HTC Desire 600 dual sim review: One in two
One in two
Google Now
As an integral part of Android Jelly Bean Google Now is available on the HTC Desire 600 dual sim. You can launch it by holding the home button.
In addition to being able to recognize voice commands, Google Now will learn from your usage patterns, and display relevant information. For example, if you search for a particular sports team frequently, Google Now will serve information for upcoming games you might want to watch.
The service interacts with you by generating cards which are displayed on your screen and give you a short overview of information it believes is relevant to you. Going to work in the morning? Google Now knows this and lets you know there's a big traffic jam on your usual way to the office, and will offer you an alternate route. This extends to a multitude of other areas, including weather, traffic, public transit stations, and nearby points of interest.
You can either type or talk to Google Now and the app will give you one of its aforementioned info cards (if available) and read you its contents aloud (you can disable this in the app settings). If there's no card to help with the answer to your question, Google Now will simply initiate a Google web search instead.
There is also a Google Now widget, which generates information for you based on what your interests are. You can put it on the lockscreen for at-a-glance info.
Synthetic benchmarks
As we already mentioned, the HTC Desire 600 dual sim uses the Snapdragon 200 chipset, which is Qualcomm's entry-level chipset for 2013. It's a quad-core CPU chipset and while four cores may sound impressive on paper, the chipset performance is far from that. The four cores are of the Cortex-A5 variety and they all run at 1.2GHz each. The Snapdragon 200 also includes an Adreno 203 GPU alongside 1GB of RAM.
The Cortex-A5 cores aren't the best performers out there so we don't expect much from the Snapdragon 200 in the following series of benchmark tests.
HTC has obviously kept things on a tight budget when constructing the Desire 600 dual sim, so they've picked the Snapdragon 200 as the cheapest current-gen chipset. Placing a Snapdragon 400 chipset inside it, would've put it directly against the HTC One mini and that's not what HTC is after here.
So, let's see how the four Cortex-A5 cores perform under heavy load. Naturally, single-core performance is underwhelming, but multi-core performance isn't great either. In Linpack, the Desire 600 dual sim barely managed to float above the rock bottom of our list.
Benchmark Pi
Lower is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
166 -
Sony Xperia Z
264 -
HTC Butterfly
266 -
Oppo Find 5
267 -
HTC One X+
280 -
LG Optimus G
285 -
HTC One mini
293 -
Sony Xperia V
279 -
Samsung Galaxy Express
346 -
Samsung Galaxy S II Plus
409 -
Sony Xperia L
435 -
Samsung Galaxy S III mini
499 -
Sony Xperia go
543 -
Samsung Galaxy Xcover 2
552 -
HTC Desire 600 dual sim
554 -
HTC Desire X
639 -
Sony Xperia E dual
800 -
Samsung Galaxy Young
831
Linpack
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S4
788 -
LG Optimus G Pro
743 -
HTC One
646 -
Sony Xperia ZL
631 -
Sony Xperia Z
630 -
HTC Butterfly
624 -
LG Optimus G
608 -
Oppo Find 5
593 -
Sony Xperia SP
348 -
Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
413 -
HTC One mini
320 -
Samsung Galaxy Note II
214.3 -
Nexus 4
213.5 -
Sony Xperia L
191 -
Meizu MX 4-core
189 -
HTC One X+
177 -
Samsung Galaxy S III
175 -
HTC One X
160 -
LG Optimus 4X HD
141 -
HTC Desire 600 dual sim
107.7
Geekbench 2 tests just about everything you can think off. Unfortunately for the HTC Desire 600 dual sim, that didn't help it bounce up from the bottom of the chart.
Geekbench 2
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S4
3227 -
LG Optimus G Pro
3040 -
HTC One
2708 -
Sony Xperia Z
2173 -
HTC Butterfly
2143 -
Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
1937 -
Sony Xperia SP
2105 -
Sony Xperia ZL
1995 -
Samsung Galaxy S III
1845 -
LG Optimus G
1723 -
LG Optimus 4X HD
1661 -
iPhone 5
1601 -
HTC One mini
1417 -
Sony Xperia L
1073 -
HTC Desire 600 dual sim
970
Overall performance is in a similar situation - AnTuTu puts the HTC Desire 600 dual sim at the bottom, while Quadrant considers it to be above last year's midrangers, but it's still near the bottom bracket as far as the current generation of mid-range phones is concerned.
AnTuTu
Higher is better
-
HTC One
22678 -
Sony Xperia Z
20794 -
Samsung Galaxy S III
15547 -
Oppo Find 5
15167 -
Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
14518 -
HTC Butterfly
12631 -
HTC One mini
11434 -
HTC Desire 600 dual sim
11203 -
Sony Xperia L
9746 -
Samsung Galaxy Xcover 2
6650
Quadrant
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
7153 -
HTC One mini
6048 -
Sony Xperia V
5816 -
HTC Desire 600 dual sim
5053 -
Samsung Galaxy Express
4998 -
Sony Xperia L
4279 -
Samsung Galaxy S II Plus
3542 -
Samsung Galaxy Xcover 2
3045 -
Samsung Galaxy Nexus
2316
Because of the low-end Adreno 203 GPU that's running the graphics department in the Snapdragon 200 chipset, we had to reside back to the NenaMark 2 benchmark. Unlike mid- and high-end devices, the Desire 600 dual sim GPU didn't max out this test, but it leads the selected 2012 mid-rangers by as much as 11 frames.
NenaMark 2
Higher is better
-
HTC Desire 600 dual sim
38.8 -
Sony Xperia E dual
27.7 -
Samsung Galaxy Fame
26.9 -
HTC Sensation XE
23.0 -
Sony Xperia J
19.6 -
LG Optimus L7
19.3 -
Sony Xperia miro
15.9 -
Samsung Galaxy mini 2
15.4 -
HTC Explorer
15.1 -
Samsung Galaxy Y Duos
13.2 -
Samsung Galaxy Pocket
12.9 -
Samsung Galaxy Ace
12.0
Now it's time to move onto web performance testing. We start with the JavaScript benchmark SunSpider. Here, the HTC Desire 600 dual sim browser is close enough to that of the faster smartphones, but you have got to remember that JS doesn't care for multi-core CPU architecture much. However, BrowserMark 2 and Vellamo show scores that can't really compete with the current batch of midrangers.
SunSpider
Lower is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
1185 -
Samsung Galaxy S4 Active
1196 -
Samsung Galaxy S III
1192 -
HTC One mini
1237 -
Sony Xperia V
1189 -
Samsung Galaxy S II Plus
1460 -
HTC Desire 600 dual sim
1660 -
Samsung Galaxy Express
1654 -
Samsung Galaxy Nexus
1863 -
Samsung Galaxy Xcover 2
1901 -
HTC Desire X
2259 -
Sony Xperia L
2539 -
Sony Xperia E dual
2824 -
Sony Xperia J
2853 -
Samsung Galaxy Young
3578
BrowserMark 2
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
2314 -
HTC One
2262 -
Sony Xperia Tablet Z
2170 -
HTC One mini
2164 -
Sony Xperia V
1957 -
Sony Xperia L
1809 -
HTC Desire 600 dual sim
1592 -
Samsung Galaxy Express
1154 -
Samsung Galaxy S II Plus
1079 -
Samsung Galaxy Xcover 2
1036 -
Sony Xperia E
992 -
Sony Xperia E dual
975 -
Samsung Galaxy S III mini
714 -
Samsung Galaxy Young
908
Vellamo
Higher is better
-
HTC One mini
2252 -
Sony Xperia Z
2189 -
Sony Xperia SP
2497 -
Samsung Galaxy Note II
2418 -
HTC One
2382 -
Sony Xperia Z
2189 -
Sony Xperia ZL
2186 -
HTC One X (Tegra 3)
2078 -
Samsung Galaxy S4
2060 -
Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
2019 -
HTC Butterfly
1866 -
Oppo Find 5
1658 -
Samsung Galaxy S III
1641 -
Sony Xperia L
1640 -
HTC Desire 600 dual sim
1572 -
LG Optimus 4X HD
1568 -
LG Optimus G
1522 -
Meizu MX 4-core
1468 -
Nexus 4
1310 -
Samsung Galaxy Fame
1234 -
Samsung Galaxy Young
1072 -
Sony Xperia E dual
1065
While synthetic benchmarks are good for making comparison tables and all, the stuff that matters is real-life performance. IN this respect the Desire 600 dual sim performed quite satisfactory most of the time - it's not as snappy as Galaxy S4 mini, for example, but it does all the daily tasks done without annoying lags or long waiting times.
Reader comments
- XYZ
- 21 Apr 2020
- fC@
Sound quality is superb (better than my galaxy s6 edge). I am using this phone for listening music till 2020.
- ganesh
- 04 Sep 2015
- JxR
very bad experience with this phone , worst phone : Too Much Slow -- with 3 application only heat too much not able to receive call because it is hanged same time - flashed it 4 times from htc no solution still no update -- very disappo...
- Muveen
- 04 Oct 2014
- U@b
I m using HTC desire 600 but I don't know how to use vedio calling.there is no option of Vedio calling. Pls suggest me