Final Words

I'll be brutally honest - while I keep a good tab on some elements of the smartphone market, more so on the business side, when it comes to deep dive analysis I leave it in the hands of Josh, Andrei and Brandon. That doesn't mean I don't need a device though, and despite their suggestions it seems I wanted a lot and wasn't prepared to spend the money. As a technical editor, my search for a smartphone caused a series of positive and negative feedback loops - some days I'd decide that DRAM was the most important, whereas others it would be the display resolution or the storage capacity. In the end it comes down to compromise and what is good and within range at the time I was looking. At one point I was adamant I wanted something more powerful than a Snapdragon 600 series, but I've ended up with a quad core MediaTek A53 device running at low frequency. There were some no-brainers – it had to be big enough and good enough to work on when I have short 20 minute public transport trips, and support dual SIM so I don’t have to keep losing my SIM card each time I travel.

The CUBOT H1 was the result of the search. It’s a smartphone that boasts 5200 mAh of battery, which is 3.4x the size of the battery in the iPhone 5c or 2x the battery in the Galaxy S6. When combined with the 1280x720 screen and the 1 GHz quad-core SoC, it gave 4 days of standard use battery which translated to 15 hours and 26 minutes on the PCMark battery test that runs from 100% to 20%, beating the Zenfone 2 by over nine hours. That is pretty much pre-2000 smartphone territory, more akin to what we used to have when playing games like Snake.

My smartphone use case has adapted over time – I want it to do work on. That means writing, switching between apps, being somewhat responsive, and always being available. The SoC means it doesn’t break any sort of record for performance, but ultimately so much of my use doesn’t require performance but rather latency in app switching and updates. Having enough memory to keep apps available means a lot, so moving up from 1GB to 2GB was a big enough change to notice, as well as the bump up to Android 5.1. The 16GB storage model is pretty basic, and the microSD compatibility is only at 32GB, rather than something bigger, and I know it will fill over time with the consistent photographing of my cats. But that is a risk that I’m going to have to take, or synchronize with Dropbox.

Without the silicone case that comes free with the phone, I will grant that despite the patterned edge, it does feel like the plastic the rear is made from, and arguably it slips out of the hand too easily. With the silicone case, it just feels like a smartphone with a case, which a lot of people use anyway. The raised power and volume buttons helps discern their location, and the fixed buttons is something I like to have on my device, even if it means giving up screen real estate.

It is clear that the cameras are not for taking glamour shots. But at a trade show, as long as you are in the front row, and have a second or two between shots, taking pictures of slides to work on later is good enough. To get a good shot taking advantage of the EIS though, you really need to use the burst mode which supports 40 shots at 13 MP each. The video is also an afterthought. That comes down to the price and what needs to be cut to meet that price. I purchased the device, brand new from Amazon, for £125 which translates to $160 pre-tax. Almost everyone I showed the phone to, probably due to the battery life argument, thought it was more expensive. The only people who guessed under (and only by $10) were a pair of senior ARM employees. But truth be told, I could buy four of these a year and it would still be cheaper than an S6. Of course, there are obvious caveats with that comparison.

I would say that this is going to be my phone for the next two years. But since I purchased it in October, two extra high end smartphones that others at AnandTech have tested have both landed on my desk for similar experiential testing. It almost seems sad to shelve the Cubot H1 immediately unless I adapt to carry two phones at once, with the H1 as that long-battery backup.

CUBOT H1
SoC Mediatek MT6735P
4x ARM Cortex-A53 at 977 MHz
ARM Mali-T720 MP2 at 400 MHz
RAM 2GB LPDDR3 at 533 MHz
Storage 16GB NAND
Display 5.5” 720p IPS
Modem 2G / 3G / 4G LTE UE Category 4
DC-HSPA+, TD-SCDMA, CDMA2000 1x/EVDO Rev. A, EDGE
Networks

 
TDD LTE None
FDD LTE B1 / B3 / B7 / B20
UMTS 900 / 1900 / 2100
GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
Dimensions 154.5 (h) x 76.6 (w) x 9.2 (d) mm,
201 grams*
Weight Measured by AnandTech, conflicting numbers online
Cameras Rear 12.8MP ( 4128 x 3096 )
Front 8MP ( 3264 x 2448 )
Battery 5200 mAh (19.76 Whr)
OS Android 5.1
Connectivity 802.11a/b/g/n 2.4GHz
BT 4.0, GPS, A-GPS, Micro-USB
SIM Size Micro-SIM (FDD-LTE, WCDMA, GSM)
Nano-SIM (GSM Only)
Also Separate MicroSD slot, up to 32GB
MSRP (UK) 16GB $160
£125 as purchased

So the final question becomes ‘how is it pronounced?’ Do we say cue-bot? Or perhaps cub-bot, or cue-bow? After writing this review, and looking at their online ‘CUBOT enterprise propaganda film’ on YouTube, it turns out to be coo-bot.

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  • nathanddrews - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    This review wins the "glod metal".
  • protomech - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    Pedantry:

    "with the first SIM for 3G/4G requiring a full-sized SIM card and the second microSIM for 2G (basic data/SMS)"

    It looks like the first SIM slot is a mini-SIM slot. There's actually a non-mini SIM card, which is about as large as as credit card. It was introduced first, but it was replaced by the mini-SIM before most people (including me) started to use cell phones.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subscriber_identity_...
  • Ryan Smith - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    You are correct sir!
  • leexgx - Monday, March 14, 2016 - link

    little update been using the phone for 3 months now nearly and works brilliantly get 2 days normal use or 1 day if using TomTom Go for 8-9 hours screen on time

    another Note You can Use 3G and 4G in Both sim slots, just not at the same time
    the sim with active data enabled has 3G and 4G access the sim with data off only gets 2G, ( when you enable data on the other sim the phone disconnects both sims and flips the radios around to the opposite sim and enables 3G and 4G on the sim with data enabled)

    voice on loud speaker seems to not be reliable, but i use Bluetooth so does not bother me
  • leexgx - Wednesday, December 30, 2015 - link

    well i got the phone and its impressive for just £110

    first day full charge i got 2 days of use out of it (8 hours of Screen On Time, not 15 hours but i had over 3 hours of google navigating so 8 hours is outstanding, as navigation uses mobile data, GPS and screen, GPS is norm especially a power hog, the phone did not even get hot)

    second charge seems to be longer, 1 day 25% battey drop (phone is saying 4 days approx remaining, i expect it to be 2 due to my useage) charge time is very slow thought (something like 4 hours but not sure when i started charging it, but that's fine due to how long phone lasts)

    battery drop is something like 1% every 10 or more ish minutes when watching 720p video

    speed wise everything seems responsive spec wise it should be slower then my M7 but seems more snappy, and it seems that they also made sure that the OS knows its a 5.5in phone(needs a new ROM installing on it as i just reset the phone and there is no google apps installed on the phone) not fully used to having a 5.5in phone thought but battery life is very nice
  • protomech - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    (woops, meant to be a top-level reply)
  • Ikepuska - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    Seriously though, the original SIM card was just a particular Smart Card. Which is still using the Credit Card form factor.
  • leexgx - Thursday, December 24, 2015 - link

    as well as gold award, it comes in gold as well
  • Robalov - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    Bought a similar knock off phone from Amazon before, battery Amazing, and typical use of the phone was fine.

    Camera was laughable, but the killer was the call quality. Unusable to make phone calls.

    I bought a bluetooth headset to temporarily get round the issue, but eventually the phone starting falling to pieces, with Bluetooth failing 50% of the time.

    With no mention of call quality here, I can't see this being any different. I hope to see an update in 6 months, with this phone in the bin.

    No free lunch, as they say.
  • Ian Cutress - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    > With no mention of call quality here

    Third page: "Phone call connection quality is also good, despite the fact that I live in an area that seems to have lead paint in the walls."

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