vivo-X60-pro

Vivo is presently one of the lesser-known Chinese smartphone manufacturers selling its handsets in the West. However, with a legacy in low-priced smartphones, a few special top-tier innovations, and friends in excessive places, we ought to be listening to a lot greater about the company in time.


We’ve now viewed a variety of Chinese phone manufacturers make it large outdoor Asia with the aid of supplying high-spec phones at low prices, and Vivo ought to be set to follow the same path. In a few years, you should see Vivo phones sitting on store shelves subsequent to Samsung Galaxy and Apple iPhones.

Small brief about Vivo.

Vivo was founded in 2009, selling its phones in only China for a time. This changed in 2014, when the company extended its reach to a few more countries, predominantly in South Asia.

Vivo released its first smartphone in Europe in 2020 and now sells its devices in a few countries on the continent including the UK, France, Italy, and Spain.

The company additionally has a presence in a few non-Eurasian countries – particularly Colombia, Chile, and Australia.

Alongside Realme, Oppo, and OnePlus, Vivo is owned via tech conglomerate BBK Electronics, though the actual relationship between BBK’s brands has usually been unclear.

However, we have viewed some sharing of tech improvements between these brands in the past, so it is possible that Vivo should be part of this.

What kind of phones does Vivo make?

Vivo’s flagship line of smartphones is the X range, with the most latest addition, the Vivo X60. These phones feature top-end specs, however generally at mid-range prices. They regularly come with camera improvements such as a physical gimbal sensor on the primary camera, for extended optical image stabilization.

In addition, Vivo has its Y-series of devices, such as the Y70 and Y20s. In general, these are dependable, inexpensive devices. Higher numbers correlate to higher specs and greater prices.

The Vivo Apex smartphones are really worth a look, too – even though you can’t purchase these handsets. They’re idea devices that Vivo launches annually, to exhibit off tech that later trickles down into smartphones the company launches to market.

So, the X and Y series are the two smartphone ranges that Vivo sells in Europe, however, it produces masses of different phones that aren’t sold in all countries.

Notable among these is iQOO, a line that’s committed to excessive overall performance (mainly for gaming), and the V and S series of phones, which sit between the X and Y lines. We’re ready on these models to make their way to Europe.

Vivo phone available information

At the time of writing, Vivo is much less than a year old in Europe. As such, it’s hard to specify launch patterns for its phones in the region.

The first batch of Vivo’s phones have been launched in Europe in October 2020, comprising the X51, Y70, Y20s, and Y11s; the X51 had been launched before in the year elsewhere.

The Vivo X60, the company’s latest flagship, noticed a Chinese launch in December 2020. There’s an opportunity we ought to see this device come to Europe, too, even though we have no thinking as to when.

what is another tech Vivo sells?

Alongside its range of smartphones, Vivo additionally sells audio units such as the Vivo TWS Neo earbuds, which show up designed for use alongside the company’s phones.

In late-2020, the brand additionally unveiled the Vivo Watch even though it isn’t reachable in Europe, and there’s no word if it will appear, or whether or not we’ll be seeing extra wearables from the company in the future.

It’s possible that, as Vivo expands, it ought to go into areas such as fitness trackers, tablets, and even over-ear headphones though that’s simply speculation for now.

Vivo X60 Pro Plus Price, Official Look, Design, Camera, Specifications, Features, and Sale Details

The main module is built around a large 1/1.3” ISOCELL GN1. This one has a classic OIS rather than a gimbal. This camera’s large 1.2µm pixels (2.4µm with binning) and the bright f/1.57 aperture are a great foundation for excellent low-light imaging.

Super Night Mode 2.0 builds on that – it can work at just 0.01 lux (that’s the illumination of a quarter moon). It improves light sensitivity by 38.8% and focus accuracy by 22% compared to the previous generation.

  
50 MP main camera (GN1 sensor) and 48 MP ultra wide (IMX598) with gimbal stabilization

The ultrawide module (114°, 14mm) is the one with the gimbal stabilization system. It can correct ±3° of movement, around three times what a typical OIS system can manage. This camera is based on the IMX598 sensor with 48MP resolution and 0.8µm pixels (this used to be the main sensor in the X50).

Next up is the 8MP periscope camera with 5x optical magnification, which can go up to 60x with digital zoom. There’s a second telephoto camera on board with a 32MP sensor and a 50mm lens (2x magnification) for mid-range zoom and portrait shots.

vivo X60 Pro+ unveiled: large main sensor, upgraded gimbal stabilization, dual tele lenses

Check out that ZEISS logo on the back of the phone. The T* anti-reflective coating is applied to both sides of each lens. There’s also a nano-crystaline structure that is the first of its kind on a smartphone.

Now we can move on to the chipset. Snapdragon 888’s GPU is 35% faster and 20% more power-efficient than the previous generation. vivo paired the chipset with fast LPDDR5 RAM, which can transfer data at up to 6,400 Mbps (16% higher than the X50 Pro+ RAM). Storage uses an enhanced version UFS 3.1 that is 14% faster than the storage of the old Pro+.

Snapdragon 888 chipset • 8/12 GB of LPDDR5 RAM • 128/256 GB UFS 3.1 storage • 35% faster GPU

The curved 6.56” OLED display has a 120Hz refresh rate and 240Hz touch sampling rate. It also boasts HDR10+ and very accurate color calibration. It’s properly bright too, topping out at 1,300 nits. Its one weakness is that the resolution is 1080p+ (sounds like perfect for many). The camera can record 4K HDR10+ videos for your enjoyment as well as 8K videos.

vivo X60 Pro+ unveiled: large main sensor, upgraded gimbal stabilization, dual tele lenses

What’s left? The battery – 4,200 mAh power pack can be charged at 55W through the USB-C port. There’s no wireless charging though, even though the back is covered with high-grade leather (available in Phantom Blue and Classic Orange).

 
The vivo X60 Pro+ has a high-quality leather back, available in: Classic Orange • Phantom Blue

And by the way, the phone comes with a charger, cable, USB-C headset and a USB-C to 3.5 mm adapter in the box (to use with the Cirrus CS4313 DAC), plus a clear protective case. You know, unlike some phones.

vivo X60 Pro+ unveiled: large main sensor, upgraded gimbal stabilization, dual tele lenses

The vivo X60 Pro+ is available in two versions, the base model has 8GB of RAM and 128GB storage and costs CNY 5,000 ($775/€635). If you need more memory, the 12/256 GB version is CNY 6,000.

Here’s a table comparing the Pro+ with the vivo X60 and X60 Pro+. It’s in Chinese, but the relevant numbers should be easy enough to read. All three phones have 5G connectivity and 5 nm chipsets that run OriginOS 1.0 (based on Android 11).

vivo X60 Pro+ unveiled: large main sensor, upgraded gimbal stabilization, dual tele lenses

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