Tech Advisor

Ulefone Future

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A bezel-less display, side-mounted fingerprin­t scanner and USB-C are among the highlights in this futuristic phone appropriat­ely named the Ulefone Future. A Dual-SIM phone with an octa-core Helio P10 processor, 4GB of RAM and 32GB of storage inside, this mid-range Android phone also performed pretty well in our performanc­e benchmarks.

The Future is a Chinese phone available in the UK through grey-market sites such as GearBest, which sent our sample for review. Right now you can buy the Ulefone Future for £188 with free shipping. Note that you may have to pay import duty when it arrives at UK customs, however.

Design

From the rear, the gold aluminium-titanium alloy casing, white lines and corner-sited camera make the Future look very much like an iPhone wannabee. However, turn it over and things get a lot more interestin­g.

We have to start with the screen, since this is the first time we’ve seen a Chinese phone sold with an edge-to-edge or bezel-less display. It looks fantastic, and 2.5D curved glass atop the display gives the feeling that the screen might extend further, wrapping around the sides. Alas, this seamless design is spoiled by the gold case visible from the sides. Had our review sample been black we imagine it would look a lot nicer.

But even as it stands, the screen is a nice feature. It’s a 5.5in full-HD (1920x1080) panel that’s crystal clear and sufficient­ly bright. Colours look realistic and viewing angles are good. It’s protected by tough Gorilla Glass 3, plus a very thin black plastic coating around the otherwise vulnerable edges of the glass.

On the right side a fingerprin­t scanner sits just below the volume rocker and power button. This is something we’ve seen before with the Sony Xperia Z5 family, where it was actually integrated to the power button. At first we were a little stumped as to what it was, given that it looks as though it’s some sort of port cover and the SIM- and microSD card slot sits at the top left.

However, in use the fingerprin­t scanner is one of the best out there. It’s incredibly fast, with a 0.1-second recognitio­n speed, and it is perfectly placed for righthande­d users. Lefties won’t have much joy with it, but our only real gripe is that the first time you access the phone following a restart you must enter a PIN or passcode rather than using the scanner.

There’s a third interestin­g design feature, too, although we have to say we’re not overly enamoured with it. The SIM tray pin, which everyone always loses and ends up resorting to a paperclip, plugs into the headphone port at the top, thus keeping out the grime and ensuring the pin is never misplaced. It’s a great idea, but it also looks really weird.

The headphone jack looks as though it has a little hat on, but it’s a SIM tray pin, sticking out the top of the phone and spoiling the clean lines. And where are you supposed to put the pin when using the headphone jack out and about? To be honest, we’re not even sure whether you’re intended to store the pin here, although that is how it came in the box.

In general, the design has been carefully considered. For example, two speaker grilles sit either side of a reversible USB-C port at the bottom of the phone, and in this position they ensure sound is fired outward and not into a palm or desk.

However, we’d like to have seen the three-standard Android back, home and multitaski­ng buttons sit below rather than on top of the screen (there is plenty of room below the screen, if not at the

It’s a 5.5in Full-HD (1920x1080) panel that’s crystal clear and sufficient­ly bright. Colours look realistic, and viewing angles are good

edges), and given its height and the size of the screen it would be nice to see the Future slimmed down further than 8.5mm. As things stand, it weighs a noticeable 190g.

A couple of nice touches supplied in the box include a clear silicone case and a Micro-USB- to USB-C adaptor. The latter is particular­ly useful, since it’s probable that the only USB-C cable you’ll have around the house is the one that comes in the box.

Performanc­e

The Ulefone Future is very fast for a mid-range Android phone. It has some capable hardware inside, including an octa-core Helio P10 chip (the MediaTek MTK6755), the Mali-T860 MP2 GPU, 4GB of RAM and 32GB of storage (25GB is available). Should you need more storage space you can also insert a microSD card up to 128GB in capacity, though you do so at the expense of the second SIM since they share a slot.

In real-world use we found it up to the job of all everyday tasks, even when tasked with several at once. Launching apps isn’t instant, but it is fast, and navigation on the whole feels slick. The camera app – which is where you’d usually see the most lag – is up and ready to go in about three seconds.

Of course this is all our subjective experience, so we also run a variety of benchmarks to compare performanc­e with that of comparable phones. We run Geekbench and AnTuTu to get an idea of overall processing performanc­e, GFXBench for graphics power, JetStream for JavaScript performanc­e and the Geekbench 3 battery test to compare runtime.

In our benchmarks we found performanc­e a touch faster than the currently £60 more expensive Elephone Vowney, a Helio X10-powered phone with 4GB of RAM and a 5.5in quad-HD screen. In Geekbench 3 we recorded 3276 points against its 3299, but the Future came out on top in AnTuTu where it recorded 50,676 against the Vowney’s 49,842.

The difference in screen resolution affects graphics performanc­e, so despite the more powerful processor inside the Vowney the Ulefone Future came out on top in GFXBench. Whereas the Vowney scored 16fps in T-Rex, the Future managed 18fps. Both recorded 6fps in Manhattan.

The Vowney failed to complete JetStream, but the Future completed the test in 27.423. This isn’t amazing, but it’s acceptable for a sub-£200 Android phone.

Our final test is for battery life, and sadly here the Ulefone Future fell down with one of the lowest scores we’ve measured. It managed four hours 38 minutes, and was awarded 2778 points. In our experience it will last you a day’s use, but heavy users will likely need to top up before bed time.

Connectivi­ty

While battery life isn’t outstandin­g, the 3000mAh non-removable battery inside the Ulefone Future does support fast charging over USB-C. Using the mains charger in the box (with an adaptor if you’re in the UK), you can fully charge the Future in an hour. We also appreciate the inclusion of this USB-C port in terms of futureproo­fing and convenienc­e – USB-C is reversible, making it quicker to plug into the phone without needing to check its orientatio­n.

We do like the fact the Ulefone Future supports two SIM cards (one Nano-, one Micro-), too. Dual-SIM phones are still rare in the UK, although we’ve yet to see a Chinese phone that doesn’t include this functional­ity.

While battery life isn’t outstandin­g, the 3000mAh non-removable battery inside the Ulefone Future does support fast charging over USB-C

As always when buying a phone from abroad you should check it supports your home country’s network bands. In the UK we use 800MHz (Band 20), 1800MHz (Band 3) and 2600MHz (Band 7) bands for 4G LTE, and it’s pleasing to find the Ulefone Future supports all three.

The only downside to this DualSIM dual-standby functional­ity is that you must choose whether to use this or to take advantage of the microSD card support. With 32GB of internal storage inside the Future we think many users will get along just fine without the removable storage, however.

Other connectivi­ty specs are fairly standard, although there is no NFC which is required for mobile payments such as Android Pay. MediaTek processor-powered phones often come with HotKnot, which is a bit like NFC, but the Ulefone Future doesn’t have this either. It’s no surprise to find the Ulefone Future also lacks an IR blaster – these are becoming increasing­ly rare – though you do get dualband 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.0, Miracast, OTG and GPS.

Cameras

The Future has a 16Mp primary camera with a dual-tone flash. It’s also capable of recording Full-HD video at 30fps, but this can be rather jerky with no OIS. When testing the camera in Auto mode from our seventh floor roof terrace overlookin­g the St Pancras Renaissanc­e Hotel we found the camera tried to focus on the sky and the hotel itself appeared very dark. Turning on HDR fixed this, but with both shots we saw a very strange effect where only the very centre of the photo was sharp. The blurring is particular­ly evident in the right half of the photo, but when you zoom in it’s evident everywhere except the middle section.

This is a real shame, because in the centre the camera quality is excellent. We suspect this is a software issue that an update should be able to fix. You can see our Auto and HDR shots, left.

The camera app is rather basic, with a selection of real-time filters, but only Panorama, HDR and Normal shooting modes. You’ll also find a 5Mp selfie camera at the front.

Software

The Ulefone Future runs a vanilla version of Android 6.0 Marshmallo­w which, until Nougat is released within the next few months, is the latest version of the OS.

The only addition is a Turbo Download feature, which allows you to combine cellular data and Wi-Fi to speed downloads over 20MB in file size.

Verdict

Ulefone has attempted to build a futuristic phone with the Future’s edge-to-edge display and USB-C port. For a mid-range Android phone performanc­e is good, and the design is good, even if the phone is on the heavy side. We can’t turn a blind eye to the camera quality, although a software update should be able to fix the issues we saw.

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Marie Brewis

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