Tuesday, 5 May 2015

Gionee Elife E8 with 6-inch HD AMOLED display,3GB RAM

Gionee Elife E8 (GN9008), the company’s upcoming E series flagship has been certified in China on TENAA

The company already confirmed that the it will launch the camera-centric Elife E8 later this year during the launch of its Elife S7 smartphone in India in April.


 According to the listing, the smartphone will feature a 6-inch Quad HD AMOLED screen, will be powered by a 2GHz Octa-Core processor, 3GB RAM, Android 5.0 OS with Amigo UI on top and 4G support.

No details about its rear camera but according to earlier GFX Bench listing, it will come with a 24MP rear camera. It will come with a 8-megapixel front-facing camera and have 4G LTE support. 

It has a fingerprint sensor on the back, below the camera. The listing was first spotted by GizChina



               Gionee Elife E8 specifications :

              6-inch (2560 x 1440 pixels) Quad HD AMOLED display
               
              2 GHz octa-core MediaTek MT6795 processor with PowerVR G6200 GPU
               
              3GB RAM, 32GB of internal memory, expandable memory up to 128GB
               
              Android 5.0 (Lollipop) with Amigo UI
               
              24MP rear camera with dual LED Flash, 8MP front-facing camera
               
              Dimensions: 164.0 × 82.3 × 9.6 mm; Weight: 207.0 g
               
              4G LTE, Wi-Fi 802.11 ac/b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0 with A2DP, GPS
               
              3520mAh battery

Monday, 4 May 2015

This iPhone 6 case harvests energy from external radio frequencies

Today at the TechCrunch Disrupt event in New York, the future of smartphone batteries might have been introduced. Nikola Labs took the stage a few hours ago at the conference and unveiled a case for the iPhone 6 that can charge the smartphone by harvesting energy from external radio frequencies. 



According to the company, more than 90 percent of the energy that smartphones use to maintain voice and data connections is wasted in thin air. The case unveiled today by Nikola Labs can capture that energy and use it to charge the smartphone, allegedly expanding the battery life of the iPhone 6 by about 30 percent. 

To enable this magical charging capability, the case uses two pieces of technology developed and patented by the Ohio State University. The first is a "harvesting" antenna that can capture energy from the radio frequencies surrounding the smartphone, and the second is a RF-DC converter that transforms this energy into DC current that the smartphone can actually use. Nikola Labs says that its case can harvest energy from Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and LTE frequencies. The case does not store energy, and the process is a passive and continuous one, meaning that power is added to the smartphone very slowly.


At the TechCrunch Disrupt NewYork conference, the company demonstrated that the case can also draw power from radio frequencies not emitted by the smartphone: when placed next to Wi-Fi router, the case started generating DC current. 

Nikola Labs plans to transform this technology into an actual product by launching a Kickstarter campaign. The campaign will debut in about a month's time, the case will be priced at $99, and the first units are expected to start shipping at some point by the end of September.



Asus Zenfone 2 with 4 GB RAM and 64 GB storage to be priced $337 and also 128GB price $595

Taiwan based Asus has quietly unveiled a 128 GB variant of its recently launched Asus Zenfone 2 smartphone. The smartphone has been listed on Flipkart with a 'coming soon' note and price tag of Rs 29,999.


The new variant of the Asus Zenfone 2 comes with a 5.5 inch display screen and Gorilla Glass 3 protection.

2.3 GHz quad-core Intel Atom processor with 4 GB RAM and 128 GB internal memory expandable via microSD card slot, the new variant of the smartphone is surely a beast of a device.
Also, the smartphones comes with Android 5.0 Lollipop and ZenUI topping the operating system which simply enhance the overall user experience.

Besides the latest 128 GB variant, the Zenfone 2 also comes in four other variants with slight differences mainly in the storage capacity and the processor




Friday, 1 May 2015

Fly launches budget smartphone Snap at $48 ( Rs. 2,999)

Fly Mobiles has launched a new mobile handset in India in an exclusive collaboration with Snapdeal.
The UK based mobile phone brand launched the Snap, which it claims, is the cheapest smartphone in India at Rs.2,999.

The Fly Snap is powered by a 1.3GHz Quad Core processor of an unknown make which is assisted by half a gig of RAM.
It has a 5MP primary camera and a 2MP front camera. It comes with a 4 inch IPS LCD display with a resolution of 480x800 pixels.
It also offers 3G connectivity, GPS and Bluetooth.
The phone runs on a 1500mAh battery.
On the storage front, the phone comes with 4GB internal storage which is expandable to an extra 16GB with the help of a MicroSD card.
The phone runs on Android KitKat 4.4.2 out of the box.
Recently, Fly Mobiles also launched Fly Qik+ in India which is an Octa-core processor phone priced at Rs.6,999 and is available on Snapdeal.
The phone also sports a 13 Megapixel primary camera and a 5 Megapixel front snapper.
It sports a 5 inch HD screen with a resolution of 720x1280. Even the Qik+ comes with Android KitKat 4.4.2 out of the box.

Samsung Galaxy Note 5 concept

Galaxy S6's metal and glass build, the Note 5 is slim at 0.31in (7.9mm), and is configured with pro-level hardware - 4K display, up to 128GB of built-in storage, USB Type C port, fingerprint scanner, and a huge 4100mAh battery. 



The 4K screen is already being rumored, as Samsung Display might be ready to ship 4K OLED panels before the end of the year. Rumors also spell a dual-edge screen version of the Galaxy Note 5, again running Ultra-HD resolution.

Microsoft hololens

Designed for comfort.


The headband is designed like a performance car with great weight distribution for a comfortable fit. Weight is distributed around the crown of your head, saving your ears or nose from undue pressure.

Power and grace.

Containing more computing power than the average laptop, Microsoft HoloLens is passively cooled without fans. With no wires, external cameras, or phone or PC connection required, you can move freely and untethered.

Adjustable fit.

The adjustment wheel in the headband ensures a comfortable fit for a wide range of adult head sizes.

Sensor fusion.

Microsoft HoloLens has advanced sensors to capture information about what you're doing and the environment you’re in
Spatial sound.
Using a scientific model that characterizes how the human ear receives sound from a specific location, Microsoft HoloLens synthesizes sound so that you can hear holograms from anywhere in the room.

Sensor fusion.

Microsoft HoloLens has advanced sensors to capture information about what you're doing and the environment you’re in.
Built-in speakers.
A precise audio experience without headphones that is immersive, yet won’t block out the real world.
Expectations

During its announcement, Microsoft said that HoloLens would be released “within the Windows 10 time frame.” That leaves a wide-open window for when we see a market release of HoloLens.

All the devices Microsoft brought to Build 2015 are prototype builds, so we expect a number of design enhancements and likely technological enhancements before anything becomes available for businesses or consumers. As such, no specifications were provided, no hardware features were revealed, and few questions were answered.



Microsoft did offer that the developers that engaged in more detailed demonstrations had high-praise for the platform. Given Microsoft’s Universal platform for apps, HoloLens has an important role to play.

What we got to use was clearly still a work in progress, but Microsoft is putting considerable resources behind the effort. That is a doubled-edged sword, expectations are being set very high early in development. That means HoloLens must be an undisputed home run once it reaches end-user heads.

Still, this is undoubtedly the future, and Microsoft has set a very high bar. We wrote it twice so far, and will write it again: This tech is really cool, and it is going to change the world

The first stop in the demonstration was a live performance given by Dan and Joe. Joe donned HoloLens while Dan went backstage and manned his PC (running Windows 10 of course). Joe executed a Skype video call with Dan. After showing how the video image (called a card) could be moved and pinned to certain parts of the room, the two then began trading holograms and each could manipulate the virtual space. 

HoloLens, Skype, Minecraft, and 3D printing

One of those holograms was a caricature city skyline of San Francisco. They made some changes to it and then sent it to a 3D printer. After that, Dan showcased a model of the Seattle Space Needle he created in Minecraft. He then passed it to Joe in the HoloLens environment where both of them could manipulate and resize the model. Joe scaled it down, and placed it on a shelf in the make-shift room that was the stage setting.


With the mind-share that Minecraft occupied during the second day of Build, from the Keynote to HoloLens demonstrations, it is clear that the next big chapter for Minecraft is that as a hologram creation environment.

LG G5 Concept

Much of the LG G5 concept focuses on giving consumers just what they are wanting. LG has consistently given consumers a smartphone that has all the features they need, and for a price they are willing to pay. LG looks to continue the trends of the successful concept of the current model, and build upon it at the same time. The new concept looks to improve on the speed, performance, efficiency, durability, color options, pricing points, and multi-tasking capabilities.

If the current rumors on a premium version with a bendable display hold-true, then this would give consumers yet one more reason to jump on board. As many smartphone manufacturers look to integrate the phone’s features with other peripherals such as a tablet or smartwatch, you can expect that LG will do the same with the G5 concept.
 It's a really cool design imagining of the eventual LG G5 that sees signature design touches, such as the minimalist front appearance and the back panel volume and power controls transferred onto a rectangular metal body. There's a long earpiece on the top and a big loudspeaker on the bottom. We're not quite sure what to think of this speaker placement, but this is a concept design, after all. Also, the smartphone is just 0.25in (6.4mm) thick.


So, would you like to see LG reinvent its G series flagships' design in this industrial manner? We're certainly curious to see what Samsung's rival can come up with if its designers dropped the leather and plastic and went to town with the CNC milling machines. This could actually happen by the end of the year

Apple Watch designed S1 chip with 512MB RAM suggested retail price

According to ABI Research’s new findings, Apple Watch has got few surprise elements in the design and a CPU design centered on a custom Apple S1 chip – labeled APL 0778.

After the popular teardown specialist’s iFixit teardown of the Apple Watch last week, ABI Research’s TeardownIQ went a step further to reveal more about it.
Apart from the custom processor design around S1 chip (APL 0778), ABI found a 512MB of RAM sourced from Elpida, 8GB of flash storage from SanDisk/Toshiba, and the integrated accelerometer/ gyroscope sensor handled by an STM chip. The Apple Watch also includes Broadcom (BCM43342) chip, NXP (NFC controller), and AMS (NFC booster) connectivity, IDT wireless charger receiver, and ADI capacitive touch solutions.

Here ABI says that the two surprise design elements in the Watch are ADI capacitive touch solutions, and the IDT wireless charging receiver. The IPX7 water-resistance Apple Watch packs components like Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and NFC radios in a weather resistant module.
The research firm which tears down devices to estimate component costs is revealing the same for Apple Watch Sport at $84

The hardware in the 38mm Sport adds up to 24 percent of Apple’s suggested retail price for the device, said IHS. The hardware components in the Apple Watch are the least expensive of any Apple product when compared to the total retail price of the device. As per IHS estimation, the most expensive component in the Apple Watch is the display (including OLED and Ion-X cover glass), priced at $20.50, followed by the processor on the S1 chip, priced at $10.20. In addition to component costs, IHS adds an estimated $2.50 for manufacturing costs, bringing its total estimate for the Apple Watch’s raw cost to $83.70
IHS Technology notes that its analysis does not take into account numerous other costs unrelated to hardware that would impact Apple’s overall margin on the Apple Watch. There is no accounting for software development or the creation of specialized manufacturing tools, research and development or marketing, logistics, amortized capital expenses, overhead, SG&A, R&D, software, IP licensing and other variables throughout the supply chain such as the EMS provider.The 38mm Apple Watch Sport has a suggested retail price of $349


ZTE Nubia Z9 with 3.5GHz octa-core CPU and 8GB of RAM

ZTE’s Nubia Z9 flagship phone has received TENAA certification that is the Chinese version of FCC. The certification has revealed some specs of the Nubia Z9.
ZTE has been hard at work in growing mindshare in Asia and the US, and they’ve done a really good job at it. We’re already impressed by products like the ZTE S pro


The phone has a model number NX508J and is said to come with 3.5GHz octa -core CPU and 8GB of RAM.

 It measures 8.9mm thick and weighing 180 grams. There will be a 5.15-inch 1080 x 1920 resolution screen and the phone offers dual SIM dual standby.


 It has 16MP rear and 8MP front facing camera and has a 3000mAh battery. The phone will run Android 5.0 and supports for GSM, CDMA, TD-SCDMA, TD-LTE, LTE FDD, WCDMA pipelines.

ZTE is expected to launch the Nubia Z9 on May 6th and should be priced at the equivalent of $484 USD

Thursday, 30 April 2015

Sony Xperia Z5 slim phablet with 4K display

The Sony Xperia Z4 announcement got us more puzzled rather than excited, and the company's smartphone plans are rather unclear at this point. Not long after the Z4's Japan-exclusive announcement, speculation about an all-new flagship smartphone for the rest of the world began. Renders of a certain Xperia P2 leaked, showing a fresh, if obviously "photoshopped" design, coupled with a heavyweight spec sheet. 



At this point, it's clear that there's something more to expect from Sony, but we can't do anything other than speculate and wait for the future to unfold. In the interim, here are some concept Xperia Z5 renders to throw on the table and ponder. Whoever created them envisioned a remarkably thin phablet with minimal screen bezels and a 4K-resolution screen. The build materials of choice are metal and glass. On the inside, one would find an octa-core CPU running at 3.2GHz, paired with 4GB of RAM. The phablet brings a fingerprint scanner and waterproofing on-board as well. There's a 4500mAh battery running the show. 


we don't get to learn anything about the rear cam, although 21MP is a safe bet. But the front snapper is a 10MP one, which ought to make selfie takers all the more happy! So, what do you think of this concept ?

Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 edge's Android 5.1 Lollipop update

This month, we told you that Samsung was working to bring an official Android 5.1 update to its latest flagship smartphones: the Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 edge. While there is no word on when we should expect the update to be released, Sam Mobile today revealed that Samsung is planning to include a new feature into the update. 


Reportedly, the Android 5.1 Lollipop update will bring a Guest Mode to the S6 and S6 edge. Already available on non-Samsung handsets running Android Lollipop (including version 5.0), Guest Mode will enable S6 and S6 edge owners to set up personal spaces for guests on their devices. It's said that the feature will even allow guests to use their fingerprints to access their personalized spaces.
 

It's not clear if Guest Mode will also be included in the Android 5.1 updates that Samsung is readying for other devices (though we don't see why not). Also, we still don't know exactly when the Galaxy S6 and S6 edge should get the 5.1 update, but we assume it's going to happen pretty soon.

Nokia is ready to sell its N1 Android tablet outside of China (starting in Taiwan)




Nokia released its N1 Android slate in January, but only in China, where the device is wildly successful. Now, Nokia is finally ready to launch the tablet in other markets. The company today introduced the N1 in Taiwan, during an event full of music and dance performances (you can watch that below). 


Taiwanese customers will be able to buy the Nokia N1 starting May, for around $268 (8,190 TWD in local currency). It's not clear exactly when the N1 will be available in other regions, but it should happen in the near future. However, Nokia may not plan to launch the tablet all over the world (for example, the US might not get it).


Running Android 5.0 Lollipop with Nokia's own Z Launcher on top, the N1 sports a 7.9-inch screen with a 4:3 aspect ratio and 1536 x 2048 pixels, and is powered by a 64-bit quad-core Intel Atom Z3580 CPU clocked at 2.3 GHz.



The tablet also features a 5 MP front-facing camera, an 8 MP rear camera, 2 GB of RAM, and 32 GB of internal memory (non-expandable). The N1 has a 6.9mm-thin aluminum body, and comes with a 5300 mAh battery

Wednesday, 29 April 2015

LG G4 benchmarked - how does the Snapdragon 808 fare ?


It's time to satisfy your curiosity about the newly announced LG G4's benchmark performance! The smartphone's announcement had us very interested in it too, as the LG G4 ships with an unorthodox spec sheet that sees the hexa-core Qualcomm Snadpragon 808 CPU, Adreno 418 GPU, and 3GB of LPDDR3 ram as its central pillars. No other smartphone that's currently on the market has the same configuration. 

In the first quarter of 2015, the Android competition has adopted four options. Camp Samsung uses its own Exynos 7420 chip paired with the ARM Mali T760 GPU. Camps HTC, Sony, and Xiaomi choose the Snapdragon 810 SoC and its advanced Adreno 430 GPU. And on the eastern front, there are the Meizu and Huawei camps, which rely upon the MediaTek MT6595 (PowerVR G6200MP4) and HiSilicon Kirin 930 (Mali -T628 GPU), respectively. Where does the LG G4 and its Snapdragon 808 position itself in this challenging landscape? And more importantly, does it deliver the expected flagship performance? Let's examine the benchmark results and find out!

Of course, one should be fully aware that synthetic benchmarks measure performance in pre-calculated tasks and scenarios, and are therefore not fully representative of normal everyday usage performance. What they do is form an accurate impression of how different smartphones and their specific hardware components handle themselves under intense load. Trying to assess normal usage performance via tests is not only impossible due to the subjective nature of the "normal usage" term, but it doesn't make much sense either. See, even the low and mid-range Android phones of today have the essential, basic tasks covered. We need to look beyond that to truly see what a smartphone is capable of, and that's where the benchmarks come in.


 VIEW ALL

CPU Performance

We use the Vellamo Metal and Basemark OS 2 tests to assess CPU performance. In these tests, the LG G4's Snapdragon 808 CPU generally performs great, moving slightly ahead of the power-hungry Snapdragon 810 CPU in the HTC One M9, and tailgating the Samsung Galaxy S6 & S6 edge's Exynos 7420 SoC. Although the SD 808 has just two Cortex-A57 cores, whereas the SD 810 and Exynos 7420 both have four, the 808 performs better than expected. Its results suggest that manufacturers could have an easier time squeezing peak CPU performance out of the lowlier SD 808 rather than the SD 810, 

 which is more powerful, but often falls victim to throttling and struggles to live up to its potential. Still, the 14nm Exynos 7420 is the top dog right now, while the Kirin 930 (Huawei P8) and MediaTek MT6595 (Meizu MX4) are unimpressive all-around. Their results boil down to the economical CPU cores used in both. The Kirin 930 utilizes exclusively Cortex-A53 cores modified by Huawei, while the MT6595 uses power-efficient Cortex A17 and A7 cores. Still, it has to be noted that both processors are designed as upper mid-range products, rather than flagship solutions. Hence, their performance is fair, but it illustrates a significant gap between "upper mid range performance" and "flagship performance". One would expect this gap to be narrower today, no?

3D Performance

You'll be able to run Modern Combat. But what about future titles?
The LG G4 and its Snapdragon 808 SoC generally position themselves slightly below the Samsung Galaxy Note 4 and its Snapdragon 805 SoC in the 3D performance tests AnTuTu and GFXBench. That's a disappointing turnout for a 2015 flagship smartphone, but it can be easily explained. Hot-headed it is, but the Snapdragon 810, which spearheads the 3D performance benchmarks, has a killer graphics unit - the Adreno 430. It reaches more than double the 3D performance of the LG G4'slowlier Adreno 418 GPU in the GFXBench rendering tests. The Adreno 430 even outguns the Mali T760 found in the Galaxy S6 & S6 edge's Exynos 7420 CPU, 

while Huawei and Meizu's upper mid-range solutions finish after the LG G4's Adreno 418, which is already behind the Snapdragon 805's Adreno 420 GPU (as measured in the Samsung Galaxy Note 4). However, it has to be considered that the Adreno 430 in the HTC One M9 is powering a 1080p display, which means it doesn't need to deal with as many pixels as a 2K resolution device, such as the LG G4, would have to. We'd assume that the odds would be evened out to an extent, if the Adreno 430 were to handle a QHD screen.
System performance

The AnTuTu test gives a good all-around perspective over system performance under load comparable to that of intense general usage. Unfortunately, the LG G4 is once again unable to stand up to flagship performance expectations.

 The AnTuTu results position it above the Snapdragon 805 in the Galaxy Note 4, and near general ballpark of HiSilicon and MediaTek's processors, which might be a good achievement on its own, but pales in comparison to flagship silicon performance. The Snapdragon 810 in the HTC One M9 runs significantly faster than the SD 808, Kirin 930, and MT6595 processors, only to be eclipsed by the Samsung Exynos 7420 in the Galaxy S6 edge.
Conclusion

All things considered, the LG G4 can be identified as an upper mid-range smartphone that incorporates flagship display and camera technologies. What does that mean in practical terms? We believe the most noticeable performance impact will be felt in heavy 3D gaming and 4K video recording scenarios, where the LG G4's "not quite there" graphics unit and older memory technology won't be able to deliver consistently smooth, effortless performance. To the strictly specs-minded buyer, the LG G4 probably doesn't seem like a good proposition in comparison to the Galaxy S6 edge at the high-end price point, or to Chinese "affordable flagships" at the low and mid-price point. But if we look at the vast majority of customers, the ones who are mostly after attractive design, a bright colorful display, and a solid camera, we think the LG G4 has what it takes to win their attention.