Software UX

On the software side, we continue to see usage of Huawei's Android skin, EmotionUI 3.1. We've had a more in-depth look into EmotionUI in our review of the Huawei P8. As the Mate S comes out only a few months after the P8, we see little to no changes in terms of user-interface as both devices run the same software version.

In terms of design, I didn't mind that Huawei didn't introduce any major updates to the UI. I personally like EmotionUI's design language and I'm especially fond the black-accentuated version that comes with the P8 and Mate S. Unfortunately the lack of any update in the UI also means that the Mate S comes with some of the same negative shortcomings that I critiqued on the P8, such as the very unpractical paginated task-switcher interface or Huawei's odd handling of application memory management and its aggressive task-killer.

Where the Mate S differs from the P8 is of course the inclusion of the finger-print sensor. The Mate 7 was one of the first Android devices to introduce a non-swipe fingerprint reader and the Mate S' fingerprint reader improves on its predecessor by increasing both the speed and accuracy of the scanning, making it one of among the best implementations out there.

Huawei takes advantage of the fingerprint reader in ways that larger vendors such as Apple and Samsung fail to do: It actively uses the fingerprint scanner as a capacitive button / track pad that recognizes touches as well as swipes. A useful feature that seems very natural to use is the dropping-down of the notification shade when you swipe down on the fingerprint-reader. Another function is the possibility to navigate between images in the stock gallery by swiping left or right on the scanner. 

GPU Performance

Since the Mate S comes with the same Kirin 93X chipset as the P8, we're not expecting any breakthrough performance of the new flagship. The Mali T628MP4 in the Kirin 935 runs at the same 680MHz speed that we've seen it running in the Kirin 930, and we have the same 800MHz LPDDR3 memory on board the Mate S.

3DMark 1.2 Unlimited - Graphics 

Starting with the 3DMark Unlimited graphics score, we see the Mate S perform slightly better than the P8. This might be due to the increased CPU frequency or a side-effect of the newer r5p1 over r5p0 drivers on the Mate S.

3DMark 1.2 Unlimited - Physics

The physics test in 3DMark is mostly a CPU test and here we see results as expected with the increased CPU frequency bringing in about 12% improvement when compared to the P8. Unfortunately the little A53 cores can't keep up with the more powerful CPU architectures found in other devices in our list.

3DMark 1.2 Unlimited - Overall

Because of the weak GPU, the Mate S again finds itself among the worstp performing devices, next to the P8 and last year's Mate 7.

GFXBench 3.0 Manhattan (Onscreen) 

GFXBench 3.0 T-Rex HD (Onscreen)

Moving onto GFXBench, we see a similar picture as the Mate S ends up among the worst performing high-end devices released in the last 18 months.

In the review of the P8, I complained about the throttling behaviour of the Kirin 930 and unfortunately that's again something that the Mate S adopts. It seems the Mate S has only slightly better thermal characteristics as the device sits tight at 11fps for the whole duration of the battery rundown after reaching its maximum throttling level.

NAND Performance

Our review device came in with a 32GB SanDisk eMMC NAND module. On Android devices we test NAND performance by using AndroBench. To test sequential reads and writes, we use 256KB buffers executed on a single thread.

AndroBench 4.0 - Sequential Read AndroBench 4.0 - Sequential Write

The NAND on the Mate S seems to be a slight improvement on the one found on the P8. The read and write speeds are acceptable but unfortunately also nothing to write home about. It seems the Mate S employs a similar eMMC chipset as the P8 as the results fall within the same performance region.

Introduction & Design System Performance
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  • hans_ober - Wednesday, December 2, 2015 - link

    So how does A53 / A53e compare to A15 in real world use?
  • vastac13 - Wednesday, December 2, 2015 - link

    Yep! Everyday I refresh my rss feeds, waiting for N6P review and when finally Anand has a notif; nope, wrong phone. :(
  • Ashinjuka - Wednesday, December 2, 2015 - link

    'fresh feeds e're day
  • hans_ober - Wednesday, December 2, 2015 - link

    Power-wise, have they optimized the higher clocked A53'e' in anyway? The curves seem to overlap, so there doesn't seem to be much of a difference. Might be they're better at very high frequencies?
  • Andrei Frumusanu - Wednesday, December 2, 2015 - link

    Notice that the minimum frequency on the fast cores is much higher power so that might be an indication of the difference between the two clusters. Unfortunately I can't access voltage easily on HiSilicon SoCs so it's harder to determine the capacitance difference.
  • zeeBomb - Wednesday, December 2, 2015 - link

    No Meizu pro 5 review? :(
  • Andrei Frumusanu - Wednesday, December 2, 2015 - link

    Unfortunately I seem to have lost contact with them over the last year :/
  • zeeBomb - Wednesday, December 2, 2015 - link

    Aw Shucks! Thats some not so good news, Andrei! At least you contributed to the previous model, and your also GREATLY written deep dive with the Exynos Octa core. Honestly, all in all, no worries man! Its basically a 1080p S6 with insane audio incorporated, and a beautiful 23? MP camera to not forget...its like an iPhone + Samsung combined.
  • s.yu - Saturday, December 5, 2015 - link

    Yeah the Pro 5 is much better than anything Huawei has to offer.
  • jjj - Wednesday, December 2, 2015 - link

    Any chance you tested perf with the memory locked at 800MHz? Just to see if there is a substantial diff in synthetic benchmarks.
    As for the 950, noticed in the Geekbench database that the memory score is all over the place. Integer and FP are around 1.9k and 1.6k but the memory score is from 1k to 2k .Makes yo uwonder what's going on there.

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