OPPO F11 Pro Review
Display
This device’s display is basically ideal. It’s extremely bright, colorful, and it’s not interrupted by any silly front-facing cameras. There’s no notch, there’s no Camera hole. It’s not as rectangular-edged as the Razer Phone series, but we’ll forgive that since this isn’t meant to be a gaming phone. Instead we get a slightly rounded-corner display with no interruptions, and no distractions.
This is the sort of display that I like best. There is no stylization for which I must atone. There is no sensor array. I do not use a front-facing camera more than once in a great while anyway – so I’m very glad to find this phone’s front-facing camera tucked away, physically.
There’s nothing here to distract from the 6.53-inch full HD+ LCD display (2,340 x 1,080 pixels), including a 90.9% screen-to-body ratio. That’s amongst the most extreme of said ratios in the industry today.
If you twisted my arm, I’d recommend that the bottom bezel could be the same width as the top. But my preference here isn’t necessarily an issue – certainly not a big enough issue to turn the phone down.
Software
This device runs ColorOS 6 operating system on top of Android 9.0 Pie, which means you’ll have all the benefits of Android, with OPPO’s take on OS aesthetics. You can also choose to run any of a variety of Android homescreen replacement apps, but you probably won’t feel the need. ColorOS 6 is looking good, running swiftly, and keeps all the best elements from the basic Android build – so what’s not to like?
Camera
The cameras on this device takes extremely nice photos. I’m mostly referring to the backside set of cameras – but the frontside camera is pretty OK, too. The rear camera array has the following: Camera 1: 48 MP, f/1.8, 1/2.3″, 0.8µm, PDAF. Camera 2: 5 MP, f/2.4, 1/5″, 1.12µm, depth sensor, LED flash, HDR, panorama, video 1080p at 30fps.
Credits: gadgets360cdn.com |
Zoom in this camera setup is only digital, so it’s not actually zooming as a larger camera would, and the results show it. If you already own the device, I’d recommend avoiding zooming and avoiding switching over to 48MP in-camera. The result is just an up-scaled 12MP photo and literally cannot look any more impressive than the original 12MP photo you’d have taken anyway.
Battery
There’s a relatively large battery under the hood of this smartphone at 4,000mAh. It might’ve seemed odd to most users when it was revealed that this phone, with all its advanced or otherwise modern features, worked with microUSB instead of USB-C. But given the intended market, India, and the fact that OPPO’s using their own proprietary fast-charging tech that seems to only work with microUSB, we’ll just have to deal with it.
The battery in this device working together with battery optimization tech like RAM dedicated to the display alone, seems to make for around a full day’s charge, pretty easily. Using this device never had me running to a port, regardless of how much I’d used the device during the day.
As it is with many modern smartphones (running Android, at least), standby time on this phone is extraordinary. This phone can stay powered on for several days in a row – provided you don’t activate its display.
Blog Credits: slashgear.com
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