I have been happy enough with the Honor 600 as my everyday phone. It runs my apps, the battery lasts two days, the design is comfortable to hold, I’m not worried about durability, and the camera is acceptable. I should be saying, sure, it’s a good phone to buy. However, the Honor 600 has made life difficult for itself due to the various software gremlins I’ve already encountered (which makes me think more will arrive the longer I use it) and the irritating way it handles the not-always-on screen. It’s frustrating, as if the software were a little more polished, particularly around calls, and t
I’ve been very happy using the Honor Magic V6 for the last few weeks, and right now, should be telling you it’s a brilliant buy. While I do think it's a good buy — there are no glaring fundamental issues with it — it comes with further advice to not rush into it at all. The Honor Magic V6 doesn’t separate itself from other big-screen folding phones, especially if you miss out on the special offer price. It’s a problem of Honor’s own making. If the Magic V6 came to the UK in March when we first saw it, it wouldn’t be butting up against whatever Samsung’s doing with the Galaxy Z Fold 8, Apple’s
The Honor 600 Pro should be the phone you expect Honor to want you to look at first, but in reality, it thinks the cheaper, less technically impressive Honor 600 will be the winner in the line-up. There’s quite a difference between the two spec sheets. The Honor 600 has a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite processor, a 6.57-inch AMOLED screen with a 120Hz refresh rate, a 6,400mAh silicon-carbon battery (7,000mAh in some territories), and a 200-megapixel main camera plus a 50MP telephoto for a 3.5x optical zoom. The Honor 600 shares the same screen and battery, but steps down to the Qualcomm Snapdrago
The Honor Watch 6 has a 1.46-inch AMOLED screen with a 464 x 464 pixel resolution, a 980mAh battery, 4GB of memory, and the app operates with both Android and iOS devices. For fitness tracking, the smartwatch has more than 120 different sports available to track, and dual-band GPS onboard too. The battery life is going to vary depending on use, but an extended battery mode will push it to around 35 days, according to Honor. The smartwatch will also track sleep, stress, blood oxygen, and heart rate. It also has a Quick Health Scan feature, which shows key data points at a glance. It’s good to s