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Mark Pickavance

Azulle Ally Android PC review

Azulle Ally.

Azulle Ally: 30-second review

Many have observed that Microsoft’s once vice-like grip on the world of computing has significantly slackened, allowing alternatives like Linux and its derivatives of Android and ChromeOS to take a chunk of what was once the Windows pie.

The Azulle Ally Android PC is the personification of that destiny, with technology designed for mobile devices but repackaged into the case of a Mini PC.

What’s important to realise is that all the Azulle website's images are renders, but as it's mostly constructed of plastic, the Ally doesn’t look radically different in real life.

It’s a small 5 x 3.7 x 1-inch box (125 x 93 x 25mm) with only tiny air vents on the metal underside. Inside is a Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 series ARM SoC, and on the outside are four USB ports, two HDMI, a LAN port, a MicroSD card slot and a 3.5mm audio jack.

The unit has a US outlet PSU rated for 5V at 3A (15W), and it has no accessories.

Our experience running this machine was jarring, to say the least. Installed on the Ally is a bare version of Android, and it is initially difficult to know which release since there is no system ‘About’.

There are a handful of pre-installed apps, no app store (no even a Chinese one). The only practical way to get software onto this machine is to download it from an APK site or do that elsewhere and use a USB key to make it available.

Given how far Android has come in the past decade, the Ally was a reminder of how shockingly bad it was once. The platform is QCOM, a version of Android 10, and it thinks it is running on a phone that can’t device if it’s in portrait or landscape mode.

Unless you have a simple Android app that will run on a machine with 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage that needs to output to a monitor and be Ethernet connected, there are many tablets available that have a much better spec for this money.

Azulle Ally: Price and availability

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
  • How much does it cost? Starting from £193
  • When is it out? Available now
  • Where can you get it? You can get it directly from Azulle

At the time of writing, the Ally is only available from the maker, Azulle, and costs £193.

There is only one version, and it’s black.

For comparison, NiPoGi makes a Mini Desktop system, the W-11, that has 8GB of memory and 256GB of storage and costs only £140. You could install ChromeOS Flex on it to have the same capabilities but a much better experience.

Therefore, this hardware is not realistically priced.

  • Value: 3 / 5

Azulle Ally: Specifications

Azulle Ally: Design

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
  • Raw Android 10 made for a phone
  • Basic construction
  • No upgrades

Removing the Ally from its box, the quality of construction and the lack of accessories hinted at its lack of sophistication.

It’s a textured plastic box with no active cooling inside, a power button on the front and ports on the right and rear sides.

All the USB is 2.0, and the only nice feature is a MicroSD card slot that allows you to add storage to the limited 64GB that comes pre-installed.

That’s a valuable feature because there appears to be no practical way to upgrade this machine in any other way, as all the components are surface mounted.

Azulle might call this a Mini PC, but it’s more akin to a phone with extra USB ports and HDMI outputs, and as such, it doesn’t offer the flexibility or power that a PC can provide.

Even using phone technology, this machine might have been quite useful. But the least possible effort went into the Android 10 installation, which often talks about ‘the phone’ and even has controls like display brightness that do nothing on this hardware.

When it first launched, we assumed something was wrong. Because it had so few icons on the desktop, and the interface contained none of the usual suspects. We’ve seen fan-made versions of Android that had more inherent functionality, and the lack of an app store or the standard Google application set makes for some challenging exercises.

It is possible to side-load applications, if awkwardly, but the core of this system seems confused about what scenario it is running and if it’s a phone, a tablet or something else.

When apps are run, they can send the Ally into rotation on its side mode or bordered portrait or landscape or switch between them randomly. The number of apps that ran well was limited, and a few refused to install or run correctly.                                     

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)

The success of Android is largely based on the application selection and how most things work on the majority of devices. And once you’ve taken those things away, there isn’t much that’s compelling about a version of Linux with no means to report the problems it patently has.

I did try to install ChromeOS Flex on it to see if it would run that acceptably, but it isn’t possible to make it boot off an external USB drive.

Unless you are an expert in writing Android apps and debugging them on a system without all the standard components, this isn’t a useful machine.

  • Design: 2 / 5

Chuwi CoreBox 5th: Hardware

  • Qualcomm Snapdragon 665
  • Limited RAM and storage
  • Only USB 2.0

Imagine that you were trapped on a desert island with a pile of electronics, and you fancied making a desktop system from phone parts. That is, in a nutshell, the Azulle Ally.

At its heart is the Qualcomm Snapdragon 665, a chip made for entry-level phones that sports eight cores in a two-pairs-of-four configuration. Half the cores are Kryo 260 Gold at 2.0 GHz, and the others are Kryo 260 Silver at 1.8 GHz. These are supported by the Adreno 610 that runs at 950MHz, a GPU not destined to be the choice of gamers.

Built on Samsung’s old 11nm FinFET fab, this SoC is mostly about power efficiency, explaining why the Ally doesn’t need active cooling to keep working.

It includes the Qualcomm Spectra 165 image signal processing module, but as this machine doesn’t have a camera, it can put its feet up indefinitely. And the same can be said for the LTE modem and plenty of other functionality.

In some phones that use it, this SoC comes with 8GB of memory and 128GB of storage, but here, it was blessed with half of that amount in both aspects. It is possible to use external storage, but as all the USB ports and the MicroSD card slot all use USB, the performance of any transfer will be a maximum of 40MB/s.

It would probably be quicker to download files using the integrated single channel 802.11ac (Wi-Fi 5) or the 1GB Ethernet LAN port.

One interesting aside is that Azulle claims that the two HDMI ports can output in 1080P resolution, but the display has a fixed resolution of 1280 x 720, and we didn’t find a way to get to the higher resolution.

Another feature that might be useful is that the front of the Ally appears to have an Infrared sensor, presumably for a remote control. It is not mentioned in any of the documentation, nor is a remote provided.

  • Features: 2 / 5

Azulle Ally: Performance

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
  • Software issues
  • Performance problems
  • Lacklustre

Firstly, this isn’t the typical selection of tests for a Mini PC or even an Android phone. The test selection has also been altered as lots of apps didn’t work correctly or wouldn’t install.

What did work was 3DMark and PCMark, but we had no success with GeekBench or GFX.

Geekbench wouldn’t install, and GFX would run out of memory on each test.

These results are way below what we’d expect from a modern tablet running the MediaTek Helio G99 SoC, and the SM6125 Snapdragon 665 is a fraction of that performance level.

To put this in perspective, the Unihertz Titan Slim, which uses the Helio P70, still managed a Wildlife score of 735. Triple that of this unit.

The only phone we’ve seen recently slower than this was the Ulefone Armor 16 Pro, which used the Helio G25.

The same SoC is utilised in the Xiaomi Redmi Note 8, among other cheap phones, and one of those can be bought for around £150. What’s interesting about the Snapdragon 665 is that when used in a phone, its critical feature is its power efficiency, giving good battery life. Which begs the obvious question of why you might put it in a device with no battery?

Whatever the answer might be, it wasn’t to go quickly.

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
  • Performance: 2 / 5

Azulle Ally: Verdict

The Ally isn’t a pal that most people will want, as the due diligence needed for Android isn’t apparent. The hardware seems fine, if modest by today's standards, but the version of Android 10 it uses has more holes than Swiss cheese.

That makes it significantly less useful unless you are an Android expert.

The bigger problem here is that numerous Android tablets around cost a very similar amount, have a later and more polished version of Android on them, and have much higher-performance hardware. Why you would buy this over them is a question we can’t answer. If this was much cheaper, like half the price, and it had a fully implemented version of Android 13, then it might be conceivably a valid choice.

But as it stands, this is an overpriced, underspecified and poorly implemented solution.

Should you buy a Azulle Ally?

(Image credit: Azulle)

Buy it if...

Don't buy it if...

Also consider

If this Mini PC doesn't fit your requirement, check out our selection of the Best Mini PCs

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