Honor 8 Pro review: Screentrooper

Screentrooper

GSMArena team, 25 April 2017.

EMUI 5.1

As expected, the Honor 8 Pro runs on the company's own EMUI ROM. It is now up to version 5.1, groomed to accompany the new lineup. The OS is not only based on Android 7 Nougat, but has also been refreshed in a number of ways. Design-wise, there is a clear stylistic progression from the previous generations of the launcher. There are now different colors and themes crafted from the ground up by Huawei's design team.

Honor 8 Pro review

Most of the Emotion UI 5.1 upgrades reside under the hood and offer boosts in various performance aspects. There are some relatively simple things, like improved mis-touch detection, better dictation algorithms, and Moments, for more convenient photo organizing. There are a few major new background systems put in place.

Ultra Memory is a new algorithm with a focus on recycling and freeing RAM faster. It learns from your app habits and speeds up app launching/resuming by keeping what you consider important in the RAM.

Ultra Response, on the other hand, allows for faster touch response, thanks to a new driver. It works towards lowering touch latency and support for predictive finger tracking. According to Huawei, their screens are now as fast and accurate as the iPhone's.

Huawei also talks a big talk about advanced machine learning, designed to catalog and predict your behavior and allocate CPU, GPU and I/O resources to the apps you use accordingly, making them more responsive. This is closely tied to SmartPower 5.0 - the latest installment of Huawei's intelligent power management platform. It promises up to 7% improvements in battery efficiency.

The lockscreen is one of the elements being carried over from previous versions of the ROM. Still, it was already quite functional. The Magazine unlock style greets you with a different wallpaper every time you wake up the device, with new ones being downloaded when you connect to Wi-Fi and an option to delete the ones, which are older than three months.

The lockscreen itself is minimalistic at first glance, with just a large clock, the date, and a shortcut to the camera. You can also quickly start the camera by a double press of the Volume Down button with the option to take a snap right away, or just go to the app.

While still at the lockscreen, you can pull up an iOS-style menu from the bottom, where you get a ton of functionality. The top row lets you manage the wallpapers - you can remove, favorite, share, or pause on the current one. In addition to that, you get a row of handy shortcuts for basic apps - voice recorder, calculator, flashlight, timer, and QR code reader.

Functional lockscreen - Honor 8 Pro review Functional lockscreen - Honor 8 Pro review Functional lockscreen - Honor 8 Pro review Functional lockscreen - Honor 8 Pro review Functional lockscreen - Honor 8 Pro review
Functional lockscreen

If you opt for a fingerprint unlock method, you probably won't be seeing much of the lockscreen anyway. Almost a shame, considering all the effort that Huawei has put into making it unique. Still, the reader is blazing fast and using it is a no-brainer.

On top of the multi and guest user support that comes standard with Android, you can also set up a so-called Private space, which you can access with a different fingerprint. The data accessible there is independently encrypted, Huawei says, and is inaccessible to the other users. Only one Private space can be set up per device.

Fingerprint settings - Honor 8 Pro review enrolling a fingerprint - Honor 8 Pro review Twin app - Honor 8 Pro review A couple of Facebook accounts - Honor 8 Pro review
Fingerprint settings • enrolling a fingerprint • Twin app • A couple of Facebook accounts

In addition to that, you also get App twins for multiple instances of a single application. Sadly, in its current state the feature only works with Facebook and WhatsApp.

But, we got a little sidetracked again. That's just the thing with EMUI 5.1. It is so jam-packed with features left and right that you can't look at a screen without stumbling onto at least a few things worth mentioning. Still, despite all the customization freedom and the powerful feature bundle, on the surface the ROM manages to maintain a clean and usable UX.

Beyond the lockscreen, we're treated to a pleasant surprise - on top of the usual all-apps-on-the-homescreens approach Huawei now gives you the option to pick the standard Android two-tiered interface with homescreens for your most-used apps and an app drawer for all of them.

No app drawer by default - Honor 8 Pro review Layout settings - Honor 8 Pro review but you can opt for one - Honor 8 Pro review app drawer shortcut - Honor 8 Pro review app drawer - Honor 8 Pro review
No app drawer by default • Layout settings • but you can opt for one • app drawer shortcut • app drawer

There are a few other interesting homescreen and general layout tweaks to check out as well. The app drawer, if you opt for it, is a vertically scrollable list of all your apps, 4 in a row, with a search field on top.

And if that wasn't enough customization already, EMUI 5.1 has Theme support. As previously mentioned, Huawei's design team put a lot of effort into re-imagining various shapes and colors in the UI. The theme store offers a wide selection and some really artsy options that fit in well with the general high-design image of the Honor 8 Pro. Of course, you can always keep things simple and only customize the wallpaper and possibly transition animations.

Powerful Theme engine - Honor 8 Pro review Powerful Theme engine - Honor 8 Pro review Powerful Theme engine - Honor 8 Pro review Powerful Theme engine - Honor 8 Pro review
Powerful Theme engine

The notification area is a 50/50 mix between stock Nougat and Emotion. Huawei has tweaked the look of the quick toggles and added the auto-brightness switch, which Google so stubbornly refuses to keep in plain sight. The notifications themselves look just like the Pixel's.

The task switcher is rather straightforward, but again with added functionality over Google's own - apps in the rolodex can be locked by tapping on the padlock icon, so killing all apps will spare the locked ones. The End all button is readily available too, not up in the right corner as Google does it.

There are a few other interesting tweaks you can apply to the status bar. For example, notification icons can be replaced by a simple numerical counter. You also have control over whether the notification LED and display should react to a new notification.

Notification shade - Honor 8 Pro review step 1 - Honor 8 Pro review step 2 with more toggles - Honor 8 Pro review task switcher - Honor 8 Pro review Status bar tweaks - Honor 8 Pro review
Notification shade • step 1 • step 2 with more toggles • task switcher • Status bar tweaks

The Honor 8 Pro features granular notifications control - Huawei had that even before it was a part of Android itself. You can control which apps can send you the three types of available notifications - the shade notifications, the lockscreen notifications and the banner style notifications.

This level of control is also employed when it comes to the app access to network data and permissions. The user can control the rights of each application to access either WiFi or mobile data. This can save a lot of traffic and help you optimize your data plan and consumption in an easy and convenient way. You can also rest assured that there is no unregulated access to your personal data or phone sensors.

Notification management - Honor 8 Pro review Notification permissions - Honor 8 Pro review App permissions - Honor 8 Pro review
Notification management • Notification permissions • App permissions

But Huawei have even managed to go one step beyond that. EMUI 5.1 implements a really approachable way for managing what it calls App links. In other words, URL associations with certain apps. The same goes for default file type associations.

Last, but not least, there is a dedicated menu for controlling really crucial permission on a per-app basis. It's a great addition, since you definitely don't want a random app ignoring the system's attempts to optimize its power consumption, or drawing over other applications.

App links - Honor 8 Pro review Default apps - Honor 8 Pro review Special access permissions - Honor 8 Pro review
App links • Default apps • Special access permissions

While these are options accessible from the settings menu, most of them are also featured in the Phone Manager app. In there you'll also find a one-touch optimization button. A virus scanner powered by Avast is on board as well.

Two battery saving modes are available from the Power manager. There's Power saving, which imposes some minor limitations on hardware and software, and then there's Ultra power saving, which condenses your entire phone's functions to a single black homescreen with six shortcuts. You can customize those shortcuts, and you can pick from any app on the phone, so this mode is more of a psychological constraint to prevent you from using many apps simultaneously than anything else.

By Huawei's estimates, that should triple your battery life, so apparently, there's more going on under the hood. Ah, there's no task switcher in this mode, you only get one app at a time, though judging by the loading times, they have to be in the RAM. Screenshots are disabled.

Power manager - Honor 8 Pro review Power manager - Honor 8 Pro review Power manager - Honor 8 Pro review Power manager - Honor 8 Pro review Power manager - Honor 8 Pro review
Power manager

A large portion of Huawei's optimization efforts seem to have gone into usability and navigation, and it shows. Throughout the interface, you get contextual menus with relevant options right at the bottom of the screen above the navigation bar - hugely convenient for single-handed operation. The universal drawer that pulls out from the left side of Google apps is a lot better suited for left-hand use than right-hand, and even for lefties some of the higher-placed options are still too far away.

Contextual menus - Honor 8 Pro review Contextual menus - Honor 8 Pro review Contextual menus - Honor 8 Pro review
Contextual menus

You can also enable the so-called Floating dock - it's a virtual key you can move anywhere on the screen, allowing you to expand it to the primary Android keys - Back, Home, Task Switcher, Lock and Close all running apps. It will help you control your phone with just one hand. There are other interesting alternative controls as well, like the ability to map the buttons on your headphones to various actions.

Smart assistance - Honor 8 Pro review Smart headset control - Honor 8 Pro review One-handed UI - Honor 8 Pro review Floating dock - Honor 8 Pro review
Smart assistance • Smart headset control • One-handed UI • Floating dock

Motion control also plays a significant role on the Honor 8 Pro as it did on previous Huawei models. There are flip gestures, as well as picking up, tilting and even things like knuckle detection and drawing. All of those are extensively customizable to your liking.

You can start recording a video of your interaction with the UI by the intuitive double knock with two knuckles while drawing an S with a single knuckle launches the scrolling screenshot. The latter is available from the regular Power/Volume down shortcut.

Motion and knuckle gestures - Honor 8 Pro review Motion and knuckle gestures - Honor 8 Pro review Motion and knuckle gestures - Honor 8 Pro review
Motion and knuckle gestures

Voice commands are constantly getting better as well. Talking to your phone is still pretty weird around other people, but otherwise, you could potentially operate the Honor 8 Pro entirely hands-free. The functionality boils down to the ability to trigger a voice command even when the phone is locked and its screen is off.

Huawei does this by always listening for a "trigger word", which by default is... "Okay, Emy." Once triggered, the phone wakes up and awaits for further voice instructions, like placing a call. Speech awareness is also customizable. The wake-up phrase can be changed, and you can also train the device to recognize your voice better.

Voice control - Honor 8 Pro review Voice control - Honor 8 Pro review Voice control - Honor 8 Pro review
Voice control

For certain scenarios, like in-car use, you can enable a Simple homescreen mode, which features large tiles for easy tapping. It's not particularly consistent, though, offering a simpler version of some menus, but not others - the dialer is the same size as in regular mode (in all fairness, it's fairly oversized to begin with).

Simple homescreen with a tiled interface - Honor 8 Pro review Simple homescreen with a tiled interface - Honor 8 Pro review Simple homescreen with a tiled interface - Honor 8 Pro review Simple homescreen with a tiled interface - Honor 8 Pro review
Simple homescreen with a tiled interface

Reader comments

  • Denis
  • 02 Dec 2021
  • nYm

Hi, I am interested in capturing true B&W images through a CMOS sensor without any bayer filters in RAW format while being capable of operating in manual mode. I noticed that some phone while having a monochrome sensor do not allow to c...

  • Anonymous
  • 15 Sep 2019
  • rK2

Yes

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