Performance
notion-ink-adam-ii-benchmarks
The internals are powered by the Rockchip RK3066 chipset which comes with a 1.5 GHz Dual Core Cortex A9 processor. The graphics are powered by the Mali 400 Quad Core GPU and is accompanied by a gigabyte of DDR3 RAM. On paper, this seems like a very good performer but in reality it is otherwise. We ran some synthetic benchmarks to test the performance out and found that the CPU is average while the Mali 400 MP GPU performs really well. You can see a couple of findings here -
Take a look at the complete set of benchmark results here.
As you can see from some of the charts above, the CPU tests like Linpack show how underpowered the CPU is, while the more GPU-focused tests like Quadrant show you how powerful the GPU is. We tried a bit of gaming too on this tablet, which is not great if held in the hand due to the uncomfortable edges but the device does perform really well thanks to the quad core Mail 400 MP GPU. We will update you with gaming videos in a while here, check back in a few days.
Screenshot_2013-12-24-20-45-54
Again, like we mentioned earlier, the findings from the benchmarks translated to day to day performance as we saw repeated slow downs both due to the CPU as well as the insufficient 1 GB of RAM, which easily fills up for even a bit of multi tasking. Yes, the 1 GB of DDR3 RAM easily fills up and has about 500 MB free on idle. It completely chokes the device when a process like installing apps is running in the parallel, so much that the device completely comes to a standstill. The touch response too is not something to boast about here, there were a lot of mistouches and long delays of action.
However, the videos and games play well on this device, which is a good sign that the GPU is powerful. But overall experience, if you ask us, is just average and sometimes really frustrating due to the single tasking nature of performance. We really hope Notion Ink optimize the hardware for better performance in a firmware update or two.
Screenshot_2013-12-24-20-44-43
The storage on the Notion Ink adam II is pegged at 8GB with around 6.30 GB available for the user, which is aplenty if you are looking at installing some games and watching a couple of movies. You can also install apps and games on the SD card, which makes life easier for people wanting to install a ton of games or watch a lot of videos with a roaming collection on the card.
Other Hardware
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Other interesting hardware parts of the Adam II include the stereo loud speakers, the cameras and the spine display. As mentioned earlier, the spine display is a way to get at a glance information and is actually a two piece 100×5 STN LCD panel, which works even when the device is in standby. The stereo speakers are surprisingly true stereo and you can notice the difference between two channels when listening in landscape. The 3.15 MP BSI cameras on both the front and back are great for video calling but we wouldn’t suggest using it for taking pictures.
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The tablet also comes with a ton of connectivity options, like WiFi, 3G in the mobile variant, micro SD expansion up to 32 GB and finally the much needed USB OTG micro USB slot which is great for a big tablet. We got the PS3 controller to work with games on this tablet, and other accessories like a keyboard and mouse or even flash drives work great. The SIM slot is a full sized SIM slot and we found it hard to use it to pop in a SIM, but otherwise data worked just fine but of course you cannot make calls.
Software
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Coming to software, the tablet runs pure AOSP Android 4.2.2 out of the box. It’s completely stripped of any major modifications and only includes small tweaks like a screenshot button for the nav layout and a secondary display option for small modifications. The UI too gains some small tweaks for better landscape usage like a notification and status bar at the bottom along with navigation shortcuts on the screen. The default media players can play most formats of music and video, and we were surprised to see 1080p videos running flawlessly on this device, even 60 fps ones. Proves the GPU muscle inside. The custom video player also lets us have a pop up overlay on the screen which we can resize and watch besides doing other things. We found this to work really well.
Otherwise, there is not much to say about the software additions. Here are some screenshots of the UI in case you are wondering -
Running on Android 4.2.2, the the device comes with lock screen widgets and day dream options just like what you see on Nexus devices. All the Google apps are pre-installed but you can obviously install anything you want from the play store too. That said, we still feel Android on a 10.1 inch tablet is not ideal. Sure there are a lot of tablet optimized apps available now, but that doesn’t change the fact that default UI is hard to use in landscape, with a centered app list button and even the app list. Also, popular apps like Twitter still are tablet-exclusive to Samsung devices and what we get here is just a stretched mobile app. The situation is improving by the day, but we would like to see it match the iPad soon, may be someday.
Battery Life
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The Notion Ink Adam II comes with a whoppingly huge 6000 mAH Lithium ion battery. Like most tablets the battery lasts for a long while even if you are using it regularly. However, we had found some anomalies, as the battery kept draining in standby, more so than while in use. We had kept the device in idle for a couple of days only to find the battery completely depleted and hence taking a long time to boot. It happened more than once for us but sometimes it idled very well, however we haven’t been able to find the exact reason why. Technically the battery life should be excellent with a massive capacity but weirdly enough, we faced drains that are uncharacteristic. It might be an isolated issue, we should warn you, but we will let you know if that changes. Also, due to a large capacity, we needed to make sure we use the in-box charger to get it charged faster than usual with the other chargers we had lying around.
Conclusion
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In the end we find two main problems with the Notion Ink Adam II. The form factor is too big for ideal textbook like usage, especially with a low resolution 1280×800 screen at 10 inches. We would definitely like a smaller 8 inch form factor with a slightly better screen and the same resolution, which works better for that screen size. Next is performance. We found it too hard to give it a pass as it constantly became non-performing over the course of usage. If Notion Ink can fix these two problems and retain the beautiful design and build, they will have a customer in me. But if you are still in the market for a really cheap 10 inch tablet that now sells for a holiday discount of just 13,999 the Notion Ink might not just be the right fit, it might even surprise you with the build quality, go for it in that case.
Pros
  • Great design and build quality
  • Good loudspeakers
  • Stock Android with no bloat
  • Powerful GPU performance, can play videos flawlessly
  • Stocked with connectivity options including HDMI out and USB OTG
Cons
  • Average display with low resolution and pixel density
  • CPU and RAM are bottlenecks for general use, hampers the experience
  • Form factor might not be ideal for the design