A few weeks ago, we bought the Kai OS device Econet is selling and marketing as the Smart Kambudzi. The device is aptly named because despite looking like a basic feature phone, the Vida Atom 3G (its real name) can actually do a number of smart things including accessing your favourite apps but more on that later.
Specs
Network | 3G – dual sim |
Battery | 1500mAh |
Screen Size | 2.4 Inches |
RAM | N/A |
Internal Storage | 4GB, MicroSD support |
Who is this phone for?
After using the Smart Kambudzi for a few weeks, I can see 2 target audiences;
- People with basic feature phones who want to transition to smartphones but can’t because of the cost;
- People who already have a smartphone but want a secondary phone with a long lasting battery but still offers some smart functionality.
“You mentioned apps?”
The marketing around the phones revolves heavily around the availability of the most popular social media and messaging apps on such a basic phone. You have, WhatsApp, Facebook, YouTube and Twitter on the Vida Atom 3G.
Whilst WhatsApp on a US$30 device is game-changing in theory in practice and in my experience, it didn’t work out so much. In fact WhatsApp didn’t work at all. The application is preinstalled but when I tried to setup WhatsApp on the phone it flat out refused to work.
My case seems like an error because the WhatsApp process would freeze up in the initialising phase and the account wouldn’t be created. Truth be told I’m not sure if this was unique to my device and whether other buyers of the phone are going through the same thing. Either way for me that was an experience breaking thing since the most important thing about this phone (for me at least) is the fact that there’s WhatsApp.
Outside of the WhatsApp issue, the rest of the applications worked like a charm. Facebook works, though the screen feels a bit too small for the busy FB interface.
Surprisingly, YouTube was actually really serviceable and watching Jah Prayzah and MKBHD videos wasn’t a pain. The speakers on the phone are pretty good which makes that experience bearable.
Twitter is less busy compared to FB and is, therefore, a decent experience but I wouldn’t necessarily recommend the phone for the social media experience – if WhatsApp worked I would probably have a different experience but on my unit, it didn’t so here we are.
The application which most impressed me though was Google Maps and Google Assistant. Yes, Google Maps. The Vida Atom 3G has GPS and thus you can use the tiny phone for your navigation needs and it was pretty accurate. I didn’t see much of a noticeable difference from the positioning on my Note 10 when sitting down but when moving around the Note is better. Does that matter? I don’t think so since the Note costs 30x more than the Smart Kambudzi.
Google Assistant on the phone works pretty brilliantly. I’ll add the disclaimer that I don’t use Google Assistant on my regular phone so it can probably do more than the Vida Atom 3G. Long pressing the x button brings up the Google Assistant which allows you to search or set up tasks using your voice. Just speak to the assistant in a language it recognises and you can check the weather or search for other things using voice prompts. You can also open apps and turn on the torch which proves that the integration is pretty good.
The only downside I noticed is that Google Assistant doesn’t always work – sometimes failing to start or failing to record what you’re saying – it didn’t happen often enough to make me not use it all though.
Email was another troublesome application. The login process if cumbersome and even after logging in, I was still being asked to setup an account – which irritated me and made me abandon the process altogether. More patient users might be more successful
The Camera
There’s nothing to say about the camera. Both the selfie and rear camera aren’t worth turning on. It’s a disservice to whoever/whatever you’re taking a photo of…
Battery life
The battery life is certainly better than whatever smartphones offer which makes this a cool device for people in areas without electricity or those who aren’t fans of constantly charging their phones. I was using the device as a secondary device and it lasted me over 4 days on as single charge. I think for those who will use this more aggressively will get at least 2 full days on a single charge.
Internet speeds
Without any speedtesting apps to actually test just how fast the phone is when connected to WiFi or on 3G networks. The phone was pretty fast on both connections. It’s noticeably slower than a smartphone but smartphones are more powerful and probably have better network modems so that’s to be expected. YouTube videos didn’t buffer and the only application which took a noticeable time when loading was the Facebook app – or maybe I just don’t like FB…
Build quality
As expected with phones of this type – it can take a beating. It’s pretty durable (unlike a smartphone) and I’ll be surprised if you can break this. There is one thing that irritated me in relation to the build quality of this phone. The back has a carbon-fibre like a pattern but instead of making the phone grippier – it makes the little bugger far more slippery than it needs to be if I’m being frank. Maybe with extended use, this pattern will wear out and become more grippy but in my use, it felt pretty slippery.
Overall the Smart Kambudzi phone is a pretty compelling package – it was just unfortunate that WhatsApp which is a key part of the experience didn’t work as advertised on the unit I had. Without WhatsApp functionality, I couldn’t help but feel the Vida Atom comes close to being the perfect feature phone but not close enough…
We will clarify whether this is a unit-specific issue or more users are going through it and update this review.
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