Honor 8 hands-on preview: Way better than you expect

The Honor 8 introduces the U.S. to one of the world’s best-kept phone secrets.
A year ago, our Alex Dobie called the Honor 7 “a well-built, premium handset and a quick performer, [with] camera capabilities that stand out in the mid-range space.” At the time, I had barely heard of the Honor line, but was impressed by the brand’s slow encroachment into the Western market, which combined the aspirational hardware design of Huawei’s high-end phones with a much more accessible name and price.
Now, with the Honor 8, the brand comes barrelling back into to the U.S. after a soft launch in 2015 with the Honor 5X, nominally sidestepping the continued reluctance of American carriers to accept anything with the Huawei name. But the Honor 8 is more than merely a reintroduction to a new market (it is also launching in Europe later this month): it is a statement of purpose, and a powerful one at that.

Honor 8 Specs
| Display | 5.2-inch IPS LCD 1920×1080 |
| Processor | HiSilicon Kirin 950 octa-core4xA72 @ 2.3Ghz + 4xA53 @ 1.8Ghz Mali-T880MP4 GPU |
| Storage | 32GB / 64GB |
| RAM | 4GB LPDDR4 |
| OS | Android 6.0 with EMUI 4.1 |
| Rear cameras | Dual 12MP (monochrome + color), f/2.21.25-micron pixel equivalent |
| Front camera | 8MP, f/2.4 |
| Connection | USB Type-C |
| SIM/MicroSD | Dual SIM in AsiaSingle SIM with microSD (256GB) in Europe/U.S. |
| Battery | 3000mAh Quick Charge 2.0 |
| Security | Fingerprint |
| Other | Infrared, bottom mono speaker, VoLTE (T-Mobile only) |
| Waterproofing | No |
| LTE Bands | LTE FDD: B1/B2/B3/B4/B5/B7/B8/B12/B17/B20 |
| Dimensions | 145.5 x 71 x 7.5 mm |
| Weight | 153 grams |
| Colors | Pearl White, Sapphire Blue, Midnight Black |
| Price | $399 (32GB) / $449 (64GB) |

Honor 8 The fundamentals
At its core, the Honor 8 is based off the impressive Huawei P9, and shares much of that phone’s architecture, including its 5.2-inch 1080p display, dual 12MP sensors, and Android 6.0-based EMUI 4.1 software. But the Honor is a more youthful product, shipping in one of three reflective colors (Pearl White, Sapphire Blue, Midnight Black) whose hues shimmer and dance behind two panes of Gorilla Glass 3. The version I received, Sapphire Blue, instantly become my favorite thing ever, shifting in the sun’s variability from dark to light and a thousand blue hues in between.
The extra gigabyte of memory gives the Honor 8 a bounce to its step that was lacking in the Huawei P9
As Alex mentioned in his preview, the Honor 8 looks like a cross between an Honor 6 and a Galaxy S7, both of which are great devices. Clad in a color-matched metal frame, the device feels both airy and robust, though like all glass phones it is extremely slippery. More than once I woke up to the phone on the floor after it gingerly slid off my purportedly-flat night table. No worse for the wear, though, the Honor 8 only needs a couple wipes with a microfiber cloth each day to remove the myriad fingerprints that inevitably plant themselves all over the front and back glass.
Inside, the HiSilicon Kirin 950 chip pairs with 4GB of RAM and either 32GB or 64GB of expandable storage to fashion a hardware base that is more than capable of driving the Honor 8’s excellent (and bright!) 1080p IPS display. On the one hand, the Kirin 950 is a regression from the 955 inside the Huawei P9 — its four 2.3Ghz Cortex-A72 chips are clocked 200Mhz slower — but the extra gigabyte of memory gives the Honor 8 a proverbial bounce to its step that was, according to our Phil Nickinson, lacking in its Huawei counterpart.
In my testing, the Honor 8 handled everything I threw at it with aplomb, easily standing up to the Exynos 8890 chip in the international Galaxy S7. HiSilicon’s Kirin processors have improved immensely over the last two years, and the Kirin 950 is decidedly modern, built on a 16nm FinFET process and featuring eight 64-bit cores in a big.LITTLE array that resembles the best from Samsung (and to some extent Qualcomm).
Without getting too into the weeds, the introduction of another processor competitor to Samsung and Qualcomm in the U.S. is significant, especially given that the latter company practically monopolizes the mobile baseband market. Like Samsung, HiSilicon has built its own LTE modem into the Kirin 950, and while at maximum speeds of 300Mbps it is not quite as advanced as the competition, it stands to reason that the Huawei subsidiary will only continue to improve as it iterates.

Like the P9, the Honor 8 features a rear fingerprint sensor that is one of the fastest I’ve ever used. I place either of my index fingers on the back of the phone and the screen turns on. It’s wonderful. Add to that a number of intuitive, why-didn’t-anyone-else-think-of-that gestures such as swiping vertically to bring down the notification shade and it becomes more than a biometric tool.
The fingerprint sensor is also a button, adding even more gesture possibilities
The sensor — or the area around it — is also a button, adding even more possibilities. Though it does not replace the home button, double-pressing the the so-called Smart Key can be configured to open the camera app, or quickly turn on the flashlight. It all has the potential to become a bit complicated, and therefore a burden, but Honor has wisely made all of these features opt-in.

On the phone’s bottom, you’ll find a USB Type-C port flanked by a headphone jack and single speaker port. The speaker is, like most in its class, adequate but underwhelming, and doesn’t come close to matching the front-facing stereo prowess of the ZTE Axon 7 or HTC 10. But this is also a very thin, minimal phone, and there wouldn’t have been space on the face to sandwich in such hardware.
Longtime fans of the Honor series will be happy to know that the top of the phone features an IR blaster that pairs with the popular Smart Controller app. I was able to get my Yamaha receiver and Samsung television configured in about five minutes.

Honor 8 Software
In the past, you couldn’t talk about Huawei or Honor without mentioning the divisive and often-frustrating software experience. While there are elements of that legacy on the EMUI 4.1 software of the Honor 8, most of the biggest issues have been corrected, including the garish and unusable icon sets that gave previous versions of the so-called Emotion UI a cartoonish feeling.
This launcher is a far cry from what you’ll find on practically any Android phone shipping today
That’s not to say Honor has rid itself of all its excess; as mentioned previously, there are plenty of settings and modes to tweak and toggle to make the phone feel decidedly yours, and the phone’s launcher and notification shade constantly remind you that you’re living a world away from Nexus, or even Samsung.
Specifically, the launcher has no app drawer, resembling — nay, mimicking — the iPhone homescreen. Sure, the home screens support widgets, but this is a far cry from what you’ll find on practically any Android phone shipping today. That’s fine, and easy enough to work around with a third-party launcher, but the notification shade is considerably more difficult to overlook, and forgive.

Honor heavily customizes the way notifications function, pinging you with requests to allow new apps to send notifications and a system to punish apps that use too much energy. It’s certainly not unusable, and I quickly grew used to its idiosyncrasies, but it’s something to keep in mind when buying this phone, and any handset from the Chinese manufacturer.
Honor has also bundled a number of apps, including Shazam and News Republic, along with a bevy of first-party utilities that, while useful, were quickly relegated to a folder (another reality it shares with the iPhone). Huawei is in the Samsung-circa-2014 era of app design, still determined to give its apps a unique visual flair, with no accordance to Google’s Material Design guidelines. Its SMS app, for instance, has no onscreen back button, forcing you to use the titular navigation key — not a huge problem, but outside the bounds of a well-designed Android app.

I can’t, and won’t, bang on this drum too hard, and though I still take issue with some aspects of it, I quickly grew to enjoy using the Honor 8’s software, quirks and all. And while this is my first real experience with EMUI, I understand from others that this is as clean, thoughtful and performant as it’s ever been. Thank goodness for that.

Honor 8 Camera
The Honor 8 has a unique dual-camera setup, borrowed from the P9 (though without the price-inflating Leica branding): a 12MP color sensor, and an identical monochrome equivalent. Together, they are meant to create sharper, more vibrant photos, with better results in low light, even without optical image stabilization. While the daylight results are some of the best I’ve seen, the phone’s lack of physical stabilization does impact its after-hours capabilities, though not as badly as devices with only one sensor.
The dual lenses are tack-sharp and focus instantly, buoyed by a camera app that makes capturing great photos easy
The f/2.2 lens(es) are tack-sharp and focus instantly, buoyed by a camera app that makes capturing great photos easy. Another benefit of the second sensor is the now-rote addition of manual refocus, since the second sensor captures depth information when the accompanying feature is enabled. As with rival Samsung there is no shortage of image modes, from Pro photo to Panorama to the aptly-named “Good food,” which didn’t seem to make my quick lunch of nachos and salsa any more photogenic. Like the Galaxy Note 7, this camera app is gesture-friendly — though it’s a little sensitive, which means even the slightest of horizontal or vertical flourishes will activate one of the many menus or mode selectors.







While the Honor 8 lacks 4K video capture, it can do 1080p at 120fps, which is good enough for my internet sharing abilities. More than that, though, the phone manages to do a great job capturing beautiful photos in almost any condition.

Honor 8 Final Thoughts
I didn’t expect to be as impressed by the Honor 8 as I am. While I haven’t been able to do sufficient battery testing to determine whether the 3000mAh battery lives up to the competition, the phone has shown promise, refusing to drop below 20% in any of the days I’ve used the phone.
More than that, the Honor 8 consistently performs well, has a great screen, and captures fantastic photos, at a price that is sure to be significantly lower than the phone it is gunning for — the Galaxy S7.
It may not have the carrier support of its South Korean counterparts, but if this first salvo is any indication, and the price of previous Honor flagships a factor, it’s going to do very well when it debuts at Amazon, Best Buy, Newegg, B&H Photo, and Honor’s online store in early September.
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Honor 8

- Honor 8 hands-on
- Honor 8 specs
- Pre-order the Honor 8
- All the Honor 8 news
- Join the discussion in the forums
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Honor 8 is the affordable Huawei P9, coming to the U.S. for $399
The Honor 8 is coming to the U.S. and Europe next month.
Honor, Huawei’s subbrand, announced that the Honor 8 is set to come to the U.S. next month (as well as to Europe, though details will be finalized at a launch event on August 24).

Built on the foundation of the excellent Huawei P9, though eschewing the dual-toned all-metal design for a metal-and-glass look, the Honor 8 will arrive in early September for $399 for a 32GB model, and $449 for a 64GB model. It shares the same vivid 5.2-inch 1080p IPS display as the P9, but steps down the processor to a Kirin 950 from the slightly-faster Kirin 955. Thankfully, Honor saw fit to add an extra gigabyte of RAM to the Honor 8, giving it 4GB in total and a spring to its performance step.
Along with Huawei’s EMUI 4.1 software, which sits on top of Android 6.0, the Honor 8 features dual 12MP rear cameras — one color, one monochrome — and an ultra-fast fingerprint sensor.
More: Honor 8 specs
The phone will be available in three colors, Sapphire Blue, Pearl White, and Midnight Black, though the blue version will be a Best Buy exclusive for 60 days. Pre-orders begin August 17 and end September 3, and each pre-order will receive a $50 gift card from that participating retailer for accessories or anything else in the store.
While there are no carrier partners in the U.S., the phone will be available in both sizes at Amazon, Best Buy, B&H Photo Video, and Newegg, along with HiHonor.com.
Honor 8

- Honor 8 hands-on
- Honor 8 specs
- Pre-order the Honor 8
- All the Honor 8 news
- Join the discussion in the forums
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Upgrade your smartphone camera with this Universal 3-in-1 Lens Kit (58 per cent off)
The smartphone era has made professional-grade images possible, with built-in cameras that improve more and more with each new model.
With the Universal 3-in-1 Lens Kit for Smartphones and Tablets, you can give your smartphone camera super powers, as easy as clipping on and shooting!
At just £9.17 ($11.99) from Pocket-lint Deals, a photography upgrade is refreshingly inexpensive.
Just clip on your Universal 3-in-1 Lens Kit to utilize either a 180 degree fish eye, wide-angle, or macro lens on your device, expanding your photographic options with spectacular results. The clip is a commitment-free attachment, letting you attach and release with ease from your phone
You’ll be able to snap gorgeously sweeping landscape, fun warped-perspective images, and up-close photos alike–all from the convenience of your humble phone.
Professional-grade photo capabilities await! Once you’ve gotten the shots you want and you’re ready to remove the lens kit from your phone or tablet, simply unclip the mount with no risk of damage to your device. A handy carrying pouch lets you keep your lenses clean and secure, while taking them with you wherever you may go.
Pick up the Universal 3-in-1 Lens Kit for Smartphones and Tablets today, and revolutionize your photographic capabilities. Free shipping to Continental U.S. keeps your final price low, and with 58 per cent discount from Pocket-lint Deals, you’ll pay only £9.17 ($11.99) for a significant functionality upgrade in your phone’s camera.
NASA is making it easier for you to dig through its research
Ever wanted to sort through NASA’s enormous collection of research results, but didn’t have an easy enough way to go about it? NASA has a solution for you, with a new public web portal that the organization hopes will help make checking through its research results simpler.
It’s called PubSpace, and it’s a searchable archive of science journal articles produced by NASA-funded research available online for free. You can download data within one year of its original publication.
The agency is looking to make its scientific data more accessible via “one-stop shopping,” which is meant to aid dissemination of research results to further scientific knowledge. Basically, making it simpler for the public to access NASA’s stores of research papers ensures additional research and breakthroughs in the future.
If you’d like to check out the portal, you can head here to do so right now. Just don’t be surprised if you get lost in a Wikipedia-like clickhole.
Source: NASA
How to get the Windows 10 Mobile Anniversary Update rolling out now
Microsoft released the Anniversary Update for Windows 10 PCs earlier this month, and at the time, it said the update would arrive for Windows 10 mobile devices “in the coming weeks”. The update is now rolling out.
Microsoft confirmed on 16 August that it began releasing the update for Windows 10 mobile devices. It’s not quite as feature-rich as the desktop version, but it does include features like a camera shortcut and media controls on the lock screen, a new Skype app, changes to the settings menu, and support for fingerprint readers. You also get more new emoji to choose from.
Here’s everything you need to know about the update, including how to get it.
Windows 10 Mobile Anniversary Update: When will you get it?
Microsoft said the availability of this update will vary depending on “manufacturer, model, country or region, mobile operator or service provider, hardware limitations, and other factors”. If you have an unlocked Windows 10 mobile device, you’re likely get the update sooner rather than later.
Windows 10 Mobile Anniversary Update: How can you get it?
To manually check if it’s available for your smartphone, go to Settings, then Update & security, then Phone update, and tap on Check for updates.
Windows 10 Mobile Anniversary Update: What does it feature?
Head over to Microsoft’s Anniversary Update hub on its blog for more details about what the update features. Also, thanks to ChangeWindows, you can view a comprehensive list of the new features available in the Anniversary Update for Windows 10 Mobile (build 14393.x).
Huawei Honor 8 goes after millennials with fancy dual cameras
It’s not even been a year since Huawei brought its affordable Honor line to the US, and the company is already releasing a follow-up. The Honor 8 is a smartphone designed with millennials in mind, and will be available for pre-order on August 17th via the Honor website, Best Buy, Amazon and a bunch of other e-tailers for $400. I had a chance to check out the Honor 8 ahead of its US release and was impressed by its dual-sensor camera and eye-catching design. At that price, however, the Honor 8 faces some stiff competition.
Huawei believes millennials are energetic, expressive and passionate. Thus, Michelle Xiong, vice president of the company’s handset division, said it decided to focus on three key points to target the young crowd: unique aesthetics, solid cameras and a useful fingerprint sensor.
The Honor 8 was made with what Huawei calls “multilayer optical filming” that helps it catch and reflect light in a subtle way. Although it looks a lot like the Galaxy S6, the 8 is quite pretty in its own right. When I tilted the phone from side to side, I could see vertical lines appear and fade. In addition to the slightly curved 2.5D glass all over, the handset’s bezel is also made of aircraft-grade aluminum.

Huawei also offers a special warranty for the Honor 8 on top of its standard 12-month option that fixes damage to the handset’s glass covering for the first three months after purchase.
Thanks to the attention to materials, the Honor 8 feels sturdy, but ZTE’s $400 Axon 7 has a more solid build. I also appreciate that Huawei kept the rear cameras under the glass instead of having them jut out like the cameras on other phones, such as the iPhone 6s, Galaxy S7 and Nexus 5x.
Speaking of the rear camera, Huawei outfitted the Honor 8 with a 12-megapixel dual-sensor setup. An RGB sensor captures color data, while the monochrome lens records details. This combination is similar to that in Huawei’s more premium P9 flagship, which was co-engineered by popular camera maker Leica. The images I snapped with our preview Honor 8 indeed looked clear and bright, with accurate colors, and selfies taken with the 8-megapixel front camera were similarly vibrant.
The camera app offers a bunch of cool modes, such as a so-called Wide Aperture setting that lets you adjust the focal point and amount of depth of field (blurred background) after you shoot a photo. Huawei also made it easier to quickly snap pictures by building in some shortcuts. You can trigger the shutter by laying your finger on the fingerprint sensor below the rear camera or by saying “cheese.” When the phone is asleep, you can launch the camera (and immediately take a picture) by double- or triple-pressing the volume down button, depending on how you set it up.
None of those features are new for Huawei’s phones, though. Like the P9, the Honor 8 comes with the company’s EMUI 4.0 software overlaid on Android 6.0 Marshmallow. This brings nifty features such as the ability to assign custom tasks to individual fingers laid on the sensor, as well as using your knuckle to outline a specific area of the screen to capture it.
The similarities to the P9 don’t end there. The Honor 8 also has a 5.2-inch, 1080p display, a USB Type-C charging port and a 3,000mAh battery that supports fast charging. Huawei says the phone will go from 0 to 50 percent after 30 minutes of being plugged in.
While both phones use the company’s own octa-core Kirin chips, the P9 has the faster Kirin 955, as opposed to the Honor 8’s Kirin 950. Huawei said the Kirin 950 is equivalent to Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 820, which powers most of this year’s flagships, but we’ll have to put the Honor to the test to see how it holds up.

The Honor 8 comes in black, white and blue, the latter being my personal favorite. It’s so popular, in fact, that folks in China are snapping up that version (which retails at about US$360 there) and reselling it for about US$500, according to Honor president George Zhao.
Too bad the Honor 8 doesn’t cost the same in the US as it does in China. Other midrange phones on the market, such as the OnePlus 3, the ZTE Axon 7 and the Alcatel Idol 4S cost the same and the latter even comes with its own VR headset in the box. But so far the Honor 8 appears to have a pretty decent camera, and if it does offer performance that parallels its rivals, it could be a worthy adversary. Stay tuned to see how well it stacks up against its competitors.
Nikon’s D3400 DSLR is made for aspiring photographers
Not everyone can handle cameras like Nikon’s flagship D5, which are designed with professional photographers in mind. But, for those who want a less advanced DSLR, the Japanese manufacturer has others such as its new D3400. This entry-level shooter features a 24.2-megapixel CMOS sensor (DX-format) alongside the Expeed 4 processor, which Nikon claims brings improved auto white balance performance and better image quality in low-light scenarios. The D3400 also boasts an ISO range of 100-25,600, 11-point autofocus system, 5-fps continuous shooting and 1080p video at up to 60 fps. These are the sort of specs you’d expect from beginner DSLRs, but the lack of 4K recording will be a downside for some people.
Of course, similar to the higher-end D500, Nikon’s D3400 comes with SnapBridge connectivity. You can use this to transfer pictures remotely to a smartphone or tablet; there’s no WiFi here though, meaning the data is shared over low-energy Bluetooth. Another highlight is that the D3400 is getting a fresh line of dedicated lenses, called the AF-P DX Nikkor. According to Nikon, these have a very quiet motor, which should come in handy for users who shoot video on a regular basis.
The D3400 will hit stores in “early” September for $650, in a kit that includes an AF-P DX Nikkor 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 G VR lens. Or, you’ll also have the option to buy it with that same glass plus an AF-P DX Nikkor 70-300mm f4.5/6.3 G ED for $1,000. Alternatively, Nikon’s also selling the 70-300mm lens with vibration reduction for $400 on its own.
Intel intros a ready-to-fly drone for software developers
Intel has introduced a quadcopter called Aero at its annual developers conference, and we’ll bet you can guess its target audience based on the event. That’s right, Aero was specifically designed not for hobbyists or for commercial purposes, but for developers who want to create and test apps for drones. The company said it’s the “fastest path available from Intel for developers to get applications airborne.” Aero is powered by an Atom processor and comes equipped with Intel’s RealSense camera for vision. It’s also preloaded with AirMap, an app that tells you where you can and can’t fly, gives you real-time info on wildfires and the like, as well as gives you an easy way to plot routes.
While the company didn’t mention a specific release date and price, it did say the drone will be available by the end of the year. If you want to make your own, though, you can get Aero’s compute board and RealSense camera kit as separate components right now for $399 and $149, respectively. Besides introducing Aero, Intel also showed off the Typhoon H, a hexacopter made by DJI rival Yuneec that has a collision avoidance system based on RealSense technology.
Source: Intel
Supplier Lens Technology Commits to 100 Percent Renewable Energy for Apple Manufacturing
Apple today announced that Lens Technology, one of its major suppliers in China, has committed to power all its glass production for Apple with 100 percent renewable energy by 2018. The commitment is a large step in Apple’s efforts to help manufacturers lower their carbon footprint in China.
Lens Technology has committed to power all of its glass production for Apple with 100 percent renewable energy by the end of 2018, as part of Apple’s industry-leading supply chain clean energy program announced last year. Lens is the first supplier to make a clean energy commitment for all of its Apple production, and will meet its goal through an unprecedented power purchase agreement with local wind projects.
The Cupertino company also announced that all 14 of its final assembly sites in the country are now compliant with UL’s Zero Waste to Landfill validation. The standard, which started in January 2015, certifies that all manufacturing waste is reused, recycled, composted, or converted into energy (when necessary). Since the program began, nearly, 140,000 metric tons of waste have been diverted from landfills.
“We want to show the world that you can manufacture responsibly and we’re working alongside our suppliers to help them lower their environment impact in China,” Lisa Jackson, Apple’s VP of Environment, Policy and Social Initiatives said in a statement. “We congratulate Lens for their bold step, and hope by sharing the lessons we’ve learned in our transition to renewable energy, our suppliers will continue to access clean power projects, moving China closer to its green manufacturing goals.”
Two Lens facilities in Changsha, Hunan province are currently used for Apple manufacturing. By 2018, Apple and Lens hope wind energy will cover 100 percent of energy consumed by Apple manufacturing. The change would avoid nearly 450,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide per year.
Last October, Apple announced two clean energy programs aimed at reducing the carbon footprint of its manufacturing partners in the country. At the time, Apple said the programs would avoid over 20 million metric tons of greenhouse gas pollution in China between now and 2020.
Tags: China, Apple environment
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