
Phones that can maintain two carrier network connections at once have
been around for a while, lurking in the shadows of mass adoption
anywhere but emerging markets, where those are very, very popular. So
popular that there are local brands you've never heard of that make
boatloads of them.
If you want to take advantage of
two good carrier plans at once, use one number for family and friends
and another for work, or simply can't resist that great new data plan,
but your contract still has mileage left in it, a decent dual SIM phone
might come to the rescue.
For the first time in
smartphone (or any phone) history, we get to have dual SIM devices that
aren't light years behind the market flagships. In fact, we are getting
those same flagships outfitted with two SIM card slots this season, and
we have the proliferation of Android handsets in dual SIM havens like
China and India to thank for that.
There's never been such a
choice of dual SIM phones that are actually up for anything you'd use a
modern day Android at, or such great value-for-money offerings that can
connect to more than one cellular network at once. That is why we are
rounding up the best dual SIM handsets money can buy this season, for
the times when one Subscriber Identity Module just won't cut it..
The best dual SIM phones
One of the best
phones for this year, the HTC One, gets even better in the dual SIM
version, as, besides two SIM cards working in tandem, the phone also
offers a microSD slot under the removable back cover - something the
"regular" HTC One doesn't get. It is now officially available outside of
China, as HTC lists it for sale in its UK store, for instance, with
European network support. "Unlike other dual-sim Smartphones, HTC's dual
active solution offers complete flexibility:
Receive calls from either sim card at any time
Switch seamlessly between both sim cards while you talk
HTC Sense helps you manage calls, texts and data between sim cards s effortlessly
On-board
Dual Network Manager allows you to select a preferred network and
personalise the name of each SIM, eliminating any complexity"
Since
you still have all the other bells and whistles, like a brilliant 4.7"
1080p display, BoomSound stereo speakers at the front, and 32 GB of
internal storage, plus the phone allows you to get a call on the second
card while talking on the first, these make it perhaps the best dual SIM
device money can buy at the moment.
Bright 1080p display?
Check. 13 MP camera with Sony sensor? Check. Ultraslim and light 6.9mm
body? Check. Two easy to access SIM cards on the sides? Check. The
Alcatel One Touch Idol X just got a markdown in the expectation of the
Idol X+, making it one of the best value-for-money dual SIM phones you
can buy, and it's a looker, too, available in several nice pastel
colors.
The other great value
for money dual SIM offering besides the Idol X is Lenovo's P780. Armed
with one of the largest phone batteries ever, the 4000 mAh unit in the
P780 offers full 25 hours of talk time in 3G mode, and 16 hours of video
playback - that's twice what most other phones are achieving. Granted,
with such a huge battery and metal back cover, the 5" HD Lenovo P780 is
not the lightest out there, but if you are looking for an affordable
dual SIM handset that will last you at least a weekend away from the
charger, this one it is.
China is usually the
market getting first dibs on great dual SIM phones from most major
manufacturers, and the Galaxy S4 is no exception. Its dual SIM version
ships with gimped Google services, and search is done via Baidu, but
this Amazon seller ships to you rooted dual SIM Galaxy S4 with Google
Play installed, so there is a workaround. In case you are willing to
spend north of $800, that is.
Fitting midrange
specs in one of the thinnest and lightest 4.7-inchers out there, Oppo
has managed to produce a great Dual Active SIM handset with the R819. It
sports a very bright 720p screen, 8 MP camera on the back, and
ingenious SIM card tray that lets you quickly swap out the second SIM
card. At $350 you are getting a well-rounded Android with cool features
and svelte looks.
What was Grand last
year, is this year's flagship size, so Samsung just unveiled a Galaxy
Grand successor, aptly named Galaxy Grand 2, which sports a higher
resolution display, a quad-core processor, larger 2600 mAh battery, plus
an additional half a gig of RAM, for a total of 1.5 GB.
We get a
slightly increased screen diagonal - 5.25" vs 5" for the original Grand
- and the svelter, 8.9mm profile of the Grand 2, compared to the 9.6 mm
of the Galaxy Grand. The second edition is taller but slightly narrower
than the original, which on theory should help one-handed navigation,
but we'll know more when we get a review unit. The Grand 2 sports a faux
leather back cover, similar to what Samsung did with the Note 3,
indicating that this soft touch material is here to stay on Sammy's
phones.
Other than those you get an 8 MP camera again with an LED
flash, 8 GB of internal memory plus a microSD slot for expansion, HSPA+
and Bluetooth 4.0 connectivity. The device is, naturally, a dual SIM
phone, targeting it at emerging markets, and runs on Android 4.3 Jelly
Bean out of the box.
Sharing decent
midrange specs with the Desire 601, its dual SIM version sports a 4.5"
qHD display, dual-core Snapdragon 400 processor, 5 MP camera with flash,
and a pretty good for the specs 2100 mAh battery. The Desire 601 is a
bit on the pricey side, but you get the BoomSound stereo speakers from
the flagship HTC One, along with Sense 5.0.
The LG G Pro Lite
phablet keeps the screen size of its namesake at 5.5", but with a much
lower 540x960 resolution. The processor is also slimmed down to an entry
MediaTek level, dual-core and clocked at 1 GHz. The G Pro Lite sports 1
GB of RAM, 8 GB of storage plus a microSD slot, and an 8 MP rear
camera. The beefy 3140 mAh battery should do endurance wonders with this
screen and specs. The G Pro Lite is comparatively thin at 9.4mm, and
weighs the reasonable for a 5.5" phone 164g.
A stand-out feature
are the dual speakers "for excellent audio performance with or without
headphones," which is not something you see on a phone every day, let
alone an affordable phablet.
Not only that, but the phablet comes
with an embedded stylus, similar to Samsung's Note line, and dual SIM
capability, which hints that it is targeted towards emerging market
customers which are jonesing for a phablet with two SIM cards and on the
cheap. The stylus is tucked at the top, not the bottom like with the
Galaxy Notes. but like them comes with dedicated Notes app for
handwriting, and the dual SIM functions also gets an accompanying Hot
Key for quick switch between networks.
Samsung outed a
rather ho-hum "mini" version of its flagship S4, outfitting it with a
qHD display at 4.3" diagonal and just 8 GB of storage. That didn't
prevent it from charging an arm and a leg for the specs, counting on the
instant Galaxy S4 brand name recognition. The situation becomes much
better when you get the dual SIM version of the Galaxy S4 mini, though,
as then the extra functionality fits the price of the otherwise
well-rounded offering.
The Xperia C sports a
large 5" 540x960 pixels display, quad-core chipset, 1 GB of RAM, 4 GB
of storage plus a microSD slot, and has an 8 MP Exmor RS sensor on the
back. Not too shabby for the price, which gets you instant brand name
recognition and dual SIM functionality in one.
A lot of people can't
call even a two or three hundred USD Android midranger with two SIM
cards cheap, and for those the cutsy Nokia Asha 210 dual SIM fits the
bill. Built tough and painted in jolly colors, it rocks the almost
forgotten portrait QWERTY style, has the battery endurance of a feature
phone and will run you only about $70 without any contract subsidies. It
can't get much better than that.
Asha 210 not cheap
enough? "The Nokia 107 Dual SIM comes with speaking clock, FM radio, MP3
player, free games and a flashlight. On top of that the tough dust and
splash-proof keymat is designed to withstand a lot, and the characters
on your keys won’t fade, no matter how long you use them. What more can
the dual SIM warrior want for this kind of cash.
Xiaomi is the next
status quo challenger from China, outing very well-rounded phones at
rock bottom prices, and its affordable dual SIM Android, codenamed Red
Rice, comes to prove why Google's Hugo Barra moved from Mountain View to
Xiaomi's headquarters not long ago. How about 4.7" HD screen, quad-core
processor, and an 8 MP camera on the back at this price tag? Not bad,
we'd say, proving that a phone doesn't have to be expensive to get
decent specs anymore, dual SIM ones notwithstanding.
No comments:
Post a Comment