Orange San francisco Review

The Orange San Francisco pops up as the first Android own-branded device from Orange.
The San Francisco is an Android-toting handset that's pitched at the lower end of the market. At £99 on pay as you go, it's comparable with handsets like the ZTE Racer, Vodafone 845, and T-Mobile Pulse Mini.
All these lower-cost Android handsets are obviously compromised in comparison with their high-end counterparts.
The real questions aren't how they stand up to all other Android phones, but how they stand up to each other and to other £100-ish mobiles.
Orange san francisco
With Android 2.1, Wi-Fi, GPS, and 3G in the mix, the feature set is compelling, and the 3.5-inch 480 x 800 pixel touch screen suggests great things in terms of visuals.

Build quality

For a budget handset, the build is lovely. The chassis feels very solid, its slate grey main colour is appealing, and the sliver highlights on the long edges look reasonably cool too, though of course they're plastic and not metal.
The Orange San Francisco is fairly thin at 11.8mm, and narrow at 56.5mm, while its height of 116mm is average. If we were being fussy we'd say that the weight is a bit on the heavy side at 130g, but it's not a big deal. Overall the Orange San Francisco feels quite comfortable to hold and is easy to pocket.
Orange san francisco
There's a row of very small buttons under the screen providing the Android Home, Menu and Back functions. If you want search you can slap the Google search box widget on the Home screen.
Orange san francisco
A 3.5mm headset connector sits on the top edge along with a teeny on/off button, while the left edge houses a mini-USB connector and the right a pair of volume buttons. Minimal, yes, but that's all you need really given that the touchscreen is available for anything you must have immediately to hand.
Orange san francisco

Interface

So, we're in Android 2.1 land, which means multiple Home screens and widgets. But we're also in Orange land, which means Orange skinning, Orange apps and some Orange-specific widgets.
There are five Home screens, and you sweep between them with your finger as usual. A press of the Home button takes you to the central Home screen. Each of the Home screens has a fixed set of four icons along the bottom, which give you access to the full apps menu, messaging, the dialler and contacts.
Orange san francisco
Interestingly, when you flick a Home screen into wide format the four fixed position shortcuts sit themselves in vertical alignment down the right hand side of the screen.
Orange san francisco
There are some nifty widgets that Orange has tweaked. The Messages one, for example, displays incoming messages that you've not read and has little 'Read' and 'Compose' shortcuts so you can deal with stuff quickly.
Orange san francisco
Meanwhile the photo viewer widget gives you large thumbnails of images, a scroller, and the ability to quickly share images, edit them, and jump to the camera.
Orange san francisco
In fact, there are quite a lot of Orange widgets to choose from to help bulk out the Android ones. If only Orange had a nicer native colour scheme on the widget picker than its orange and grey one, though.
Orange san francisco
Orange san francisco
Incidentally, if you don't like the overall look of Orange's default Home screen style you can run the Homescreen Selector app and choose the alternative – good old totally unskinned Android.
Orange san francisco
It's worth making a comment about the screen at this point. It measures 3.5 inches across diagonal corners and it does feel quite sizeable considering the small overall handset size. It is capacitive and responds well to finger presses. Generally we found it to be sharp and bright – remarkably so, for such a low cost handset. It's a real highlight of the phone.
There are no Call and End hardware buttons on the Orange San Francisco, and we're perfectly happy for that to be the case. They aren't necessary, since a quick tap of the dialler button on any of the Home screens calls up the dialler from which you can, quite simply, launch into a call.
Orange san francisco
Many Android handsets have the ability to grab contacts from a range of third-party apps, most often the likes of Facebook, Twitter and MySpace. Not here, though. The import options are from your Google account, an SD card or your SIM. There's also the old fashioned way via your PC if you download HTC's PC Sync software.
Orange san francisco
You can create contacts on the handset too, of course, and that's just a matter of running through the new contact screen to add what data you want.
Orange san francisco
You can do the Facebook and Twitter things but oddly Orange has not bothered to install apps for either on the handset, so you'll have to pop into the Android market and make a couple of downloads to get you started. Not a problem, since there are some great free apps, just an irritation.
We didn't have any problems with actually making calls, holding a signal or with call quality either – the San Francisco acquitted itself well as a handset for that good old fashioned thing: the voice call.
When it comes to messaging, like we said just a moment ago, Twitter and Facebook fans will need to download apps to take advantage.
Orange san francisco
Still, you've got mobile email here, and when it comes to setting that up Orange offers plenty of options that should help you get things done faster. 'Work' is a shortcut to helping you set up your Exchange email system, while the others are services that are pre-populated with some of the information you need.
The list is just a little longer than this screen shot suggests. If your email provider isn't on the list, then you'll need to get the POP and SMTP details from them to set up mobile email. It's not a big ask, though.
Orange san francisco
Whether you're creating emails or SMS, you'll be using the on-screen keyboard. Well, one of two, actually. The standard Android keyboard is here, and you also get the TouchPal keyboard which gives you a couple of different layouts including a 12-key phonepad and one that puts two characters on each key.
Working in tall format is a little cramped whichever keyboard style you choose, because the screen is on the narrow side. But flick into widescreen mode and there's plenty of space for two-thumbed typing at speed.
Orange san francisco

Web browsing

The Orange San Francisco is a 3G handset and it loads web pages reasonably quickly. We mentioned earlier that the screen measures 3.5 inches and has 480 x 800 pixels. It's sharp and bright, and quite well suited to web browsing.
Orange san francisco
Orange san francisco
Pinch to zoom works well and is responsive, and you've got a rather nice 'share pages' feature, which means you can send someone an email or text with a direct link to a web page really easily.
Orange san francisco
Orange san francisco

Camera

Orange san francisco
The Orange San Francisco has a 3.2-megapixel camera that shoots a reasonable picture. It has autofocus, which is a nice plus point, but not having a flash is a downer. Video is probably best left alone, though and is quite possibly the most disappointing aspect of the San Francisco.
There aren't a great many settings and bits to fiddle with in the camera, but what there are you can pull out from a left-side menu.
Orange san francisco
Orange san francisco

Music

The music player on the Orange San Francisco is the standard Android one. Sound volume isn't very loud when at its maximum through the loudspeaker, and it's a little heavy on the treble and lacking in bass tones.
Orange san francisco
The headphones Orange provides aren't up to much, but they do have an inline pause/play control, which is something we're pleased to see on such a low cost handset. Using a set of our own earphones improved things dramatically.
The 3.5mm headset connector is on the top of the chassis, which is precisely the right place for it.
There's an FM radio on-board but it's not particularly user friendly.
Orange san francisco
There doesn't seem to be a way of playing music through the loudspeaker for a start, and you can't autoscan channels. The best you can do on that front is to seek and then save each channel individually. There's no RDS and no way to name channels manually. The saving grace is a sleep timer.
Orange san francisco
Video playback is handled by a separate app and the screen's high resolution helps with quality. This time the loudspeaker works too, thank goodness!
You've also got access to Orange TV, which is one of the apps Orange has peppered onto the handset. We found the streaming to be perfectly acceptable, though it's not live TV that you get but news, pop videos, movie trailers and other snippety stuff.

Battery life

With a 1250mAh battery on-board, the Orange San Francisco isn't going to last you several days between charges. Gauging battery life is always a bit of a tricky thing to do, because depletion will depend on how heavily you use particularly power draining aspects of the handset.
Orange san francisco
We got through a day's pretty heavy usage with some juice left in the tank, but we'd expect to be charging every day.

Apps

When it comes to apps, there's quite a lot here in addition to the Android staple fare. The GPS is used by Google Maps and also by Orange Maps which is Orange's own sat-nav tool.
We found the GPS was pretty efficient at getting and retaining a signal, and having two mapping options to hand means you can choose which you like best right out of the box.
Orange adds its own App Shop for games, apps and ringtones. It doesn't work over Wi-Fi, but you may find it a useful companion to the application-filled Android Market.
Orange san francisco
Orange has filled the phone with its own apps, as you'd (sadly) expect, with the Orange Wednesdays app for Android (two for one deals on cinema ticket) the headliner.
And there's a little weather app that does what its name suggests. There is also a version of Documents to Go for viewing Word, Excel, PowerPoint and PDF files.
Orange san francisco
The Orange San Francisco impressed us a lot more than we expected it to. There is quite an array of Android handsets lurking around the £100 mark, and this one is the pick of the bunch.
It has Android 2.1 which might mean an upgrade to 2.2 could be close, and its high-resolution capacitive screen puts it streets ahead of competition like the ZTE Racer, Vodafone 845, and T-Mobile Pulse Miniin terms of usability.
The build quality also punches somewhat above its weight, and while we can't really forgive the somewhat lacklustre camera and poorly featured FM radio, it's a small price to pay for what are, generally, some pretty neat features.
Even the provision of a 2GB microSD card to boost the 150MB of internal memory is a pleasure to see.
Oh, there's something we've not mentioned thus far and we think we'll just drop it in here. The Orange San Francisco is made by ZTE. And we like it more than we liked the ZTE Racer.

TechRadar verdict

There are some budget Android handsets that we think let Android down. They don't show off the operating system in a good light and could easily turn people away because of that. The Orange San Francisco is a different kettle of fish.
Yes, it has a 600MHz CPU, which is far from the fastest, but it didn't falter at the first hurdle, coped well with video playback and only really stumbled when we asked it to do a lot of stuff at once.
Yes, the Orange San Francisco is light on internal storage, the camera is ropey, the FM radio ditto.
But Orange has come up trumps where it really matters, with good build quality and an excellent screen considering the price of this handset.
With those factors in mind we think it would be a great intro to Android for the more cash-strapped among us.
We liked
Smashing screen. Capacitive with pinch to zoom support and a good resolution at 480 x 800 pixels. And at 3.5 inches it's large enough for web browsing.
It's got nice build quality featuring a sturdy fascia with a pleasing visual design, but without flashy buttons all over the place.
It also has some nice Orange widgets that seem to have been well thought through.
You can ditch the Orange Home screen design and go right back to plain vanilla Android if you'd rather.
Orange bundles a 2GB microSD card. Not huge, we know, but on a budget handset the pennies really count for Orange as much as for the purchaser, and it's a nice little plus point.
Even though the headphones are a bit ropey, we like the inline pause/play button they sport.
We disliked
No integrated Facebook or Twitter clients. Not a disaster, since you can download them from the Android Market easily enough, but we'd have liked to see them on-board out of the box.
The camera needs a flash and, well, to be better all round really, and the video camera really needs a kick up the, er, specifications.
The FM radio leaves a lot to be desired in terms of usability – perhaps not the phone to be getting if listening to commentary at football matches is paramount.
Verdict
Every operator has its budget Android offering and you can also get several SIM free.
The Orange San Francisco is the best of the bunch because Orange seems to have got the bottom line features right.
Good, large, high-resolution screen, nice solid hardware design, neat array of Orange widgets, a processor that doesn't get challenged till you start to thrash it. Thumbs up!

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