Nov 5, 2018

OPPO A7 EXPECTED TO LAUNCH BY 13 NOVEMBER, LEAKED RENDERS REVEAL COLOUR OPTIONS

The Oppo A7 launch seems imminent now, and per some reports, the smartphone may be made official in China on 13 November.
OPPO A7 EXPECTED TO LAUNCH BY 13 NOVEMBER, LEAKED RENDERS REVEAL COLOUR OPTIONS

Days ahead of the launch, some renders and promotional images of the Oppo A7 have been leaked, which reveal quite a bit about the possible design language of the device.
First spotted by AndroidPure, one leaked render of the Oppo A7 reveals the possible colour options for the smartphone. One of the options seems inspired by the Vivo X23 Star Edition phone and features green and golden colour variants with gold rims and frames.
Further, looks-wise, the Oppo A7 is bears an uncanny resemblance to the Realme 2 smartphone, with only the notch being different. It's now a waterdrop design.
As for the specifications, according to a report by MySmartPrice, the Oppo A7 is expected to be powered by an octa-core 1.8GHz Snapdragon 450 chipset with an Adreno 506 GPU. The device is believed to be launched in two variants – 3GB RAM + 32GB storage and 4GB RAM + 64GB storage.
The smartphone is likely to come with a 6.2-inch 18:9 FullView 2.5D curved glass display with Corning Gorilla Glass 3. The phone will run Color OS 5.2 based on Android 8.1 Oreo.
In terms of cameras, the Oppo A7 will reportedly sport a 13 MP sensor with LED flash + 2MP depth sensor at the back. According to leaks, a 4,230mAh battery will power the phone.

Motorola One Power spotted running Android 9 Pie on Geekbench

Motorola has confirmed to release Android Pie update for its One Power by the end of this year.


Motorola One Power, the first Android One smartphone from the Lenovo-owned company, is set to receive Android 9 Pie update. At the launch of Motorola One and Motorola One Power in Berlin in August, the company had confirmed that the first major update based on Android Pie will arrive by the end of this year. Now, the smartphone has been spotted running the latest version of Google’s mobile operating system on Geekbench.

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A benchmark listing for the smartphone suggests the company is on track to release Android 9 Pie update by the end of this year. The smartphone was expected to launch with Android Pie out-of-the-box when the company launched the device in India in September. However, it instead came with Android 8.1 Oreo, and Motorola reiterated its plan to push an update by the end of 2018.

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Motorola, which once held a significant market share in emerging markets, lost out to Chinese smartphone makers. Under Lenovo, the company seems to be reshaping its mobile business by launching Android One devices with deeper integration for Google’s core applications. Motorola One Power is the first device in the series, and it is priced at Rs 15,999 in India.

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With Android 9 Pie, Motorola One Power will gain key new features like dual 4G VoLTE support, gesture-based user interface, improved privacy setting and features like Digital Wellbeing. The Digital Wellbeing feature lets Android users check the number of times they unlock their device and number of notifications received by them throughout the day.

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Android 9 Pie also brings system-wide design changes and adaptive display and adaptive battery that use machine learning to tweak user settings. The Motorola One Power features a 6.2-inch Full HD+ display, Qualcomm Snapdragon 636 SoC, 4GB RAM, 64GB storage. It sports dual rear camera setup with 12-megapixel and 5-megapixel sensors and a 12-megapixel selfie shooter. It is backed by a 5,000mAh battery, and comes in black color.

Realme phones to get price hike after Diwali, hints CEO Madhav Seth

Realme India CEO Madhav Seth tweeted that the fall in Rupee is negatively affecting the brand as it works on low margins.
Realme phones to get price hike after Diwali, hints CEO Madhav Seth


Realme has had a solid debut this year after releasing four very impressive smartphones in India. One of the reasons behind the brand's success is introducing segment-first devices such as the cheapest notched phone with the Realme 2 and the cheapest Snapdragon 660 phone with the Realme 2 Pro. The other major reason behind their popularity is pricing, which has been very competitive. However, this might not be the case for long as the company may increase the prices of its phones post Diwali.

Realme India CEO Madhav Seth tweeted that the fall in Rupee is negatively affecting a brand like Realme that works on low margins. This "indicates that we might have to upgrade the pricing, just to make sure that we continue to give you the best technology in our upcoming offerings." Seth's tweet does not confirm a price hike, but it certainly hints at the same. Xiaomi, another brand that works on low margins, also said back in September when it launched the Redmi 6 series at introductory prices that the pricing will be increased due to the sliding rupee.
As of now it is still unclear what kind of hike we are looking at. Madhav Seth in his tweet said that the company will try to bring the same offering at "best prices" so we will have to wait and see what happens after Diwali. You can also expect Xiaomi's budget Redmi 6, Redmi 6A and Redmi 6 Pro phones to get a price hike after Diwali as well, although the company is yet to reveal anything on that just yet.
The Realme 2 Pro and Realme C1 are the latest phones from Realme, priced at Rs 13,990 and Rs 6,999, respectively. This makes the Realme 2 Pro the cheapest Snapdragon 660 phone in the market right now. It also makes the Realme C1 one of the cheapest notched phones available for consumers in India. Realme has already teased a new phone by the end of the year, which will be the first to run the latest Helio P70 chipset.

India iPhone sales to fall for first time in four years: Counterpoint

For the whole of 2018, Apple was set to sell about 2 million iPhones, as Indians baulk at high prices for the devices, driven by trade tariffs and a weak rupee.

India iPhone sales to fall for first time in four years Counterpoint



Apple’s iPhone sales are set to dip by around a quarter in India’s holiday season fourth quarter, putting them on course for the first full-year fall in four years, industry research firm Counterpoint said on Saturday. The Cupertino, California company’s struggle to break through with India’s 1.3 billion consumers swung more sharply into focus this week after Apple blamed a disappointing set of sales forecasts on a handful of big emerging markets.
Chief Executive Tim Cook said after publishing third quarter results that sales were flat in India in the fourth quarter, which includes a month-long festive season culminating this week in Diwali- a bumper period for electronics sales. Neil Shah, research director at HongKong-based Counterpoint Research, said on Saturday its channel checks pointed to numbers for the quarter in the range of 700,000 to 800,000 units, down from about a million a year ago. For the whole of 2018, Apple was set to sell about 2 million phones – a drop of about a million from last year, he said, as Indians baulk at high prices for the devices, driven by trade tariffs and a weak rupee.
“Sales are set to drop for the first time in four years,” Shah said. “If you look at Q3 – it was 900k last year and this (year) is almost 450k. “iPhones have gone costlier and the features and specs aren’t that compelling. The install base of Android has grown vastly; the new customer base (for Apple) is not coming.”
Cook on Thursday called the company’s problems in India “speed bumps along a very long journey” and most analysts say that the prestige of Apple’s brand should allow it to claim back lost ground as Indians’ spending power continues to grow. Shah said that, while more than half the phones sold this year were older iPhone models, high selling prices meant Apple’s Indian revenue should still be flat or slightly higher than a year ago.

Why I won't be buying the new OnePlus 6T even though it's a great phone

Let me get this straight. I'm a OnePlus fan ever since the OnePlus One came to be four years ago. Note that I'm a fan of the phones, not the company as in my eyes, those are two different things. And it's not that I dislike the OnePlus 6T per se, but I believe that it provides insufficient reasons to upgrade.
Why I won't be buying the new OnePlus 6T even though it's a great phone
Why I won't be buying the new OnePlus 6T even though it's a great phone

TOP 10 BY DAILY INTEREST

 DeviceDaily hits 
1.OnePlus 6T55,404
2.Samsung Galaxy A7 (2018)45,455
3.Huawei Mate 20 Pro39,790
4.Xiaomi Mi Mix 337,385
5.Xiaomi Redmi Note 6 Pro35,551
6.Xiaomi Pocophone F131,425
7.Samsung Galaxy A9 (2018)28,658
8.Huawei Honor Magic 227,871
9.Samsung Galaxy S827,207
10.Huawei Honor 8X26,723


And if you are here to read the usual stuff like the lack of 3.5mm audio jack, wireless charging, microSD card support and water and dust protection, move over. We've been through this too many times and I don't find any of those a deal-breaker for me. I stream my music and videos from Netflix, YouTube and Spotify even on cellular while using Bluetooth headphones. And I haven't used my phone underwater ever nor do I find wireless charging a necessity with the super fast Dash charging.

Why I won't be buying the new OnePlus 6T even though it's a great phone

TOP 10 BY FANS

 DeviceFavorites 
1.Xiaomi Redmi Note 5 Pro1,287
2.OnePlus 61,237
3.LG V301,112
4.Xiaomi Mi A1 (Mi 5X)1,095
5.Apple iPhone X1,027
6.Huawei Mate 10 Pro954
7.OnePlus 5T923
8.Nokia 7 plus895
9.Samsung Galaxy S9+887
10.Huawei P20 Pro790

So I am using a OnePlus 3 as my daily driver ever since it launched two and a half years ago and after being disappointed by the new OnePlus 6, I decided to reach out to the company's support and change the battery of my old phone and keep it a little longer. The process was surprisingly painless and in just three working days the phone was back with me with a new battery, free of charge. Maybe because at that point it was still covered by its warranty, but I can't be sure.
Anyway, with the new battery, I felt like I was holding a brand new phone. Not only did the battery replacement boosted the endurance but it also breathed life into my old OnePlus 3. The performance was through the roof - no more lags, no hiccups, no nothing. It's only then when I finally appreciated the clean stock-ish nature of OnePlus' OxygenOS.

Why I won't be buying the new OnePlus 6T even though it's a great phone

I could even argue that the day to day performance on my OnePlus 3 is negligibly worse than the OnePlus 6T's. It seems like the Snapdragon 820 is still pretty snappy and handles app opening and switching perfectly. Even the frame rate of the animations is plenty fluent.
So in the end, I won't be getting major real-world performance gains by spending €550 on the 6T.
Moreover, I find my OnePlus 3 easier to use with one hand and the 5.5-inch screen is perfectly fine for watching movies and browsing. It's so much easier to handle. And there's no issues with brightness and color reproduction. In fact, as our test confirmed, the sunlight legibility of my OnePlus 3 is somewhat better than the OnePlus 6T's.
Why I won't be buying the new OnePlus 6T even though it's a great phone

Let's talk about the camera now. OnePlus' phones have gone a long way in this department, but the 6T still comes short of most of its competitors in the high-end segment. Sure, for the asking price, the device is arguably the best camera phone, but for posting on social media, my phone does a pretty good job. I've sideloaded Google Pixel's camera app on the OnePlus 3 and the results are just mind-blowing. Just look at that portrait shot with pretty poor lighting and no second camera for depth sensing.

And I just feel compelled to repeat this: OnePlus, please add a secondary camera that makes sense on the OnePlus 7. A telephoto or ultra-wide angle would really make a difference.
Why I won't be buying the new OnePlus 6T even though it's a great phone

What's next? Battery? Well, with my usage, I can easily go through two days on a single charge or even three if I plug in the handset for 20-30 minutes while I shower. Once again, the Dash charge is a game-changer for anyone coming from the Quick Charge standard. The OnePlus 6T will surely last longer, but the fast charging means that I stand to gain little from it.
Why I won't be buying the new OnePlus 6T even though it's a great phone

And I really don't like the fragile glass sandwiches these days. My OnePlus 3 has taken some beating over the years, but a few scuffs on the bottom is all it has to show for it and I don't really mind those. Whereas a cracked back would be such an eye-sore that a replacement would be necessary. If you are doing a glass phone, then at least include the wireless charging.
At first, I didn't think that OnePlus would do so such a ballsy move with the in-display fingerprint reader. Even the Mate 20 Pro feels a bit sluggish when unlocking and any other optic sensor currently on the market can't match the speed of a conventional one. The OnePlus 6T does get pretty close to that and it's not only usable, it's actually a lot faster than the one on my OnePlus 3.
Why I won't be buying the new OnePlus 6T even though it's a great phone

I think the main reason is the much-optimized software and the fact that OnePlus uses Goodix's optic sensor instead of the sluggish one found on the vivo NEX S for example. Still, while it's great on its own it's not I can't shake off the feeling that the tech just isn't there yet. Maybe next year with the OnePlus 7?
Why I won't be buying the new OnePlus 6T even though it's a great phone

However, I still struggle to find a good enough reason to make the jump. It just feels like €550 is just too much to spend just to have a cool in-display fingerprint reader and a slightly better camera. Hell, I don't even use my camera all that often. Or maybe I'm getting too old, my OnePlus 3 just molded in my hand and I lost flexibility. Besides, with the Android 9.0 Pie coming to the 3/3T, it almost feels like I have unfinished business with that phone.
I am pretty sure there are plenty of other Android fans out there who are in the same boat me. For good or bad, the smartphone market has matured to a point where buying a flagship is a long-term investment, especially if your OEM provides software support for longer than two years. Wasn't that the whole point of buying a flagship phone? I guess I finally settled.