We have seen a slew of budget phones hit the market, and met a few that have proven that for a budget price, you can still get a device that is a good performer and doesn't feel cheap in your hands.
On first impressions, the device is very well built. It is a little heavier than other smartphones in the same price bracket though, weighing in at 140 grams. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing as it makes the phone feel sturdy in one’s hands.
On the face, the Huawei Ascend G300 has a
4-inch display with a resolution of 480x800 pixels, which is standard
for the budget smartphones and is similar to the Spice Mi-425. The best
part of the display is that it is an IPS LCD capacitive touchscreen,
making it really sharp. It looks really crisp and vibrant and the
viewing angles are great. Better than what we’ve seen in this price
range. Below the touchscreen you have the standard array of capacitive
buttons – menu, home and back.
In terms of its connectivity options,
the Ascend G300 has the microUSB port at the bottom, volume rocker on
the left and the headphones jack along with the power/sleep/wake button
at the top. The rear of the phone houses the 5MP camera with an LED
flash and the device compromises on a front facing camera which is a
major bummer if you are one who would like to make video calls. The
device also compromises on a physical shutter button.
The design of the device may be your run
of the mill budget Android smartphone, but the build is something we
are really happy with. It feels extremely well built and not at all
plasticky. The device has a dual colour tone – white and gunmetal grey –
which is nice. The rear does feel metallic but it is actually coated
plastic. Held in one’s hand, the Huawei Ascend G300 won’t appear cheap
to anyone.
Features and Specifications
Under the hood, the Ascend G300 is powered by a Qualcomm MSM7227A Snapdragon 1GHz Cortex-A5 processor and Adreno 200 GPU. It also has 512MB of RAM and 4GB internal storage (2.5GB available to the user) expandable up to 32GB via a microSD card. As mentioned earlier the device has a 4-inch IPS display. The rear of the device has the 5MP camera with an LED flash.
Straight out of the box, the Ascend G300
runs Android 2.3 Gingerbread but the device will be upgradable to
Android 4.0 ICS, which is nice.
The OS comes with a Huawei Launcher,
which isn’t the best when compared to the likes of Samsung TouchWiz or
HTC Sense. It gives you the option of five customizable home screens and
you have the standard slew of widgets that can be found on any Android
phone.
The lock screen gives you easy access to
four options – unlock the device, go to messages, call log or the
camera. The Ascend G300’s skin is quite bland and makes the device very
laggy. You can install a paid third party launcher or use the free
version of Launcher Pro to make the device snappier.
The Ascend G300’s rear 5MP camera clicks
average quality images, the same that you would find on the original
HTC Desire - you won’t be replacing your point and shoot with this
device. The camera app too is fairly simple and adds no bells or
whistles to functionality.
Overall, the specifications under the
hood of the Ascend G300 are decent, with the most impressive part being
the display. The pre-loaded skin is disappointing but that can be
changed.
Performance
The performance of the Huawei Ascend G300 is a mixed bag. In terms of benchmarks, it performed very well beating most of the budget tablets in its segment. In real world usage however, it is a different story.
To start with the good, the Huawei
Ascend G300’s display is fantastic. Even in sunlight, we were able to
see the display and work. It wasn't as susceptible to glare as we
expected. The call quality on the device too is good. The voice is
clear, though we did face a few call drop issues when the signal
strength went down to 1 to 2 bars.
Another interesting aspect about the
Huawei Ascend G300 is the keyboard. There are three different layouts at
your disposal and swiping left or right can easily access them. One is
the standard QWERTY that we are used to. The second is the three letters
per key that we find on traditional phones. The final layout is a
QWERTY two letters per key layout. These layouts are available in both
portrait as well as landscape mode. The availability of different
keyboard layouts on a touchscreen phone isn’t a new feature but it isn’t
found on all devices.
Another interesting feature about the
keyboard is the way in which you can access symbols. In HTC Sense, long
press a key and its symbol appears when typing. In the keyboard on the
Huawei Ascend G300 you simply drag down on the relevant key and its
symbol appears on screen. It's a different method and one that is
comfortable while typing.
The device doesn't come preloaded with
many apps. You have the free trial version of Documents to Go, but you
can get that for free from the Google Play store. Another down side to
the device is that it didn't run HD videos. We tried to run a bunch of
MOV and MKV files on the device but they didn't run.
Simple AVI files
however ran very smoothly without any hiccups. The display looks really
good running these videos. The viewing angles are good, the video looks
crisp and it is fun watching the videos on the device. The audio from
the device too was good. It screeches a bit at full volume but is loud
nonetheless. We have seen better speakers on other smartphones in the
same price range though.
In terms of app performance, the Huawei
Ascend G300 ran quite well. We played a few games and ran apps from the
Google Play store and were satisfied with the performance of the device.
One aspect where the device was really
good was with the battery life. Using Wi-Fi, making calls and running a
few apps, the device lasted us two days. The 1,500 mAh battery does
justice to the product.
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