الاثنين، 30 مايو 2016

خليــك بطاطــس





عارفــين ليه البطاطس المحمرة هي الاكلة الوحيدة اللي اجتمع الناس كلهم علي حبها ؟


البطاطس المحمرة لما بتتقلي في الزيت بتبقي عادة مقرمشة من برة و طرية من جوة ... -عشان كدة لما حد يعمل معاك موقف سخن اوي ماتعملهوش وحــش اوي .. ايوة حاسسه انك زعـــلان منه و خد موقف بس خلي قلبك ابيــض و وطــري "طيــب يعني"   مش ناشف و سامــح عشان ربنا بيسامــح .








بطاطس محمــرة تلاقيها عند ماكدونالدز ( فرينش فرايس) وبرضه تلاقيها عند بتاع الفــول والطعميهيعنــي انت كمان خليك  البطاطســاية" .ماتتكبرش علي حد وصاحب كل الناس غنــي او فقــير  "زى 








البطاطــس المحمــرة بتتقدم مع حاجات كتــير:-
 مايونيــز , كاتــشب ,صالــصات مختلفــة , و ساعات كمان طحينة بس بتفضل في الاخر اسمها بطااااطس -يعنــي مهما اتعرضــت 
لثقافــات و بيئــات مختلفــة احتفظ دايما بشخصيتــك المستقلة و طريقة تربيتك و خلي الناس هية اللي تتاثر بيــك


البطاطــس كمان ممكن تبقــي شيبسي و هي اول حاجة بنفكر فيها لما بنحس بالجــوع و احنا برة البيــت - ساعد الناس دايمــا و 
خليــك اول واحد ييجــي علي بالهــم لما يقعــوا في مشكــلة خليك جــدع زي "الشيبسى".






البطاطــس المحـمرة لو اتهرســت بتبقي كمان طعمــها حــلو و ممكن نسمــيها "بطاطس بيوريــه" -مهــما الدنيا تــهرس و تبهدل 
فيــك خليــك شخص كويــس و لذيذ و طلع للدنيا لسانك و قول "انا بطاطسايه بيوريه".







عشان تبقــي محبــوب من كل الناس خليــك بطاطــس





3 Things turned failure to success if you remembered the time of failure




The failure is an essential part of the successful life, where you that looked at any of the lives of the 
successful figures that we see in the modern era or the old you will find that the common denominator among 
them that they passed a lot of moments of failure






The biggest example of the failure of the access road to what you want, which was not the way to the White House never easy that Abraham Lincoln



1816: expulsion of Abraham and his family from home and was forced to work to earn a living

1831: Try to establish a special work but failed

1832: Lost in the legislative elections of his mandate and lost his job, he could not enter the Faculty of law

1833: borrowed money to start its work, but by the end of the year declared bankrupt and pay in this loan  17 years

1835: his wife died

1836: a nervous breakdown and spent 6 months in psychiatry hospital

1838: pursuit to be the head of the Legislative Council of the mandate, but faced failure

1840: Entered elections and but failed

1843: sought to enter the congress and lost again

1864: succeeded in entering the Congress

1848: Try to remain in Congress for another term but failed

1849: tried to be clerk in his mandate, but he is expulsion. 

1854: tried to enter into the Senate But lost

1860: Presidential elections in the United States and became chairman of the united states of america.


Can you imagine how many times you failed this man even up to be President of the United States

And Steve Jobs, who died, one of the famous executives of one of the largest technology companies in the world of Apple. The expelled see what he did after he was expelled from Apple

 in the 30th, he do not give up even the foundations of a start for himself and then founded NeXT and Pixar found his way back to Apple again.

So what are the things that these people carried out after every failure they felt to become the successful in this world.




1. There is important information in failure:-

Thomas Edison the inventor of the electric lamp which has failed in many trials before it reaches the end result speaks for failure, "I did not fail, but I found that 10000 way it can not work," Try to shift your failure of the negative energy into positive energy that give you the results you want.


2. Worse usually goes faster than you think:-

What it can appear at this moment a black cloud smog will never become dull in memory when the sun shines again. It could become remind you of your failure in the past of the worst enemies but reminds you of the worst you have to remember the moments of success. Never deny that some failures may be strong to the point that pose the ground hard, but as long as you will not abide by the spirit of defeatism and always have the determination to start all over again will become the strongest someday Be uncertain of it.
 "The ease with hardship." (quran)


3. Accept failure and take responsibility:-

Usually a failure is everyone's responsibility so you must know what is your part of this failure. This recognition will not help you to avoid failure in the future, but also eliminates from your mind and you fall victim to the failure of others.
Finally, when a bomb explodes failure always remember that there are inventors, business people and leaders have appeared to them more than once a failure in the way of their success, but they did not allow for this failure to be a weak point in their lives, but turned it to be a tool for success.

الأربعاء، 18 مايو 2016

HTC Desire 530 Review

?WHAT IS THE HTC DESIRE 530

2015 wasn’t a great year for HTC phones. While the company’s flagship HTC One A9 smartphone looked great, it was overpriced and offered middle-of-the-road hardware. Then the company disappointed everyone by not unveiling the HTC One M10 at MWC
So you could be forgiven for missing the arrival of the Desire 530. It's a phone that, on paper at least, has the potential to be one of 2016 best affordable smartphones – although its UK price hasn't yet been confirmed
Its standout design feature is its 'Micro Splash' finish, which is created using nozzles that spray paint at various pressures and different thicknesses at the back of the phone. As a result, HTC claims each Desire 530 is unique



HTC DESIRE 530 – DESIGN

As budget phones go, the Desire 530 genuinely feels like it's been designed with care. The phone looks like a stripped-down version of HTC’s selfie specialist, the Desire Eye, which is no bad thing
During my initial hands-on with the Desire 530 at the MWC show, I was a big fan of the Micro Splash finish, as it made the white model I tested look like a Jackson Pollock painting. Curiously, the model HTC sent me for review was the one edition that doesn't get the Micro Splash treatment, instead being a fairly dull grey. It still feels good to hold, but it doesn't have that visual 'wow' factor that the splashed models create
The inclusion of a lanyard slot is another unique design feature. For those who missed the boat, lanyards were a fashion accessory that could be seen on many '90s school kids' Nokia 3230s. They’re basically bits of shoelace that let you connect the phone to your wrist – making it harder to lose
HTC claims the lanyards will prove a hit with younger buyers looking to accessorise their phone, and while this might be a stretched claim, I can see the feature being useful for people who use their phone to capture photos in crowds at festivals or sports events, where the chance of an accidental drop is high
HTC is also offering a range of 'snap cases' for people who want to further customise their phone. The snap cases have the same Micro Splash finish as the Desire 530, but offer a more varied number of colour options. If you're unfortunate enough to end up with the plain grey version, this could be a great substitution



Interesting design features aside, the Desire 530 is fairly well built – by budget handset standards, at least. The plastic undeniably looks a little drab without its speckled finish, but it's more than solid enough to survive the odd accidental drop. The grey unit I tested came out of an encounter with my flat’s stairwell without so much as a scratch
With a 5-inch screen, it also hits the same size sweet spot as the Nexus 5X, which makes it one of the few small-hand-friendly smartphones on the market. Overall, it's a lovely device to hold, if not to use
The phone comes equipped with a microSD and Nano SIM slot. The inclusion of a microSD slot is a key positive, as it’ll let you add up to 200GB of extra space to the Desire 530’s 16GB of built-in storage
Thanks to the inclusion of Android Marshmallow’s Adoptable Storage feature, if you're using an SD card that's fast enough, you'll be able to seamlessly expand your storage. The phone automatically assigns where apps and files are stored without any management required on your part

HTC DESIRE 530 – DISPLAY

The Desire 530’s 5.0-inch Super LCD screen is a little less impressive, but reasonable for the money. The specs match the Desire 530’s arch-rival, the Moto G, which is the same size and has an identical 1,280x720-pixel resolution
The Desire 530’s screen is more than sharp enough for regular use. Colours are a little drab for my liking, but there’s also a useful temperature control in the phone’s settings that lets you tweak the screen to meet your preference
The temperature control is a nice touch, but I found a few serious issues that hamper the screen’s overall appeal



For starters, viewing angles aren’t great. Viewed from even slightly off-centre, whites quickly distort and take on various hues including blue, grey and yellow, depending on the angle you view them from
The phone’s maximum brightness is lower than I’d like. Even maxed out the phone looks dull and becomes unusable when hit with even moderately bright light. During my time with the Desire 530, even on grey overcast days in London the phone’s screen regularly became unreadable outdoors
Being fair to HTC these are issues I experience on most affordable smartphones and even 12 months ago I’d have found them forgivable. But with the arrival of handsets such as the Moto G, EE Harrier and Honor 5X, this is no longer the case
By today’s standards the Desire 530’s screen isn’t good enough, even at the budget end of the market



HTC DESIRE 530 – SOFTWARE

The Desire 530 runs using Google’s latest Android Marshmallow operating system overlaid with HTC’s custom Sense skin
Even though Google’s Android N developer preview is now out, Marshmallow's presence should be a key selling point. Android Marshmallow is the best mobile operating system currently available and has a number of nifty features. These include a robust set of application-specific privacy controls, user-friendly Material Design and a decent portfolio of battery-saving services
However, initially I was concerned the Sense Skin may hamper the OS's overall appeal. I’ve never been a fan of Android skins for a variety of reasons – chief of which is their tendency to add bloatware to Android
Luckily, once I started playing with the Desire 530, I found my initial concerns, generally, weren’t warranted. As Android skins go, Sense is one of the better options out there. The OS does add some bloatware apps, but generally manages to make positive (or at least inoffensive) changes to the standard Android experience
HTC’s Blinkfeed news aggregator window is the most obvious Sense addition on the Desire 530. Blinkfeed is a custom feature that can be accessed by swiping left from the phone’s home screen



It aims to make it easier for users to keep on top of the daily news by pulling content in which it thinks you’d be interested into a tiled user interface. It doesn't always get these recommendations right and it often pulls in too many stories from too few sources, but as a quick news digest it's perfectly palatable
Sense’s Theme Store is another potentially useful feature. It lets you customise the Desire 530 design to meet your personal preferences. There’s a decent selection of pre-made themes, and you can even make your own themes from scratch, which matches the custom feel of the phone's Micro Splash-painted chassis

HTC DESIRE 530 – PERFORMANCE

The Desire 530’s tweakability is great, but its appeal is hampered by poor performance. Running TrustedReviews’ standard suite of benchmarks, the Desire 530 is easily one of the worst-performing phones I’ve tested
The scores aren’t surprising when you look at the Desire 530’s hardware. The phone runs using a Snapdragon 210 CPU and 1.5GB of RAM
The Snapdragon 210 is a low-end chip that's designed for super-cheap handsets. It may, on paper, look reasonably good, being LTE-ready and quad-core, but the truth is that it doesn’t deliver performance-wise
On the general Geekbench benchmark the Desire 530 ran in with a poor 296 single-core score and 987 multi-core score. Other affordable phones I've tested have scored nearly three times higher on the same test. The £170 Honor 5X, for example, ran in with 694 single-core and 3,016 multi-core Geekbench scores
The Desire 530’s performance on the gaming-focused 3DMark tests was similarly underwhelming. Running 3DMark’s IceStorm Extreme benchmark the Desire 530 scored 4,162. This is close to half what I’d expect a budget smartphone to score



It wasn't just synthetic benchmarks where this phone struggled: using it as my regular phone was a frustrating experience. While video streaming over Wi-Fi and 4G was generally smooth, on too many occasions the phone inexplicably stuttered when navigating between menu screens
Games such as Riptide GP2 also suffered from performance issues and in general the phone feels too slow by today’s standards. Even opening applications took multiple seconds longer than I’d like



HTC DESIRE 530 – CAMERA

Up until the 2015 edition of the Moto G I generally didn’t expect much from affordable smartphones in the camera department. But in today’s budget smartphone market, camera tech is an increasingly important area, and many sub-£200 smartphones can now offer genuinely impressive photo performance
Here again I found the Desire 530 to be slightly disappointing
The 8-megapixel camera’s f/2.4-aperture lens ensures shots taken on the Desire 530 in regular light are suitably sharp and have good enough colour balance to be shared on social media. But image quality is nowhere near as good as the Moto G’s



The Desire 530 can take reasonable photos



But its shutter lag is terrible



It doesn't deal with low- or mixed-light situations well



Even moderately challenging conditions were too much for it
The Desire 530’s performance issues also severely diminish the phone’s photographic capabilities. On too many occasions I experienced a massive delay between pressing the on-screen shutter button and an image being captured. The slow shutter speed makes shooting anything but a static subject close to impossible.
The processor also struggled to deal with the phone’s panorama shot mode, and my attempts to capture a usable photo for the review proved difficult.
The camera’s autofocus is also fairly finicky. Shooting in anything other than bright light, the Desire 530’s camera struggles to accurately focus.
The Desire 530’s 5-megapixel front camera suffers from the same issues and has equally poor shutter speeds – which again made capturing images on it an awkward experience


HTC DESIRE 530 – BATTERY

Battery life is one area where the Desire 530 meets expectations. I generally managed to get at least a day’s use out of the 2,200mAh battery with regular use. This entailed listening to music on the way to and from work, sporadically attempting to check my messages and social media feeds, streaming an episode of House of Cards via Netflix at lunch, and taking and making a few calls



The phone also deals with battery-intensive tasks reasonably well. Streaming video on popular services such as Netflix and BBC iPlayer, the phone lost an average of 13-16% of its charge per hour. The discharge rate isn’t the best I’ve seen, but it’s also far from the worst. Some of the other affordable handsets I’ve tested lose as much as 20% per hour with video streaming
Normally I’d give you an indication of how much battery the Desire 530 lost with gaming, but sadly the performance problems once again hampered my efforts. Trying to play even moderately demanding titles such as Riptide GP2 on the Desire 530 was such a choppy experience that I never once managed to play for a full hour before losing my patience and pulling out my Pixel C


HTC DESIRE 530 – SOUND AND CALL QUALITY

HTC lists the Desire 530 as featuring its famed Boomsound speaker tech. But don’t be fooled: the phone doesn’t have the same dual-speaker setup seen on more pricy HTC handsets
HTC has designed the phone to look like it has two speakers, but the Desire 530 actually only has one. The mono speaker is housed on the bottom of the phone and doesn’t offer terribly good audio
Like 99% of the smartphones I review, audio lacks low-end oomph and has a tendency to sound tinny and distorted when pushed to even moderately high volumes. If blasting music out of your phone is your thing, then the Desire 530 won’t be for you
Call quality is slightly better, though a little on the quiet side. Taking and making calls around the office the internal speaker and microphone were up to task. But when making calls on London’s busy streets, people on the other end of the line regularly struggled to make out what I was saying



?SHOULD I BUY THE HTC DESIRE 530

A few years ago, when affordable smartphones were 'smart' in name only, the Desire 530 would have been a reasonably decent choice for buyers on a budget
But in today’s world, where consumers are surrounded by great affordable handsets like the Moto G, EE Harrier and BQ Aquaris X5, its low-end specs don’t cut the mustard. The Snapdragon chipset used doesn’t offer adequate performance and comes close to completely ruining the overall user experience. Because of this, I can’t recommend the device, no matter how competitively priced HTC makes it
This is a little sad, as the handset’s Micro Splash finish makes it one of the best-looking affordable smartphones around


Huawei Ascend G620S review

? WHAT IS THE HUAWEI ASCEND G620S




The Huawei Ascend G620S is the latest stab at updating the vision of the ideal budget phone that Motorola nailed so well with the Moto G. It costs around £120, but has a decent 5-inch screen, 4G and a 64-bit processor
It’s not too bad for the price at all. We only wish it didn't seem quite so deliberately limited to show it’s a lower-end model. It uses a rather old version of Huawei’s custom UI, making the Huawei Ascend G620S seem a little dated in parts
Still, for the price it’s not too shabby at all



Huawei Ascend G620S: Design
The Huawei Ascend G620S looks a bit like how Samsung phones used to look before the company started to really get things right over the last 12 months. That sounds like an insult, and kinda is, but expectations for the design of a sub-£100 are never that high. It's a plastic phone with a texture on the back
And at least it’s not just a plain black rectangle, at least in the finish we’re looking



The Huawei Ascend G620S comes in black and white versions, and the white one has a silver trim and silver soft keys. There’s a fake leather texture etched into the plastic back cover too. But it’s fairly subtle, with a fine grain and no fake stitching to really draw attention to the style
It still feels pretty cheap, but some of you may prefer this finish to the glossy plain plastic you get in some other budget phones
The rather funny thing about how budget phones have starting using bigger screens in the last year or so is that models like the Huawei Ascend G620S aren’t really any smaller than top-end phones like the Galaxy S6. They feel larger, in fact, because that extra bit of chunky in the screen bezel and thickness makes them seem a bit tubby



Hoping for a small and easy Android? The Huawei Ascend G620S might seem a bit large. But if a petite frame doesn’t matter too much, it poses no real issues. The buttons, hardware and soft keys, are all quite easy to reach. One obvious budget drawback, though, is that the soft keys don't light-up. They're just shiny silver accents
It doesn’t have every benefit common to phones with a removable plastic, either. There’s a microSD card slot to let you add to the 8GB memory easily enough, but the battery is non-removable. It’s held in place under a metal sheet
Other basic hardware elements are more-or-less as you’d expect at the price. 4G is onboard and the usual complement of wireless connections are here. But you don’t get ac-speed Wi-Fi, an IR transmitter and other such bonus bits. There is NFC, though, missing from some budget rivals



HUAWEI ASCEND G620S: SCREEN

We’re more than happy to miss out on a few connectivity extras in a phone if the result is a great screen. What we get in the Huawei Ascend G620S is a good one, although not quite at the top of this new budget class
It’s a 5-inch screen of 720p resolution, getting you decent sharpness, but far enough off the Retina standard to make it clear there’s a bit of compromise going on. The Huawei Ascend G620s offers 294ppi, showing slight pixellation close-up



This is normal, though: we’re still a way off seeing a 1080p phone for under £100 from a name people have heard of (and yes, we count Huawei in that class). And if you're upgrading from a lower-res budget model, this should seem like a big upgrade. Where the Huawei Ascend G620S drops down a notch is in its screen architecture, which is a bit less advanced than the best
The display layer appears a little bit recessed beneath the very top-most layer of the screen. As well as just looking that bit less swish, it reduces contrast and outdoors visibility a bit. In very bright sunlight the Huawei Ascend G620S struggles. Higher-end screens merge some screen layers and get rid of air gaps to give the display a bit more pop



You can get a slightly higher-end screen if you pay about £130-140. But even the £20 saving of the £120 Huawei Ascend G620s matters at this price. Top brightness is pretty potent, and while colours aren’t as vivid as phones higher-up Huawei’s range, they’re also reasonably natural-looking
There’s an ambient light sensor too, letting the Huawei Ascend G620S judge the level of backlight brightness required
While there are some compromises for the price, it’s fairly good

HUAWEI ASCEND G620S: SOFTWARE AND ANDROID

One area likely to put a few people off the Huawei Ascend G620S is software. First, it runs Android 4.4.4 rather than Lollipop 5.x, a kinda dated version at this point
More importantly, it also uses an ageing version of the custom Huawei Emotion UI that actually dictates what the phone looks and feels like more than the core Android software. It has version 2.3 rather than the 3.x version you get in Huawei’s more expensive phones, such as the Ascend G7.



It does seem to be about putting the Huawei Ascend G620S in the cheapo box too, as phones just as powerful like the (Huawei-made) Honor 4X use the newer version (one possible explanation is the amount of RAM available). Parts of Emotion UI 2.3 look a bit dated now, especially the settings menu.
The basic layout is the same as the newer version, mind, and it’s not going to please everyone. Its big change is that it drops the separate apps menu. All you have are homescreens, just like an iPhone



What this means is that whenever you install an app, it just finds a spot on one of your homescreens. And version 2.3 of Emotion UI seems to be particularly spotty about exactly where it puts ‘em. Some searching will be required
It’s only really an annoyance for that initial period when you're constantly installing new apps, though. You can put folders on your home screens, minimising how many homescreens you’ll need, and letting you organise the phone that bit more
However, thanks to using dated software all-round, the Huawei Ascend G620S definitely lags behind something like the Motorola Moto G in this area. Emotion UI does have a few extras you might like, though
It uses themes that totally reskin the phone including wallpapers and icons. The default theme is actually one of the best, but there are loads of extra ones you can download from the Themes app if you want something a bit more ‘out there’. Again, Emotion UI 3.x themes tend to be a bit better




The Huawei Ascend G620S is also a little laden down with extra apps. It’s not Huawei stuff that’s the issue, but all the Gameloft bloat that’s on there. We hope it’s earning Huawei a few quid for preinstalling so many Gamloft titles as it does clutter up the phone’s storage fresh out of the box. There’s only 8GB on there (around 4GB is accessible) so while there is a smidgen of extra space, there's not an awful lot going spare


HUAWEI ASCEND G620S: PERFORMANCE

In the past we’ve seen quite a few Emotion UI 2.3-based phones perform quite badly, with general lag making them appear compromised. And a bit rubbish. However, the Huawei Ascend G620S runs really quite well
It uses the Snapdragon 410 CPU, a 64-bit quad-core 1.2GHz processor, and 1GB RAM. While a low-end spec, it’s still very good for a phone selling at around the £100 mark. We did notice a bug or two, in particular a Calendar-crashing one that seems to be an Emotion UI foible, but using the Huawei Ascend G620S is a largely stress-free experience once you get used to how it rolls. There's some occasional lag, but it's very minor



It’s also not a bad gaming machine, just like the arch-rival Moto G. It sails through 3D games with only slight frame rate drops in the most challenging (or under-optimised) titles like Asphalt 8. Even if its software may be a bit less-optimised than the latest vanilla edition of Android, the Huawei Ascend G620S is just as good as pretty much any other £100-odd phone for games
The Geekbench 3 result supports this too. The Huawei Ascend G620S scores around 1330 points, roughly 10 per cent greater than the Snapdragon 400 Moto G
It would be nice to have more storage to give you extra room to install games and store music, but it’s unrealistic to expect this at the price



HUAWEI ASCEND G620S: CAMERA

The Huawei Ascend G620S has an 8-megapixel camera with an LED flash and a basic 2-megapixel front camera. At £120, you can’t ask for much more
Its photos are surprisingly respectable, with punchy colours and none of the red tone-mushing issues we see in many cheap phones. This is partly thanks to a rather clever ‘smart’ mode that not only judges exposure and colour temperature reasonably well, but can focus closer than the Auto mode, handy for macro shots. It’s also good at reducing the amount of noise in low-light situations and bumping-up the exposure so that what’s in-shot is reasonably clear
Natural dynamic range is pretty poor, but then there’s the HDR mode to help out with that

What it isn’t, though, is remotely fast. And its slowness does take some of the fun out of using the camera. The Huawei G620S’s camera app takes almost five seconds to load, there’s some shutter lag, and both the Smart and HDR modes are significantly slower than the Auto made. And that’s not fast to start with
So while the results can be decent if you have patience, the Huawei G620S will probably see you miss a few of those quick-shot photo moments. Oh well. Here are some photos we took using the phone



The close-up skills of Smart mode make shallow depth of field effects possible

Given its price, the G620S has done well with colour and detail here
This backlit scene would be a silhouette with Auto mode, solved here with HDR

HUAWEI ASCEND G620S: BATTERY LIFE

The Huawei Ascend G620S wins back a few points with its stamina, which is pretty solid. It only has a 2000Ah battery, which is about as small as we’d like to see in a 5-inch Android phone, but it does remarkably well here
We’re not talking easy two-day stamina, and heavy users can drain it down in a day (we did with all-day WhatsApp, an hour of Netflix streaming and a couple of hours of 3G/4G podcast streaming). However, with ‘normal’ use you should find you have around 30 per cent battery left by bedtime to see you through into the second day without a charge
Do note, though, that the reflective screen means you’ll need to crank up the Huawei Ascend G620S screen to the maximum brightness when you go outdoors. Its stamina works best for office workers, not outdoors types
In the looped video test, which involves playing a 720p MP4 until the battery runs dry, the Huawei Ascend G620S lasts for 10.5 hours. That means it comfortably outperforms the Moto G 5-inch, likely down to the aggressive Huawei power management, the 64-bit processor or a less power-hungry screen. Or maybe all three

HUAWEI ASCEND G620S: SOUND QUALITY

We’re going to have to end this Huawei Ascend G620S review on a bit of a bland note, but we can’t go without mentioning its call quality, even if it is 2015. It’s perfectly fine, and we experienced no drop-outs during calls
The tone of the speaker goes for clarity by not smoothing out the sound too much or adding too much lower-end warmth. As such, voices don’t sound exactly pretty, but you will be able to understand them. There’s also a secondary mic on the back for noise cancellation

It’s the same story with the speaker. It’s nothing special, but doesn’t embarrass the Huawei Ascend G620S. You get a single speaker on the back. It doesn’t distort at top volume like some cheaper phones, but isn’t terribly loud and is fairly thin-sounding


?Should you buy the Huawei Ascend G620S
The Huawei Ascend G620S is a very solid budget Android phone that offers pretty strong value if you can swallow its quirks. Just look at what your get for around £100: 4G, a decent processor and a fair 720p screen. Not bad, is it
The bad bits include a highly reflective screen, a pretty slow camera and software that’s dated and unusual in parts. As the screen is that bit more reflective than the Moto G, this is not the new king of budget phones
However, if you find it at a good price and need to save cash, go ahead. While there are some strange bits and some signs this is a real entry-level phone, there are no show-stopping annoyances