Nokia Lumia 830 review: Shining bright
Shining bright
Benchmarks and performance
Nokia Lumia 830 is powered by the widely used Snapdragon 400 chipset. It has four Cortex-A7 processor cores clocked at 1.2GHz, Adreno 305 graphics common for most of the Windows Phone gang and 1GB RAM.
First, we ran the multi-platform compound test BaseMark OS II, which takes in consideration CPU performance, graphics, web benchmark, and memory. The Lumia 830 posted a mid-range score, slightly better than its S400-powered Lumia siblings.
Basemark OS II
Higher is better
-
HTC One (M8) for Windows
1114 -
Nokia Lumia 930
1067 -
Nokia Lumia 830
478 -
Nokia Lumia 630
465 -
Nokia Lumia 635
451 -
Nokia Lumia 735
435
Then we ran AnTuTu for Windows Phone, which also gauges the overall system performance. Here Lumia 830 is on par with the Snapdragon 400-running Lumia 630.
AnTuTu 4
Higher is better
-
HTC One (M8) for Windows
26394 -
Nokia Lumia 930
26206 -
Nokia Lumia 830
12112 -
Nokia Lumia 630
12035 -
Nokia Lumia 635
11969
Finally, we ran the JavaScript-centric Kraken benchmark and the compound BrowserMark 2.1. It turned out that the Internet Explorer browser isn't on par with today's mobile competition - it isn't even close to Chrome and Safari in these benchmarks though in real life usage, the difference is hardly as noticeable.
Kraken 1.1
Lower is better
-
HTC One (M8) for Windows
10669 -
Motorola Moto G (2014)
15988 -
Sony Xperia E3
16059 -
Motorola Moto G 4G
16118 -
Nokia Lumia 630
26257 -
Nokia Lumia 830
26542 -
Nokia Lumia 735
26913
BrowserMark 2.1
Higher is better
-
Motorola Moto G (2014)
1085 -
Sony Xperia E3
1044 -
Motorola Moto G 4G
911 -
HTC One (M8) for Windows
821 -
Nokia Lumia 830
599 -
Nokia Lumia 630
462
In the end of the day it's the real life performance that matters and it's great. Nokia Lumia 830 runs the Windows Phone 8.1 buttery smooth, without any lags whatsoever. All default apps and the Office suite did great, as well as some popular game titles we tried out.
Overall, the Lumia 830 delivers adequate performance, which is exactly what we expected.
Cortana is there to ease your day
Cortana, which premiered on Windows Phone 8.1, is Microsoft's answer to Siri, S Voice and Google Now. It does a pretty good job with voice recognition and it has the potential of helping you out on a number of occasions throughout your day.
Cortana is very similar to Siri. The voice comes courtesy of Halo's Jen Taylor and is probably the most human-like sounding virtual assistant we've encountered. It recognizes your voice commands and questions in natural human language and provides voice feedback.
So, what can Cortana actually do for you? First you need to personalize it in order to utilize its full potential. The Settings are called Notebook and are divided into Interests, Reminders, Quiet Hours, Inner Circle, Places, and Music Searches. In Interests you can assign literally everything you like and Cortana will help you track specific news, plan trips, find restaurants or bars, and more.
You can find the answers to simple questions, put down notes and set up alarms al by your voice
Cortana supports reminders including contact-based ones - you can tell her to remind you of something next time you call some of your contacts. It also supports reminders by location (home, work, university, stores), so it can remind you to wish a coworker a happy birthday before starting with the work-related questions.
You can turn on your Bluetooth or check the currency exchange rates • she can do fun stuff too
Cortana can also remember places, important people to you (it can even suggest such people based on your activity), plus it can actively control your quiet hours mode.
Cortana can fully interact with your phone and carry out all kind or commands related to it - make a call, send a message, add appointments, take notes, set alarms, play specific music or playlists, navigate you to locations or simply search the web. It can also turn on/off settings or give you straightforward answers to simple questions.
Asking what's for dinner • Who are you? • Settings
Cortana is also capable of checking the traffic in your city and it will remind you to leave early or warn you if your bus or train has been delayed. It can also provide alternatives routes to avoid traffic jams.
Unique among virtual assistants, Cortana can also forward your commands to third party apps, so you can for example ask it to open Skype and call some of your contacts. Only Skype, Facebook and Twitter currently support this functionality, but others should follow sooner rather than later.
As far as the speed of voice recognition is concerned, WP's virtual assistant does a fine job. Words are recognized almost in real time, and the accuracy has greatly improved since its earlier iterations.
Siri can do a lot more than Cortana today, while Google Now with its automatically appearing cards is probably the most useful of the bunch, but those two have quite a head start. Microsoft does remind you that Cortana is still in beta, so we expect even better performance and functionality once it's finalized.
We'd also like to see Cortana hitting other regions and languages as the US, UK and China are the only ones supported for now. It recently became available in early alpha version in Australia, Canada and India, but this is surely not enough. The good news is you can bypass that limitation by simply changing your region in the settings menu - no complicated hacks required.
Reader comments
- AnonD-492870
- 29 Apr 2018
- FVp
The battery is no good.
- werasonjairus
- 01 Jan 2018
- fuf
I love windows phone and its now a week since I bought 830 but it reboots every after 2-3 hours and while charging it stops at 80%. What is the problem!!!
- werasonjairus
- 01 Jan 2018
- fuf
I love windows phone and its now a week since I bought 830 but it reboots every after 2-3 hours and while charging it stops at 80%. What is the problem!!!