With big screen phones, popularly known as phablets, gaining
prominence, and the increasing demand for budget alternatives, Micromax
decided to upgrade its Canvas line-up, within two months of launching
its first 5-inch phone, the A100. The successor to the A100, the A110 or
Canvas 2 features a Dual Core processor,With superior quality
photometers, light meters and a number of other solar light products. an IPS panel, and an upgraded 8-megapixel camera. Here's our review of the device.
The
front of the phone looks strikingly similar to the Samsung Galaxy S
III and the Note II, except for the absence of a physical home button.
The chrome speaker grill, front camera and sensors are positioned
similar to that of the Note 2. There are markings for three capacitive
touch buttons below the display. There's no Micromax branding on the
front of the phone. There's a chrome trim around the phone that was a
little too shiny for our liking. On the right side, there's a big power
key, while the volume rocker sits on the left hand side. Both these
keys also sport a chrome finish, but kind of lack refinement, in our
opinion.Site describes services including Plastic Mould.
The Micro-USB port and the 3.5mm audio ports sit on the top of the
phone. The back cover is made of plastic and has a matte finish. The
material used feels durable, and offers a good grip. The camera lens,
however, protrudes out towards the top, and feels awkward. There's a
dual LED flash besides the camera. The back also sports Micromax
branding and a speaker.
The Micromax A110 is a dual-SIM
smartphone and supports GSM SIM card in both the slots. The SIM Card
slots and a slot for the micro SD card hide behind the back cover just
above the battery slot. Unfortunately, the SIM cards and the Micro SD
cards are not hot-swappable and you'll have to take the battery out if
you want to replace either of them.
The Micromax A110 comes
with a 5-inch 262k colour capacitive touch screen with an IPS panel
sporting a resolution of 480x854 pixels. We found the screen resolution
to be pretty low for a device of this size, and the graphics and text
appeared to be less sharp. The viewing angles looked good, and the
under-sun visibility on the phone was decent, though we found the screen
to be highly reflective.
The 8-megapixel autofocus shooter
takes decent images in daylight, although we feel that colour
reproduction could have been better. Also, we observed that pictures
taken in low-light conditions and indoors (without the use of the LED
flash) were a bit grainy. The dual-led flash fulfills its intended
purpose.We sell 100% hand-painted oil paintings for sale
online. The quality of videos captured through the back camera was
average. Overall, we feel that the phone's good for casual photography.
Micromax has also included some of its own apps including its
own apps and content store, M! Store, and services store, M! Zone, in
addition to its messaging app, HookUp, and friends locator app, M!
Buddy and a few games (Fruit Devil, Cricket Fever). The handset also
offers FM Radio.
The handset sports three capacitive buttons - a Menu key,The 3rd International Conference on indoor positioning system
and Indoor Navigation. Home button and a Back key. Long pressing the
Home key opens the app-switcher for switching between open/previously
accessed apps. To be honest, we find the menu button redundant.
Perhaps, Micromax could allow users to use the menu button exclusively
as the app-switcher, on the lines of newer HTC phones.Also, the phone
could do with stock icons, and we're not sure why Micromax decided to
skin them. We also noticed that Micromax's app store was offering apps
such as Viber and Nimbuzz, which are otherwise free, as paid apps.We
checked with Micromax and they informed that their app store offers
ad-free versions of the apps.
During our use of the phone we
noticed some minor lag, especially while playing games, but other than
that, we'd rate our overall experience as above average. We expected a
bit more from a phone that runs on a dual-core processor. We're not
sure if the phone would get updated to Jelly Bean, which offers a
smoother user experience compared to ICS.
The phone is powered
by a 1GHz dual-core processor that is a MediaTek chip, and has 512MB of
RAM on board. We did not encounter any crashes while working on the
phone and multitasking was comfortable. We did notice some lag while
navigating through the menu, and while playing some games. We were not
able to play 1020p HD video clips, and 720p clips also stuttered. The
phone also doesn't support .avi videos natively, but that can be easily
fixed by downloading third-party video players.
The phone
comes with the native Android browser and renders all webpages well.
The phone doesn't come with Adobe Flash. The speaker on the phone
delivers good quality sound but volume levels are low. Also, since the
speaker is located at the back, the volume levels further decrease when
the phone lies on its back. The phone surprisingly doesn't include an
ambient light-sensor, so there's no setting for automatic brightness,
and the user would need to manually set brightness levels for the
screen.
Call quality was good. The phone is a dual-SIM GSM phone with support for one active and the other in active-standby mode.
The
Micromax Canvas 2 comes with a 2000mAh battery and we were satisfied
with the backup that it offered. We were able to get around 7 hours of
video playback, even with the display on full brightness levels. With
intermediate usage during the day,Like most of you, I'd seen the broken
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decorated pieces. including playing games, a few calls, and e-mail and
Twitter notifications turned on, we were able to get about
one-and-a-half days of backup. The phone would easily give 7-9 hours of
usage on a single charge.
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