Yu Yutopia detailed specifications
GENERAL
Alternate names
-YU5050
Release date-
December 2015
Form factor
- Touchscreen
Dimensions (mm)
-146.60 x 72.66 x 7.20
Weight (g)
- 160.00
Battery capacity (mAh)
- 3000
Removable battery-
No
Colours
- Silver
SAR value
- 0.30000001192093
DISPLAY
Screen size (inches)
- 5.20
Touchscreen
-Yes
Resolution
-1440x2560 pixels
Pixels per inch (PPI)
-565
HARDWARE
Processor
- 1.5 GHz Octa-core
Processor make
-- Qualcomm Snapdragon 810
RAM
- 4GB
Internal storage
- 32GB
Expandable storage
- Yes
Expandable storage type-
microSD
Expandable storage up to (GB)
-128
CAMERA
Rear camera-
21-megapixel
Flash
- Yes
Front camera
- 8-megapixel
SOFTWARE
Operating System
- Cyanogen OS 12.1
CONNECTIVITY
Wi-Fi
- Yes
Wi-Fi standards supported
- 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac
GPS
-Yes
Bluetooth
- Yes, v 4.10
NFC
-No
Infrared
-No
Wi-Fi Direct
-No
MHL Out
- No
HDMI
- No
Headphones-
3.5mm
FM
- Yes
Number of SIMs
- 2
SIM 1
SIM Type
-Micro-SIM
GSM/CDMA
-GSM
3G
-Yes
4G/ LTE-
Yes
Supports 4G in India (Band 40)
-Yes
SIM 2
SIM Type
-Nano-SIM
GSM/CDMA-
GSM
3G
-Yes
4G/ LTE
-Yes
Supports 4G in India (Band 40)
-Yes
SENSORS
Compass/ Magnetometer
-Yes
Proximity sensor
-Yes
Accelerometer
-Yes
Ambient light sensor
- Yes
Gyroscope
- Yes
Barometer
- Yes
Temperature sensor
-No
The brand new Yu Yutopia is being touted as "the most powerful phone on
the planet", which is a bold claim from a company's debut entry into the
big leagues. Yu Televentures CEO Rahul Sharma seems mighty confident
though since the company's marketing department had no qualms about
taking digs at Apple and Samsung in the teasers that led up to the
phones' debut last week.
Pot-shots aside, it's clear that Yu is going after the Chinese
manufacturers like OnePlus, Xiaomi, Gionee and Oppo who have long been
offering "flagship killers" without having to empty your bank account.
The aptly named Yutopia is an imagining of what a perfect smartphone
should be like, while still being affordable to the masses.
Yu has certainly got the ingredients right but how it all comes together
in the end, is what really matters. Is the Yutopia every bit as good as
it looks on paper? Let's find out.
Look and design
The aluminium and magnesium chassis is one of the highlights of the
phone. It feels incredibly premium and has good ergonomics. The phone is
also comfortably slim and heavy enough to not feel like you're holding a
toy. The satin texture does make the phone quite slippery though and we
wish Yu had bundled at least a bumper case along with it.
The primary SIM tray and secondary hybrid-SIM tray are accessible via a
common flap on the left. The right side houses the volume and power
buttons, which have good tactile feedback and are easily accessible. The
headphone socket and Micro-USB 2.0 port are placed on the top and
bottom respectively.
Around the back, we have a circular protruding dial which houses the
21-megapixel camera and dual-tone LED flash unit. Below it, is the
fingerprint sensor followed by the speaker grille placed at the bottom.
As expected, the glass cover for the camera isn't scratch resistant and
we noticed scuffs developing after just a couple of days of usage. This
is another reason why you desperately need a case for the phone.
The front is dominated by an excellent 5.2-inch, Quad HD IPS display
along with Corning's Concore glass. The latter has similar scratch
resistant properties as Gorilla Glass, except here, the protective glass
and touch screen are a single panel. Colour reproduction and viewing
angles are very good and so is sunlight legibility, thanks to some nifty
software tricks, which well get into in a bit. The touch response can
get a little iffy at times as we noticed intermittent unresponsiveness
during our usage. It's not a consistent issue but every now and then, it
fails to register an input. The notification LED is placed at the
bottom.
The Yu Yutopia comes bundled with a transfer cable, a charger which
supports Qualcomm Quick Charge 2.0, Little Bird in-ear headset from
House of Marley, and some instruction booklets. The quality of the
accessories are good and feel like they will last you in the long run.
Overall, the Yutopia is a handsome looking phone that's well built and
ergonomically large for some single handed usage. We would have liked
some scratch protection for the camera bump, a bundled case of some sort
to protect the body and for grip, and perhaps, oleophobic coating for
the display, since it easily catches fingerprints.
Specifications
Yu has gone all-out when it comes to specifications, well, at least the
core components. We get Qualcomm's finest Snapdragon 810 SoC, 4GB of
LPDDR4 RAM and 32GB of onboard storage. The latter can be expanded via a
microSD card up to 128GB. There's also dual-band Wi-Fi b/g/n/ac,
Bluetooth 4.1, GPS, USB OTG and FM Radio. We're still missing NFC and
unfortunately, there's no wireless charging either. Apart from the usual
suite of sensors, the Yutopia also gets a barometer sensor. Last but
not least, we have a 3000mAh non-removable battery with support for fast
charging.
To get the specifications out of the way, the Yutopia has a 21 MP camera
with f/2.2 aperture, 77.3 degrees wide angle lens and the image sensor
used is a Sony EXMOR IMX 230. The rear camera also has Phase Detection
Auto Focus feature, dual tone LED flash light support, 6P largan lens,
Blue glass filter.
Software
The Yutopia runs on Cyanogen OS 12.1 which is based on Google's Android
Lollipop 5.1.1, and is slated to get Marshmallow-based update sometime
next year.The default theme upon first boot is quite buggy and causes
random freezes during usage so we recommend switching to something else
immediately. The Yu theme from Cyanogen is a lot better as Wi-Fi and
cellular status are accurately represented and the random freezes have
almost gone away. Despite this, the OS doesn't feel Nexus-smooth or look
as refined as say, Oxygen OS from OnePlus, but perhaps we'll get there
in future updates.
The beauty of Cyanogen is the tonne of customisation that's on offer and
the additional features integrated into stock Android apps. Theming is
big here and you have options from a theme pack to only customising
individual components like the icons, status bar, toggle switches, etc.
Truecaller is integrated into the dialler which can be enabled if you
choose to; LiveDisplay will automatically adjust the screen's colour
temperature depending on the type of ambient light; you can set system
profiles; Privacy Guard lets you control which apps have access to your
personal data; and there's integrated WhisperPush service for sending
and receiving encrypted SMSes.
With arround Yu the company has launched an integrated discovery
platform that enables users to look for services such as cabs, mobile
booking and shopping among others through a single window.
The Yutopia also debuts Yu's brand new software service called Around
Yu, which lets you shop, book a cab and much more, all in one place. Yu
has tied up with Zomato, Ixigo and Ola currently and we expect many more
to jump onboard soon. The services are actually well integrated and
easy to use. This is a good value added feature which will be genuinely
useful once more partners are on board.
In addition to this, there's a YUniverse app, which is a customised
Opera Turbo for the Yutopia, a file manager, and a screencast app.
Music and Video
Audio is another area where Cyanogen has done a brilliant job. The
AudioFX app lets you toggle between sound profiles for the speaker and
headset, individually or create your own custom preset. In addition, you
get DTS Sound too but this can simply be toggled on or off. AudioFX can
also be accessed from within the music app, which is great for
switching profiles on the fly.
Another interesting announcement Yu made in this regard was tie-up with
Gaana under which it is offering six months of free downloads from the
music streaming service.
The concept of Gaana as default player is similar to Apple Music on
iPhones. As you launch the application, you will notice the Yu branding
on the banner. The interface is very similar to the original Gaana
application. Since Yu is offering six months of free trial, you can
upgrade to Gaana+. You can also choose the Sound Quality from automatic,
HD, High, Medium and Low depending upon available connectivity you
have.
Gaana has also been integrated with Yu’s built-in equalizer, which you
can access through the Settings within the app. The Yu Yutopia gives the
option to choose between AudioFX and AudioFX with DTS Sound. For more
better music experience, the smartphone comes bundled with Little Bird
in-ear headphones from House of Marley.
Overall, Gaana is quite fluid on the Yutopia. Yu’s bet on Gaana is quite
interesting as the concept is relatively new for the non-iOS land.
Gaana, as an app, needs slight improvement, especially in terms of
search functionality. If you don’t like Gaana, you can always download
other third party music streaming apps. Just that you may miss out on
the six-month unlimited free subscription.
Performance
Once you to get rid of the buggy default theme; the Yutopia performs as
it should. App performance is good and so is multitasking. On average,
there's always about 2GB of free RAM for apps so that's one thing you'll
rarely fall short of. However, it doesn't take long for the 810 SoC's
achilles heel to rear its head. The phone warms up pretty easily even
with simple tasks and gets really hot around the rear camera area when
gaming or shooting videos. Unfortunately, this issue is unavoidable,
especially when you have a chip that's prone to heating. Call quality is
good though and the 4G support is present on both SIM slots.
You can store up to five fingerprints and use to instantly unlock the
phone, without hitting the power button. It can also be used to take a
selfie from within the camera app. The trouble is, the sensor isn't very
accurate and often rejects your fingerprint in the first attempt,
prompting you to try again. At times, it doesn't register it even when
you place your finger perfectly on the dial while at times, it will
unlock the phone when used even at an obscure angle.
The phone is also very benchmark-happy, posting impressive numbers
across the board. We got a good score of 69036 in AnTuTu, 40fps in the
T-Rex test of GFXbench and 10284 in 3DMark Ice Storm Extreme.
Camera
The 21-megapixel main camera manages well detailed close ups and
landscapes shots, provided there's ample natural light. You swipe up or
down on the screen to cycle between shooting modes while options for
flash, front camera, white balance and even more shooting modes are
placed in front for easy access.
Yu features its InLife camera UI to its Yutopia that is looks very
dissimilar to any of the existing camera UI. If the icon placements are
concerned, the camera shutter and video switch is on the right side, and
camera settings and front cam toggle are at the bottom coupled with 2
more icons. The good thing is that the viewfinder stretches over the
screen and gives you a good view at the objects. The settings contain a
lot of options including switchable viewfinder, and zero shutter lag
etc.
HDR mode adds a white haze which makes the picture look very unnatural.
The focusing system is not the quickest and tends to slow down even
further under low-light. Capturing speed isn't the quickest either,
although this can be remedied a bit by enabling 'Zero shutter lag', at
the cost of some sharpness and detailing. HDR didn't seem to work well
at all as the resulting picture looks hazy and very unnatural. There's
also no burst mode, pro mode or any option to save as RAw
The Optical Image Stabilisation (OIS) helps getting smooth video but we
noticed a hint of frame drops when panning. This issue was present while
recording in 4K as well as 60fps mode. In low-light, 1080p mode works
best as 4K introduces way to much noise in the video. However, no matter
the lighting, the sensor is always hunting for focus, which doesn't
look too good in the end result. Surprisingly, the front 8-megapixel
camera is actually good, producing fairly detailed selfies, both
outdoors and indoors.
Battery
The 3000mAh battery lasted us for 8 hours and 57 minutes in our video
loop test, which is not bad but could have been better. During regular
usage with a mix of camera, calls, music and gaming, we got an average
of about 18-20 hours, before the battery saver kicked in. Thankfully,
the phone does support Quick Charge 2.0 and in our tests, we were able
to charge it from bone-dry to 35 percent in half an hour.
Conclusion
The Yutopia is certainly a good first premium effort from Yu but it's
far from the utopian smartphone that the company envisioned. Simply
cramming in top-end components to fit a desired budget doesn't
necessarily guarantee the best product. The Yutopia does have its share
of redeeming qualities like the excellent 2K display, very good build
and finish, quick charging, great multimedia and services integration in
the OS and quality bundled accessories.
However, there's plenty of scope for improvement for the next version.
The current fingerprint sensor is a bit of a hit-or-miss affair, battery
life could have been better, overall camera performance feels
underwhelming and there's really nothing new to say about the heating
issue from the 810 chip. We would also like to see NFC and maybe
wireless charging included in the next iteration.
At Rs. 25,000(375$), the OnePlus 2 is still a good option. If a higher
resolution screen is what you're after, then the slightly older LG G3
is still a good candidate at around the same price, and it is expected
to get the Marshmallow update sometime next month.