Recently the Chinese maker uncovered its leader Huawei P40, Huawei P40 Pro and P40 Pro + leaders, alongside the Watch GT 2e savvy, Sound X remote speaker, the primary brilliant glasses, and new forms of the Watch GT 2. Today, they did their first benchmarks on the P40 Pro at AnTuTu.
The score in AnTuTu is not impressive
According to AnTuTu, which tracked the score in its database, the P40 Pro earned 482,457 points. In more detail, AnTuTu reports that the Huawei P40 Pro achieved a CPU level of 153,441, a GPU of 173,021, a MEM of 85,542, and a UX of 70,453.
The P40 Pro is equipped with the Kirin 990, the company’s flagship processor. So we think the score he scored on AnTuTu is just good. Especially when compared to the performance of the Xiaomi Mi 10 Pro which features Qualcomm’s latest flagship processor, the Snapdragon 865, with 610,627 points.
Specifications
The Huawei P40 Pro has a 6.58-inch OLED display with 2,640 × 1,200 pixels resolution and a 90Hz refresh rate. The punch-hole has a 32MP camera and a 3D ToF sensor. Inside the smartphone is the Kirin 990 5G with the Mali-G76, 8GB of RAM and 128 or 256GB of storage.
At the camera level, the P40 Pro has a quad rear camera, with a 50MP f / 1.9 aperture, a 40MP ultrawide, a 12MP telephoto lens with 5x optical zoom and a 3D ToF. Finally, the smartphone has a 4.200mAh battery with 40W fast charge support and 27W wireless charging.
The absence of Google Play from all new Huawei smartphones
The costs of the new Huawei P40 would be somewhat “salty” for cell phones that don’t have Google Play and in this way won’t approach the biggest application store with most Android applications.
What’s more, when we state Android applications don’t simply allude to Google’s, for example, Gmail, Maps, YouTube, Photos, Chrome, they won’t have the new Huawei P40 at any rate since they are not permitted in the US to utilize Google Mobile Services (GMS) ).
The issue that should concern us with these initial steps of Huawei without Google Mobile Services (GMS) – is the nonattendance of the various applications for a lot of gadgets we use today (brilliant cameras, keen watches, shrewd groups, home control, and remote caution, vehicle alert and versatile control, applications.
The nonattendance of Google Play will be significant for photography aficionados too – since at any rate at first – they won’t approach significant camera applications used to associate their camera to their cell phone.
Adobe Lightroom, Snapseed, Filmic Pro, PhotoPills and more are also missing today. What about the purchased apps and games we use today on our Android smartphone? Can’t we use them on our new Huawei smartphone? We expect some of them to be available in Huawei’s AppGallery in the future, but when?
Google, of course, warns us not to load GMS services on Huawei smartphones, but this is a risk that anyone who wants to take it cannot be banned.
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