Micromax
 A116 Canvas HD is the successor to the company's popular budget phablet
 (large screen phones that are considered to be a phone-tablet hybrid), 
the A110 Canvas 2. The company has bestowed the phone with an HD screen,
 has put a quad-core chip, under the hood, and has doubled the on-board 
RAM. The phone was announced in January, but made its debut around 10 
days back, generating a great response among new and potential 
customers, clocking in 9000 unit sales in a day, in addition to 
generating a lot of buzz in general. So does the Canvas HD live up to 
the hype? We try to find out.
Build/ DesignOn first 
look, the Canvas HD looks more like an enlarged version of the Samsung 
Galaxy Nexus, unlike its predecessor, the Canvas 2, whose design 
resembled that of the Samsung Galaxy Note 2/Galaxy SIII. However, 
despite sporting a 5-inch screen, the phone looks compact compared to 
the Canvas 2.
On closer inspection, you'll gather that the front 
of the phone is black in colour, while the back is white. Looking from 
the sides, it gives the impression that the phone bears both colours 
since the removable back cover doesn't just cover the back and extends 
to the sides. We didn't like the dual-colour design concept, but some 
might find it interesting.
The screen forms the largest part of 
the front and the bezel is, thankfully, much thinner than that of the 
Canvas 2. The three capacitive navigation buttons sit below the screen, 
while the earpiece (also black in colour), notification light, and the 
front facing camera, are located above the screen. To be honest, the 
front has a very plasticky feel to it, but then this phone costs Rs. 
13,990, so you don't expect premium materials to be used. However, the 
screen gets smudged easily, even without our hands being sweaty.
The
 back of the phone, which features a removable back cover, has also been
 done in plastic, sports a glossy finish and is less prone to smudges. 
The 8-megapixel camera lens protrudes out a bit, similar to the HTC One X
 camera lens. The LED flash and a secondary microphone are located 
adjacent to the lens. There's Micromax branding and a speaker grill 
towards the bottom. The back cover hides the battery compartment, above 
which there are two SIM card slots and a slot for the microSD card.

At
 the right side, you can see a Power/screen lock key, which is also 
white in colour. This button is a little recessed and at times gets a 
bit hard to press. The volume rocker sits at the left side and is easy 
to press. At the top, you'll find the 3.5mm headset jack and a micro-USB
 port. There's just a microphone at the bottom edge.
Overall, we 
felt that Micromax could have used better quality materials but it would
 have to cut corners to reduce the price of the device, so it's 
understandable.
DisplayThe USP of the Canvas HD is 
indeed its HD screen. The phone's 5-inch HD IPS screen sports a 
resolution of 1280 x 720 pixels and a colour depth of 16.7 million. 
Thanks to the higher resolution, text, icons and images look much 
sharper compared to the Canvas 2 and the recently launched Samsung 
Galaxy Grand. There was no pixelation. However, we felt that the screen 
contrast was a little haywire, resulting in images appearing to be 
washed out.
Under sun visibility was good though the screen is 
very reflective. Thanks to the IPS panel that facilitates wider viewing 
angles, we found that the viewing angles were indeed wide, which 
essentially means that more than one person can view content playing on 
the screen properly, even from different angles. We also found the touch
 response of the screen to be good.
Software/ InterfaceThe
 Micromax Canvas HD runs Android 4.1.2 (Jelly Bean). Micromax has 
skinned some elements of the user interface, such as the app icons and 
the notification tray. The notification tray includes toggles for 
settings such as Wi-Fi, Brightness, Rotation, Bluetooth, GPS, Data, 
Screen timeouts and profiles (for alerts and other notifications). 
There's also a SIM selection toggle. Similar to most other Android 
devices, there are five customisable home screens that can be filled 
with app shortcuts and widgets.

The
 notification tray also features a settings shortcut and a clear all 
notifications button, along with expandable notifications (expanded with
 the two finger pull gesture). Android 4.1 Jelly Bean also brings in 
Google Now, which needs to be initialised for the first time, before 
use.
For the uninitiated, Google Now is a voice based information
 assistant and an extension of Google search. You can ask questions and 
the tool returns answers or search results. It uses 'cards' which are 
essentially small boxes that offer different sets of information ranging
 from weather forecast, directions, traffic information, scores, 
appointments, and currency conversion, among others. Google Now collects
 information based on the user's behaviour, location, and even e-mail, 
to offer information automatically.
The three capacitive buttons,
 Home, Menu and Back help in navigating through the phone, with the Home
 button also doubling up as an app switcher on long press.
Micromax
 has also included some of its own apps including content stores, M! 
Store and M! Live, and services store, M! Zone, in addition to its 
messaging app, HookUp, and friends locator app, M! Buddy and a few 'try 
and buy' games (Fruit Devil, Cricket Fever). The handset also offers FM 
Radio and FM radio recording.
Micromax has also modified the 
Messages app, adding a Smileys input option next to the text entry 
prompt, and a button for attaching multimedia, contacts and audio clips,
 among others, with it. Micromax has also added a file manager app, a 
NoteBook app, a ToDo app, in addition to a universal search app, and a 
video player app. It has also replaced the stock camera app with a 
different one. The company has also included a Wireless Input Device 
app, letting users configure a Bluetooth-based input device with the 
phone.
Micromax has also modified the Phone Dialler app giving 
the option of calling from any one of the SIMs. The dialler resembles 
the iOS dialler in terms of the colour scheme.
CameraThe
 phone features an 8-megapixel autofocus shooter that takes decent 
images in daylight. However, we found the photos taken through the phone
 a bit overexposed, and the white-balance in the automatic mode was not 
optimal. This results in images appearing to be a bit whiter, and 
colours looking a little dull.  Indoor shots were above average. We also
 found that the camera took some time to focus. The camera takes good 
quality videos depending on the ambient light. However, it saves video 
clips in .3GP file format, which is an older file format.

As
 we mentioned before, Micromax has put its own camera app. The app 
leaves out the Panorama mode, but offers a burst mode, letting users 
click up to 99 shots at once. We also noticed that there is minor gap 
between two consecutive camera shots in the continuous shot mode. The 
phone offers three basic modes - Face Beauty, HDR and Photo. The photo 
mode allows users to modify settings like Exposure, colour effect, ISO 
and white balance, among others. There's a self timer of up to 10 
seconds as well.
The phone also features a VGA front camera, 
which takes average pictures, and can be used for video conferencing. We
 wish the phone had a dedicated camera button to help click a quick 
picture.
PerformanceThe Micromax A116 Canvas HD is 
powered by a 1.2GHz MediaTek MT6589 quad-core processor with 1GB RAM 
onboard, and PowerVR SGX544MP chip for processing graphics. There is 4GB
 of internal storage, which is expandable up to 32GB via a microSD card.
With
 Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, the overall experience of navigation through 
the interface was impressive, thanks to Project Butter and the phone's 
quad-core processor. We did not experience any lag while launching apps,
 playing games, scrolling web pages or switching between apps. It is 
safe to say that performance wise, the Canvas HD trumps other phones in 
this price range. Even the more expensive Galaxy Grand loses out to the 
Canvas HD in terms of benchmarks, but end users are unlikely to note 
significant performance difference between the two, unless they are 
playing CPU-hungry games (Hint: The Canvas HD performs better).

We
 were able to play full-HD clips, with the phone supporting formats like
 .AVI, natively. The speaker on the phone delivers average quality sound
 at high volume levels, but there's some muffle when the phone lies on 
its back, as the speaker grill is located on the back. The headphones 
that come with the phone offer average quality sound output. Call 
quality was good, during our testing process.
The phone comes 
with a 2,000mAh battery, and based on our experience, it will just about
 last you a full day. We charged the phone in the afternoon (at around 
2pm), and with medium to heavy usage, including 1-1.5 hours of phone 
calls, two e-mail accounts with push notifications, screen at maximum 
brightness, playing some music and video clips, Twitter notifications 
and WhatsApp chats, the phone lasted 8-9 hours. It's also worth pointing
 out that we had turned off Wi-Fi and auto-brightness, and the phone was
 hooked to a 3G network. Altering these settings might help in running 
the phone for a longer duration, depending on your usage pattern.
VerdictThe
 Micromax A116 Canvas HD is a worthy upgrade to the A110. A 5-inch 
screen phone, with a quad-core processor, running Android 4.1 Jelly 
Bean, at a price point of Rs 13,990 is indeed a value for money 
proposition.
Other phones in the same range include the Karbonn 
S1 Titanium, which also has a quad-core processor, and sports a 4.5-inch
 qHD (960x540) multi-touch capacitive touch display and runs Android 4.1
 Jelly Bean. The phone's been priced at Rs 10,990 and pre-bookings  have
 already started. The XOLO A1000 is another phone to look out. But we'd 
wait until we've had a chance to run these phones through our tests 
before recommending.
The Samsung Galaxy Grand is another budget 
phablet, if you don't mind spending Rs 6,000 to Rs 7,000 extra for a 
phone which has an inferior screen and battery life compared to the 
Canvas HD, but a better camera and bears the Samsung brand name.
Overall,
 the Micromax A116 Canvas HD seems to the best Android budget phablet 
we've come across so far, and we have no qualms in recommending it.
Price: Rs. 13,990
Pros
- Good screen
- Decent performance
- Excellent value for money
Cons
- Plasticky feel
- Power button is recessed
- Sub-par camera
Ratings (Out of 5)
- Design: 3
- Display: 4
- Performance: 4
- Software: 3.5
- Battery Life: 3.5
- Value for Money: 4.5
- Camera: 3
- Overall: 3.5