Huawei is one of the top performing smartphone manufacturers today (despite the ban), delivering a wide variety of devices for every price-point. But the firm’s flagship phones have also earned accolades for camera prowess, battery life, and fast charging.
It’s been a long road to this point for the company though, as its flagship P series has evolved in a big way from its early days. We take a look at the history of the all-popular Huawei P series ahead of the Huawei P40 release.
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The Chinese manufacturer had a big reputation for white-labeled budget devices when it decided to launch the Ascend P1 in 2012. It wasn’t a very powerful device compared to contemporary phones back then, featuring a TI OMAP 4460 chipset (dual-core Cortex-A9), 1GB of RAM, and 4GB of expandable storage. Meanwhile, the Samsung Galaxy S3, launched in the same year, featured a quad-core chipset (quad-core A9), 1GB of RAM, and 16GB of expandable storage in the base model.
Then again, the Ascend P1 was cheaper than the likes of the Galaxy S3. And you still got a decent 4.3-inch 960 x 540 OLED screen, and 8MP backside-illuminated main camera.
Read: A definitive guide to everything that affects smartphone battery life
Probably the biggest disappointment was the tiny 1,670mAh battery. It would take Huawei a few generations to realize that many people didn’t care about a super-thin design if the phone’s endurance suffered greatly.
Clearly the Huawei Ascend P1 wasn’t quite flagship-tier, but it landed in what we now know as the upper mid-range price bracket.
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The next phone in the P-series was the Huawei Ascend P2 in 2013, but it was only on the market for a couple of months before the Chinese brand released the Ascend P6.
Design was a major focus for the P6, as the phone’s chin wrapped around the bottom of the device to form part of the back cover. Huawei compared this aesthetic to a folded up sheet of paper at the time, while also touting the thin design. It’s just a pity that the thin design meant we also saw a disappointing 2,000mAh battery. But the firm joined Sony and a few others in offering battery saver functionality ahead of stock Android, helping to squeeze a bit more juice out of the device.
A smaller battery wasn’t the only lamentable decision made by Huawei in the name of design, as it chose to put the headphone port on the left-hand side of the phone. Why it didn’t opt to put the port at the top or bottom of the device, I’ll never know. Anyway, this decision meant you couldn’t comfortably keep the phone in your pocket while listening to music.
The device used a Huawei K3V2 processor that packed a decent level of power, featuring a quad-core Cortex-A9 design and a Vivante GC4000 GPU (yeah, I don’t know either). Toss in 2GB of RAM and 8GB or 16GB of storage and you’ve got a pretty capable platform for the time. It also stood out from competitors at the time thanks to a focus on selfies, packing a 5MP camera with beautification effects.
EMUI critics would’ve had a field day with the Ascend P6, as the Emotion UI (as it was called then) still felt garish in many ways. Aside from the copious use of brown, silver, and Apple-style skeuomorphism, one strange addition I recall was the ability to use weird shutter sounds, such as a woman saying “click.” Yeah, you heard me. Nevertheless, it continued the trend of offering a higher end but not quite flagship experience at a lower price.
The Ascend P7 proved that the firm wasn’t going anywhere, and stepped things up in a number of key areas. Huawei continued to recognize the trend towards selfie cameras, offering an 8MP camera on the front in a time when few other brands were doing so, for one.
It also offered a solid experience for the most part, delivering a Kirin 910T processor along with 2GB of RAM and 16GB of storage. The Kirin 910T was definitely a few steps behind the Snapdragon 801 seen in other Android flagships though, and this performance gap would persist for a few years yet.
But the Ascend P7 demonstrated flagship-level features in other areas, such as a 13MP f/2.0 main camera and a full HD IPS LCD screen. And once again, the €350 price tag made it a bargain compared to other high-end phones.
Was this 2015’s most aesthetically pleasing phone? We wouldn’t quite go so far to say that, but the Huawei P8 certainly drew attention for its design back then. Featuring an aluminum body (albeit with a plastic camera window and iPhone-style antenna lines), a textured power button, and a pleasant amount of heft, the P8 was definitely easy on the eyes.
Huawei’s 2015 device also showed some impressive capabilities in the camera field, being capable of churning out Light Painting shots via the 13MP OIS-enabled camera. In fact, the 13MP camera used an RGBW color filter, as opposed to the traditional RGB sensor. This sounds rather similar to the approach taken by Huawei for the P30 series.
Read: Huawei P30 Pro review — A phone with superpowers
Other specs include 3GB of RAM, 16GB or 64GB of expandable storage, a sharp 5.2-inch FHD screen (IPS), a 2,680mAh battery, and an 8MP selfie snapper.
The P8 was powered by Huawei’s Kirin 930 and 935 processor, and despite Huawei’s claims, it was definitely closer to mid-range silicon. Between the budget octa-core Cortex-A53 CPU cores and Mali-T628 MP4 graphics, it still had some way to go towards challenging Qualcomm and Samsung.
If any phone made rival brands take Huawei seriously, it was arguably the P9 and P9 Plus. The company evolved the design here, still offering a unibody metal design with a “window” for the area around the rear camera. We also got some Apple-style antenna lines here, as well as a fingerprint scanner for the first time in the series. This scanner also offered gestures, such as the ability to swipe through photos or activate the notification shade.
Huawei went all-out on the photography front though, enlisting camera company Leica’s help for lenses and processing, while being one of the first to offer dual rear cameras (a 12MP+12MP monochrome setup). The camera experience evolved to offer monochrome photos, as well as depth of field effects via simulated aperture adjustments.
It all came together to make for a good photography platform in most conditions, although the lack of OIS was a glaring omission. Having used the phone as a daily driver for roughly a year, I also felt that it didn’t quite have the same reliable fire-and-forget nature as Apple and Samsung devices. I also thought that video recording in low light was awful, even back then.
Horsepower, which had long been the family’s weakness, saw a big step up with the Kirin 955 processor. This SoC marked the first time we saw powerful Cortex cores in a Huawei flagship, offering four Cortex-A72 cores in addition to four power-sipping Cortex-A53 cores. GPU performance still lagged far behind Samsung’s phones though, using a Mali T880 MP4 GPU versus the Galaxy S7‘s Mali T880 MP12 component. But it’s clear Huawei made a massive improvement overall.
Huawei also offered the P9 Plus, packing a slightly bigger (5.2-inch) OLED screen and a bigger battery among key differences.
Huawei’s P10 and P10 Plus delivered a distinctive and polarizing “hyper diamond cut” finish that stood out from glass-backed rivals. The firm also moved the fingerprint scanner to the front, resulting in a phone that looked like an iPhone or HTC One A9.
Huawei attempted to ape Meizu by mapping gestures to this scanner, allowing you to go back with a light tap of the scanner/home key and go home with a firm press. Need to activate the recents menu? Then you only need a lateral swipe on the scanner/home key. We thought these gestures were “surprisingly intuitive” in our Huawei P10 review, but the move to full-screen designs/gestures and the lack of a Galaxy S8-style haptic home button means you don’t get this on newer devices.
The P10 series doesn’t make for a massive improvement on paper when it comes to camera specifications. You’ve got a 12MP+20MP monochrome rear camera pairing here, but the added resolution and optical image stabilization definitely helped to deliver better results. It didn’t hurt that the Kirin 960 chipset finally brought 4K recording to the P series.
We also saw a Plus variant for the last time in the range before Huawei switched to the Pro moniker with the P20 series. The P10 Plus differed from the vanilla P10 by having a bigger battery, a bigger and sharper screen, and wider rear camera apertures.
If the likes of the P8 and P9 put Huawei on the map and made it a popular brand, then the P20 series proved that the company was gunning for the number one spot. Huawei’s early 2018 flagships brought grunt, endurance, and competitive camera technology.
Starting with the grunt, the P20 series offered the Kirin 970 chipset, which was the first Android phone processor to offer a dedicated machine learning chip. This piece of silicon enabled offline language translation with the pre-installed Microsoft translation tool and better image processing/recognition capabilities. But it also enabled significant energy savings, allowing the CPU and GPU to offload machine learning tasks.
The vanilla P20 delivered a pretty solid 3,400mAh battery, while the P20 Pro serves up a 4,000mAh battery. Either way, you’re getting 22.5W wired charging. Unfortunately, wireless charging wasn’t available on either model.
Read: 40MP shootout — Huawei P20 Pro vs Lumia 1020
But the biggest reason to get the P20 series was for the photography experience, as the P20 Pro in particular was the first triple rear camera smartphone. It offered a massive 40MP primary camera, 20MP monochrome sensor, and 8MP 3x telephoto snapper. The phone could also deliver 5x hybrid zoom, essentially using image fusion and processing to yield better results than traditional digital zoom.
The standard P20 was far more modest in its camera capabilities, offering a 12MP+20MP monochrome dual rear camera pairing. The phone still had a few camera features in common with its Pro stablemate, including a great Night mode.
The P20 series also popularized the gradient color trend, with its T
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