Live photos of Alcatel Mandarina Duck
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Table of contents:
- Positioning
- Design, size, controls
- Display
- Keyboard
- Battery
- Menu
- Camera
- Performance
- Music player
- Impressions
Sales package:
- Handset
- Li-Ion battery (700 mAh)
- User Guide
- Charger
- microSD memory card (varies by region)
- MiniUSB data cable
- Bag clip
- Wired stereo-headset
Positioning
Alcatel has nestled in the niche for reasonably cheap solutions and with every new phone they are trying to accomplish the impossible – come up with an affordable, yet snazzy device enjoying quality materials. What may seem like an unrealistic dream at a glance is being proven by Alcatel these days, as they keep rolling out handsets with decent materials that are normally utilized in higher-end offerings. But the world knows very few miracles, and there is no escaping from the fact that inside these handsets are only as good as budget solutions, and even subpar, compared to similar devices in this class. The reason being that you can’t deliver cool looks, a slew of features and a light price tag all in one package – you can play around with any two of these parameters, but only at the expense of the third one. If some vendor will actually break through the limitations of this formula, its merit will be on par with the creation of a perpetuum mobile.
People across the globe usually have very resembling behavioral patterns, and tend to base their choices of accessories, clothing, whatever not on real utility, but rather specific brands. Handsets co-designed with leading fashion houses are no new word in the industry, but it has been only a year since they hit the mass market hard with the debut of Alcatel and Sagem in this segment. While Alcatel’s initial foray into this niche with a couple of Elle-branded solutions wasn’t much of a success, it did attract some interest to the phone maker. Their latest offspring, the Mandarina Duck, is a different creature, though – this brand is renowned for its bags and a quite adequate pricing policy, and in its turn, Alcatel has managed to come up with a fitting phone, building upon the Alcatel OT C701. All in all, the differences between these two phones don’t go any deeper than the design. The handset’s innards haven’t changed much since the C701, bar new wallpapers and the main menu that’s now in keeping with Mandarina Duck’s style.
Alcatel OT C701:





Design, size, controls
The handset comes in three flavors Green, Lilac, Red Cherry, which all have their top flip outfitted in glossy plastic, while the back is ornamented with a duck, and the base is decked out in velvety plastic. All in all, the Mandarina Duck is very palm-friendly, and feels nice in the hand.












Display
The handset’s main display shows up to 65K colors (TFT) with a pale picture that isn’t always clearly visible in the sun. The screen measures 1.5 inches from corner to corner and offers a resolution of 128×160 pixels, allowing it to accommodate up to 6 text and 3 service lines. The fronts utilized in the Mandarina Duck are quite sharp and generally were never an issue. On balance, the display found here is downright meager and would rather suit an ultra low-end solution.
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Keyboard
The numeric keys are quite sizable and thus comfortable to use. All buttons are lit in relatively dim blue, which still seems to be well-visible in various environments. The Mandarina Duck’s keypad also boasts a dedicated camera button.



Battery
The back cover feels very robust; underneath is a 750 mAh Li-Ion battery, rated for 10 hours talk time and 270 hours standby. In Moscow the Mandarina Duck stayed up and running for around 3 days at 40 minutes of calls and little to no usage of other features. We also put it through our music test and squeezed around 7 hours from it (with a stereo-headset plugged in). It takes the battery a fraction less than 2 hours to charge up.

Menu
With 10 Mb of built-in memory, the device allows you to install any applications, and store personal data. But you’d better use a memory card for such purposes, which is at your service to the last bit. The software department is standard for the company’s latest-and-greatest devices, being downright unified and set apart from the previous generation of phones, specifically the Alcatel S853. The differences lie in the Mandarina Duck’s less sophisticated functions – the phonebook in particular, omission of EMS support, voice notes in calendar, etc. All in all, this model is a downgraded edition of the C-825, having fewer settings on offer.
The main menu can be displayed as a 3×4 grid, or, if you like, a list or one-item-per-screen view. For all menu items, shortcut number navigation is available.

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USB-connection. The device enables you to use standard USB date cable, plus the battery starts recharging automatically, whenever you plug in the cable into a PC. Three operation modes are available – COM-port emulation, and USB Mass Storage (provides access only to the only memory card). Data transfer rate makes up about 550-660 Kb/s.
Phonebook. The Mandarina Duck can store up to 800 entries in its phonebook, plus the SIM-card memory is also available. In the general list, both numbers from the phone and SIM-card memory are displayed. The horizontally arranged tabs allow you to quickly jump from the general list to entries saved on the SIM-card, or to the handset’s own contact list. The last tab serves for showing groups too – unlike the vast majority of handsets, the groups here are not directly assigned to already submitted contacts, letting you select entries from the general list, or enter them yourself (by default, you are allowed to enter text and phone numbers). The groups are used for bulk mailing, and assigning custom pictures, tunes, or videos to callers.
In the settings, you can choose the fields you wants to be displayed during contact data input, which it is quite comfortable, since such fields, like address, for example, are of little use.
Any entry may contain such fields as Name (there is no separate field for Last Name), up to 4 phone numbers (field type is pre-defined), e-mail address, company name, birthday (not tied to the calendar). Also, you are free to set a personal ring tone, video clip and picture for each contact. When calling, the picture is displayed full-screen, number type, and group (if the contact belongs to one) are also shown.
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- 640×480
- 320×240
- 128×160
- 160×120
The multi-shot mode for taking 3 or 5 shots in rapid succession, as well as mosaic mode (resolution is reduced automatically) is available. Three types of file compression are available on the Mandarina Duck – economy, standard and high. The timer can be also set to 5, 10, or 15 seconds. White balance can be automatically adjusted for daylight, lamplight, fluorescent lamp or cloudy weather. The following overlays are available – grayscale, sepia green, sepia blue, color invert, gray invert, blackboard, whiteboard, copper carving, blue carving, embossment, contrast, and sketch. Plus, there are three other overlays which you can modify: Contrast, Sharpness, Brightness, and Saturation. The handset comes loaded with two types of frames - horizontal and vertical.
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| (+) maximize, 480×640, JPEG | (+) maximize, 480×640, JPEG |
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| (+) maximize, 480×640, JPEG | (+) maximize, 480×640, JPEG |
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| (+) maximize, 480×640, JPEG | (+) maximize, 480×640, JPEG |
My creations. All files acquired with the help of the camera are stored in this folder. The handset is quite sluggish when it comes to opening files (the memory type has no impact on it), as drawing thumbnails takes considerable amount of time.
Performance. The device does not support 3D Java, so we’ve managed to launch only the first two test packets. The results are more than just moderate - they are in fact inferior to all the products by other companies. Overall, this doesn’t have anything to do with the interface – the device turns out to be pretty swift.
Media Album. This item contains all multimedia files, but their categorization is quite quirky, at least for those who have not dealt with Alcatel products before. In the main list, you will find My Audios, My images, My videos etc. At that, these menu items are assigned for already loaded files, rather than for the photos made by the bundled camera. The latter are stored in My creations, where no categorization is applied. Memory card is viewed separately, data structure on the card is pre-defined, but you’ll have no hard time figuring out what is what by looking at the folders names. Plus, you can create your own folders as well.
In the lists, you may also see thumbnails of images that can be viewed in full screen mode.
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Music should be stored on the memory card in the Music folder, or the root directory, as otherwise the device won’t find it. Tracks can be sorted by genre, artist, or album, or you can call up the tracks you played back recently. Any track can be added to My Star List, which is something like a list of favorites. You are also enabled to throw various tracks onto playlists.
Wrapping it all up, the player does pretty well and is in line with other handsets. In stand by mode, track title and artist are flashing on the screen, but there is no place for a progress bar or remaining time. The Mandarina Duck also enjoys the progressive fast forward feature. The dedicated player controls allow you to manage playback as well as call up the player application itself (long press of the Play key).
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Equalizer – settings for the equalizers, that actually do alter sound experience, are surprisingly stored outside the player itself. With their help, you can choose one of the 7 equalizers – Normal, Bass, Dance, Classical, Treble, Party, Pop, and Rock. Each of them has 8 manageable bands, with the ability to adjust them in any way you wish.
Display. Here you can select wallpapers - for this purpose, any file may be used. Also in this item, you will pick images for the phone switch-on/off splash screen (any picture or video), and layout of the main menu (grid, list or thumbnails).
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Back to the table of contents >>>
Impressions
The volume of 64-chord polyphony is rather high (above the average), the phone rings loud enough just about in any environment. The silent alert power is a bit above the moderate. The reception quality is not the thing we would complain about.
The Alcatel Mandarina Duck sells for around 150 USD, whereas its close sibling, the Alcatel C701 is priced only at 125 USD, the differences being the design and the MD’s bag clip. But do these two things justify the gap? Probably not, but on balance, the Mandarina Duck is an okay phone, although not cutting-edge functionality-wise. For its class the handset offers good looks and decent materials, plus a known brand thrown in for good measure. It will very well suit those who would like to get a clamshell for next to nothing, but would really hate to sacrifice build quality and design at that. It won’t spark a fire among consumers, but many will like it.






















































































































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