Android Advisor

Vodafone Smart N8

£79 inc VAT from fave.co/2F8JBpr

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The Vodafone web listing for the Smart N8 says: “Access your messages, apps and contacts via the Smart N8’s fingerprin­t sensor.” This doesn’t actually make sense, but hints at the limitation­s of an incredibly cheap smartphone.

If all you need is a phone to call, text, dabble with email, Facebook and online banking, then the Smart N8 will suffice. But you’ll find a whole host of frustratio­ns if you want it for anything more than that.

Design

The plastic Smart N8 is surprising­ly sturdy considerin­g its £79 price tag. There’s hardly any flex or bend in

the frame despite the removable back panel that gives access to the nano-SIM card and SD card slot. It’s an odd design choice given that the battery is not removable, but it keeps the phone slick and slim with the only exterior ports being headphone jack and Micro-USB.

You have a choice of graphite or gold, and the back panel is subtly textured to help with grip. Our gold and white review unit looks a lot like a first generation Google Pixel from the front, and has a fingerprin­t sensor on the back just under the camera.

It’s a very basic design, but it’s quietly understate­d and not an encumbranc­e to any pocket thanks to its slight size. It won’t turn any heads, but for a budget phone it’s perfectly functional and has above average build quality.

Hardware

The Vodafone Smart N8 is, unsurprisi­ngly, locked to the Vodafone network.

More important when buying a budget phone is asking if the specs are good enough for your particular needs. The Smart N8 is powered by a very low-end MediaTek MT6737 chip with 1.5GB RAM. These specificat­ions really are the bare minimum on a modern smartphone and won’t power you anywhere near high end gaming, for example.

But it’s enough to text, call, take a few photos, use Facebook over the 4G connection and play basic games. We did all of this on the Smart N8 and all we had to deal with was frequent lag and dropped frames. This is not a phone up for much beyond casual use. We tried to install Asphalt 8: Airborne to see how bad the lag was, and the phone couldn’t even handle downloadin­g the full game file.

You won’t want to use it as a main phone for business unless you’re very patient, as switching between email and text apps is quite slow and using Gmail itself as part of the preinstall­ed Google apps can often drag thanks to the lack of memory. These are basic apps, and they work here, just very slowly.

In comparison to similar phones, its performanc­e is not as good. The EE Hawk, for example, runs better, but is nearly double the price. The Nokia 3 has the same MediaTek chip as the Smart N8 and runs with just as much lag as the N8 does. You can use Instagram, but it chugs along in its own sweet time.

The display is a 1280x720 IPS LCD with a low 294ppi. That doesn’t matter too much on this small

5in screen (and remember the price), so it’s fine for all basic use. Even Netflix doesn’t look too bad, but this is a big video viewing downgrade if you usually watch on an iPad, for example.

There’s only 16GB storage on board but the microSD slot lets you expand up to another 32GB. Such a card is available very cheap on Amazon.

The camera is passable, and in good daylight photos are acceptable for use on social media, though obviously very far off the quality of high end phones. The 13Mp sensor struggles in low light, despite the LED flash but for a point and shoot it’s not bad. Zooming in reveals a lack of detail captured.

It can also record video at 720p at 30fps – a low bar, but still nice to have for the occasional shoot.

While not unacceptab­le, the camera even in daylight cannot capture much detail

The front-facing camera is just fine for selfies, and its 5Mp are enough for Skype calls, even if a little grainy. You’re also not going to watch to listen to music or watch video for long using the single speaker but it’s fine for these video calls. The headphone jack lets you plug in when you want to use Spotify or have a YouTube session.

Bluetooth 4.0 allows for connection to speakers and headphones, and this worked fine in testing. Call quality is also loud and crisp over the Vodafone network. The 2,400mAh battery is adequate for the specs, and charges pleasingly quickly via the included charger. It’ll easily last you a full day of use but you’ll need to charge every night with above average use.

There’s also NFC for mobile payments, but no sign of any waterproof­ing.

Performanc­e

Benchmarki­ng a phone this cheap is somewhat redundant, but we’ve done it anyway. The EE Hawk

is noticeably faster in all tests, so if you aren’t fussy about which network you’ll be on it might be a better bet if you want less lag when using a few apps.

Geekbench measures the processing power, GFXBench looks at graphics and Jetstream is for browsing capabiliti­es.

It’s very similar to the Nokia 3 as the specs are basically the same. What these numbers tell you is that yes, the Smart N8 is not an overly capable phone, despite functionin­g perfectly well in basic tasks.

Software

The Smart N8 ships with Android 7.0 Nougat. As it’s a low-end phone, you are unlikely to ever receive a software update to Android Oreo or, indeed, any updates at all. Our review unit is still on the March

2017 security patch. This isn’t the end of the world, but manufactur­ers will only work with Google to update the most popular handsets, so this is a downside to buying a budget phone.

You aren’t necessaril­y at a data security risk in this case, but it’s good housekeepi­ng to keep your phone software up to date, and buying the Smart N8 will stop you for doing this.

Vodafone is using very close to stock Android, but with some telling changes. Swiping right on the home screen opens a whole screen called ‘Beginner tips’, showing that Vodafone considers this a phone for children or perhaps the less technologi­cally advanced. The tips are useful, though, if you are not used to how smartphone­s work.

You can also look at ‘Expert tips’ to get even more out of the Smart N8. You also have to use Vodafone’s own Calls+ app for calls, but you can install Google’s Android Messages app if you don’t like the preinstall­ed Messages+ app. Other than that, the phone is low on operator bloatware, which is nice.

Verdict

If you are okay with being stuck on Vodafone, the Smart N8 is pretty much the least you should spend on a functionin­g smartphone. You won’t see much of an improvemen­t in performanc­e unless you spend double the £79 asking price, so for teenagers or as a simple Internet tool it will suffice. But beyond simple apps like Facebook and Instagram, the N8 struggles. Running several apps at once grinds it to a halt, and any form of graphical gaming is a no. But it’s not

built for that, and if your needs are simple, then the N8 will suffice. Henry Burrell

Specificat­ions

• 5in (1280x720, 294ppi) IPS LCD capacitive display • Android 7.0 Nougat • MediaTek MT6737 processor • Quad-core 1.3GHz Cortex-A53 CPU • Mali-T720MP2 GPU • 1.5GB RAM • 16GB storage, microSD up to 32GB • Fingerprin­t scanner • 13Mp rear-facing camera: autofocus, LED flash • 5Mp front-facing camera • 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi • Bluetooth 4.0 • A-GPS • Micro-USB 2.0 • Non-removable lithium-ion 2,400mAh battery • 144.5x71.9x8.6mm • 115g

 ??  ?? The Smart N8 comes with Android Nougat
The Smart N8 comes with Android Nougat
 ??  ?? Low light
Low light
 ??  ?? Landscape
Landscape
 ??  ?? The textured rear helps with grip
The textured rear helps with grip
 ??  ??

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