Connect with us

Tech

Infinix NOTE 7 Review

Published

on

[ad_1]

The Infinix NOTE 7 has been in the Kenyan market for a while now. It is the company’s 7th iteration in a series that has been quite successful. This year, however, a couple of things are quite different:

  1. There are only two variants. There’s no PRO Model.
  2. There’s no X-Pen
  3. There’s also still no Android ONE version as we saw with the NOTE 5 – which I absolutely loved.

This year, there’s the NOTE 7 and the NOTE 7 Lite. And although in the video I said Infinix says there may be a variant with an X-Pen, that may not be happening. In terms of prices, Infinix, as usual, is trying to be quite competitive:

  • NOTE 7 4GB RAM/64GB storage – KES. 18,399
  • NOTE 7 6GB RAM/128GB storage – KES. 20,699
  • NOTE 7 LITE 4/64GB – KES. 15,799

If you can afford the normal NOTE 7 with 4GB of RAM, then for sure you can wait a little, top-up and pick up the NOTE 7 with 6GB RAM and more storage. But that’s up to you. Though I believe one will get a way better experience with the 6GB RAM model. I have been using the 4GB RAM model, and I hope this review will help you consider whether or not to get one.

(I wish I had the NOTE 7 LITE too so as to be able to compare the two and tell you which one to go with. But unfortunately, that’s not the case. You can read the differences between the two devices here.)

Let’s begin with the usual biggest let down with all Transsion devices, the software and user experience.

XOS:

I honestly miss the original Infinx days when there was zero bloatware on the devices. If I remember well, when I bought the Infinix HOT NOTE, and when I reviewed the NOTE 3, there were only the default X-Apps from Infinix, and some games. Nowadays, Infinix fills the device with unwanted and unnecessary apps. And they’re named weirdly. And they ask for so many permissions, and agreements. And it feels like one may be giving away consent for so much data collection than they can possibly understand.

Like always, my advice is this:

  1. First, before agreeing to anything, delete all the apps you don’t know what they do.
  2. Second, disable everything that you don’t want but cannot be deleted. Make sure you disable their access to notifications, permissions etc.
  3. Third, connect to the internet, sign in to Play Store, and download a launcher of your choice. I love Nova Launcher.
  4. Make the launcher you default launcher in Settings.
  5. Then disable the default XOS launcher, limiting its permissions, access to notifications, and everything that would allow it to run.

Doing this helps you deal with not just your privacy, but also your peace of mind. So many apps want to send notifications at once of things you don’t want. So many apps ask you for permissions of things they don’t need to access. Once you do this, you will get a good and clean smartphone experience. And with the power of this device, you may be in for something good, once you deal with these above annoyances.

Performance:

[ad_2]

Source link

Comments

comments

Trending