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Micromax Canvas Selfie Review

The term Selfie can be defined as a self-photograph taken by a camera phone or any handheld camera. Today, ‘selfie’ has almost become a household term, with everyone posting selfies of almost every place they’ve been, the self obsession is very obviously an opportunity that smartphone makers are pouncing on.



Price-INR-15999/-

Micromax Canvas Selfie is their serious and focussed attempt on launching a selfie special smartphone. With 13 megapixel front camera, the Micromax Canvas Selfie is betting big on the megapixel way of judging a camera. And, the number play continues onto the processor as well, you get an Octa-core processor to support the 13MP camera. So, will more be merrier for the Micromax Canvas Selfie? Let’s find out!

Build & Design

Micromax’s build quality has hugely improved over the years and the Canvas Selfie is a pretty good example of that. The presence of a Gorilla Glass 3, a non removable back adds up to the phone’s sturdy build. All three physical buttons, power, volume rocker and the camera button feel and look well machined and have a nice click to them.



Moving on to the design, the phone is definitely a looker. Unlike being a regular rectangular slab, the Canvas Selfie features a curved top and bottom. This gives a nice design touch, reminds me of an old Motorola phone, the ROKR E8. Saying that, the enormous bezels at the top and bottom of the phone could have been minimized.



The front the display is well hidden when unlit giving the Canvas Selfie a nice mirror like sheen. The large camera at the back along with the dual flash may not go down well with some people, but it does make the phone look different. Overall, the Micromax Canvas Selfie is a sturdily built phone with some interesting design choices that make the phone stand-out from the regular pack of mid-range smartphones.

Display & UI

The 720p, 4.7-inch display on the Micromax Canvas Selfie looks good on paper but I found the display to be dim. Even on full brightness the screen failed to pop in terms of color and vibrance. Viewing angles and outside legibility are okay and the display is more at par with phones that are a segment below.



UI is another area where the phone disappoints. The custom UI is a step back from the spartan stock Android Micromax was offering on its previous phones. The UI feels cluttered and could be disorienting for existing Micromax users.

Performance

The Micromax canvas Selfie has the same MediaTek 6592 SoC as the one we saw on the Micromax Canvas Nitro. They even perform almost at par, hence the performance is satisfactory for its price segment, though not class leading by any stretch of imagination. And with 2GB of RAM on board, the phone does not feel bogged down on heavy usage or multitasking, there is enough room in terms of a smooth user experience even after you fill it up with dozens of apps.
Call quality is good and the sound quality via the built-in speakers is fairly loud. During my review period, the Micromax Canvas Selfie largely stayed manageable in terms of device temperature. Though prolonged gaming and camera usage can cause the device to quickly heat-up. An issue I also observed with the Micromax Canvas Nitro.

Camera & Battery



The smartphone boasts a 13MP camera at the rear and a 13 MP camera at the front and both camera sensors are made by Sony. Bringing the focus back on the star of the show (for Micromax), the 13MP front facing shooter for capturing selfies. I found pictures taken by the camera in suitable lighting to be good. While details and sharpness levels were good and noise levels were kept in control on most occasions, the colours felt a bit oversaturated. Images taken in low-light came out well in terms of overall quality, though the noise level was on the higher side, a typical case of low-light pics from small sensors that invariably results in ISO levels being pushed to the max to maintain fast shutter response..

The Canvas Selfie features software tricks to ‘beautify’ faces. The software makes your eyes larger, whitens the skin, slims down the face, removes oiliness and more. There is a entire range of make-up (editing) options as well. All of these features are available on both cameras which can used or applied and they work to an extent only. So, Whether you see it as an advantage or stuff that you’d rather live without is an individual choice. Overall, inspite of having its fair share of negatives, given its price-point, the Micromax Canvas Selfie is a good phone for SELFIE ENTHUSIASTS. The Micromax phone is priced a lot lower than HTC Desire Eye, the current champion of ‘selfie phones’. At 1/3rd the price, the Canvas Selfie offers a lot of value for selfie lovers. Though, you also need to consider the fact that the other aspects of the device aren’t class leading for its category and keeping the selfie aspect aside, you will find better phones in this price range.



Images taken by the rear 13MP camera delivered a similar result to the front-facing camera but with slightly better images at times. Pictures looked warmer with slight oversaturation and the only down side to the camera is the low-light performance. The dual-LED flash does help in low light but use of flash is recommended for situations when the subject is at a reasonable distance from the lens, ensuring images don’t end-up being over-blown due to the excessive light
One thing to add is that the phone heats up like a pan while using the camera. This was odd since it didn’t heat up as much when I played games on it.

The battery is another low point of the phone. In my battery test the smartphone was able to last just over five hours. When I used the phone as a daily driver with normal usage, the battery was out of juice by evening, which is not good enough by any standards.

Bottomline

The Micromax Canvas Selfie skimps on every other feature except the front-facing camera. So, if you want a “selfie” phone in a budget, this is your best choice but if you want more than that you should look elsewhere.

CES 2015: Android Retro Kit

Craig Grannell dons his old-git hat and grumbles about how iconic old gadgets simply become yet more Android devices

CES 2015: You can’t go back: Android ‘retro’ kit just isn’t the real thing
Each year, CES throws up (figuratively, although some people might argue almost literally) certain themes that set the course for technology for the rest of the year.
In 2014, it was all about smart technology, which, sure enough, became increasingly absurd as the months passed.
This year, possibly due to the economy still being given a thorough thrashing, there’s a clear attempt to infuse technology with familiarity and the warm, fuzzy glow of nostalgia.
By way of example, there’s the new Kodak Instamatic and the new Sony Walkman. Both of these names propel me back to simpler times, blissfully free from mortgage payments, nappies, constant nagging notifications on multiple black rectangles, and spam.



WIRED FOR SOUND 


CES 2015: You can’t go back: Android ‘retro’ kit just isn’t the real thing

My Walkman was already old when I got it - a hand-me-down from my mother. I recall it (probably erroneously - although only slightly) being about the same size and weight as a housebrick.
The thing was so bulky that it came with a shoulder strap rather than a belt-clip, in order that it not yank your trousers down at inopportune moments. Its heft was such that if you spun round too quickly, the thing would fly dangerously about your person, causing you to send friends flying into walls, or turn hideous (but, at the time, weirdly fashionable) ceramic owls and field-mice into exciting three-dimensional puzzles.
Despite this, I loved the thing, with its giant clicky buttons, even as it chewed through batteries (and sometimes the cassettes it was supposed to be playing). It was this that cemented itself in my head whenever I thought ‘Walkman’, eclipsing any successors with their new-fangled shiny discs, MiniDiscs, and MP3s.

CES 2015: You can’t go back: Android ‘retro’ kit just isn’t the real thing

Similarly, Kodak Instamatic has an important place in history for a great many people, ushering in an age of relatively low-cost photography, and boasting form factors that were tactile, beautiful and approachable. Naturally, by the time I got my hands on one, it was already pretty old, but that merely somehow made it feel experienced and worldly wise.
This was a camera that had been places; it quickly became a cherished item - something magical that had a life of its own.

Old for old's sake?

CES 2015: You can’t go back: Android ‘retro’ kit just isn’t the real thing

At CES 2015, though, the modern-day interpretations of these classics bear little relationship to their forebears. Admittedly - at least from certain angles - you might initially think otherwise. The Instamatic certainly has an unmistakable form factor, and while there’s no such immediate familiarity with the Walkman, it nonetheless intrigues with its chunky buttons and textured matte black finish, emblazoned with a gold Walkman logo.
But flip these devices over and you’re abruptly wrenched back to the present, faced with touchscreens running Android. Naturally, this is about pragmatism, utilising a relatively freely available foundation in order to create new high-tech gadgets. But by encasing these items in retro clothing, they end up feeling a little hollow and soulless.
They’re neither one thing nor the other - not classic kit, nor anything truly new.
For the nostalgic, there’s a whiff of cynicism in the air, of trying to part old fools with their money. And for relative youngsters who never experienced a Walkman or Instamatic first-hand, you have to wonder whether these Android devices would have been better just shooting for being amazing in their own right.
As it is, while the originals were game-changers, these new tykes simply feel like more of the same. And truly, they are proof that in the world of technology, you can never go home again — unless you visit eBay.

Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Review

A lot has changed in the smartphone wars since the original Galaxy Notewaddled into our lives with its finger-stretching girth, huge (at least at the time) screen and stylus.





Android champions such as the LG G2, Sony Xperia Z1 and Galaxy S4 are all muscling in on the Note’s phablet territory with their 5in displays and salivating spec sheets, and monolithic titans such as the Sony Xperia Z Ultra aren’t making Samsung’s job any easier.
Can the Note 3, armed with its stylus and armoured with Samsung’s big bag of Android tricks fend off and conquer its fierce competitors? It’s time to find out.


PLASTIC IN DISGUISE

Simply fabulous fashion news: the tacky, slippery, almost oiled-up plastic that’s hampered the sex appeal of Samsung’s past Galaxy handsets is no more. Sort of. It turns out the back of the Note 3 is still plastic, but it’s disguised to look like leather, complete with fake stitches.
Soft and rubbery to the touch, the new backside means we finally have a Galaxy device that doesn’t leap out of the hands like a greased up water wiggler. Given the Note 3’s large dimensions and our attempts at tricky one-handed use (more on which later), this extra grip is a godsend and should save many people from accidental gravity-influenced screen wipeouts.
The actual style of the Note 3’s new not-quite-leather wardrobe, as with any aesthetic debate, is subjective. Jony Ive supporters will definitely gag at its skeuomorphism and label it tacky, but before close inspection it does look relatively classy.
While the Note 3’s new wardrobe is an improvement overall thanks to its grippiness and groove-cut metal-looking border, it still can’t hold a candle to the premium materials enveloping the iPhone 5SHTC One and Sony Xperia Z Ultra.
Ergonomically, the Note 3 sits comfortably in the hands with well-balanced weight, but the usual phablet caveats apply – you’ll need to engage in some finger balancing acts to use it one-handed. While not on the same insane scale as the Xperia Z Ultra (which requires Hagrid-sized mits), the Note 3 is still a device you’ll be using with two hands most of the time.
A Note wouldn't be a Note without an S Pen, and on the Note 3 it’s tucked in the familiar bottom-right corner of the device. We found it pretty tricky to remove from its slot, though, even after a whole two days of practice – that means it’s unlikely to drop out unaided, but does make quick note-taking a bit less, well, quick.

MORE CONNECTIONS THAN HEATHROW

Your first glimpse of the Note 3’s charging port will fill you with dread, revealing what appears to be a proprietary connector. But fear not: what you’re actually looking at is a shiny new but soon-to-be-standard microUSB 3.0 port.
That means the Note 3 can suck up a 900mAh current when you’re charging it from your PC as opposed to microUSB 2.0’s 500mAh current, resulting in faster charging. The newer port also offers faster data rates for media transfer, but that won’t stop the Jony Ive brigade from shielding their eyes from the rather ugly connector while holding their minimalist Lightning cables close for comfort.
Don’t set alight to your tangle of microUSB 2.0 cables just yet, though, because they can still plug into the right-hand section of the Note 3’s port. Backwards compatibility for the win.
Aside from that, the Note 3 follows the Galaxy tradition of a microSD slot to bolster the internal 32GB/64GB storage, as well as a removable 3,200mAh battery. Both of which will be ambrosia to the power user brigade.

A DISPLAY THAT'S WORTH THE EXTRA GIRTH

Our eyes have no complaints whatsoever when staring at the Galaxy Note 3’s pixel-packed Full HD Super AMOLED Plus 5.7in screen. It’s crystal clear, bright, and serves up bold colours and crisp, easy-to-read text. In short, it’s everything you’d want to see from a flagship device.
Its extra size really comes into its own when placed next to rivals such as the already rather large-screened LG G2, which looks tiny in comparison. Your thumb will pay for the extra real estate, and all but the most shovel-handed will find it hard to swipe and type with one hand comfortably, a problem familiar to phablets but one that doesn’t plague the smaller G2.
But the extra space spoils you when watching movies, reading ebooks or playing the latest games. If you’ve a voracious appetite for visual media the usability trade-off will be an easy one to make.
Comparing the Note 3’s screen to that of the G2 (which is one of the best smartphone displays we’ve ever seen), is initially a little disappointing, thanks to the over-saturated, cartoon-like colours – the calling card of Samsung’s AMOLED displays. But dive into the Note 3’s settings and you can flick the Screen Mode to ‘Professional Photo’, which displays far more realistic colours that are almost identical to those of the G2’s display. We’d heartily recommend this quick fix to anyone who wants their Note 3 screen to look its most natural.
The Note 3 screen’s larger dimensions mean it has a lower pixel density than the LG G2, and if you’re the type to press your eyeballs against screens you will notice that the G2 is tiny bit sharper, but in the real world the Note 3 definitely doesn’t leave you wanting for pixels.
The G2 clearly trumps the Note 3 in the white department, though, and comparing the two screens is like sitting through a Daz commercial. The G2 serves up pristine, glacially pure whites while the Note 3’s whites look like they’re a dirty cream colour in comparison.
It’s the sort of thing that’ll bug you a lot when comparing the Note 3’s screen to other LCD counterparts, but in isolation it’s unlikely to bother you.
The Note 3’s AMOLED display redeems itself, as ever, with its true, deep blacks, but the G2’s screen is so impressive with blacks that are almost as dark, that this is only a slight advantage.
So is the Note 3’s screen the very best we’ve seen? Not quite. But it’s not far off, and the Note 3 is obviously head, shoulders and wasteband above the G2 if size is important to you – and if you’re reading this review, it probably is.

SAY CHEESE

The Note 3’s 13MP rear snapper is impressive, and it trades blow-for-blow with the LG G2’s superb 13MP camera – currently the benchmark for Android snappers.
In most regular shots in good light the Note 3 produces photos that are a little more saturated, but with slightly greater contrast. Some of the G2’s shots look pale by comparison, with a little less in the way of finer textures and details picked up.
Occasionally, though, the slight over saturation of the Note 3’s shots can result in a loss of detail. Folds in flower petals can be drowned out in patches of colour that are too vivid, while the G2 manages to retain such finer details.
The Note 3’s HDR mode is very good, with greater emphasis on detail thanks to the higher range of contrast. As with most HDR modes there’s a slight processing delay, and many serious snappers avoid their over-emphasising ways, but if you like your photos extra sharp there’s little to argue about here.
On other occasions the differences between the Note 3 and G2 pics are so small you’d be hard-pressed to spot the difference without seriously zooming in.
Macro shots are also very hard to tell apart. In some close-ups the Note 3 comes slightly out on top, while the G2 is the victor in others. We’ve chalked that down to the difficulty in focusing both cameras on the same exact spot at such short distances, but either way both phones offer excellent detail and depth of field effects when shooting at very close range.
The Note 3 is beaten fairly soundly by the G2 in low light situations, both with and without the flash. Thanks to its Optical Image Stabilisation (OIS), the G2’s shutter can remain open a touch longer, capturing more light, resulting in more detail, more accurate colours and less noise. That makes the G2 a far better choice on nights out, even if you disregard the fact that it’s also more compact and easier to handle after one or two glasses of your favourite tipple. Party documentarians should obviously also consider the iPhone 5s – it’s True Tone flash is a thing of wonder.
Overall the Note 3 emerges slightly ahead of the G2 in normal shots, thanks to its greater contrast, but it fails to impress in low light conditions. Given that a large majority of people use their phones in low light when they’re out and about, the G2 camera's versatility probably makes it the best choice for most.
Naturally the Note 3’s camera app comes loaded with Samsung’s usual box of tricks, from a fantastic gif creator to an Eraser Mode that removes photobombers with minimal hassle.
60fps 1080p video recording is also on the menu, and while that imperfect image stabilisation results in slightly shakier movies than you’ll get from the G2 and 5s, the results are perfectly usable. Unlike its rivals, the Note 3 will also record in 4K – a minor brag given the current paucity of 4K TVs, but a brag all the same.

THIS SNAPDRAGON BREATHES FIRE

The Galaxy Note 3 packs two different flavours of silicon depending on where you are in the world. The first is Samsung's own Exynos 5 Octa processor and the other is Qualcomm's mighty Snapdragon 800 quad-core processor.
In Blighty we get the latter, and it clocks in at 2.27Ghz, the same as the 800 chip in the mighty LG G2. But does it deliver the G2's silky smooth Android experience?
In a word, yes. Despite Samsung's heavily skinned TouchWiz (more on that later), we didn't experience any stuttering, slowdown or lag, even when running a multitude of apps and demanding games simultaneously. Web browsing is as zippy as can be, pages are rendered smoothly and text resizing is as smooth as butter in a hot pan.
This is a welcome pattern that has emerged in our most recent smartphone reviews and is a trend that's thankfully now the norm in all new Android flagships. Unless Google gets something seriously wrong with Android 4.4 KitKat, the niggles and lag of the Android of old appear to have been banished for good.
Interestingly, AnTuTu rates the Note 3 a full 6,000 points lower than the LG G2, despite the fact that both share the same silicon. Seeing as the G2 is also skinned just as heavily as the Note 3, the difference in scores could be due to the S Pen extras running in the background, but the Note's 3GB of RAM clearly does its job well in keeping things running smoothly.
At the end of the day, the numbers don't matter. The Note 3 runs slicker than your average Android smartphone and matches the LG G2 at every dip and corner in the Android speed racetrack, and that's what really counts.


SUPER STYLUS

The Note 3’s S Pen stylus is one of the main things that separates it from the competition, but we approached it with a little trepidation as we’ve never found its ancestors very easy to use.
Once we eventually slid it out from deep within the Note 3’s innards (pro tip: nails are invaluable), we were pleasantly surprised by how easy it was to doodle and make notes on the Note’s generous screen. It’s a million miles away from the slippery, hard tip of the original Note’s stylus and offers even more grip than that found on the Note 2’s. And it also works with the capacitive back and menu buttons, a feature we’ve been crying out for since the very first Note.
It’s long enough to hold comfortably and the variable pressure rubber tip offers plenty of friction and resistance without slipping all over the place. The upshot of all this is that this is the closest we’ve ever managed to replicate our natural handwriting on a portable device, and the handwriting recognition is, quite frankly, fantastic.
While it’s still quicker tapping out a message on SwiftKey, there’s something rather satisfying about seeing your handwriting accurately converted into a message, or creating quick notes and doodles with your natural scribbles. But that’s not even the half of it…

STICK IT WITH THE POINTY END

Hovering the S Pen above the screen and clicking its button brings up an Air Command menu wheel. There are five features on offer, each one with a more confusing marketing name than the last. Try to keep up.
Action Memo
The first option on the wheel is Action Memo. Click that and you’ll get a Post-It-sized overlay for making quick notes. If you write a phone number, email, URL or even address, you can then select it and carry out the relevant action for each. Jotted down a phone number? Select it then save it to contacts or call it directly. Got someone to write down their address? Fire it up in Google Maps. Even with our remarkably bad handwriting, the Note 3 does a very good job of translating our scribbles.
Pen Window
Another option in the Air Command Wheel is Pen Window. Select it, draw out a box, choose from a list of compatible apps, and boom – you’ve just drawn yourself a fully interactive widget. It’s a very impressive trick to show off to your mates, but it’s a lot quicker to just fire up the app you need, and some of the widgets look squashed and disproportionate depending on what size you’ve drawn them on.
S Finder, Screen Write and Screen Booker
The first of these Air Commands is a universal search that sifts through everything on the device, even your handwritten notes. Screen Write snaps a screen shot that you can then make annotations on, and Screen Booker lets you select only the parts of the screen that are relevant before defacing them with derogatory doodles, if you’re into that sort of thing.
It all makes for an impressive tech demo, but we’re not quite convinced how many of these S Pen features are actually more convenient than doing things manually, though the screenshot annotations and handwriting search could certainly be useful.
The artists out there should also be able to make excellent use of the SketchBook app. Ross Presly, Stuff’s resident designer and avid skull-drawer, certainly did.

FORT KNOX

One of our key gripes with BlackBerry 10 is that it’s Balance feature (the one that lets you separate your phone into work and play profiles) requires you to faff around with work servers and permissions. Samsung Knox on the Note 3 works straight out of the box and lets you keep work and play completely separate.
Once you’ve set up a pin you can access Knox from a single tap in the notification bar at anytime, and it automatically locks itself after a certain time limit has passed. Unlike LG’s Guest Mode, Knox also works at an enterprise level, which should keep your IT manager happy, too.

TOUCHWIZ - EVERYTHING BUT THE KITCHEN SINK

Samsung’s TouchWiz interface returns once again, and it looks as bright and cartoony as ever. We really want Samsung to go back to the drawing board and redesign its Android skin to something a lot lighter and more grown-up – for inspiration the software guys need look no further than HTC’s Sense 5.0, Sony’s lightweight Xperia Z skin, or of course, stock Android.
But we digress. TouchWiz is back, and its packed full of so many software extras that we’re not even sure where to start. It seems like with each and every new Galaxy release, Samsung’s developers try their very best to cram in absolutely anything and everything they’ve been working on to add to an already copious software feature list. As with the S Pen features we’d prefer it if a lot of it was stripped down, but there are some useful tricks thrown in.
Swiping up from the bottom of the Home screen reveals an HTC Blinkfeed-like stream of all your news and social updates, all powered by FlipBoard. It’s very easy on the eyes and we like the fact that it’s completely hidden until you summon it.
Another one of the Note 3’s most useful features is Multi Window, a little app menu that appears when you press a permanently overlaid button, and lets you fire up two compatible apps simultaneously. Want to browse the web while checking your emails? Done. It’s a useful feature for multitasking that’s also found on the G2, but the Note’s bigger screen makes it a far more usable feature.
Speaking of screen size, if it’s all too much for your poor hands to handle there are swiping thumb gestures that shrink down the display to either the left or right side of the screen. It seems a little pointless to waste that extra space, but can be useful if you need to bash out a text in a hurry with only one hand free.
If you dive deep within the Note 3’s settings you’ll come across a setting called Smart Rotation. Turn it on and the Note 3’s screen will automatically adjust screen rotation according to the orientation of your face. No more fumbling around with the auto-rotate setting whenever you’re reading on your side. Smart indeed.
Dive even deeper and you’ll find a Quick Glance option that lets you wave your hand over the Note 3 when it’s locked, briefly summoning any notifications you might have before turning off again. You’ll look odd doing it, but you can pretend you have superpowers. It’s far quicker to just wake the screen at the press of a button and pull down the notification bar though. We’re adding this one to the ‘pub trick pile’.
As for the rest? There’s Story Album for arranging your holiday snaps, S Health for tracking your exercise, and an integrated IR blaster that turns the Note 3 into a remote for your TV. We could go on, but we could be here all day.
Essentially there’s a little something for everyone here, if you can be bothered to sift through the noise. It’s fine if you don’t, of course, as the Note 3 is a superb device even with its great mass of tricks stripped away. We’d appreciate it if Samsung could split the wheat from the chaff for the next generation of Galaxy devices, though.

BATTERY LIFE - ENOUGH BUT NOT MUCH MORE

Our usual video rundown test is processing as we speak and we’ll update the review with the results forthwith, but in everyday use the 3,200mAh battery does a fine job of powering the massive screen and mass of software extras for more than a day of moderate use. It’ll certainly outlast an iPhone 5, although won’t keep going for as long as the battery freak that is the G2.

VERDICT

Put simply, the Samsung Galaxy Note 3 is the best phablet in the world right now. Its glorious 5.7in screen pumps out crisp detail and punchy colours while still remaining pretty portable, at least compared to the gargantuan 6.4in Sony Xperia Z Ultra.
It has a superb camera that more than holds its own against the LG G2 in all but dim conditions, and it eats Android, 3D games and multitasking for breakfast.
The S Pen is a doodler’s dream and feels far more natural than any other stylus we’ve used, and if you throw in the Samsung software extras that are useful to you, the Note 3 should be the number one choice if you’re keen to follow the phablet path.
Its Current Price In Indian Market Is From Rs. 44,074.00 to Rs. 49,900.00.
We Hope The Android 4.4 KitKat will Strike Soon In The Note.
.....................RELATED LINKS..................
Google Nexus 5                                            
                                             Apple Iphone 5s
                                       Samsung Galaxy S4
                                               HTC One Mini
                                      LG G Flex Review
                                      Android 4.4 KitKat
              Comparison  Of  Smartphones

Nokia Lumia 1020 Review





Forty-one million pixels. Think about that for a moment. Your current phone probably captures eight. Your compact, maybe 12. Your SLR probably sneaks in about 14 (or 20 if you're lucky). And yet Nokia's Lumia 1020 is a smartphone that captures more than all of those 'proper' cameras put together.
This begs a few questions: do megapixels matter, or is that massive number meaningless? Even if it does have a killer camera, is the Lumia 1020 also a killer phone? And does the rave yellow handset come with free shades? Read on to find out.




BUILT TO BE SEEN

Nokia’s dalliance with monochrome and metal in the Lumia 925 didn’t last long. The 1020’s banana yellow polycarbonate housing (mercifully, white and black are also available) is big and bright enough to dazzle bystanders and slippery enough to demand a skin. Fortunately it feels robust enough to survive a drop, but at 158g it's over 40g heavier than an iPhone 5 and is also a touch too broad to be properly comfortable. 
At first, the side-mounted power button is easily and irritatingly confused with the shutter release, which also pops the Lumia into camera mode - all too frequently you'll find yourself accidentally opening it up. Once you're used to the layout the dedicated shutter button is very handy. It works direct from sleep, too, although the time to taking its first photo lags a crucial second or so behind the iPhone 5, so it's all-too easy to miss the crucial action shot. Bit of a mixed bag for ergonomics, then.

THAT CAMERA

There's a reason for the aforementioned bulk, and it's a rather good one. Nokia execs can breathe again: the Lumia 1020’s camera is fantastic. 41 megapixels sounds ridiculously over-specced, but a few shots in, serious snappers will wonder how they ever survived with fewer. Landscapes are sharper, faces clearer, and buildings and cars have razor-sharp edges. Quality-wise, it's genuinely as good as a powerful compact camera.
Counter-intuitively, shooting in the 5MP setting can sometimes deliver even better results. That’s because the Lumia’s PureView tech (first seen on a forgettable Symbian handset, the 808 PureView) doesn’t just resize the full resolution image. Instead, it combines data from multiple pixels into one ‘superpixel’ to even out grainy digital noise and record colours more accurately, especially in dim conditions. Not to be confused with ‘ultrapixels’ on the HTC One, which are just large traditional pixels that capture more light in the first place.
The default camera app is Nokia ProCam, which offers shutter speed, white balance, sensitivity and focus adjustment on pop-up dials, and a bona fide full auto mode. In normal shooting, the app stores photos as a 5MP snap plus a full resolution JPEG version – either 34MP or 38MP, depending on whether you've chosen widescreen or 4:3 image ratio. 
For a whole bunch of full resolution snaps taken during testing, head to our Flickr set.
You can opt to keep just the 5MP, which saves 10MB of storage each time you press the shutter, but it doesn’t do much to improve the shot-to-shot time - a sluggish five seconds. And there are other imperfections: annoyingly, if you want the blisteringly fast 5MP burst mode, you have to slowly switch into another app called SmartCam. Actual shutter lag is minimal, but the software-related delay is an issue for such a camera-focused phone.

ZOOM WITHOUT THE TEARS

If you swipe or pinch to use the Lumia’s 3x optical ‘zoom’, you’re actually taking a 5MP crop of the full resolution frame. As you zoom in, you’ll gradually sacrifice some of the superpixel benefits, but at least you won’t end up with a soft upscaled blur as with most smartphones. And even at full ‘zoom’, the Lumia still records a full-frame, wideangle high-res partner shot. 
Full HD video (at 24, 25 or 30fps) looks lovely, and the stereo audio recording is well above par. Another photo favourite is the decent xenon flash – far superior to weedy LED lights. It’s good out to a couple of metres. Suffice it to say, this is a camera that wipes the floor with all smartphone rivals.

SHOOT AND SHARE

Nokia piles plenty of its own image sharing apps on the 1020, including a fun cinemagraph app for partially animating pictures, a selfie app to glam up your front cam snaps and a Creative Studio offering the basics (and a bit more) of image editing. There’s also a panorama app and Microsoft’s decent Photosynth to download. But checking the Windows Store, there’s still no sign of the promised Vine app, and a native Instagram app isn’t even on the horizon. Uploading to Twitter and Facebook is easy enough but lacks album and visibility options. And on none of the apps can you actually upload those full-res 34MP beauties. Essentially Windows Phone 8 is rather holding back the Lumia 1020.

MIXED BAG OF MEDIA

You might have thought such a resolution powerhouse would have an equally pixeltastic display, but the 1020 packs a Gorilla Glass 3-covered 1280x768 (720p) screen, in stretch 15:9 format – off the pace with this year's 1080p Android superphones. At 332ppi, though, it's plenty crisp enough at rendering text and Windows Phone 8's sharp-edged tiles could cut through lead. AMOLED tech means colours are beautiful but brightness outdoors suffers a little – it’s no match for the Galaxy S4's, despite the use of similar technology. 
On the music side, it’s hard to argue with free Pandora-style radio feeds through Nokia Music, even if the stereo sound from the built-in speakers isn’t quite as nice as that from the HTC One. Through headphones with decent-quality files, it's a punchy, engaging listen.

POWER-UPS

There’s no lag from the dual-core 1.5GHz Snapdragon silicon, even during 3D gaming on NOVA 3 with apps running in the background. It stormed the Benchmark Free app, matching or outperforming all previous Windows Phones handsets. The 1020 gets warm around the camera area in use but, thanks to WP8's frugal operation, the 2000mAh battery will easily last a whole day. 
If you think the Lumia 1020 isn’t already chunky enough, or you’re training for a weightlifting event, you can slip on a wireless charging cover to make use of Qi accessories. More enticing is a camera grip cover that basically converts the 1020 into a kick-ass compact camera with LTE inside.


MAPS, APPS AND OS

Apart from the camera, the HERE maps, navigation and local search are better than Apple’s efforts and give Google a good run for its money. Full marks to Nokia for making it easy to download local maps once and for all: no more waiting for roads to de-pixellate when reception is poor. Another winner is the effortless integration with Microsoft Office, Outlook and SkyDrive, including 7GB of free cloud storage. 
Windows Phone 8 still feels fresh and fast, particularly on the powerful Lumia 1020 hardware. The selection of apps is improving all the time, too, and for many people will be more than adequate for their needs. It's still behind Google and Apple here, though, and the fact that key camera apps - particularly Instagram - are still missing is more of a problem for the 1020 due to its focus on photography.

VERDICT

Smartphones might already have replaced standalone cameras for many but, lacking flashes and zooms, they could never quite finish the job. The Nokia Lumia 1020 has just about polished it off. With its mind-blowing resolution, beautiful image quality, great low light capability, zoom and flash, the 1020 is way more camera than anyone needs day to day, plus a powerful smartphone to boot.
There are flaws, though. Shot-taking is slowed a tad by the software, and Windows Phone 8's remaining app gaps include a number that such a camera-focused phone really should have.
On top of that it's mighty expensive - at least in the US. Perhaps Nokia will surprise us and launch it for less in the UK, but we reckon that's highly unlikely. That will leave the much more affordable Lumia 925 as the Windows Phone of choice for most people looking to inject live-tile loveliness into their smartphone life. For the camera geek elite, though, the Lumia 1020 is well worth the stretch.

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