Rating Your Huawei P10

The P10 comes loaded with Android 7.0 Nougat overlaid with Huawei’s Emotion UI 5.1.
While I’m happy to see Nougat, which is by far the best iteration of Android to date, I’m less enamoured with Huawei’s Emotion software.
Android skins made sense back in the day, when the OS was young and missing key features.
But since Android Lollipop, which was a turning point for the OS, I’ve felt they’re generally detrimental to the user experience for a couple of reasons.
First, because most of the additions are either superfluous, or duplicate services to ones already included on Android.
This issue remains true on the P10, whose menu system has been completely rejigged and comes with numerous duplicate services for items such as music, photos and calendar.
I wish more companies would follow Moto’s example and put a clean install of Android on their phones, or at the very least do what HTC has with its One series and stop adding duplicate apps.
The second issue is that the skin’s code always delays how quickly handsets can be upgraded to new versions of Android.
The appearance of Emotion is likely to be a key reason the P10 isn’t running on the latest Android 7.1 version of Nougat.
Huawei has also done some interesting work to improve the OS under the hood, using Ultra Memory. Ultra Memory is a background feature designed to let the phone run more smoothly by recycling memory faster.
Performance
The P10 uses the same Kirin 960 chipset as the Huawei Mate 9 phablet, and it’s paired with a Mali G71 MP8 GPU and 4GB of RAM.
The specs are a step up on the P9, which used an older Kirin 955 CPU and, on paper, put the device on a par with competing flagships.
Both remain slightly behind the Plus version, however, which comes with 6GB of memory – although, to be perfectly honest, this amount of memory on a smartphone is complete overkill.
With regular use I didn’t have any serious problems with the P10’s performance. Apps opened in milliseconds and the phone dealt with multiple tab web browsing without any signs of stuttering.
The only time I noticed any performance disparity between it and competing flagships was when gaming.
The games did run smoothly once up, but the P10 became noticeably hotter than rival phones during prolonged play sessions – although not to the point I was worrying about CPU throttling.
Call quality is also solid. The speakers and microphone are more than good enough to make and take calls, even on busy Suva streets.
Feedback: maraia.vula@fijisun.com.fj