Jio Phone vs Jio Phone 2
The JioPhone 2 was launched as a
successor to the JioPhone, the first smart feature phone from Reliance
Jio last month. The aim is the same – bring Internet to the masses, but
this time around there’s a change in the form factor, among other improvements.
Well, the JioPhone 2 (Rs 2,999) changes things up on
the design and aesthetic front with a horizontal display and QWERTY keyboard,
but is that enough to call this an upgrade? I have used the JioPhone in the
past and have been using the JioPhone 2 for the past month.
Design and Build Quality
While there are obvious differences in the design of both the
JioPhone and JioPhone 2, they sport a similar plastic build, with a matte
finish to the body.
The JioPhone sports a sleek candy bar design with a T9 keypad
(that requires you to tap each key multiple times to input characters or
numbers) whereas the JioPhone 2 replaces the same with a full-sized physical
QWERTY keyboard. This makes the latter shorter and a little wide but
the device is still quite compact and handy.
Even though both of the devices are quite chunky, they have
an equally good in-hand feel and are comfortable to use for prolonged periods.
You will, however, have to get used to the T9 and QWERTY keyboard after typing
on glass, if coming from smartphones.
You get exactly the same ports, i.e. microUSB and 3.5mm
headphone jack, on both of these devices but the JioPhone 2 brings along
storage expansion up to 128GB using a microSD card.
Display
Reliance Jio has played it smart here and both the
JioPhones essentially include the same display, except for its placement on
the device. Both of them feature a 2.4-inch QVGA TFT display, with a screen
resolution of 240×320 pixels on the original JioPhone and 320×240 pixels
on the JioPhone 2.
The screens on both devices are usable and get bright enough,
even in broad daylight, however, I think Reliance Jio has cut some corners with
the JioPhone 2. The screen on JioPhone looks better and has superior
color reproduction when compared to its successor, so that would be my
pick.
Software & Performance
Speaking of the specs, Reliance Jio hasn’t changed much on
the internals front, except for the processor it seems. The JioPhone 2
features a 1.2GHz dual-core processor while the JioPhone includes only a 1GHz
dual-core processor, coupled with 512MB RAM and 4GB internal storage on
both devices.
While the specs may look decent for a feature phone,
the performance of the phones is not too great. You can easily
browse the web with Jio’s 4G LTE network but the sluggish animations and slow
user experience can turn off smartphone users.
The silver lining is that first-time phone adopters,
especially those who will be introduced to the Internet with the JioPhone won’t
notice any issues.
Coming to software, both JioPhone devices are powered by
KaiOS, which is quite feature-rich and offers a likable UI. It comes packed
with a myriad of smart features, including several Jio apps and Google
Assistant.
However, it is truly difficult to accept either of the
JioPhone devices a daily driver because of the lack of some of the most
popular apps like WhatsApp or YouTube. Facebook and Google Maps have found
their way to KaiOS but they aren’t enough to demand the attention of users.
Cameras
And yet again, the 2-MP rear camera and 0.3-MP selfie
shooter on the JioPhone 2 are the same as its predecessor. The photo
quality is acceptable for a smart feature phone and would be enough to capture
memories or send to friends via WhatsApp (if and when it launches on KaiOS).
You wouldn’t exactly be able to see the details in these
photos and they’re full of noise, especially in low-light conditions.
The tiny screen wouldn’t show much detail anyway but transferring the photos
over to a PC via Bluetooth can actually help you judge the quality. We doubt
anyone would be doing this though. You can check out some of the camera samples
in out JioPhone 2 hands-on right here.
Battery
Both the JioPhone and JioPhone 2 sport a
decently-sized 2,000 mAh battery that can easily last the whole day on
low to medium usage. However, I noticed that browsing, watching YouTube, and
camera usage depletes the battery fast and the phone dies within hours.
And it becomes especially frustrating when it happens because
both phones take ages to get fully charged. Since we’ve become used to fast
charging, a feature phone that doesn’t have it sticks out like a sore thumb. It
takes roughly 3 hours for the JioPhones to get fully charged.
What is your opinion on the JioPhone 2? Let us know in the
comments below.
Article courtesy: https://beebom.com/jiophone-2-vs-jiophone/








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