Best Android smartphones of 2015: The 49 best Android phones you can buy in the UK today - best Androids reviews
The 49 best Android smartphones reviewed | Best Android phones you can buy in the UK in 2015

Best Android smartphones of 2015: The 49 best Android phones
you can buy in the UK today - best Androids reviews
The 49 best Android smartphones reviewed | Best Android phones you can
buy in the UK in 2015
By Chris Martin | PC Advisor | 09 March 15
Reviews of the 49 best Android smartphones that are available to buy in
the UK in 2015. Best Android phones. Best Androids reviews. See also:
The 38 best smartphones: What's the best phone you can buy in 2015?
New entry: ZTE Blade S6 - see where it ranks below.
The mobile phone industry has been turned on its head in the past seven
years, with practically every phone now sold a ‘smart’ one with manifold
mobile-computer possibilities. For most people the default choice is
now thoroughly Android. The combined weight of Google with its Android
software and all its hardware licensees, such as HTC, Sony and Samsung,
has created a buoyant and incredibly competitive market among handset
manufacturers.
We identify two main categories of Android smartphones: the flagship
devices that go head-to-head with leading Windows Phones and the iPhone,
and the larger mass of more affordable options, typically priced around
£100-£230 when sold SIM-free. Also see: Best SIM-only deals: Best
SIM-only and Data SIM deals for smartphone and tablet users
In the UK, many Android smartphones will be sold on contract, of course,
often with no upfront cost, but on a two-year contract. Another option
may be a pay-as-you-go (PAYG) handset that requires topping up with
credit for calls and data. But bear in mind that PAYG phones may be
locked to the selling operator, which will try to recoup its
loss-leading sale price with costlier fees. When you've found the phone
you like, compare mobile phone deals to get the best tariff. (See also:
what's the best Android tablet?)
Best Android smartphones 2014
How to choose a premium Android phone
The flagship Android smartphones of 2014 now all come with quad-core
processors, huge 5in and larger touchscreen displays and 2GB or more of
memory. They are also 4G-capable and ready to join the UK’s emerging LTE
networks, and most now sport dual-band Wi-Fi with draft 11ac, so can
take advantage of faster data links to the latest wireless routers.
The arms race for more processor cores and higher clock speeds was
started by Android hardware makers, desperate to differentiate
themselves with specifications against rival devices. We're now at the
point where few phones are not powerful enough to meet your needs. With
Google pedaling hard to speed up its software, interface stickiness is
now barely a problem on the best Android hardware. The main processor
will be integrated as a system-on-a-chip with the graphics processor,
and all the best Android phones can play action games fluidly.
Although benchmark speed tests tell us little about the suitability of a
smartphone to serve in its chosen role as our personal internet gateway
and digital assistant, we do include them in our reviews. We don’t
recommend you make your purchasing decision on these alone, though. See
also: What's the fastest smartphone 2015.
With development of the modern smartphone now slowing, manufacturers are
building on existing components, notably the camera. Nokia made great
strides with ultra-high pixel photography with the Lumia 1020 phone and
its 41Mp camera, although as a sub-brand of Microsoft, its handset runs
Windows Phone software. LG differentiated its flagship phone with a
pseudo-Lytro focus-free camera, while Sony has made strides with a
combination of 20-plus megapixels and high?quality sensors.
On the video side, we’re seeing 4K-class UHD video recording, high-speed
shooting for slow-motion playback, and front Skype cameras equally at
home with full-HD face capture.
Other features typically only found in the leading Android devices
include NFC, even if it remains a novelty for the greater majority of
users, and infrared transmitters that allow your phone to replace your
TV channel zapper.
Best Android phones: How to choose a budget Android phone
Typically, the budget end of the market includes phones that try to look
as impressive as possible, while built down to a low price using older
or slower components, and with plastic shells and buttons.
With Google keen to get Android phones into as many hands as possible,
subsidised handsets have appeared that make usable smartphones more
accessible than we ever. Decent-spec phones such as the Google Nexus 4
enabled handsets with all the headline features of a flagship smartphone
to be brought into reach for under £200.
Sacrifices can include lower-quality displays, both in pixel count,
which makes text blurrier, and also in colour/image quality. Processors
may also be slower or less efficient, meaning more interface lag is
likely and perceptibly slowed screen animations.
Cameras may cite as many pixels as their more expensive stablemates, but
will use low-grade sensors and cheaper optics, giving lower-quality
photos. And built-in storage can be limited to a paltry 4GB, which means
you’ll depend on slow and fiddly SD cards just to keep your music
collection to hand.
But if you can work through such limitations and don’t have the budget
for the full smartphone experience, some budget smartphones are very
tempting without breaking the bank.
Best Android phones: what to look for
As you'll see from our reviews of the best Android smartphones (below)
there is a wide variety of Android operating systems on the market. So
do be aware that not all Androids are made equal. Each manufacturer puts
on to Google's OS its own stylings and features: Samsung's TouchWizz
interface is very different from HTC's Sense, for instance. But it's
also worth pointing out that there are different iterations of Android
included with brand new phones, and your phone is not likely to be
upgraded when a new Android comes out. Also some Android phones - none
here - don't give you access to Google Play and all the apps and media
contained therein. This is a big point: don't get caught out.
Unlike Windows Phone and BlackBerry the Android world is full of great
apps. Unlike Apple's iOS you have a choice of music and movie stores.
And almost all Android phones charge and synch from vanilla USB cables,
and allow for the addition of SD cards for expanded storage.
The bottom line is that the best Android phones, those reviewed here,
are the best phones you can buy. They certainly offer the best value.
But be aware that there is wide variety in the Android world. Check
reviews from trusted sites such as PC Advisor before parting with any
cash.
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