The Asian Age

Lenovo K8 Note: Goodness of stock Android, price of a killer

- MOINAK PAL

Lenovo entered the market with its game-changing K3 Note in 2015. Two years back, Lenovo was the only smartphone manufactur­er to provide a 5.5-inch HD display, 2GB of RAM and a 1.7GHz octa-core MediaTek processor for Rs 10,700 (K3 Note). This meant stepping on the other brands which had their big sized smartphone­s on the market at a much higher price.

Lenovo immediatel­y became the talk of the town. Further price cuts meant one could get a K3 Note for `9,999. Moving ahead, Lenovo had launched the K6 Power and the K6 Note last year. We did not see any action until fast forwarding to the third quarter of 2017, Lenovo drops the bomb — Lenovo launched the K8 Note this year.

The Lenovo K8 Note arrived and we couldn’t wait to get our “hands on” the device. Green coloured box with Lenovo lettering across — our first impression of the device was it was the build quality. The K8 Note has anodized aluminium back with a dual camera system and the fingerprin­t sensor on the rear.

The front of the K8 is protected by a 2.5D Corning Gorilla Glass 3 and feels pretty robust with the metal-glass design. The top houses the 3.5-mm headphone jack, volume rockers and the power button take their places on the right bezel, and on the left is a music key to control music playback.

Lenovo has claimed that the K8 Note has a water repellent coating, which means we did not go into collective shock when water was splashed on it, or unexpected showers. This did not mean we could dunk the K8 Note in water, which could have damaged the phone permanentl­y.

The display on the K8 Note is a 5.5-inch FHD display with a resolution of 1080 x 1920 pixels. Colour reproducti­on is decent and watching movies was an experience we repeatedly loved. Blacks are not pronounced like you get on an AMOLED display, but the K8 Note’s display still contains solid contrast with excellent viewing angles.

The price of the phone stays a mid-budget, which means the internals remain impressive. The K8 Note packs a deca-core MediaTek Helio X23 (MT6797) processor with 4GB RAM and 64GB storage. Regular usage is decent with basic gaming. Considerin­g this phone is more on the entertainm­ent side, we resorted to movies and music videos more often.

Moving on, we arrive at the most important of this review, the software. The K8 Note runs on Google’s Android 7.1 Nougat out of the box. Lenovo has ditched the proprietar­y Vibe Pure UI to go for the stock UI option, which is a welcome change. This means zero bloatware and no more unwanted apps and space wastage.

In the camera department, the K8 Note is the first phone from Lenovo’s stable to sport the dual camera system. The dual lens system pairs a 13MP primary sensor with a 5MP secondary sensor on the back. The primary camera captures regular pictures, while the secondary 5MP camera shoots depth of field informatio­n.

The 13MP primary camera shoots good quality pictures with decent colour reproducti­on. Lowlight images also looked decent considerin­g majority of the phones in this price bracket do not shoot good quality low-light images.

The front camera is a 13MP unit with an added flash which does its job well. We found the colour and picture clarity to be pretty decent too.

The K8 Note is backed by a 4000mAh, non-removable battery. We received a decent 48 hours on a single charge — it’s impressive.

The K8 Note did not have the same ripple effect as the K3 Note did when it launched two years back, but it’s still a revolution­ary product.

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