Blu Pure XR review: Mostly decent hardware choked by bad software


I've in my fingers the Pure XR, Blu's present day flagship. Teased back at the starting of August, many noted that the cell bore some putting similarities to a couple different telephones from the front. Regardless of this, Blu used to be fast to express its pleasure for this new gadget. Watching at the company's portfolio, mainly the final member of the Pure line, the Pure XL, the purpose for the fuss is beautiful obvious. I've been making use of it for about a week now and i have a number of thoughts on it. Important is that on the price of $299, this cellphone packs some good specs into a very satisfactory frame.

Yet as is the story with many a excellent device, program is the Pure XR's biggest weak spot.


SPECS


Display5.5" 1920x1080 SuperAMOLED (401 ppi) with Gorilla Glass 3
Processor4 x 1.9 GHz and 4 x 1.0 GHz octa-core MediaTek Helio P10 (6755) with Mali-T860MP2 GPU
RAM4GB
Camera16MP rear, 8MP front
Storage64GB, microSD card slot
Wireless3G: 850/1700/1900/2100; 4G LTE: 2/4/7
PortsUSB Type-C, 3.5mm headphone
Battery3,000 mAh
OSAndroid 6.0 Marshmallow
Dimensions154.3 x 74.9 x 7 mm; 147.2g
Price$299
ColorsGold, Grey
BuyAmazonBest Buy

THE GOOD


Nice designA very sleek, light phone. Despite being aluminum, it is not very slippery and the double chamfer improves grip. The overall design language may look familiar, but it works well with this phone.
DisplayVibrant colors, excellent viewing angles, better outdoor visibility than some other displays.
StoragePlenty of internal storage, plus an SD card slot for either additional or adoptable space.
BatteryDespite being 3,000 mAh, I had no trouble making it to the end of the day with 15-20% left when I went to bed.

THE NOT SO GOOD


SoftwareNot going to lie, but the software is pretty awful. Covering up the app drawer-less Carefree Launcher is easy(ish), but that doesn't fix the settings menu or the strangest implementation of Quick Settings I have seen. Also, for the security people, it is on 6.0 and the July patch.
Fingerprint sensorNot always accurate. Like Samsung, the sensor requires a full click-in, then about a second and a half to read the finger. Also slow in the OS itself.
PerformanceDefinite lag across the system, especially after a few days into my testing (despite reboots). Heavy tasks, and even things like swiping away several emails in Gmail, really bogged down the phone.
No NFCWe are nearing the end of 2016, and mobile payments are a thing here in the U.S. Not including NFC a few years ago might have been acceptable, but with the push behind contactless payments, NFC is no longer arbitrary.

Hardware, Build Quality, and Appeal


Upon first doing away with the packaging from the delivery materials, I was once instantly impressed with the aid of the overall nice. That may appear ridiculous, however ever because the OnePlus One, i have relatively paid awareness to the total presentation of a device, given that that is my first impact of it. My hopes soared once I noticed the black field with chrome textual content and an embossed picture of the mobilephone itself, which seemed and felt extraordinary.

The build exceptional on the Pure XR is beautiful top-notch, besides for a couple of things (extra on that later). Although it is a unibody aluminum mobilephone, it feels totally distinct than my OnePlus three. For one, it's not as slippery, seemingly because of the coating and the chamfers. It is usually lighter than this 12 months's Flagship Killer, coming in at 147.2g. The speaker and port configuration is fairly normal, with the style-C port within the core flanked by using the speaker grille and the three.5mm jack. The vigor button and the volume rocker, both of which furnish an great tactile response, are along the proper facet of the telephone. The entrance-facing digital camera and the usual array of sensors are up along the top bezel.

The capacitive navigation keys flank the fingerprint sensor. They are easy dots that do not illuminate, so they may be able to be rough to find. There is some haptic feedback to denote that you just honestly pressed the button (besides, you realize, the apparent indicator from the OS).

The back of the mobilephone is where it particularly steps up its appeal. The grey unit I bought is really excellent, and even has a blue-ish tinge to it (you guessed it, I like the colour blue). The digicam, flash, and laser autofocus are within the left corner. The finish, like I recounted above, is notable — i don't consider like this thing goes to slide out of my hand if I don't have a loss of life grip on it. Frankly, I was now not afraid to take this cell out bare, and simplest used the integrated case after I was doing rougher events.

Now again to the 2 flaws i've found within the hardware. The first and most apparent thing i realized is how low cost the fingerprint sensor feels. It is very plasticy, which is a a ways cry from my experience with Samsung's ultra-modern sensors. When I depress the button (it's not a capacitive dwelling key just like the OnePlus 3), the reaction from the cell is very hole. At the same time difficult to explain, I was left with a sense of distaste at any time when I pressed it.

The opposite thing is that the fingerprint sensor itself is just not very speedy nor totally accurate. I estimate the whole accuracy over the direction of my time with the cell to be about 75%, even after re-adding my fingerprints a couple of times over. So, even as it performs its function for the most part, there have been ample irritating instances that the sensor failed. In regards to its speed, it takes just shy of two seconds to wake up, read my print, and unencumber. Its slowness is not only relegated to waking the gadget to be used — it takes most effective a hair less time to authenticate within the OS itself. Nevertheless, it's nonetheless faster than coming into my PIN, but barely beats out a swipe with shrewd Lock enabled.
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