Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

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Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

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Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

Dunning Pitches White Sox Past Twins For 6th Straight Win
3-MIN READ

Dunning Pitches White Sox Past Twins For 6th Straight Win

Minnesota Twins' Ryan Jeffers grounds out to Chicago White Sox second baseman Nick Madrigal, scoring Byron Buxton during the fifth inning of a baseball game Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2020, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

Minnesota Twins' Ryan Jeffers grounds out to Chicago White Sox second baseman Nick Madrigal, scoring Byron Buxton during the fifth inning of a baseball game Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2020, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

Dane Dunning pitched seven effective innings, Luis Robert had a key tworun single and the Chicago White Sox strengthened their hold on the AL Central by topping the Minnesota Twins 62 on Tuesday night.

  • Last Updated: September 16, 2020, 9:12 AM IST

CHICAGO: Dane Dunning pitched seven effective innings, Luis Robert had a key two-run single and the Chicago White Sox strengthened their hold on the AL Central by topping the Minnesota Twins 6-2 on Tuesday night.

Dunning (2-0) permitted one earned run and three hits in by far the biggest of his five major league starts. Looking poised and confident, the 25-year-old right-hander struck out seven and walked two in the longest outing of his career.

Tim Anderson and James McCann homered as Chicago (32-16) posted its sixth straight win and moved three games ahead of second-place Minnesota, which won the AL Central last year. The AL-best White Sox also moved 16 games over .500 for the first time since they were 71-55 on Aug. 26, 2012.

Byron Buxton hit his third career inside-the-park homer for Minnesota, but the Twins finished with just four hits. Randy Dobnak (6-4) allowed four runs and eight hits over 4 1/3 innings in his second straight loss.

Twins manager Rocco Baldelli and designated hitter Nelson Cruz were ejected by plate umpire Will Little after Ryan Jeffers took a called third strike for the final out of the seventh. It was third career ejection for both.

Buxton showed off his breathtaking speed in the third, tying it at 1 when he raced around the bases for his ninth homer. Buxton’s drive to deep center caromed off the wall after Robert tried to make a leaping catch, and Buxton scored easily with a stylish headfirst slide.

Buxton and the Twins thought he had an inside-the-park homer in the ninth inning of Monday’s 3-1 loss, but it was changed to a ground-rule double after a replay review led to a ruling that his liner to left was lodged at the bottom of the wall.

This time, Buxton got to keep his first inside-the-park homer since Aug. 18, 2017. But the White Sox went ahead to stay with three runs in the bottom of the third.

McCann hit a tiebreaking double, and Robert followed with a liner back up the middle against a drawn-in infield. McCann and Jos Abreu scored to give Chicago a 4-1 lead.

After Buxton singled and scored on Jeffers’ groundout in the fifth, Chicago responded with solo homers by Anderson in the sixth and McCann in the seventh.

Anderson had three hits and scored twice, and Abreu also finished with three hits. Anderson and Abreu are both strong contenders for the AL MVP award.

WELCOME TO THE BIGS

Travis Blankenhorn started at second base for the Twins in his major league debut. He doubled in the ninth for his first career hit.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Twins: INF Marwin Gonzalez rested a day after he was scratched due to an illness. Baldelli said Gonzalez was feeling much better. I don’t think he’s going to miss very much time, Baldelli said. … INF Miguel San (neck stiffness) and OF Eddie Rosario (left elbow) returned to the starting lineup.

White Sox: LHP Jace Fry threw 1 1/3 scoreless innings after he was reinstated from the 10-day injured list. He had been sidelined by back spasms. I got a shot in my back to help out and after that kind of set in, we took it slower, Fry said. I think I could have been back a few days ago. But they were being pretty safe with it and making sure I felt good before I got back on the mound. LHP Bernardo Flores Jr. was optioned to the team’s alternate training site to make room on the roster.

UP NEXT

Lucas Giolito (4-2, 3.43 ERA) pitches for Chicago on Wednesday night. The right-hander is 1-0 with a 4.32 ERA in three starts since he threw a no-hitter against Pittsburgh on Aug. 25. The Twins did not announce a starter before Tuesday’s game.

___

Jay Cohen can be reached at https://twitter.com/jcohenap

___

More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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Yelich, Braun Lead Brewers To 18-3 Romp Over Cardinals
4-MIN READ

Yelich, Braun Lead Brewers To 18-3 Romp Over Cardinals

St. Louis Cardinals starting pitcher Jack Flaherty throws during the third inning of a baseball game against the Milwaukee Brewers Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2020, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)

St. Louis Cardinals starting pitcher Jack Flaherty throws during the third inning of a baseball game against the Milwaukee Brewers Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2020, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)

Christian Yelich broke out of his slump with a home run and three hits, Ryan Braun also went deep and the Milwaukee Brewers romped to an 183 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Tuesday night.

  • Last Updated: September 16, 2020, 9:18 AM IST

MILWAUKEE: Christian Yelich broke out of his slump with a home run and three hits, Ryan Braun also went deep and the Milwaukee Brewers romped to an 18-3 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Tuesday night.

Keston Hiura and Daniel Vogelbach also homered for the Brewers.

Well after the game was out of hand, both managers were ejected following a catcher’s interference call on Yadier Molina that led to a tense confrontation in front of the Brewers’ dugout.

Milwaukee jumped on St. Louis early, a night after the teams combined for only eight runs in splitting a doubleheader in which both games went to extra innings.

With St. Louis leading 1-0 in the first, Yelich and Braun hit back-to-back solo home runs off Jack Flaherty (3-2). Neither was hit particularly hard. And Flaherty, who had allowed two runs or fewer in five of his six previous starts, showed some dominance, as six of the first seven outs he recorded were strikeouts.

But Yelich, who singled, and Braun, who walked, hurt Flaherty again in the third inning. They scored on a double by Vogelbach, a designated hitter claimed off waivers Sept. 3.

The game broke loose in the fourth, after Flaherty gave up two singles and a walk to load the bases. There were still no outs when three runs crossed the plate, giving Milwaukee a 7-1 lead, and Flaherty was pulled.

Jake Woodford came on and gave up a three-run homer to Hiura that put Milwaukee up 11-1. The solo shot by Vogelbach came in the seventh, off Nabil Crismatt.

Cardinals pitchers entered Tuesday having given up the fewest home runs in the National League.

Milwaukee left-hander Brett Anderson (3-3), scratched from his last scheduled start on Sept. 12 because of a tight right hip, pitched five innings. He gave up an RBI double and a bases-loaded walk, both to Paul Goldschmidt.

Milwaukee manager Craig Counsell acknowledged before the game that he considered resting Yelich, who went 3 for 4 with two singles. Before the homer, the 2018 NL MVP had seen his average dip below .200, as he went 1 for 18 with 12 strikeouts over his last five games.

Obviously its been a struggle up there, to say the least,” Yelich said. “Its baseball. Youre going to go through it. Its going to happen. Sometimes theres no explaining it. Its how the game works.

Counsell and Cardinals manager Mike Shildt were ejected in the fifth, with Milwaukee leading 13-2, after Braun was awarded first base on the interference call. Shildt examined Molinas left arm, then he and Molina approached the Milwaukee dugout and exchanged words with Brewers players. Players from both teams dugouts and bullpens massed in front of the Milwaukee dugout, but that was the extent of it.

INTERFERENCE CALL

Shildt said he didnt blame Braun, but was upset because it was only the second time in Molinas career that Molina has been called for interference. I go to check on him and make sure hes OK and hear something out of the (Brewers) dugout,” Shildt said. We dont start things, but were not going to take it. Heard something I didnt appreciate. I will always have our players backs.”

Said Counsell: Apparently there was a little miscommunication between (Shildt) and our dugout, him and me, I should say, him and me.

SIGNIFICANT CHANGE

With no off days during the first three rounds of the playoffs, under the schedule announced Tuesday, Counsell said that I understand thats how we have to do it, but that is a significant change in the rules for the postseason, a very significant change in the rules for postseason. It affects how your rosters made up, without a doubt, and it will affect, definitely, pitching strategy not so much the first round, but after the first round.

Shildt said of the quarantining required by the playoff schedule: Im a take it as it comes kind of person. It is what it is. Everyones having to do it. I think if you keep the mental edge and know that thats the situation, you make the best of it.

TRAINERS ROOM

Cardinals: RHP Johan Oviedo was expected to rejoin the team Tuesday evening and is expected to start the second game of Wednesdays doubleheader, Shildt said. Oviedo was put on the injured list Sept. 10 after he came into contact with someone who tested positive for COVID-19. … 2B Kolten Wong was scratched from the lineup with discomfort on his left side. He was replaced by Tommy Edman.

UP NEXT

A full slate of pitchers for Wednesday had not been announced. St. Louis RHP Adam Wainwright (4-1, 2.91 ERA) will start the first game of the doubleheader. The 39-year-old has pitched six or more innings, including a complete game, in each of his last five starts. RHP Brandon Woodruff (2-3, 3.40) will start one of the games for Milwaukee.

___

More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

Turkish Police Detain 106 Over Alleged Gulen Links - Anadolu
1-MIN READ

Turkish Police Detain 106 Over Alleged Gulen Links - Anadolu

Turkish Police Detain 106 Over Alleged Gulen Links - Anadolu

Turkish police detained more than 100 people, mostly soldiers on active duty, in an operation on Wednesday targeting supporters of the Muslim preacher who Ankara says was behind a failed coup in 2016, stateowned Anadolu news agency reported.

  • Last Updated: September 16, 2020, 2:54 PM IST

ISTANBUL: Turkish police detained more than 100 people, mostly soldiers on active duty, in an operation on Wednesday targeting supporters of the Muslim preacher who Ankara says was behind a failed coup in 2016, state-owned Anadolu news agency reported.

The operation marks a fresh wave in a four-year-old crackdown targeting the network of U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen. He denies involvement in the July 2016 putsch, in which some 250 people were killed.

The Istanbul state prosecutor’s office issued detention warrants for 132 suspects, 82 of them serving military personnel and the rest retired or expelled from the armed forces, Anadolu said. So far 106 people have been arrested in raids by counter-terrorism police across 34 provinces, it said.

On Tuesday, prosecutors in the western province of Izmir ordered the arrest of 66 suspects, including 48 serving military personnel, in an investigation of the armed forces.

Since the coup attempt, about 80,000 people have been held pending trial and some 150,000 civil servants, military personnel and others sacked or suspended. More than 20,000 people had been expelled from the Turkish military alone.

Ankara prosecutors on Friday ordered the detention of dozens of lawyers suspected of operating in support of Gulen.

Turkish and international lawyers’ groups said the lawyers were simply doing their job representing clients accused of Gulen links.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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From Cafes To Dentists, Relief At British Coronavirus Insurance Ruling
2-MIN READ

From Cafes To Dentists, Relief At British Coronavirus Insurance Ruling

From Cafes To Dentists, Relief At British Coronavirus Insurance Ruling

Murray Pulman says he is as tough as they come, but battles with his insurer have left him close to tears after a coronavirus lockdown forced his familyrun cafe The Posh Partridge to close.

  • Last Updated: September 16, 2020, 8:30 AM IST

LONDON: Murray Pulman says he is as tough as they come, but battles with his insurer have left him close to tears after a coronavirus lockdown forced his family-run cafe The Posh Partridge to close.

Pulman was counting himself as one of the lucky ones on Tuesday, however, after a judgment in a London test case against eight insurance firms, including his insurer QBE , held up the promise of a payout on his business interruption policy.

He is among hundreds of thousands of mainly small British businesses now waiting to hear if their insurer will pay out imminently, or keep them hanging while they appeal.

“This has had me close to the edge,” Pulman told Reuters by telephone from Dorchester, southwest England, where the cafe reopened on July 4 after its closure in late March.

QBE did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The cafe, which the 56-year-old started with his 29-year-old daughter Emily four years ago, now runs at half speed to allow social distancing to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

“I will be paid one day … (but) I expect them to run me ragged having to prove this and prove that, prove the other,” he said.

The Posh Partridge was profitable from the start, says Pulman, who paid QBE around 1,350 pounds a year for a business interruption insurance policy for the business.

The terms of the QBE policy said it would pay out if the premises were closed by a local authority as a result of an outbreak of a contagious human disease within a 25 mile (40 km)radius.

But when the coronavirus pandemic hit and the cafe was forced to close, QBE told him he had no valid claim.

The High Court judgment means Pulman could qualify for a payout, pending any appeal, although he will likely remain reliant on volatile takings, which on one day fell as low as 22 pounds ($28), as long as the coronavirus pandemic persists.

“The insurer utterly abandoned us and sought to mitigate their losses to zero,” he said.

“This judgment will not make that go away.”

DENTAL WORK

Dentist Laith Abbas also got an abrupt no from QBE when he tried to claim as the government-imposed lockdown in March closed his North London surgery.

When he found his policy didn’t pay out, he led a campaigning group of 2,000 dental practices with business interruption policies to seek redress.

Abbas said Tuesday’s judgment had given its members hope.

“A lot of dentists have suffered in lockdown, and there’s no light in the tunnel with a potential second wave,” he added.

“Business interruption insurance is potentially the only thing that can keep dental practices afloat.”

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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Delhi BJP President Adesh Gupta Tests Positive for Covid-19, in Quarantine Since Last Week
1-MIN READ

Delhi BJP President Adesh Gupta Tests Positive for Covid-19, in Quarantine Since Last Week

File photo of Delhi BJP president Adesh Verma.

File photo of Delhi BJP president Adesh Verma.

Delhi BJP president Adesh Gupta said he was in quarantine during the last week and advised those who had come in contact with him to get themselves tested.

  • Last Updated: September 16, 2020, 5:00 PM IST

Delhi BJP president Adesh Gupta on Wednesday said he has tested positive for COVID-19. "Last week, I took a COVID test after having light fever. Its report was negative. I was tested again as I was feeling unwell. The report has now come as positive," he said in a tweet in Hindi.

Gupta said he was in quarantine during the last week and advised those who had come in contact with him to get themselves tested. Delhi BJP media cell head Ashok Goel said Gupta was found positive in his third COVID-19 test. The previous two tests, including an RT-PCR, came out as negative, he said.

"The Delhi BJP president underwent a rapid antigen test last week and later, an RT-PCR test, both of which showed him to be COVID negative. He had body ache but no fever. He was again tested using the RT-PCR method, the report of which came on Wednesday as COVID-19 positive," he said. Party leaders said Gupta's parents, who live in his ancestral village in Uttar Pradesh, had also tested positive for COVID-19 and were treated in Delhi 15-20 days ago.

Meanwhile, the Delhi BJP office on Pant Marg was closed for sanitisation on Wednesday, a day after 17 people there tested positive for COVID-19. These include staff members and their families who live on the party office premises.

On Monday, a peon of the Delhi BJP office tested positive for COVID-19, after which all the staff and their family members, numbering around 40, were tested. Two BJP MPs from Delhi, Meenakshi Lekhi and Parvesh Verma, were found COVID-19 positive ahead of the Parliament session that started earlier this week.

.

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Madonna To Direct And Co-write A Movie About Her Life And Music
1-MIN READ

Madonna To Direct And Co-write A Movie About Her Life And Music

Madonna To Direct And Co-write A Movie About Her Life And Music

Pop music superstar Madonna will direct and cowrite a movie about her life for Comcast Corp's Universal Pictures, the studio said in a statement on Tuesday.

  • Last Updated: September 16, 2020, 7:45 AM IST

LOS ANGELES: Pop music superstar Madonna will direct and co-write a movie about her life for Comcast Corp’s Universal Pictures, the studio said in a statement on Tuesday.

Madonna, 62, will team with Oscar-winning “Juno” screenwriter Diablo Cody on the script, Universal said.

The “Material Girl” and “Express Yourself” singer is the best-selling female music artist of all time with global sales of 335 million records.

Over her five-decade career, she also acted in movies including “Evita” and “A League of Their Own” and directed and wrote 2011 film “W./E.” about the British royal abdication scandal in the 1930s.

“I want to convey the incredible journey that life has taken me on as an artist, a musician, a dancer – a human being, trying to make her way in this world,” Madonna said in the statement.

The movie’s focus “will always be music,” she added.

“Music has kept me going and art has kept me alive,” she said. “There are so many untold and inspiring stories and who better to tell it than me.”

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National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, Protests Pakistan Map, Exits Meet

National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, Protests Pak Map, Exits Meet

After consultation with the host, the Indian side left the meeting in protest at that juncture, the statement added.

National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, Protests Pak Map, Exits Meet

Ajit Doval, team walked out of Shanghai Cooperation Organization over doctored map by Pak (File)

New Delhi:

National Security Adviser Ajit Doval and the Indian team walked out a meet of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization hosted by Russia after Pakistan used a doctored map as a background for its representative. The map showed Indian territories as part of Pakistan. The Indian side's move was a protest against Pakistan's blatant violation of norms, the foreign ministry said on Tuesday.

Asked about the issue, ministry spokesperson Anurag Srivastava said in a statement: "The Pakistani NSA deliberately projected a fictitious map that Pakistan has recently been propagating. This was in blatant disregard to the advisory by the host (Russia) against it and in violation of the norms of the meeting."

After consultation with the host, the Indian side left the meeting in protest at that juncture, the statement added.

"As was to be expected, Pakistan then went on to present a misleading view of this meeting," the statement further read.

The map, issued by Prime Minister Imran Khan on August 4, claims territories of India - Jammu and Kashmir, Ladakh and Sir Creek in Gujarat -- as parts of Pakistan. India had rubbished it as an "exercise in political absurdity" with no legal validity.

Government sources said Islamabad's use of the fictitious map, depicting sovereign Indian territories as part of Pakistan, is a blatant violation of the SCO Charter. It is also against all its established norms of safeguarding the sovereignty and territorial integrity of SCO Member States.

India, sources said, has issued strong objection to the use of this illegal map by Pakistan.

The Russian side, as the Chair, had tried very hard to persuade Pakistan not to do so. Russia does not support what Pakistan has done and hopes that Pakistan's provocative act will not affect India's participation in SCO, sources said.

Over the last year, Pakistan has been attempting to highlight Kashmir at most international forums. But showing such a map in violation of protocol became possible as the meeting was virtual owing to the coronavirus pandemic.

Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

Yu Yureka Black Review

Yu Yureka Black Review

By Prasid Banerjee | Updated May 22 2019
Yu Yureka Black Review
DIGIT RATING
70 /100
  • design

    81

  • performance

    58

  • value for money

    57

  • features

    83

User Rating : 5/5 Out of 1 Reviews
  • PROS
  • Looks good and different
  • CONS
  • Camera isn't dependable
  • Battery life could be better

Verdict

The Yureka Black is a decent smartphone, but it lacks in the camera and battery departments. The Xiaomi Redmi 4 is a better purchase, although the Yureka Black will perhaps suit those who put looks above all else. Of course, the really right choice would be a phone that brings such features on top of Android Nougat, but OEMs seem reluctant to make such phones right now.

BUY Yu Yureka Black
Buy now on flipkart Available 7399

Yu Yureka Black detailed review

Micromax needs a win. In fact, it needs a big win, and for that it’s pulling out the big guns. The company’s sister concern, Yu Televentures, had its biggest and probably only win with the Yureka smartphone (review) some years ago. So, to bring back the Yu brand, Micromax is also reviving the Yureka line of devices, with what it calls the Yureka Black.


There’s a stark change in philosophy this time. The Yureka Black feels more like a Micromax phone than one by Yu Televentures. It’s not the price breaking, spec-focused device the company has been known for. Instead, Micromax is focusing on design and delivering the specs/features that most of its competitors are bringing. That means there’s nothing really new or ground breaking about this device. Yet, it’s one of the many smartphones contending for your attention and a portion of your hard earned money. So, here’s the Yureka Black review.

Build and Design

Much like the Yu Yureka, the Yureka Black is essentially a phone called the Wiko uFeel Prime with the Yu logo instead of Wiko’s. You could criticise the company for that, but really it makes Micromax no different than any other, with their similar looking smartphones. For what its worth, the Yureka Black at least doesn’t look and feel like any of its competitors in the Indian market. It’s a sad fact, but the smartphone market literally has no innovation anymore.

On the flipside, the Yureka Black’s metallic back feels distinctly more premium than competing devices. It feels more like glass than metal, same as the Jet Black variant of the iPhone 7 (review). That though means that the Yureka Black is the most slippery smartphone in the budget segment. It feels slippery when you’re holding it, and tends to slide off your lap or table. It’s a difficult phone to handle, especially with one hand. Things are easier when holding it in vertical position, but it’s a nightmare when held horizontally, for shooting photos, watching movies etc. The slippery back also makes it difficult to prop up against other objects, since it tends to slide off them too. Lastly, as with the iPhone 7, the body is prone to scratches and smudges.

There are chrome antenna lines on the back with the camera at the top-centre and a flash below it. The Yu logo is parallel to the camera on the bottom and the sides are rounded, as are the corners. There’s 2.5D Gorilla Glass 3 on the front and true to its name, the entire device is as black as it gets. In fact, it’s so black that I found it difficult to spot the micro-USB orientation in dimly lit rooms. The bezels are hard to spot too, because of this black treatment, and the entire design becomes more seamless due to that.

That said, I’m not a big fan of the black shadows (on the home screen) near the top and bottom edges of the display. It looks like light leak, but is actually an UI element that disappears when you’re using other apps.

Overall, the Yureka Black chooses looks over ergonomics, and like every other smartphone you’ll need a cover for this one. If that works for you, you’ll enjoy this device.

Display

The black shadows I mentioned above make the display somewhat underwhelming at first glance. A closer look suggests that Yu has tuned the colours to pleasantly warmer levels, but contrast is certainly lower than usual. It’s a nice looking display and touch performance is good as well, but higher black levels would have been warranted, especially for a phone that plays on the whole “black” thing. In fact, deeper blacks would have blended well with the design as well.

Viewing angles are fine, but a yellowish tone appears when you’re not looking at the display head on. The angles don’t have to be too extreme either and as a result, photos, movies and videos sometimes look quite unnatural on the screen. The display is also slightly on the dimmer side, which means you’ll have to squint a little bit when you’re out and about.

UI

Moving on, I’ve said this often in my reviews recently: Android Marshmallow is simply unacceptable on any smartphone today. Micromax isn’t the only offender, but it must be penalised for this. If you really skip all Marshmallow-powered phones, Motorola and (upcoming) Nokia phones are the only ones you’ll be left with.

The fact is that Android is a fragmented ecosystem, and you do not get updates often. So, by buying a device that’s running a two-year-old OS now, you’re simply reducing your phone’s life cycle. Moreover, you’re missing Google’s security patches from an entire generation of Android, which should matter to even the most basic user today. Simply put, consumers have to demand phones with the newest version of Android and companies have to provide it. Period.

Now that you’ve read all that and ignored it, the UI on the Yureka Black is quite stock like. There are cosmetic changes to the icons and navigation bar, but there are no big changes or surprises here.

Micromax is promoting the fact that the phone supports something called “Smart Gestures”. That basically consists of some regular gestures, like double tap to wake/lock, Flip to mute, pocket protection and more. These are all gestures we’ve seen before and while they do work, I’m personally better off without them. Also, there’s a “Draw Gestures” box that appears when swiping from the top. I often brought this up when pulling down the notification shade, which is poor UI design. The gestures are a nifty gimmick, but nothing that you couldn't do without.

Performance

Going with industry trends, Micromax chose the Snapdragon 430 to power this smartphone. The company is using the Snapdragon 430 and 435 interchangeably, since the two aren’t all that different in any way. However, Snapdragon 435-powered smartphones will have better LTE support, which means they’re more versatile as far as connectivity is concerned.


AnTuTu Benchmark


Geekbench 4 Single Core


Geekbench 4 Multi Core


3D Mark Unlimited

On regular usage, you should expect some lags and stutters. Games are playable, but not at their best. Games like Injustice and WWE Champions will run a couple of frames over 30fps, but won’t ever hit 60. That’s about the performance you can expect from smartphones under Rs. 10,000 today, and it qualifies as usable too. As with most other aspects of this phone, the performance is neither surprising, nor does it impress anymore than other smartphones. App load times are high and I saw stutters when toggling the brightness meter at times. The performance is fine for basic users, but it's not a speedy or smooth device by any margin.

Camera

The rear camera is the only real disappointing aspect of the Yureka Black. I took some good photos at times, but the camera is far from dependable. Colour saturation is sometimes too high and sometimes on the lower side, details are very low and focus often goes wrong. The camera is slow to focus in both well lit and low light conditions. The phone also finds it difficult to separate closely matched colours, like a dark and light shade of green placed close to each other. There was even some colour noise in low light photos, something I haven’t seen in smartphone cameras in years.

Yu Yureka Black

On the other hand, the front camera is more dependable. It softens facial textures a little bit, but not enough to make them look unnatural. However, details here are still low and photos lack sharpness still. There's a front flash that can be used in low light conditions, but it won't change any of the basic elements of the images. If selfies matter to you, the flash will probably add some value proposition here, but I'd recommend spending a little more for far better selfies.

Battery

Driving all of the above is a 3000 mAh battery and you’ll get about 10-12 hours of battery life from this. You can game for over an hour on 20% charge and high brightness, while the camera isn’t very tough on battery life either. The Yureka Black’s battery life lies in the industry average today. You’ll charge it every morning and charge again after a 10-hour work day. It’s not going to last you till the night, though, so the Redmi 4 does provide almost 50% more battery life.

Bottom line

When you make a comeback, you want a phone that sticks out and garners consumer attention. In that, the Yureka Black is successful as far as design in concerned. But, there’s nothing to set this phone aside from its competitors and its camera and battery life are actually inferior to the Xiaomi Redmi 4 (our current budget favourite). If you put good looks above all else, the Yureka Black will suit your fancy, but gun to my head, the Redmi 4 is a far more balanced and better device than this. Of course, the really right choice would be something with Android Nougat, but unfortunately no OEM wants to give you that in this price range.

Yu Yureka Black Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 01 Jun 2017
Variant: 32GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    5" (1080 x 1920)
  • Camera Camera
    13 | 8 MP
  • Memory Memory
    32 GB/4 GB
  • Battery Battery
    3000 mAh

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Prasid Banerjee

Trying to explain technology to my parents. Failing miserably.

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Micromax Canvas Knight 2 Review

Micromax Canvas Knight 2 Review

By Kishore Ganesh | Updated May 22 2019
Micromax Canvas Knight 2 Review
DIGIT RATING
71 /100
  • design

    77

  • performance

    69

  • value for money

    66

  • features

    72

  • PROS
  • Satisfactory performance
  • Looks good
  • Camera gives decent performance in adequate light
  • CONS
  • Overheats, hinders performance
  • Oversaturated Screen
  • Camera's white balance is off
  • Feels slippery in the hand

Verdict

The word ‘average’ carries meaning across all aspects of the Knight 2. On its own, it is a satisfactory phone with a few niggles, such as overheating. But looking at the competition and its price, it is hard to recommend the Knight 2.

BUY Micromax Canvas Knight 2
Buy now on amazon Out of Stock 5799
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Micromax Canvas Knight 2 detailed review

Micromax has been following Samsung's strategy of releasing as many smartphones across as many niches as possible, in order to maximize reach and sales. In the past month itself, Micromax has launched multiple devices (Canvas Spark, Canvas hue, and more). This strategy has apparently worked, since Micromax has overtaken Samsung in India, and is continuing to grow. We have in our labs the Canvas Knight 2, which is Micromax’s first 4G phone. One thing I would like to say at the outset is that Micromax has really upped its design standards, and while it may seem very ‘inspired’, for the end consumer, it is still an excellent design, original or not.


However,  it is launching in a much more competitive market. No longer is Micromax the only star of budget phones, with manufacturers like Xiaomi, ASUS and more entering the market.

Design
At first glance, you would be forgiven to mistake the Knight 2 for an iPhone, but the lack of the circular home button gives it all away. Indeed, Micromax seems to look very much like the iPhone, like other phones in this segment (For example, the Mi4) The sides have very thin bezels, while the top and bottom have thick ones, similar to the iPhone.  It does look really good, and the back is covered with Gorilla Glass 3. It looks and feels premium with the use of glass and metal in its construction. Micromax earlier used to cover its phones with plastic, but now it seems to have upped its design standards. It is light, but not too light, giving it a sturdy feel. Some phones are very light, making us a bit anxious when handling them.

Coming to the slimness, it is wafer-like at 6.3mm. It bests several phones in this segment, and is in fact thinner than more expensive phones. While it does look good, is it comfortable? For the most part, yes. The Knight 2 is comfortable to hold,  with its compact build, but I have to say it is quite slippery. You should probably put on a case to make it easier to grip. The one odd thing I noticed was that the power and volume buttons were on the wrong side. Well, the placement wasn't wrong per se, but it took a little getting used to, since most devices have their power buttons on the top or on the right side of the device.

The buttons are nice and tactile, but I would have preferred them to be just a tad more recessed, but I am just nitpicking. On the back, you will find a camera on the top-left, accompanying a dual-LED Flash and it just furthers the iPhone-esque design aesthetic. The back does attract fingerprints due to its glossy nature.  The sides are golden in color, but are not tacky. Overall, I would say Micromax has executed the design part well, but if you are looking for something unique, this is not it. You shouldn't be shopping in the budget segment anyway if you had uniqueness in mind.

Display
Micromax has fitted the Knight 2 with a 5-inch HD AMOLED display. We are increasingly coming across midrange phones using AMOLED displays, which are generally better in terms of contrast and color vibrancy. Though the key advtantage with AMOLED screens is on the power consumption side.

The screen is satisfactory in sharpness, but many other phones in this segment have better full HD screens. While at the upper-end, manufacturers are coming out with Quad-HD Screens, I feel they don't make much of a difference even as they compromise on battery life. The colors on the Knight 2’s screen are over-saturated. Yes, all AMOLED screens do over-saturate, but many manufacturers have managed to do it right. For me, the screen over-saturates too much.. It is a matter of personal preference, really, and you may prefer exemplified colors. Test out the Knight 2's screen at a store near you, to see if you prefer the over-saturated screen.

Another thing I found was that whites weren't pure. They were yellowish, and it was very visible. This stark difference in the whites was exemplified when I compared it to another phone. By virtue of it being an AMOLED Screen, blacks on the the Knight 2’s screen are as black as they can be, since the screen actually shuts off pixels where the color is black.

UI
The Knight 2's UI is as close to stock as possible. Micromax hasn't really changed the design all that much, and has made small tweaks here and there, but there's no comprehensive OS-wide skin like Samsung's Touchwiz or HTC's Sense. And that's a good thing, since stock Android is the best in our opinion. It is faster and cleaner. Micromax has put some bloatware in the phone, which no one really needs. The phone comes with an App Center, Mannons video app and Swiftkey,  along with a few other apps that cannot be uninstalled. Thankfully, Swiftkey is useful, and the others don't take up much space.

 

Camera
The Knight 2 has a 13MP Camera with a dual-LED Flash, but as camera aficionados know, megapixel count doesn't directly co relate to performance. The sensor is a Sony IMX 214 variant, which is also found in the OnePlus One and the Mi4. However, just having the same sensor doesn't mean similar performance, as the quality of the lens also comes into play. The camera is pretty decent, and is sharp, but when you look carefully, you will see that most smaller details aren't sharp at all, and images look smudged. This effect is exemplified in low light conditions, where at the center details are captured decently, but around the edges, it looks a bit smudged. The white balance is really off, and the camera over-saturates a lot.

Pictures taken in low-light have a yellow-green hue sometimes, and even outside, the white balance is off. You have to manually adjust the white balance to get good pictures. Sometimes, the pictures come out all right without doing anything, but usually, you have to tinker around to get a good picture. Except for the white-balance, I would say the camera is decent, but not noteworthy. The front-camera too is decent and detailed, but like most other front-cameras, it suffers in low-light. The pictures, given ample light, come out good usually.

 

 

Micromax Knight 2

 

Performance
Micromax has fitted the Knight 2 with a 64-bit octa-core Snapdragon 615 Processor, which is pretty capable and has started to appear in many mid-range phones. In real-life usage, the Knight 2 is pretty swift, with UI navigation being smooth and apps opening quickly. We did see it skipping a second here and there, and sometimes, it lagged when opening apps, and the camera. The task switcher took a second or two to show the apps, and scrolling lag was seen in some areas. In my opinion, wireless performance wasn't satisfactory, with the signal sometimes dropping out just a room away from the router, while other devices were able to get strong signals. It was a bit unstable, with the signal sometimes dropping out in the same room, but this happened only once.

There's a very significant heating problem, as has been the case with most Snapdragon 615 devices. Just opening a few apps, and that too very resource-friendly ones, caused the device to heat up considerably, especially at the center of the back of the device. At one point, I had to place the phone down. When it got heated up, naturally, performance took a hit, and just swiping across the launcher showed some lag. Left to itself, it cools down very quickly, but once you start using it again, sometimes the heat comes back.

Gaming performance is satisfactory. In Asphalt 8, I tested using the highest quality setting available, and saw a few frame skips at the beginning, but it wasn't a dealbreaker. But as I progressed through the race, the device started heating up, and frame skips occurred more frequently. In Dead Trigger, I saw lag when moving around the area. I am sure it would get worse as I get to more crowded areas, and it was heating up at the beginning itself. In the Benchmarks, as you can see, the octa-core Snapdragon 615 is similar in performance to the quad-core Snapdragon S4 Pro, which is an SoC from two years ago. If you were thinking that the octa-core processor would come close to the performance of flagships today, that's just wishful thinking, since the cores themselves are underpowered, making an octa-core combination less powerful than a flagship quad-core processor. It is quite behind the Snapdragon 801, which is a 32 bit quad-Core processor that appeared in many flagships in 2014.

 

Antutu | Create infographics

 

Battery
Coming to battery performance, it lasted 4 hours and 30 minutes on the Geekbench Battery Benchmark, which simulates real-world tasks. It will last you through a day with conservative usage, but not more. The battery capacity is 2250mAh, which seems a bit on the low side when phones are coming out with 3000mAh batteries today. But the small battery wouldn't have mattered if Micromax had optimized the software for better battery life. After all, the iPhone has a smaller battery than most phones and still manages to eke out good battery life. Alas, the Knight 2 is just about average in the Geekbench tests, but it is not bad in any way. It is just not as good as it can be.

There's a battery saving option by Micromax, however, that promises to massively improve battery performance. What it does, is to turn your screen into grayscale, which is effective due to the AMOLED Screen, which can actually dim down or turn off individual pixels. Bluetooth, WiFi are turned off and screen brightness is reduced, and background syncing too is slowed down. Only a few basic functions, such as calling and messaging are available. As you can see, it massively sacrifices usability, but it does work in a pinch to extend battery life. If your phone is on its last legs, switch on this mode to get a few minutes, and perhaps even an hour of battery life.

Storage
The Micromax Canvas Knight 2 has 16GB of internal storage, of which 12GB is available. Today, with games taking up gigabytes of space, only the most frugal of users will find this space sufficient. Thankfully, the Knight 2 has a microSD card slot, and you can choose for apps to be installed on the SD card.

Conclusion
When you look at the Micromax Canvas Knight 2 in seclusion, it looks like a good phone. Not spectacularly good, but not bad at the same time, with a nice design, satisfactory performance and average battery life. But when you look at the competition, the Knight 2 falls short.

It is priced at over Rs. 16,000, which is a bit on the expensive side for what you get. For just Rs. 13,000, you get the Mi4i, which offers the same processor, but a better camera, better battery performance, a better screen and good design. The Mi4i seems like a much better deal now, doesn't it? And if you go just a bit higher, the Mi4 64 GB is available at Rs. 17,000 on Flipkart, and it has a much better Snapdragon 801 processor, along with a better camera, more storage and better battery life.

The Zenfone too seems like a capable phone, with performance beating the Knight 2. If the price were a bit lower, I would have reconsidered, but at the time being, I see no justification for buying the Knight 2. You have a better phone at a cheaper price, and a much better phone at a slightly higher price.

Micromax Canvas Knight 2 Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 05 Jun 2015
Variant: 16GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    5" (720 x 1280)
  • Camera Camera
    13 | 5 MP
  • Memory Memory
    16 GB/2 GB
  • Battery Battery
    2260 mAh

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Smoke From US Fires Reaches Europe, Satellite Data Shows

Smoke From US Fires Reaches Europe, Satellite Data Shows

Satellite data from the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) showed that the wildfires currently raging across California, Oregon and Washington State are "tens to hundreds of times more intense" than the recent average.

Smoke From US Fires Reaches Europe, Satellite Data Shows

It estimated that blazes have spewed out more than 30 million tonnes of carbon dioxide since mid-August.

Paris:

Smoke from the fires devastating swathes of the US West Coast has reached as far as Europe, the European Union's climate monitoring service said Wednesday in its assessment of the "unprecedented" blazes.

Satellite data from the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) showed that the wildfires currently raging across California, Oregon and Washington State are "tens to hundreds of times more intense" than the recent average.

Thanks to strong pressure systems, the smoke from the fires was trapped along the western part of North America for days, making for potentially dangerous air quality in major cities such as Portland, Oregon and Vancouver and San Francisco.

But the weather shifted on Monday, carrying the smoke east along the jet stream. The site NY Metro Weather said Tuesday that it was visible in the skies above New York.

CAMS said that it had tracked the long-range transport of smoke particles from the fires as far as 8,000 kilometres to the east -- reaching northern Europe.

It estimated that the blazes, which are significantly more likely to occur as the planet warms, have spewed out more than 30 million tonnes of carbon dioxide since mid-August.

"The scale and magnitude of these fires are at a level much higher than any of the 18 years that our monitoring data covers" since 2003, said Mark Parrington, CMAS senior scientist and wildfire expert.

"The fact that these fires are emitting so much pollution into the atmosphere that we can still see thick smoke over 8000 kilometres away reflects just how devastating they have been in their magnitude and duration."

Climate link

The blazes have already burned nearly five million acres (two million hectares) across the US West, torching an area roughly the size of the state of New Jersey, with fears the death count of 35 may rise.

The disaster has brought the issue of global warming to the forefront of US political discourse a matter of weeks ahead of the presidential election.

While it has been historically difficult to prove the link between individual extreme weather events and climate change, there is a growing body of evidence showing blazes such as those in the US could not be so intense and widespread without the 1C of warming humanity has caused during the industrial age.

In general, climate change has been proven to amplify droughts that dry out regions, creating ideal conditions for wildfires to spread out-of-control and inflict unprecedented material and environmental damage.

Using a growing area of research known as "attribution science", experts concluded that the wildfires that struck eastern Australia earlier this year were made at least 30 percent more likely due to global warming.

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

Brainwavz M2 Review

Brainwavz M2 Review

By Siddharth Parwatay | Updated May 22 2019
Brainwavz M2 Review
DIGIT RATING
80 /100
  • design

    76

  • performance

    84

  • value for money

    49

  • features

    55

  • PROS
  • Bass king at this price point
  • Build quality pretty decent
  • CONS
  • No mic

Verdict

If thumping bass is very important to you, and a microphone is not, you can’t go wrong with the Brainwavz M2. If you want similar overall performance but with a mic, you’d do well with the 1More Single Driver. It’s cheaper too.

BUY Brainwavz M2
Buy now on amazon Available 2999
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Brainwavz M2 detailed review

The Brainwavz M2 isn't really a new launch. It has long been a staple on any online roundup/listing featuring the best in-ears within this price range. However what's new is that the company “officially” launched it in India only in Oct 2016. It’s been a favourite for good reason. The entire M series from Brainwavz delivers great sound, with each variant being uniquely tuned to suit every preference.


Brainwavz M2 box

Build & Design

Unlike the Brainwavz M1 which looks a little too plain jane, the Brainwavz M2 has a few niceties thrown in like the silver accents. The design is fairly simple – sheathed cable with a Y split and no microphone. Therefore the M2 makes it clear that these are for pure listening and won’t double up as a headset to take calls on. The cable incidentally looks a lot like the one on the E10C. In the package, you get your standard set of differently sized silicone tips as well as a sturdy (and roomy) hardcase.

Brainwavz M2 accessories

Features & Performance

The Brainwavz M2 is decidedly bass-heavy. In fact, the bass is so accentuated, we’ve given it the title of “Bass King” when compared to some of the recent in-ears we've tested. The M2 sound very similar to the a-JAYS Four+ but ever so slightly better, as was evident from our EDM tracks. The rest of the spectrum is fairly faithfully reproduced as well. Shine On You Crazy Diamond sounded spacious, but the bass did tend to get overpowering. Similar was the case on Chris Rea’s Call on Me. The M2 is also very sensitive, so will sound very loud even at low input volume.

brainwavz M2 ear

Incidentally, we also had the Brainwavz M1 lying around at the time of reviewing the M2s and perhaps it's worthwhile discussing what the differences are between the two. In terms of cable quality, they are both the same, but that Rs. 500 extra you pay for the M2 gets you two things: firstly a pair of better-looking headphones and second, a significant bump in the bass department.

Brainwavz case

Bottomline

The Brainwavz M2 is a bass lover’s delight. At the same time, it doesn’t fail in reproducing the rest of the frequency range decently. The only thing missing in the M2 is an in-line microphone. For some, this absence can be a deal-breaker. In this case, the slightly cheaper 1More Single Driver is a good option for you. But remember, you can’t get the deep lows that the M2 is able to deliver. 

 

Specifications

Impedance (ohm) - 20 Ω
Frequency response - 20-22kHz
Cord length (m) - 1.3m
Weight (in grams) - 10g
Driver diameter (mm) - 10.7mm
Sensitivity - 115dB/mW
Type (balanced armature / dynamic) - Dynamic

 

Brainwavz M2 Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 03 Apr 2017
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Playback Time Playback Time
    NA
  • Frequency Range Frequency Range
    NA
  • Channels Channels
    NA
  • Dimensions Dimensions
    NA

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Siddharth a.k.a. staticsid is a bigger geek than he'd like to admit. Sometimes even to himself.

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Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

Titans Sound Ready To Let Veteran Kicker Fix His Issues
3-MIN READ

Titans Sound Ready To Let Veteran Kicker Fix His Issues

Tennessee Titans inside linebacker Rashaan Evans (54) leaves the field after being ejected during the first half of an NFL football game against the Denver Broncos, Monday, Sept. 14, 2020, in Denver. (AP Photo/Jack Dempsey)

Tennessee Titans inside linebacker Rashaan Evans (54) leaves the field after being ejected during the first half of an NFL football game against the Denver Broncos, Monday, Sept. 14, 2020, in Denver. (AP Photo/Jack Dempsey)

Mike Vrabel and the Tennessee Titans sound prepared to be patient with fourtime Pro Bowl kicker Stephen Gostkowski.

  • Last Updated: September 16, 2020, 1:42 AM IST

NASHVILLE, Tenn.: Mike Vrabel and the Tennessee Titans sound prepared to be patient with four-time Pro Bowl kicker Stephen Gostkowski.

Making the game-winning field goal certainly helps.

Gostkowski’s track record does too.

For a guy thats a career 87% field-goal kicker whos done it as long as he has, I think a lot of those corrections are going to be on him,” Vrabel said Tuesday hours after Gostkowski made a 25-yarder with 17 seconds remaining for a 16-14 win in Denver to open the season.

“But its also going to be about us in the operation and the ability for us to protect and the ability to make everything around him better and have a lot of faith and confidence in Stephen in moving forward.

The Titans thought they fixed their kicking woes by signing Gostkowski, the fifth-ranked kicker in NFL history on Sept. 3. Instead, the NFLs worst field-goal team in 2019 picked up where they left off after using five different kickers last season.

Gostkowski’s misses led to flashbacks to last October when Cairo Santos missed three field goals and had another blocked in a 14-7 loss to Buffalo. Gostkowski was wide right from 47 yards, had a 44-yarder blocked and yanked a 42-yarder wide left. Then he missed an extra point in the fourth quarter.

The Titans cut Santos after his misses.

Gostkowski said he thought he sped up after just missing the first field goal, which could be an easy fix of timing with practice. This also is a short week with the Titans returning home Tuesday morning with Jacksonville visiting Sunday. Testing protocols make quick roster changes much tougher.

After the missed extra point, Gostkowski also took off his right sock.

I practice without socks all summer so then I started putting them on, Gostkowski said. “I would have taken my pants off to make that last kick to try something different. I wasnt doing very well so I had to switch something up for mental sake. Its just a weird quirk I guess.

WHATS WORKING

The offense’s ability to score in the red zone and the two-minute offense. The Titans led the NFL in scoring on 75.6% of drives inside an opponent’s 20. They scored TDs on their first two drives, then got the game-winning field goal.

Tannehill led the Titans on three game-winning drives last season. He notched his fourth and 17th of his career against Denver. Tannehill completed his first five passes on the drive.

WHAT NEEDS HELP

The Titans ranked eighth last season for fewest penalties in the NFL and led the league for the fewest penalties in Vrabel’s debut season. They had four penalties for 33 yards in the first quarter before finishing with five.

Linebacker Rashaan Evans, their leading tackler last season, was ejected after an unsportsmanlike penalty when he swung his right hand at Denver tight end Jake Butt late in the first quarter.

STOCK UP

WR Corey Davis. The No. 5 pick overall in 2017 finds himself in a contract year after the Titans declined to pick up his fifth-year option. He had offseason toe surgery and appeared healthy with his best game since 2018. He caught seven of the eight passes thrown to him for 101 yards.

STOCK DOWN

Gostkowski. According to Next Gen Stats, the odds of the veteran kicker missing three field goals and an extra point were 1 in 1,804 or about 0.06%.

INJURED

The Titans put cornerback Adoree Jackson on injured reserve before the game, then veteran Johnathan Joseph hurt his right arm in the first quarter. LT Taylor Lewan left the game in the third quarter after hurting his right knee but returned.

KEY NUMBER

14-0 The Titans’ record when Derrick Henry runs for at least 100 yards. The NFL rushing leader of 2019 ran 31 times for 116 yards for a 3.7-yard average per carry.

NEXT STEPS

The Titans now will play four of their next five at home starting Sunday in their home opener against Jacksonville. Then there’s a trip to Minnesota before hosting Pittsburgh, Buffalo and Houston in October.

___

Follow Teresa M. Walker at www.twitter.com/teresamwalker

___

More AP NFL: https://apnews.com/NFL and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL

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Flipkart to hire 70,000 in India ahead of big shopping eventFlipkart to hire 70,000 in India ahead of big shopping eventFlipkart to hire 70,000 in India ahead of big shopping eventFlipkart to hire 70,000 in India ahead of big shopping eventFlipkart to hire 70,000 in India ahead of big shopping eventFlipkart to hire 70,000 in India ahead of big shopping eventFlipkart to hire 70,000 in India ahead of big shopping eventFlipkart to hire 70,000 in India ahead of big shopping eventFlipkart to hire 70,000 in India ahead of big shopping eventFlipkart to hire 70,000 in India ahead of big shopping eventFlipkart to hire 70,000 in India ahead of big shopping eventFlipkart to hire 70,000 in India ahead of big shopping eventFlipkart to hire 70,000 in India ahead of big shopping event

Flipkart to hire 70,000 in India ahead of big shopping event

 

Walmart Inc's Flipkart said on Tuesday it would create 70,000 new jobs and employ many more as delivery partners and in other roles as it prepares for a surge in online shopping during the busy Indian festive season.

Flipkart, Amazon.com Inc's Indian unit and Reliance Industries Ltd's fledgling e-commerce business are vying for a share of the booming online retail market, which received a big boost from the COVID-19 pandemic as more Indians used their smartphones to shop for groceries and other items.

Flipkart’s “Big Billion Days”, styled on the lines of Amazon’s Prime Day, rakes in its biggest sales for the year. The four- or five-day long sale usually starts around October to tap India’s festive season, which ends with Diwali.

The company said it would also sign up more than 50,000 kiranas, or small grocery stores, for last-mile delivery.

“While creating direct job opportunities across Flipkart’s supply chain, which include delivery executives, pickers, packers and sorters, there will also be additional indirect jobs created at Flipkart’s seller partner locations and (local corner stores),” the company said in an emailed statement.

Earlier this month, the e-commerce company launched an online wholesale service, Flipkart Wholesale, for mom-and-pop stores and other small businesses.

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UK Restores 3 Idols Stolen From Tamil Nadu Temple Back To India

UK Restores 3 Idols Stolen From Tamil Nadu Temple Back To India

The theft dates back to 1978 and led to an investigation by the Idol Wing of the Tamil Nadu Police working along with colleagues in the Metropolitan Police in London.

UK Restores 3 Idols Stolen From Tamil Nadu Temple Back To India

The UK-based collector behind the handover was described as a lover of Indian art and culture

London:

A set of three idols of Lord Rama, Sita and Lakshmana, stolen from a temple in Tamil Nadu decades ago, were restored to the Indian government on Tuesday after a collector voluntarily offered to hand it back on discovering their true history.

The theft dates back to 1978 and led to an investigation by the Idol Wing of the Tamil Nadu Police working along with colleagues in the Metropolitan Police in London.

The unnamed collector, who had acquired the statues in good faith, was informed about their dubious provenance by the Met Police.

After matching them up with archival photographs from the 1950s held at the French School in Pondicherry, it was proved that the idols in his possession were those belonging to the Vijayanagara period and stolen from Sri Rajagopalaswami Temple at Ananthamangalam in Nagapattinam district of Tamil Nadu.

In a ceremony streamed from India House in London in keeping with the limit on gatherings due to the COVID-19 restrictions, priests from Sri Murugan Temple in London conducted a short religious ceremony for their handover to India.

"Today marks the successful completion of the search and rescue operation of these very beautiful idols, which were consecrated and worshipped side by side for years. We wanted to ensure these deities were handled with due reverence and propriety before they are shipped back to India," said Indian High Commissioner to the UK Gaitri Issar Kumar.

"On behalf of the government of India, I hope this will inspire museums and collectors to carefully look and check their collections and help us restore deities that belong to the people of India and have been worshipped for centuries," she said.

The UK-based collector behind the handover, who has chosen to stay anonymous, was described as a lover of Indian art and culture.

Addressing the virtual event, officials from the state government of Tamil Nadu praised his voluntary intervention and expressed the hope that no further action will be taken against him.

"The voluntary handover of these idols highlight two enforcement issues: the need for effective communication and dialogue, and the proper documentation of all cultural heritage, which would not only act as a deterrent to thefts but also help as evidence without which the outcome of this case may have been very different," said Tim Wright, from the Metropolitan Police.

Minister of Culture and Tourism Prahlad Singh Patel, connecting virtually to the event from Delhi, welcomed the repatriation of the statues, which he said was among over 40 "priceless" stolen artefacts restored to India since 2014.

He also revealed that documentation from the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) and other experts has been collated for the British Museum as part of efforts to seek the repatriation of another idol which belongs in India.

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

IQOO 3 5G Review
IQOO 3 5G Review

IQOO 3 5G Review

Subhrojit Mallick   |  18 Mar 2020
DIGIT RATING
75 /100
  • design

    81

  • performance

    80

  • value for money

    66

  • features

    70

  • PROS
  • Achieves peak frame rates in games with high stability.
  • Above-average camera performance
  • Compact form factor
  • CONS
  • Software riddled with unwanted apps installed by default
  • Promotes sleazy content via push notifications
  • Inconsistent haptic feedback hampers gaming experience

Verdict

With impeccable hardware that puts the user at the cutting edge of smartphone technology, the iQOO 3 5G ticks all the boxes for a heavy user — Excellent gaming capabilities, fast app loading and switching, responsive UI, a compact design and above average cameras.

BUY IQOO 3 5G
Buy now on amazon Available 36990

IQOO 3 5G detailed review

It’s not every day do we see a new smartphone take on the well-settled incumbents in the premium segment, with the latest hardware made available before anyone else, but that’s exactly what the iQOO 3 5G did. The phone launched early in 2020 and essentially became one of the first in India to offer the Qualcomm Snapdragon 865, the chipset that has come to become the cornerstone for Android flagships. The smartphone is offered in two variants. One with support for 4G only and another with support for both 4G and 5G. We received the 5G variant for review.

Without a functioning 5G network in India yet, getting the 5G variant may be moot, but the iQOO 3’s 5G variant comes with 12GB RAM and 256GB storage, and the price it’s being offered at is quite convincing. Considering this is a new brand, is the iQOO 3 5G worth spending your money on?

Performance

For an independent brand, launching a flagship right away can be a hit or miss. But looking at the hardware inside, the iQOO 3 5G begs to be pushed hard. There’s the new Snapdragon 865 (which explains the 5G part), along with the latest LPDDR5 RAM and UFS 3.1 storage and even a carbon-fibre heat sink. The company is using the tagline “Monster Inside”, and I do agree with that statement after looking at the spec-sheet. But how does this ‘monster’ really perform? The benchmarks may have an answer —

On AnTuTu, the iQOO 3 5G scored 585579 while on Geekbench 5 single-core and multi-core tests, it scored 928 and 3289, respectively. On 3DMark Slingshot  Extreme which tested the Adreno 650 on the Snapdragon 865, it scored an impressive 7262 in the OpenGL test while the Vulkan test scored 6631. Looking at the numbers, the iQOO 3 5G is clearly leading the pack with the highest benchmarks we have seen this year on an Android smartphone. That’s one way to make an entrance.

But you don’t really need benchmark apps to tell if this smartphone is fast and powerful. Using the iQOO 3 5G, in general, is a smooth experience. The UI operations are fast and slick and there are no lags whatsoever in launching apps. The phone boots up in less than 30 seconds and right down from unlocking it from sleep to launching an app like Call of Duty: Mobile, it all happens in an instant. Having said that, the experience could have been better if the iQOO 3 5G came with a high refresh rate display. Despite all that firepower, UI operations are perceived to be slower than say the Realme X2 Pro or the OnePlus 7T because the screen refresh rate is still at 60Hz.

Gaming

The iQOO brand in China is primarily known for making gaming smartphones. And, we saw a bit of that here in India as well. The iQOO 3 5G comes with two pressure-sensitive “monster buttons”, one on each edge which doubles up as extra controls for gaming. We saw this feature back in the ROG Phone II and the Nubia Red Magic 3S and personally speaking, I happen to rely on them a lot while playing games like COD: Mobile. While I still consider the ones on the ROG Phone II the best, the iQOO 3 5G’s monster buttons are also quite functional. They work the same way, only the intensity of the haptic feedback is not consistent which led to a few missed kills in the game.

To check how well the iQOO 3 5G can run games, we played one round each of COD: Mobile and PUBG Mobile with GameBench connected to see how the CPU behaves during gaming.

To give you a quick gist, we played COD: Mobile and PUBG Mobile both at their highest possible settings. COD: Mobile delivered 60 FPS with 100% stability while PUBG Mobile ran at 40 FPS with 100% stability. The numbers reveal that the iQOO 3 5G had no problems whatsoever in offering the best possible performance while gaming since both the frame rates and stability numbers are as high as it can go.

Software

The iQOO 3 5G runs on the iQOO UI based on Android 10, which does look a lot like the latest version of Vivo’s FunTouchOS but with some nifty new additions. For one, you have the option to have the app drawer, which is quite handy for users like me who tend to have a lot of apps installed. Second, the quick settings tiles are placed in the notification panel instead of accessing it with a swipe up from the bottom.

There is an extra AI button on the side which, when pressed together with the pressure-sensitive buttons, turns on Monster Mode which is basically the phone’s gaming mode. But don’t expect too much from it right now. It only clears up resources and blocks calls and notifications from interrupting your gameplay, apart from turning on the monster buttons and haptic feedback. You can’t really tweak the CPU and GPU settings like you can from the Armoury Crate in the Asus ROG Phone II.

Like most affordable flagship smartphones, while the hardware is mostly on point, the software is what keeps it from offering a true flagship experience. The iQOO 3 5G is no different. It has all the flaws that the Redmi and Realme flagships offer. Unsolicited notifications that flood the phone (and even the lock screen), unwanted apps (we counted nine in the app drawer that come installed by default), and the minus one screen that throws up all sorts of sleazy content, are something that you should be aware of before buying this phone.

Battery Life

The iQOO 3 5G is one of the first smartphones to run on the Snapdragon 865 and it gave us a good peek into the screen-on times we can expect from the phones powered by the flagship SoC. The iQOO 3 5G also has a rather large 4,400mAh battery that gets topped up by a 55W fast charger that comes included in the box.

Despite a large battery, the screen-on times are rather disappointing. With 4G data turned on, the iQOO 3 5G delivers just about a day’s worth of usage with heavy usage that includes an hour of gaming, streaming a 40-minute episode on Netflix and browsing social media. If you also take videos and photos on top of that, the battery will be drained by the evening. On Wi-Fi, the battery drain is a little less aggressive and you can get a day’s worth of battery life even after heavy usage.

While we’re yet to pinpoint what exactly is putting so much strain on the battery, the good news is that the 55W fast charger tops up the battery in around 50 minutes.

Camera

Given most of the focus will be on the hardware inside, the camera setup on the iQOO 3 5G also looks to impress. There’s a 48MP quad-camera setup at the back that includes a 13MP ultrawide lens (with f/2.2 aperture), another 13MP telephoto lens (with 2x optical zoom and f/2.5 aperture) and another 2MP depth sensor. On the front, you get a 16MP f/2.0 lens drilled into the AMOLED display and might just be the tiniest punch-hole camera I have seen so far on a smartphone. How well do they perform?

Primary 48MP

The 48MP primary camera does put out sharp details in photos in its native 48MP mode. Yet, with no AI scene recognition applied, the contrast looks unnaturally boosted which explains the perception that the image is well-detailed. A 100% percent crop of the same reveals that isn’t the case. At its original 8000x6000 resolution, details look smudged, especially the foliage which iQOO is trying to mask using higher contrast.

Photos taken with pixel-binning turned on come out quite balanced. They are sharp, reproduce good colours, and carry a lot of details. The dynamic range is also quite impressive. The sample above shows the colours, and especially the details in the leaves were retained to a great extent without clipping the blue sky all that much.

Indoors, the performance is above-average. The AI scene recognition is quick to recognise what you are shooting, and the resulting image again comes out balanced with not much post-processing required. The camera gets all elements under focus quickly, and the details are uniformly captured across the frame.

13MP Telephoto

The 13MP telephoto lens also carries over the adequate sharpness and details like we saw from the 48MP lens. However, colours come out far too saturated and vibrant leading to some level of inconsistency. The shutter response is also slightly slower than the primary lens, enough to make you miss the moment if you are shooting a moving object.

13MP Ultrawide

The ultrawide lens on the iQOO 3 5G quickly became a favourite. With a good balance of colours and exposure along with adequate sharpness across the frame, this 13MP ultrawide lens is fun to use. There’s also not much distortion if you are shooting objects that are moderately far away, but more than that, you can also use it well past sunset provided the scene is lit with artificial light.

Here’s an example of the ultrawide lens in use post sunset —

While it’s not the best results you would expect, I particularly like the details it’s able to produce around the center without letting noise creep in. However, the shutter is kept open for too long for motion blur to kick in if something is moving in your frame.

Night Mode

The first thing I noticed about the night mode in the iQOO 3 5G (apart from the fact that it’s there, that is) is that the frame is much wider than the normal photo mode. That’s likely because the binned photos also crop out part of the sensor. But I couldn’t really find much of a difference in shots taken from the night mode and the normal photo mode apart from slightly higher illumination.

Apart from the fact that the normal mode crops out the frame and hence lets you go closer to your subject, it also carries a lot more details than the photo taken from the night mode. However, taking the cutting-edge hardware into considering, the results can be improved much more via software updates. Enabling night mode across all the three lenses, for instance.

Selfie camera

The 16MP selfie camera does offer a lot of options for shooting selfies and while I’m not much of a selfie-taker, I quite liked the portrait selfie mode in this device. It managed to keep the background lights under check and also light up the display with a warm tone to illuminate facial details much better.

Design and Display

While the iQOO 3 5G makes a monstrous impression when it comes to the performance, the design of the phone is at best, average. There isn’t any element on the phone that stands out except for maybe the power button that’s of a different colour than the rest of the body. But even if it has a predictable design, it doesn’t make it any less ergonomic. The rounded corners, and a compact form factor does make it much easier to hold and use the phone. But it does carry quite a lot of heft, probably because of all the hardware inside.

The iQOO 3 5G’s AMOLED display measures 6.44-inch diagonally and the selfie camera is drilled into the top right corner. Considering the monster buttons are also placed on the right edge, it would have been more practical to put the in-display camera in the top left corner to prevent it from being a distraction.

A good decision on iQOO’s part is to offer 180Hz touch sampling instead of a high refresh rate as that has a direct impact in your gaming. While it still isn’t as high as the ROG Phone II, the touch response time is pretty neat and I was able to get a lot of kills in COD: Mobile because of it.

The panel is also HDR10+ certified and hits 531 lux in max brightness under direct sunlight. Indoors, the brightness falls down to 4 lux at a minimum.

Bottomline

The iQOO 3 5G is clearly a contender for being one of the best smartphones in the first half of 2020. With impeccable hardware that puts the user at the cutting edge of smartphone technology, the iQOO 3 5G ticks all the boxes for a heavy user — Excellent gaming capabilities, fast app loading and switching, responsive UI, a compact design and above average cameras. The flagship experience is marred only by pesky notifications and a bloated app drawer. We also don’t have a record of how quickly iQOO will push out updates for this device, and for how long, but for it to stay relevant enough for using its 5G features, it should get at least two years of active support. Having said that, since iQOO also launched a 4G only variant of the device that is priced much lower (you do get lesser RAM and storage), it’s more prudent to invest in the lower priced 4G variant than splurge more on acquiring 5G support right now. Either way, you won’t be disappointed provided you can look past the invasive push notifications.

IQOO 3 5G Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 25 Feb 2020
Variant: 128GB6GBRAM
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    6.44" (1080 x 2400)
  • Camera Camera
    48 + 8 + 13 + 2 | 16 MP
  • Memory Memory
    128 GB/6 GB
  • Battery Battery
    4370 mAh

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Tongan backpacker and fruit picker fined, warned for fighting in Bundaberg court | Daily Mail Online
 
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Tongan fruit-picker is fined over a 'consensual' punch-up with another backpacker – but is allowed to stay in Australia because of farm worker shortage

  • Fruit-picking backpacker told he can stay in Australia, despite punching worker 
  • Maka Leohiva Taliauli, 26, appeared in Bundaberg Magistrates Court on Monday 
  • He was fined $650 after punching backpacker from Vanuatu in 'consensual' fight
  • Magistrate tells him he can stay in nation as farmers 'can't find enough' workers
  • Taliauli only has to 'behave' himself as his behaviour was serious misconduct

A fruit-picking backpacker who punched another tourist while drinking with friends has been fined and warned to behave if he wants to stay in Australia. 

Maka Leohiva Taliauli, 26, pleaded guilty to one count of assault occasioning bodily harm in the Bundaberg Magistrates Court on Monday.

The Tongan farm worker was fined $650 for fighting outside Childers' Federal Hotel after drinking with friends on July 11, News Mail reported.

Maka Leohiva Taliauli (pictured), 26, appeared before Bundaberg Magistrates Court when he pleaded guilty to one count of assault occasioning bodily harm on Monday

Maka Leohiva Taliauli (pictured), 26, appeared before Bundaberg Magistrates Court when he pleaded guilty to one count of assault occasioning bodily harm on Monday

The court heard the man, who has picked fruit in Australia for four years, punched a backpacker from Vanuatu in a 'consensual' fight after being separated.

Taliauli knew the victim, who sustained a cut on his cheek and bruise below the eye from the blow to the right side of his face.

They were living in the same accommodation, which is no longer the case.

Taliauli's visa was set to expire this month, but border closures mean he cannot return to Tonga until they reopen.

The court heard the 26-year-old hoped to come back to Australia again after returning home. 

Taliauli (pictured) and the victim, who sustained a cut on his cheek and bruise below the eye from the blow to the right side of his face, were known to each other at the time of the attack

Taliauli (pictured) and the victim, who sustained a cut on his cheek and bruise below the eye from the blow to the right side of his face, were known to each other at the time of the attack

In order for him to do that, Bundaberg Magistrate Andrew Moloney told Taliauli he must 'behave' himself.

'We need as many backpackers and workers who are going to pick the fruit as possible (because) we can't find enough, but to stay here and get that good work, you're going to have to behave yourself,' he said.

Mr Moloney added Taliauli was not going to jail but needed to understand his behaviour was serious misconduct.

'What makes it serious is you restarted it after it had ended and there are examples in our courts of people being in prison for this kind of stuff because people have come in for a second go,' he said.

Mr Moloney's comments followed Taliauli's employer appearing before the court and speaking highly of the defendant. 

A conviction was not recorded but Taliauli was fined $650 for the incident. 

Mr Moloney added Taliauli (pictured) was not going to jail but needed to understand his behaviour was serious misconduct

Mr Moloney added Taliauli (pictured) was not going to jail but needed to understand his behaviour was serious misconduct

Tongan backpacker and fruit picker fined, warned for fighting in Bundaberg court

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Xolo Q1000 Review

Xolo Q1000 Review

By Sameer Mitha | Updated May 22 2019
Xolo Q1000 Review
DIGIT RATING
70 /100
  • design

    60

  • performance

    80

  • value for money

    60

  • features

    90

  • PROS
  • Well-built
  • Good display
  • Smooth multitasking
  • CONS
  • Lacklustre camera
  • Real Racer hung the device

Verdict

The Q1000 offers a good build, impressive display and a smooth touch experience. Apps and games ran well on the smartphone except Real Racing 3. On the downside, the camera is average and the device is fingerprint magnet and you get a mere 4GB built-in storage. If you are in the market to pick up a 5-inch quad-core budget smartphone such as the Canvas HD, Lava Iris 504q, Spice Stellar Pinnacle Pro along with the Gionee Elife E3 before making your purchase decision.

BUY Xolo Q1000
Buy now on flipkart Out of Stock 4990

Xolo Q1000 detailed review

Xolo as a brand may not be as popular as Micromax or Karbonn but it is definitely making a name for itself in the budget smartphone segment as a company that makes some really good products. In the past we have seen the likes of the Q700, X500 and X1000 launch, all devices that really impressed us. They bring a good mix of features and specifications that gives the user a value for money smartphone.


Today, we have with us the Xolo Q1000. We investigate, if this smartphone has what it takes to live up to the reputation of the Xolo stable thus far.

At a Glance
With a 5-inch 720p IPS display, 1.2GHz MediaTek quad-core CPU, 1GB RAM, 4GB built-in storage and vanilla Android 4.2 Jelly Bean – the smartphone brings a slew of features to the table. Here is a quick look to see how it compares to the competition in terms of specifications.

Model

Xolo Q1000

Spice Stellar Pinnacle Pro

Micromax Canvas HD

Lava Iris 504q

OS

Android 4.2

Android 4.2

Android 4.2

Android 4.2

Display Size
5-inch
5.3-inch
5-inch
5-inch
Display Type

IPS LCD

IPS LCD

IPS LCD

IPS LCD

Display Resolution
1280x720
960x540
1280x720
1280x720
Built-in storage
4GB
16GB
4GB
4GB
Expandable storage

up to 32GB via a microSD card

up to 32GB via a microSD card

up to 32GB via a microSD card

up to 32GB via a microSD card

Processor

1.2GHz quad-core

1.2GHz quad-core

1.2GHz quad-core

1.2GHz quad-core

RAM
1GB
1GB
1GB
1GB
Rear Camera
8MP
8MP
8MP
8MP
Front Camera
1.2MP
5MP
2MP
2MP
Dual-SIM
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Battery
2100mAh
2550mAh
2000mAh
2000mAh
Price

Rs. 14,999

Rs. 14,990

Rs. 13,850

Rs. 13,499

The specifications of the Xolo Q1000 are quite similar when compared to the competition. The Spice Stellar Pinnacle Pro has a larger battery and built-in storage as well. Apart from the 4GB built-in storage, which is a bit low, we think the specifications are at par with the competition. 

Design
One good thing that we liked about previous Xolo phones such as the Q700, X500 and more was that those smartphones had a rubberized matte finish giving them a premium look and feel and adding to the grip. The Q1000 on the other hand has opted for a plastic back, which made us feel a little disappointed initially. The plastic body on a smartphone is something that we are used to seeing on Samsung smartphones. The rear panel of the Q1000 is a bit better built than what we have found on Samsung devices and that’s saying a lot. It still is a fingerprint magnet though.

The Xolo Q1000 not only feels well built, though plasticky, but also feels a bit hefty, weighing in at 171.1 grams.

The front of the Xolo Q1000 has the 5-inch display with the standard three capacitive touch controls below it. The display has DragonTrail Glass protecting it which is a good thing. The placement of the controls however feels a bit off. The right of the Q1000 has the power button, and the left has the volume rocker (no complaints here). Below the volume rocker you have the shutter button. This button doesn’t act as a shortcut to open the camera app but it does work while clicking photos. We have missed the physical shutter button on the past and its nice to see it make an appearance on this smartphone. Its positioning however is something that will take you some time to get used to.

The top of the Q1000 has the headphones jack and the microUSB port. Below the rear plastic panel you have the slots for the two SIM cards and the microSD card.

Even though Xolo has gone the plastic rout with the Q1000, its design and build is quite impressive. The device feels quite heavy and sturdy in ones hands and is comfortable to hold.

User Interface
We love the vanilla Android experience and that is what you get on the Xolo Q1000. The smartphone runs on Android 4.2 Jelly Bean so you also get access to the lock screen apps on the device. The UI is slightly customized but there is no skin overlaying the OS and that is a very good thing. It not only maintains the fluidity of the UI, but also ensures a snappy smartphone experience.

Performance
Since the Xolo Q1000 boasts of the same hardware that is powering the plethora of other quad-core smartphones out there (MediaTek MT6589), we wonder how much of a difference we will see in performance. Here is a quick look to see how it performs in the benchmark comparisons.

As you can see from the benchmarks scores, the performance of the Q1000 is nearly at par with what the competition has to offer. There are places where the Q1000 has scored the highest whereas in other places, the Canvas HD holds the top position.

The response of the Xolo Q1000’s touchscreen is very good. There are times when budget smartphones touchscreen feels sticky or slightly rough but the Q1000 is really smooth. Not only does the touchscreen feel smooth but the response during navigation is nice too. There is very little lag on the device when compared to the others.

The Xolo Q1000’s keyboard is stock Android and well laid-out. The device is comfortable to type on too. Playing games, watching videos or navigating the browser, the navigation experience on the smartphone is good.

The 5-inch display has a 1280x720 pixel resolution giving it 294ppi pixel density. The IPS panel has good viewing angles and the text images; games all look crisp on the smartphone. Reading books and browsing the Internet was a good experience on the smartphone.

Speaking of games, apart from Real Racing 3, all the other games ran very smoothly on the smartphone. We played a bit of Angry Birds Star wars, Subway Surf, Dead Trigger and more. Real Racing 3 just hangs and the only way to get the smartphone working again is to remove the battery, reinsert it and switch the smartphone on.

Moving to the calling capability of the Q1000, put simply, it is good; no complaints here.

The Q1000 doesn’t come with any preloaded apps or bloatware. For all your app needs you have access to the Google Play store.

The camera on the Xolo Q1000 is average. If the lighting condition is good, the images produced are decent. When you see the image in their actual size, there is some loss of details and sometimes there is even a bit of noise. In low-lit conditions, there is loss of even more details and the images are quite noisy. In the sub 15k price point, one smartphone that has a really impressive camera is the Spice Stellar Pinnacle Pro.


In terms of its battery life, the Xolo Q1000 has enough juice to get through the day average you. In our continuous video playback test, the smartphone lasted for 5 hours with the brightness on full as well as the volume. The Wi-Fi was also on.

Bottom Line
The market is flooded with quite a few good budget quad-core phones leaving the consumer spoiled for choice. What does the Q1000 offer? A good build, impressive display and a smooth touch experience. Apps and games ran well on the smartphone except Real Racing 3. On the downside, the camera is average and the device is fingerprint magnet and you get a mere 4GB built-in storage. If you are in the market to pick up a 5-inch quad-core budget smartphone such as the Canvas HD, Lava Iris 504q, Spice Stellar Pinnacle Pro along with the Gionee Elife E3 before making your purchase decision.
 

Xolo Q1000 Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price: ₹14990
Release Date: 23 May 2013
Variant: 4GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    5" (720 x 1280)
  • Camera Camera
    8 | 1.2 MP
  • Memory Memory
    4 GB/1 GB
  • Battery Battery
    2100 mAh
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Sameer Mitha

Sameer Mitha lives for gaming and technology is his muse. When he isn’t busy playing with gadgets or video games he delves into the world of fantasy novels.

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Xolo Q1000

Buy now on flipkart 4990

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Buy now on flipkart 4990

Digit caters to the largest community of tech buyers, users and enthusiasts in India. The all new Digit in continues the legacy of Thinkdigit.com as one of the largest portals in India committed to technology users and buyers. Digit is also one of the most trusted names when it comes to technology reviews and buying advice and is home to the Digit Test Lab, India's most proficient center for testing and reviewing technology products.

We are about leadership-the 9.9 kind! Building a leading media company out of India.And,grooming new leaders for this promising industry.

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Coolpad Note 3 Plus Review

Coolpad Note 3 Plus Review

By Hardik Singh | Updated May 22 2019
Coolpad Note 3 Plus Review
DIGIT RATING
63 /100
  • design

    66

  • performance

    55

  • value for money

    52

  • features

    77

  • PROS
  • Well-built
  • Fast fingerprint scanner
  • CONS
  • Average performance
  • Display not as accurate, in terms of colours, as the Coolpad Note 3.

Verdict

The Coolpad Note 3 Plus is a spec update over the Note 3, and it's not the phone to buy. The colour accuracy is not the same as the original and the performance is slightly lower. That said, the Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 is the best phone to buy in this segment, and if you can't get that, the original Coolpad Note 3 is the phone to go for.

BUY Coolpad Note 3 Plus
Buy now on amazon Out of Stock 9499

Coolpad Note 3 Plus detailed review

Coolpad turned quite a few heads with its Coolpad Note 3 smartphones. Both the original Note 3 and the Note 3 Lite still offer one of the better packages at their respective price points. While the Coolpad Note 3 Lite is still amongst our top 3 phones under 7K, the Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 has been stealing the Note 3's lunch money. To cope, the Coolpad Note 3 Plus brings a 1080p display and costs the same as the original, Rs. 8,999. Of course, the Note 3's price has currently been reduced to Rs. 8,499. 


So, has this change in display changed its current prospects, and what about the performance? Here's the Coolpad Note 3 Plus review.

Display

Starting off with the new, the original Coolpad Note 3 had a decent display with one of the best viewing angles in its category. The Note 3 Plus adds to that, with the new 1080p display, but isn't as good a display as the original. The 1080p display on the new phone has a slightly cooler tone that we aren't very fond of. The older Note 3 had warmer colours, which looked better. The sunlight legibility has improved, but the overall display quality is unable to match up to the Xiaomi Redmi Note 3.

Performance

The other specifications of the phone are similar to the original. This means, the device is powered by an year old MediaTek SoC, which combined with 3GB of RAM is able to keep up with the competition, with the Redmi Note 3 being the only exception. Day to day performance is smooth and using social media apps, camera app, or any non-gaming app doesn't slow the phone down. However, it does stutter if you open a few heavy apps back-to-back, and is rather inconsistent at times. The graphics performance has dipped and while you can play heavy games, we found the phone lagging more often than its older iteration. All things considered though, this is still a recommendable phone to buy under the 10k price bracket. Coolpad is likely to cash in on the fact that the Redmi Note 3 is available via flash sales and in very low numbers.

Camera and Battery

While the megapixel count remains the same, the camera quality has improved, slightly. Images taken by the 13MP rear shooter on the Coolpad Note 3 Plus seem sharper. Besides that, nothing has changed. The camera remains similar in terms of focusing speed, the dynamic range seems same, and the front facing camera is exactly the same.

  

We did find a minute difference in the battery life, but overall it's quite similar to the Note 3, with both scoring more than 9 hours of screen on time on our Geekbench battery benchmark.

Everything else, like the build, design, and UI remains the same. However, we would urge you to check our review of the Coolpad Note 3 to know about them.

Bottomline

The Coolpad Note 3 Plus is a slight update to an already good phone, but if you are interested in this segment, we would suggest going for the the Xiaomi Redmi Note 3, which is still the best phone in the sub-10k category, and if you are patient enough, that is the phone to go for. If not, the Coolpad Note 3 is a better phone than the Note 3 Plus, since it offers better colour accuracy and slightly higher performance levels.

Coolpad Note 3 Plus Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 06 May 2016
Variant: 16GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    5.5" (1080 x 1920)
  • Camera Camera
    13 | 5 MP
  • Memory Memory
    16 GB/3 GB
  • Battery Battery
    3000 mAh

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IQOO 3 5G Review

Nokia 5.3 Review

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Hardik Singh

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Coolpad Note 3 Plus

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Buy now on amazon 9499

Digit caters to the largest community of tech buyers, users and enthusiasts in India. The all new Digit in continues the legacy of Thinkdigit.com as one of the largest portals in India committed to technology users and buyers. Digit is also one of the most trusted names when it comes to technology reviews and buying advice and is home to the Digit Test Lab, India's most proficient center for testing and reviewing technology products.

We are about leadership-the 9.9 kind! Building a leading media company out of India.And,grooming new leaders for this promising industry.

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This is 'Naagin 5' Actor Mohit Sehgal's 'Favourite Pic' from Set
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This is 'Naagin 5' Actor Mohit Sehgal's 'Favourite Pic' from Set

credits - Mohit Sehgal Instagram

credits - Mohit Sehgal Instagram

Mohit Sehgal, who is playing the role of Jay in Ekta Kapoor's 'Naagin 5', shared his 'favourite' picture from the sets of the show featuring co-stars Surbhi Chandna and Sharad Malhotra.

  • Last Updated: September 16, 2020, 2:15 PM IST

Actor Mohit Sehgal, who is playing the role of Jay in Ekta Kapoor's Naagin 5, shared his 'favourite' picture from the sets of the show.

Mohit took to Instagram to share the picture, "My favourite picture from #Naagin5. Love u guys @officialsurbhic @sharadmalhotra009 (sic)," he captioned the picture on Instagram. In the picture, the actor can be seen sharing the frame with his co-stars Surbhi Chandna and Sharad Malhotra.

Meanwhile, Surbhi plays Bani and Sharad is shown as Veer in the show. Also, while Surbhi dons the role of Naagin, Mohit took the character of Naag and Sharad plays the antagonist Cheel.

In the latest episode, the trio realised their true powers and Veer attacked Jay and a furious Bani takes revenge on Veer.

Meanwhile, Surbhi, Mohit and Sharad took over the show after Hina Khan, Dheeraj Dhoopar and Mohit Malhotra did the initial few episodes. Also, Anjum Fakih, Parag Tyagi, Gaurav Wadhwa and Aahna Sharma have joined the cast of the Naagin 5.

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Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

Body image in sport: Scotland's Rhona Lloyd did not train to avoid big muscles - BBC Sport

Body image in sport: Scotland's Rhona Lloyd did not train to avoid big muscles

By Becky GreyBBC Sport
Scotland's Rhona Lloyd runs with the ball
Rhona Lloyd earned her first senior Scotland cap in 2016

At the age of 16, Rhona Lloyd thought about giving up rugby.

She had just been given her first opportunity with Scotland Under-20s and it came with a gym programme to complete in her own time. She joined the team, but ignored the gym work.

No other girls at her school played rugby and, already taunted for being a "man", Lloyd did not want to give her peers more ammunition by developing big muscles.

Now, the 23-year-old has 28 caps for her country and the sport has taken her around the world from Paris to Hong Kong. She is pretty proud of her guns too.

"They sent me a gym programme with press-ups and sit-ups - such basic stuff," Lloyd recalls.

"I remember thinking I couldn't do it because I would look more like a man. It's ridiculous because I was acting like after 10 press-ups I was going to wake up the next day looking like Popeye.

"I felt like if I had muscles I wasn't attractive or I wasn't feminine. I had this massive block where I didn't want to look more like a man.

"I didn't want to give people more reason to call me that. I didn't have any role models that were muscly, athletic females."

Lloyd posted a picture of her frame at 15 compared to now with the caption: "15-year-old me on the left didn't wanna do weights because she was scared of "looking like a man". Don't be like her."

'Now being strong is cool'

Two years later, Lloyd went to Edinburgh University and joined the rugby team. Suddenly, she did have role models.

The wing, who now plays for Loughborough Lightning in the Premier 15s, says "everybody was lifting weights" and it quickly became something she loved too.

"I was just in this new environment and all of a sudden it was cool to be different," she explains.

"That was celebrated. I came to this realisation that if I wanted to play for Scotland I wasn't going to look like everybody else because I was trying to do something that other people weren't.

"I play a physical sport. You need to have some muscle behind you so it's getting over that mental block and embracing that.

"Now being strong is really cool. I want to be that role model that I didn't have."

'Society's expectations can hold you back'

Lloyd says it was "not safe" to be playing at the size she was when she won her first cap against England aged 19 but adds that now at Loughborough players look "so strong" from the moment they arrive.

Although things are changing, Lloyd is not alone in her experience. In last month's BBC Elite British Sportswomen's Survey, 78% of respondents said they were conscious of their body image.

When Ireland used players to launch their men's kit but models to launch the women's jersey last month, Lloyd spoke out alongside friend and fellow player Florence Williams.

The subsequent #IAmEnough campaign went viral, prompting women from various sports to speak out about their experiences of having a body image that does not fit with society's expectations of women.

Canterbury, the makers of the Irish jerseys, have now pledged to photograph both male and female players in all future campaigns.

Lloyd says she was contacted by athletes in a variety of sports, from rock climbing to rowing, and hopes the continued conversation around body image will make her experience less common in the future.

"It definitely can hold you back," she says. "In sport when you're on the field, how society thinks you look or how attractive you are in society counts for absolutely nothing.

"To see so many female rugby players sharing their experiences of sexism in sport or body image or why the campaign mattered to them.... I've never seen that unity from the rugby community."

World Cup qualification 'a huge ask'

With one year to go until the World Cup in New Zealand, social media campaigns are not the only thing occupying Lloyd's mind.

Scotland failed to qualify in 2017 and are yet to seal their place at next year's tournament. It is a tough task, with one team going through from qualifiers taking place in December against Italy, Spain and Ireland.

Later this month, Scotland will reconvene for the first time since the coronavirus lockdown prematurely ended their Six Nations campaign in March.

"My first season with Scotland was when we played two games against Spain and we didn't qualify," Lloyd recalls.

"I wrote in my diary, 'this can't happen again'. Four years ago we were a brand new team but it's hardly changed in that time.

"We've all been working so hard over the past four years with that goal in mind. It's a huge ask but I know that we can. It's just going to come down to whoever best prepares and performs on the day."

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X-in-the-Loop (XiL) based virtual calibration methods to efficiently address future powertrain and vehicle development challenges - Mobex

X-in-the-Loop (XiL) based virtual calibration methods to efficiently address future powertrain and vehicle development challenges

Daniel Guse, Project Manager, FEV Europe

Can’t attend live? Register anyway, and we’ll send you a link to the slides and a video of the webinar when it’s finished.

In this free, 60-minute webinar, FEV‘s Daniel Guse presents cost and time-saving potentials that can be raised by establishing virtual calibration in the context of the necessary technical and methodological advancement of powertrain and vehicle development processes.

Key topics and takeaways:

  • Exemplary direct and indirect cost and time-saving potentials gained in powertrain and/or vehicle development projects by the implementation of FEV’s virtual calibration methods
  • Hardware specific targets to successfully establish XiL test scenarios on dynamic test benches
  • Minimal functional and physically-based structure of the major relevant real-time simulation models to successfully perform calibration and testing tasks from various work scopes
  • Presentation of FEV’s physically based approach to objectively evaluate and categorize the longitudinal drivability capabilities of conventional as well as autonomous vehicle concepts
  • Correlation of test results for various calibration and testing tasks between on-road testing with real vehicles and different XiL test bench concepts

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Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

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Zopo Flash X Plus Review

Zopo Flash X Plus Review

By Shrey Pacheco | Updated May 22 2019
Zopo Flash X Plus Review
DIGIT RATING
61 /100
  • design

    58

  • performance

    68

  • value for money

    46

  • features

    70

User Rating : 5/5 Out of 1 Reviews
  • PROS
  • Decent display
  • CONS
  • Poor build
  • Sub par performace
  • Sub par camera

Verdict

The Zopo Flash X Plus is not the phone we'd recommend, irrespective of where you're buying from. While the Xiaomi Redmi Note 4, Honor 6X and Moto G5 remains amongst our top recommendations in this price range, for offline buyers, both the Asus Zenfone 3s Max and Lenov K6 Note offer better value than this smartphone. If you're lucky enough, a 3GB RAM variant of the Coolpad Cool 1 is sold offline too, which is the best phone for offline budget buyers.

BUY Zopo Flash X Plus
Buy now on flipkart Out of Stock 6990
Buy now on amazon Out of Stock 6999

Zopo Flash X Plus detailed review

The sub-15K market in India is pretty competitive with manufacturers falling head-over-heels in an effort to offer the best features at a reasonable price. You can even get devices that offer flagship-grade processors, big-screen phablets, dual-rear cameras, and huge batteries. Zopo takes on this market, entering the fray with its new Flash X Plus smartphone. Launched at a price of Rs. 13,999, the device will be up against some pretty good smartphones, like the Xiaomi Redmi Note 4, Honor 6X, Coolpad Cool1 and so forth. Let's see if the Zopo Flash X Plus has what it takes to stand out. 


Build and Design

The Zopo Flash X Plus may not look exceptional, but that doesn't mean it's a bad looking smartphone. It sports a metallic build with 2.5D glass on top. The volume rocker and power button are located on the right edge of the device, while the SIM tray is on the left. On the bottom, you have the micro-USB port, flanked by the speaker grille and the 3.5mm headphone jack. The fingerprint sensor is located behind the home button. At the back is the 13MP primary  camera with dual-LED flash, while the the noise cancelling microphone is located on the top edge.

It's when you pick up and hold the phone that you start noticing the flaws. The power button for example, doesn't depress enough when you press it, making it a little tricky to use, especially when trying to take screenshots. There's a similar issue with the home button too. While it is touch sensitive, like the one used on the OnePlus 3, it depresses just slightly, which I personally disliked.

Another issue was the SIM tray, which doesn't sit flush with the body. When I ejected it from the slot, it turns out that the tray consists of two separate sections held together with what looks like three spot-welds. So, the two pieces jiggle about when you hold it. More worryingly, this meant that there was a slight chance that the two pieces might break off. The entire design points towards a lack of polish and attention to detail, which is never a good sign.

That's not all. The notification LED, which is located behind the ear piece, is visible through the hole for the noise cancellation microphone on top of the device. It's as if Zopo took the shell that every sub-15k smartphone uses, but decided to skip on the microphone. This also means that dust and water can easily enter the device. Such build issues on a smartphone are definitely not something I would want, especially when you take into account the price of the device. 

Display and UI

The Zopo Flash X Plus sports a 5.5-inch Full HD display. The viewing angles are pretty decent, with cooler colours. The display is also decently bright with a luminance rating of about 492 Lux. Sunlight visibility is fine and I didn't have to squint much to read text, even in bright daylight. 

Zopo has opted to use a UI that looks a lot like stock Android, complete with the App drawer, which I personally like. However, you do get some bloatware installed on the device like the Xplorer Keyboard, Zopo Care, Zopo World and even an app that just takes you to Zopo’s website. These apps, except for the Zopo app (that takes you to the website), cannot be uninstalled. Thankfully, you can keep these apps hidden away in the app drawer. Other than this, you also get the option to turn on gesture functions such as double tap to wake, drawing on the screen, and more. I could use the double tap to wake function, and drawing a 'C' to launch camera, but the other gestures weren't very responsive.

Performance

The Zopo Flash X Plus is powered by a 1.3GHz MediaTek MT6753 processor with 3GB of RAM. In day-to-day use, the processor is not too bad and does most simple tasks without much problems. However, it seems to have problems with performance intensive tasks like gaming. Lag between menus and loading screens is also noticeable. While playing Asphalt 8, the phone offers frame rates of 13fps, which is amongst the lowest we've seen in any price range. Playing the game at these frame rates is troublesome and the experience is sub-par. In an air conditioned room, the phone reached 37 degrees with about half an hour of gaming. With outside temperatures at about 40 degrees, the Zopo Flash X Plus reached 43 degrees with about 20 minutes of gaming. Neither of the temperatures are out of the ordinary, but you wouldn't expect much heat from this level of performance any way. 

Camera

The device features a 13MP rear camera with f/2.2 aperture lens. It produces undersaturated colours and overall images lack contrast and vibrancy. In low light conditions, things become worse. The sensor produces too much pixel noise, which ruins details.

At the front is an 8MP camera with a f/2.4 aperture lens. The Zopo Flash X Plus uses a version of Apple's Retina flash for taking photos in low light conditions and there is a gesture mode that takes a picture when you flash the victory/peace hand gesture. Selfies taken from this camera lack details and noise levels are quite high at night, again with low levels of detail.  

View post on imgur.com

Battery

The smartphone is equipped with a 3350mAh battery. During my average work day, which starts at about 8 in the morning and ends at 11pm, I was left with about 25 percent battery. This included about 20 minutes of gaming, 30-40 minutes streaming music, and the rest was divided between calling, social media, and so forth. Our synthetic battery benchmark tests ran for about six hours. While it is possible to get longer battery life with more judicious use, it's advisable to carry a powerbank just in case.

Bottomline

The Zopo Flash X Plus finds itself in the middle of a very competitive category and it is outperformed by other, better equipped smartphones. It's outgunned in pretty much every way, from build quality to battery life. To its credit, Zopo has cut the price of the phone to Rs. 12,999, but you can get much better smartphones at around this price point. The Moto G5 and Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 would be recommended. If you don't want to buy online, the Coolpad Cool 1 is sold offline as well, while phones like the Lenovo K6 Note and Asus Zenfone 3s Max are viable alternatives for offline buyers.

Zopo Flash X Plus Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 01 Mar 2017
Variant: 32GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    5.5" (1080 x 1920)
  • Camera Camera
    13 | 8 MP
  • Memory Memory
    32 GB/3 GB
  • Battery Battery
    3100 mAh

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Shrey Pacheco

Writer, gamer, and hater of public transport.

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Zopo Flash X Plus

Buy now on flipkart 6990

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Buy now on flipkart 6990

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Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

Huawei Honor 10 Lite Review

Huawei Honor 10 Lite Review

By Subhrojit Mallick | Updated May 22 2019
Huawei Honor 10 Lite Review
DIGIT RATING
70 /100
  • design

    65

  • performance

    67

  • value for money

    70

  • features

    76

User Rating : 3/5 Out of 1 Reviews
  • PROS
  • Nearly borderless display
  • Handles gaming and other heavy tasks with ease
  • Above average camera
  • CONS
  • Short battery life
  • Plastic build
  • No gorilla glass protection

Verdict

The Honor 10 Lite may have come out earlier in China, but for India, it comes just on time. With Mobile World Congress just a month away, the Honor 10 Lite is filling a critical gap in time before more innovative devices come to market. Mid-range phones have performed impressively over the past year and are set to become even more powerful in 2019. While this smartphone does come with the performance expected from a 2019 mid-range phone, there are certain elements that should have been left behind in the past year itself, such as the microUSB port and the inability to stream videos in HD from Netflix or Prime Videos. However, with an almost borderless screen and above average cameras, it’s easy to recommend the Honor 10 Lite. If you need a phone right now, between the Realme 2 Pro, Mi A2, Redmi Note 6 Pro and the Asus Zenfone Max Pro M2, the Honor 10 Lite is definitely the one to go for. However, in the next few months post MWC, we do expect more exciting mid-range smartphones to be available, so if you can wait, you may better choices a few months down the line.

BUY Huawei Honor 10 Lite
Buy now on amazon Available 17880

Huawei Honor 10 Lite detailed review

After launching a series of smartphones ranging from the high-end to entry-level price range, Honor has more or less consolidated its lineup in 2018. The blitzkreig also proved to be profitable for the company as it broke into the top 5 smartphone manufacturers in India according to reports. It’s only obvious that the Huawei sub-brand is now looking to maintain the momentum it gathered last year. The Honor 10 Lite is a way to keep that momentum alive. With a large display, a new processor and a colourful finish, the Honor 10 Lite looks to emulate the success the Honor 9 Lite received at the beginning of 2018. However, because of the mid-range elements in the phone, the phone is priced much higher than its predecessor going all the way up to Rs 17,999. One might argue that the average selling price in the Indian smartphone market has also increased (thanks mostly to the success of high-end devices like OnePlus 6), and as such, the price is more or less acceptable, but with Rs 17,999 to spare, is the Honor 10 Lite the best phone to buy right now? Let’s find out.


Design

The Honor 10 Lite looks much like other Honor phones. It has a similar colour treatment with a glossy, reflective exterior. Only, instead of the usual glass panel on the back, the chassis is made out of hard plastic. The company promises high durability, but I wasn’t convinced. Just like the Asus Zenfone Max Pro M2, it gets scratched easily. It also tends to retain more smudges and fingerprints. I had to keep a microfibre cloth with me at all times to keep the phone spotless. You do get a TPU case out of the box but using that takes away the charm of the glossy finish.

The phone also curves at the edges making it easy to grip. Honor anyway likes to maintain a slim profile and the Honor 10 Lite is quite slim at 8mm. It’s not as wide as the Honor 8X even though the company relies on the same Chip-On-Flex (COF) technology to keep the size of the bezels at the bare minimum. As a result, Honor was able to achieve an impressive 91 percent screen-to-body ratio. With a tiny U-shaped notch housing the front camera, the upper part of the display is also void of much distraction. Between the wide rectangular notch and this one, I prefer the latter simply because it takes up much less space. Since the company did away with a wide notch, all the other elements like the LED notification light and the proximity sensor had to be fitted at the bottom.

The biggest quip I have about the Honor 10 Lite is that it still relies on a microUSB port for charging and data transfer. The port is wedged between the 3.5mm headphone jack (thankfully retained) and the speaker grill, and doesn’t support the company’s SuperCharge speeds. I believe it’s now time for the microUSB to retire and make way for USB-C universally.

Nevertheless, the Honor 10 looks good, but I won’t go as far as saying it’s well-built. Plastic isn’t quite durable which is the reason OEMs raced to use aluminium and ceramic and even titanium to make them long-lasting. I would still say it’s better than using glass as it makes the phone less fragile and also allows the space to experiment with various colour treatments. The Honor 10 Lite has a 3D optical effect that takes a lot of effort to accomplish, according to Honor, and while that’s not a new look anymore, it does add a bit of flair to the phone.

Display

The display on the Honor 10 Lite is one of the highlights of the phone. The 6.21-inch panel stretches almost all the way to the edges thanks to the CoF technique Honor pulled off. The waterdrop notch on top also allows for more screen real estate. Honor uses a similar LCD panel as the Honor 8X which we had noted to be quite bright. Even the Honor 10 Lite registered high brightness values in our luminescence tests. As such, content on the 19.5:9 aspect ratio display looks good particularly thanks to a high 415 ppi pixel density. The icons appear quite sharp and bright wallpapers appear rich and vibrant. However, the phone lacks the Widevine L1 certification, so even if the display makes HD content appear rich and colourful, you won’t get the same quality while streaming on Netflix, Amazon Prime Video and the likes.

The panel also seems to have its white balance set to a cooler bias rather than the neutral white we normally expect from IPS LCD panels.. The blues and greens appear more saturated while the reds and yellows seem a little washed out. The display is especially good for gaming though. The borderless panel immerses you in the game and the extra real estate comes handy when you have large hands.

Performance

While it’s nice to have a bright and vibrant display and a cool design, the performance will always be the most essential aspect of a smartphone. If it fails to perform, everything else becomes secondary, and the Honor 10 Lite doesn’t quite disappoint. It relies on the HiSilicon Kirin 710, the same chipset that power the Honor 8X. For anyone wondering, the Honor 8X was the runner-up in the mid-range segment in our Zero1 awards where only the performance matters. The Kirin 710 is based on a 12nm manufacturing process and features four high-performance Cortex A73 cores clocked at 2.2GHz and four high-efficiency Cortex A53 cores clocked at 1.7GHz. While ARM has released new core architectures, the older Cortex A73 cores work quite well. In fact, as compared to the older Kirin 659 where all the eight cores were high-efficiency Cortex A53, the Kirin 710 is quite a performance jump. It reflects in the benchmark results as well. In fact, the Kirin 710 managed to trump Qualcomm’s best mid-range chip in that price range — The Snapdragon 660.

On AnTuTu, the Honor 10 Lite scored 130849, which is similar to the Honor 8X’s 139785 and more than the Mi A2’s 128895. While on Geekbench Single and Multi core tests, the Kirin 710 showed promise by scoring 1541 and 5427 respectively. In comparison, the Honor 8X also scored similarly with 1602 and 5435 respectively while the Mi A2 scored higher in single core performance at 1602 and more or less the same in the multi-core test at 1632. While Geekbench and AnTuTu measures how well the CPU holds up, 3DMark’s Slingshot measures graphics processing and that’s where the Honor 10 Lite seems to be a little weak. It scored a measly 731 while the Mi A2 outperformed by scoring 1767. Even the Honor 8X had the same weakness, and that’s particularly because the Kirin 710 is paired with an older Mali-G51 GPU  and is no match for the Adreno GPUs.

Nevertheless, Honor compensates for that with the software-based GPU Turbo 2.0. It uses machine learning to render only parts of the frame that change over time, and as such cuts down on the processing power required. The impact is big while playing certain games like PubG Mobile. Gamebench revealed that the popular battle royale game (PubG) ran at 30 FPS while the same game on the Asus Zenfone Max Pro M2 ran at 26 FPS. Both are much lower than what the high-end smartphones deliver, but that’s as far as you can go with a mid-ranger it seems. GPU Turbo also supports Asphalt 9 and other popular Chinese games.

The Honor 10 Lite runs on Android 9 Pie and is the first Honor phone to come with the latest version out of the box. The new EMUI 9, based on the latest version of Android, brings new features like gesture-based navigation, digital well-being and more. The gestures are very iPhone-like, and takes a little time to get used to. You do get a little extra screen space by removing the navigation buttons. I was more interested in the Digital Balance feature which gave me a quick rundown of where my time went while on the phone. You can also set a stipulated amount of time to use the phone, and is especially useful if you’re giving a phone to your kid. There’s Huawei’s HiVision too which can be used to recognise dresses and famous objects. It did work in some cases but also failed quite a lot of times. It seems like a work in development, and as such, Honor could have just enabled support for Google Lens. Interestingly, the Honor 10 Lite can also project it’s display wirelessly to any miracast supported device. It’s not exactly a new feature, but you can use the phone as it is, while projecting a video to a screen, like how you would use Chromecast to cast content.

Everything said and done, even though the Honor 10 Lite is packed with useful features, the UI itself still has the same unaesthetic feel to it. It’s not as refined and seamless as say, MIUI. It does not have the simplicity of stock Android either. It’s weird to see Honor putting so much effort to make the exterior stand out, but the phone’s software experience still has a long way to go.

Camera

Throughout 2018, we saw mid-range smartphone cameras go from strength to strength and posed quite a challenge to their expensive counterparts. The Mi A2, for instance, managed to shoot better low-light photos than a lot of other high-end offerings. Cameras have been improving over time, and that’s evident in the Honor 10 Lite. The 13+2MP setup on the Honor 10 Lite is above average. There are obvious compromises like lack of OIS or EIS, although Honor offers it’s AI-based stabilisation in the night mode which is a hit or miss.

On the front is a 24MP Sony IMX 576 sensor, the same as the one on the Realme U1. The 24MP sensor bins four pixels into one to generate a better low-light selfie with more details and less noise. Part of that claim is true, but some of it isn’t quite so.

Honor also implemented it’s AI-based scene recognition system that comes into play when you are taking a photo of a common scene. The camera can recognise 22 different scenes, and in most cases, it simply boosts up the local contrast and the saturation to bring out a result that the average smartphone user will find attractive.

The phone manages to take good photos without much effort when there’s ample sunlight. The dynamic range in the final JPEGs is a little less as the shadows retain lesser details. We have seen mid-rangers like the Mi A2 and the Redmi Note 6 Pro take photos with good details in the shadow regions. However, the photos Honor takes are aesthetically pleasing simply because it jacks up the saturation and contrast in the photos.

The camera is especially useful in taking closeup shots of food, flowers and the likes. There, the 13MP sensor with its f/1.8 aperture is able to reproduce finer details and the results look good on a big screen. However, since there is no stabilisation in place, you need to have steady hands to click a photo of say, a flower moving in the wind. You can turn the AI off if you don’t want an oversaturated result.

 

Indoors, the camera’s somewhat low dynamic range starts becoming more evident. It tends to shoot at slower shutter speeds and because of a lack of stabilisation, even a slow shutter speed of 1/100s shows signs of blurring in the edges. In case of the sample below, the area farthest in the frame is hardly in focus and lacks sharpness. In the next sample below, the dark area have little to no detail. You can experiment with the focus point a bit to get your desired exposure, but there’s a limit to it.

The phone is especially adept at taking portrait photos. Sure it won’t have that gradient bokeh effect the new iPhones produces and the blurring is pretty linear. But the edge detection and subject separation is pretty accurate.

In low-light, the camera falls flat. Shooting in normal Photo mode results in noisy photos, with little to no sharpness. However, the night mode manages to recover some details. It essentially works on the same principle as the OnePlus 6T’s Nightscape mode where the shutter is open for longer and the resulting shake is countered by taking multiple buffer images and fusing them together. The results aren’t as good as the OnePlus 6T though, but good enough for the price it is offered at. Stationery objects are easier to shoot with this mode, as you have to hold the phone up for longer.

Thanks to the pixel-binning efforts, the selfies from the Honor 10 Lite’s 24MP front camera also come out decently well. Sure Honor boosts up the beautifying effects by default but they can be turned off to get a more realistic portrait of people’s faces. It also seemed to work enough in the dark. Apart from binning the pixels together, it also makes the screen bright to use as a source of light. The resulting photos have the background dark and noisy, but the faces are in focus with adequate sharpness.

Battery

The Honor 10 Lite have some traits in common with the Honor 8X - The same chipset and a big display among them, but one place where it crucially deviates is the battery capacity. The 10 Lite packs a smaller 3400mAh battery. The company believes the 12nm chipset will be more power efficient and will compensate for the lower capacity. But that's not totally the case. Especially while gaming, the battery drain is higher than normal. A 30-minute session of PubG Mobile drained the battery from 45 percent to 23 percent. While watching content on Netflix, the drain is more conservative however, perhaps because it's not running at full resolution. On PCMark Work 2.0 though, the phone lasted 5 hours 24 minutes, indicating you won't have to plug the phone in charge before evening. The phone also doesn't seem to support any sort of fast charging and topping the battery takes around 1.5 hours. Clearly this isn't the mid-ranger to buy if you're looking for a really long battery life.

Bottomline

The Honor 10 Lite may have come out earlier in China, but for India, it comes just on time. With Mobile World Congress just a month away, the Honor 10 Lite is filling a critical gap in time before more innovative devices come to market. Mid-range phones have performed impressively over the past year and are set to become even more powerful in 2019. While this smartphone does come with the performance expected from a 2019 mid-range phone, there are certain elements that should have been left behind in the past year itself, such as the microUSB port and the inability to stream videos in HD from Netflix or Amazon Prime Video. However, with an almost borderless screen and above average cameras, it’s easy to recommend the Honor 10 Lite. If you need a phone right now, between the Realme 2 Pro, Mi A2, Redmi Note 6 Pro and the Asus Zenfone Max Pro M2, the Honor 10 Lite is definitely the one to go for. However, in the next few months post MWC, we do expect more exciting mid-range smartphones to be available, so if you can wait, you may better choices a few months down the line.

Huawei Honor 10 Lite Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 20 Jan 2019
Variant: 64GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    6.21" (1080 x 2340)
  • Camera Camera
    13 + 2 | 24 MP
  • Memory Memory
    64 GB/4 GB
  • Battery Battery
    3400 mAh

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Subhrojit Mallick

Eats smartphones for breakfast.

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Coronavirus LIVE: India cases at 5,020,359; Pune records 231,196 cases | Business Standard News
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Coronavirus LIVE: India cases at 5,020,359; Pune records 231,196 cases

Coronavirus latest update: DCGI has gave permission to Serum Institute of India to resume clinical trial of the Oxford Covid-19 vaccine candidate. Stay tuned for coronavirus India LIVE updates

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Coronavirus | World Health Organization | Lockdown

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India updates: India has crossed the grim 5-million mark by recording 90,123 cases in the last 24 hours. With this, India is rapidly nearing the US tally of 6.7 million. The death toll has risen by 1,283 to 82,091. The government prevented 1.4-2.9 million cases and 37,000-78,000 deaths due to the disease by imposing the nationwide that was announced on March 24, the Lok Sabha was informed on Tuesday.

Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu have reported the highest number of cases. However, infections are rising rapidly in states like Karnataka, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal. Meanwhile, Delhi recorded 4,263 new corona cases, pushing the tally to 225,000. The worst-hit states are Maharashtra (1,097,856) Andhra Pradesh (583,000), Tamil Nadu (5,14,208), Karnataka (4,75,265), and UP (324,036). Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Pema Khandu has tested positive for the  

update: ICMR Director General Dr Balram Bhargava today said three vaccines are at the clinical trial stage in India. "Cadila and Bharat Biotech have completed phase-I trials. Drugs Controller General of India (DCGI) Dr V G Somani has gave permission to Serum Institute of India to resume clinical trial of the Oxford Covid-19 vaccine candidate.

World coronavirus update: The global tally of coronavirus cases stands at 29,715,422. While 21,523,712 have recovered, 938,406 have died so far. The US, the worst-hit country, 6,787,739 cases. It is followed by India, which has 5,020,359 cases, Brazil (4,384,299) and Russia (1,073,849).

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Xiaomi Mi 10 Review
Xiaomi Mi 10 Review

Xiaomi Mi 10 Review

Subhrojit Mallick   |  09 Jun 2020
DIGIT RATING
77 /100
  • design

    75

  • performance

    77

  • value for money

    60

  • features

    77

  • PROS
  • Sharp and detailed photos
  • Stellar gaming performance
  • Bright, vibrant display
  • Day-long battery life
  • CONS
  • Bloatware and spam notifications
  • Boosted colours in binned images
  • 108MP photos have a smaller plane of focus

Verdict

The Xiaomi Mi 10, for all that it offers, gives you a good bang for the buck.The price tag is slightly on the higher side if you compare against some of the 5G flagship phones launched this year, but for the premium, the Mi 10 offers an excellent display, and a reliable primary camera alongside flagship performance chops.

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Xiaomi Mi 10 detailed review

The Xiaomi Mi 10 is the company’s third attempt to break into the premium segment, after being absent from it for a few years. But as fate would have it, the Mi 10 launched amidst the worst pandemic the world has seen in recent years, making it even more difficult for the company to convince buyers to pitch in half a lakh for a Qualcomm Snapdragon 865 processor, especially when the brand itself is majorly known for its low-cost smartphones in India. The task gets even more difficult when there’s already a Snapdragon 865-powered flagship available for Rs 34,990.  

But after using the phone for more than a week as a daily driver, it’s clear that Xiaomi has now matured enough to make a wholesome flagship smartphone that cuts way above its budget phones. It’s not flawless, though, by any means. Here’s our review of the Mi 10 —

Xiaomi Mi 10 specs at a glance

The Mi 10 has all the hardware chops worthy of a 2020 flagship smartphone. That includes the Snapdragon 865 chipset under the hood, 8GB of LPDDR5 RAM and 256GB of UFS 3.0 storage. At the back is a 108MP primary camera, one of the largest sensors available for smartphones right now, combined with a 13MP ultrawide camera, along with macro and depth sensors. If you haven’t guessed already, the 108MP camera is the marquee feature of this smartphone, but there’s a lot more to the phone than meets the eye.

Xiaomi Mi 10 Hardware Performance

Benchmark analysis

The Qualcomm Snapdragon 865 inside the phone basically guarantees top-notch performance in Android flagships. Qualcomm has made some incremental changes in the architecture that does show a boost in performance in the benchmark numbers, but to be frank, I didn’t feel any difference coming from the ROG Phone II, which I’m using presently as my primary daily driver. Xiaomi is also using the full suite of Snapdragon 865, that includes all the RF upgrades required for 5G connectivity, and Snapdragon Elite Gaming features including HDR gaming.

Combined with the latest RAM and storage module, we have a tried and tested formula for smooth and stable performance in the Mi 10. Here’s what the benchmarks have to say —

When pitted against other Snapdragon 865-powered flagships and the new iPhone SE (2020), we see some interesting results. The Mi 10’s scores in all CPU benchmarks are slightly lower than what others like the iQOO 3 5G, OnePlus 8 and Realme X50 Pro achieve, but well within the margin of variance we expect in benchmark scores, indicating that the Mi 10 performs no different than other flagships in 2020, and is every bit a modern-day performer. An interesting thing to note here was how the iPhone SE (2020) simply crushes the single-core performance on Geekbench 5, scoring well above the rest.

Real-world usage

In terms of daily usage, the Mi 10 feels smooth and fast. It takes less than 30 seconds to boot up, and when unlocked, goes instantly to the homescreen. The ultrasonic fingerprint sensor is fast, but you will hardly get to use it when face recognition is turned on. The phone’s 90Hz display also makes things appear smoother when scrolling down a menu or simply swiping across the home screen. In all, the Mi 10 is just as good as any other flagship from 2020 in day to day usage.

Gaming Performance

Now let’s look at gaming, what has become a cornerstone in our performance testing. We did short sessions of PUBG Mobile, CoD: Mobile and the new Forza Street and measured performance using GameBench.

The results, not surprisingly, are quite impressive. Both CoD: Mobile and PUBG Mobile hit 60 FPS with 100% stability-indicating there were no frame drops in the sessions. But before you go out and brag, remember the iQOO 3 5G and the Realme X50 Pro 5G also performs similarly with all metrics maxed out. The phone also didn’t heat up even though we played with all settings maxed out in a non-air-conditioned room with the Delhi summer at full blaze.

While the top-notch gaming performance was more or less a given considering the hardware it packs, the CPU behaviour while gaming drew my attention. The Xiaomi Mi 10 maintains highly variable CPU frequencies across all cores, likely to improve power efficiency while gaming. Having said that, the prime core of the Snapdragon 865 which can hit up to 2.84GHz, is hardly used and most of the heavy lifting is delegated to the mid and efficiency cores. Even when the prime core is engaged, it only goes up to 1.8GHz at its peak. And that’s across all the three games we played.

In contrast, the Realme X50 Pro has a more uniform frequency distribution while the iQOO 3 5G keeps the prime core running at minimal clock speeds and the mid and efficiency cores are flatlined at around 1.5GHz.

Observing unique CPU behaviour across multiple Snapdragon 865 devices gives a peek how OEMs like to tune their smartphones to achieve the highest possible performance in games. The difference is likely to ensure sustained performance and conserve power.

Xiaomi Mi 10 Software Performance

The Xiaomi Mi 10 runs on MIUI 11 based on Android 10, and here’s where most users looking for a flagship experience may be a little disappointed, while old Xiaomi users upgrading from a mid-ranger will feel right at home.  There’s no app drawer for one, and while I understand that has always been the case with MIUI, I would have at least liked the option to turn it on if I’m paying half a lakh for a phone. Then there’s the usual set of bloatware that phone comes riddled with. Most of them can be uninstalled, but some, like the Mi Browser which was recently embroiled in a data leakage scandal, can’t be uninstalled.

Another big backlash that Xiaomi faces is the way it monetises MIUI by serving ads. Thankfully, since this is a flagship offering, Xiaomi has promised no ads. But that’s sadly not the case if you count the dozens of spam notifications I received from the GetApps app store and Mi Videos. And these are apps I never opened for once during my time of use. The only way to get rid of them is to disable notifications from these apps from the Settings. Even better, is to use a custom launcher. I recommend the Microsoft Launcher, which solves every issue I have with MIUI.

And if you get past the bloated interface, the missing app drawer and the spam notifications, there’s a lot to like about MIUI. Especially, the customisation it offers with support for third party themes and icons. The interface is also optimised for the 90Hz panel, and the UI colours look nice and vibrant, and dare I say, quite premium.

The software is perhaps the biggest factor that pulls this smartphone down, against more refined ones like OxygenOS and Samsung’s OneUI.

Xiaomi Mi 10 Camera Performance

This is where Xiaomi puts most of its money on. The Mi 10 is the first smartphone under Rs 50,000 to rock the 108MP camera sensor developed by Samsung’s imaging team. The sensor measures 1/1.33”, second only to the size of the custom sensor used in the Huawei P40 Pro+. The large sensor size accommodates more than a 100 million 0.8 micron pixels, which helps in achieving noise-free digital zoom and a fair amount of detail at 100% crop. The sensor also outputs 27MP photos by default by binning four neighbouring 0.8um pixels into a large 1.6um pixels, the same technology used in the previous 48MP and 64MP cameras.

Aside from the 108MP camera, there camera setup is disappointingly average. There’s a 13MP ultrawide and two 2MP sensors for macro and portrait photos. Indeed, the final JPEG output is largely improved by the new Spectra ISP on the Snapdragon 865 which works in tandem with Xiaomi’s colour-boosting AI algorithm and HDR mode to produce photos that look highly palatable. Here are some examples —

Image samples in this review have been resized for the web. To check out the full resolution, head to our Flickr Page here.

Xiaomi Mi 10 108MP output

 


The 108MP camera is really one of the best out there in terms of the sharpness you get in landscape shots. Things like food needs to be shot from a little distance. Shooting it up close doesn’t keep the entire frame in focus because of an inherent flaw in the design of these large format sensors (explained wonderfully by Android Authority). Keep an eye on the file size though. It can range from anywhere between 40MB to 15MB, and there are times the binned output is larger than the 108MP output.

Having said that, the Mi 10 does tend to saturate the colours to make photos look more palatable, and the white balance can go a bit haywire when shooting sunsets. The dynamic range also leaves a lot to be desired, although it can be improved in a photo editing app like Snapseed.

Xiaomi Mi 10 27MP (Binned) output


 

The 27MP binned mode expectedly outputs photos that look far better than the 108MP mode, with perhaps the best colour blend we have seen on a smartphone in this price. The 27MP mode is also where Xiaomi’s AI and HDR algorithms are deployed, so the dynamic range is far better here than in the 108MP mode. The colours also tend to pop out, but the details at 100 per cent crop shows noise and the undesirable water colour effect.

Ultrawide lens



The output from the 13MP ultrawide lens doesn’t show distortions but details around the edges of the frame are practically non-existent. The center sharpness is laudable, however while the colours achieved are bright and vibrant.  The ultrawide lens’ small f/2.3 aperture doesn’t allow the camera to be much useful after the sun sets.

2X Digital Zoom


 


2X Zoom at 108MP



The Mi 10 offers 2X digital zoom which can be extended up to 10X. However, it’s barely usable at that range. 2X zoom is available both in the binned mode and the 108MP mode, which is something we’re seeing for the first time. I suppose the large size of the sensor allows for a nicely detailed crop, which is how the camera achieves the zoom. The details will be lesser as compared to a photo taken at 1X, and noise starts creeping up from 4X and beyond.

Night Mode


 


The Mi 10’s night mode works as advertised, and while it can’t achieve the sharpness of the new iPhones or even the Huawei P30 Pro. The results are unpredictable. Some shots come out super sharp while some look shaky, and some even looks like day. The good thing is the default mode captures a lot of light even at night, and you can easily experiment with using the night mode or just use the default binned mode.

The other modes work as advertised, so we won’t be delving deep into them. You can check out all the samples in their full resolution in our Flickr dump.

Macro mode


 

Portrait Mode



Front Camera


 

Xiaomi Mi 10 Battery Life

The Mi 10 packs a large-ish 4780mAh battery with support for 30W wired and wireless charging. The latter is something we are only seeing for the first time this year, and while I’m not much of a fan of wireless charging, it’s quite convenient to just prop the phone on the wireless charging stand (requires to be bought separately for Rs 2,299) for an hour to see the phone charged to 70 per cent. It takes roughly an hour and a half to reach full capacity on wireless charging. Wired charging is slightly faster, finishing the task with 65 minutes during our run.

As for the battery life, we clocked a consistent six hour screen-on time on an Airtel 4G connection, with spurts of benchmark runs, gaming, lots of camera use and browsing social media. That’s decent and at par with other flagships in 2020. MIUI is quite aggressive in its memory management, which does go a long way in saving power, but at the cost of launching apps you just closed all over again.

Xiaomi Mi 10 Design and display

The Mi 10’s design can hardly be called an original, but it does carry the flair of a flagship. With a glass sandwich design and slim edges, it’s nice to hold. Single-handed use is very much possible but I had to adjust my grip every time I wanted to lock the screen by pressing the power button after typing out a text. The phone also lacks an official IP rating, but it does have the same P2i coating like in the Redmi Note 9 Pro.

Speaking of the display, this is hands down the best display Xiaomi has ever made, at least among the one that had the good fortune of launching in India. The panel is HDR10+ certified and stretches 6.67-inches with curved edges like the OnePlus 7T Pro. The panel is punctuated by a punch-hole selfie camera that’s tucked in the top left corner, and as much as what Linus has to say, I don’t find it marring my experience of watching a movie or playing a game on the phone.

The panel managed to hit 946 nits at its peak, indoors in the evening while at its lowest, the panel went down to 6 nits. The peak brightness is certainly impressive, and helps a lot with sunlight visibility and while watching HDR content. Yes, HDR is supported across all major streaming platforms including Netflix and Amazon Prime and if you are who tunes in to a show on the go, the Mi 10 is perfect.

Bottomline

Is the Mi 10 worth spending your hard-earned money on? Well, if you can get past the issues in the software, the Mi 10 is actually a great device to use. The price tag is slightly on the higher side if you compare against some of the 5G flagship phones launched this year, but for the premium, the Mi 10 offers an excellent display and a reliable primary camera alongside flagship performance chops. The MIUI interface is the only thing that holds it back in front of options like the OnePlus 8 and OnePlus 8 Pro, but it's not that hard to get around the issues. In all, the Mi 10, for all that it offers, gives you a good bang for the buck.

Xiaomi Mi 10 Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 22 Apr 2020
Variant: 128GB8GBRAM
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    6.67" (1080 x 2340)
  • Camera Camera
    108 + 13 + 2 + 2 | 20 MP
  • Memory Memory
    128 GB/8 GB
  • Battery Battery
    4780 mAh

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Subhrojit Mallick

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Digit caters to the largest community of tech buyers, users and enthusiasts in India. The all new Digit in continues the legacy of Thinkdigit.com as one of the largest portals in India committed to technology users and buyers. Digit is also one of the most trusted names when it comes to technology reviews and buying advice and is home to the Digit Test Lab, India's most proficient center for testing and reviewing technology products.

We are about leadership-the 9.9 kind! Building a leading media company out of India.And,grooming new leaders for this promising industry.

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Fed\'s New Policy Approach Needs Some More Explaining

Madhuri Dixit Dance On Ek Do Teen Song Video Viral On Internet - Madhuri Dixit ने एक-दो-तीन सॉन्ग पर किया धमाकेदार डांस, बार-बार देखा जा रहा थ्रोबैक Video

Madhuri Dixit ने 'एक-दो-तीन' सॉन्ग पर किया धमाकेदार डांस, बार-बार देखा जा रहा थ्रोबैक Video

माधुरी दीक्षित (Madhuri Dixit) का यह डांस वीडियो सोशल मीडिया पर जमकर वायरल हो रहा है. इस वीडियो को लोग खूब पसंद कर रहे हैं.

Madhuri Dixit ने 'एक-दो-तीन' सॉन्ग पर किया धमाकेदार डांस, बार-बार देखा जा रहा थ्रोबैक Video

माधुरी दीक्षित (Madhuri Dixit) का डांस वीडियो वायरल

नई दिल्ली:

माधुरी दीक्षित (Madhuri Dixit) एक्टिंग के साथ-साथ अपने डांस के लिए भी खूब पहचान रखती हैं. उनके डांस वीडियो इन दिनों सोशल मीडिया पर जमकर वायरल हो रहे हैं .'तेजाब' फिल्म से बॉलीवुड में जबरदस्त पहचान बनाने वाली माधुरी दीक्षित (Madhuri Dixit) अब भी एंटरटेनमेंट इंडस्ट्री के साथ जुड़ी हुई हैं और फिल्मों के साथ ही टीवी पर भी नजर आती हैं. माधुरी दीक्षित के वीडियो और फोटो समय-समय पर सोशल मीडिया पर धूम मचाते रहते हैं. माधुरी दीक्षित (Madhuri Dixit Dance )का एक पुराना डांस वीडियो  सोशल मीडिया पर खूब धूम मचा रहा है.

यह भी पढ़ें

Mouni Roy ने फोटोशूट के दौरान दिये जबरदस्त एक्सप्रेशंस, खूब Viral हो रहा है Video

माधुरी दीक्षित (Madhuri Dixit) को इस वीडियो में देखा जा सकता है कि वो अपने मशहूर सॉन्ग 'एक-दो-तीन' (Ek Do Teen) पर जबरदस्त डांस कर रही है. माधुरी दीक्षित का यह डांस वीडियो आईफा अवॉर्ड समारोह का है. वीडियो में देखा जा सकता है कि उनके डांस को देख प्रियंका चोपड़ा और दीया मिर्जा सहित बाकी सेलेब्स उन्हें खूब चीयर कर रहे हैं. माधुरी दीक्षित के इस वीडियो को 5 लाख से ज्यादा बार देखा जा चुका है. फैन्स उनके थ्रोबैक वीडियो पर जमर रिएक्शन दे रहे हैं.

Listen to the latest songs, only on JioSaavn.com

कैटरीना कैफ ने व्हाइट ड्रेस पहनकर समुद्र के बीचो-बीच करवाया ग्लैमरस फोटोशूट, देखें PHOTO

माधुरी दीक्षित (Madhuri Dixit) के वर्क फ्रंट की बात करें तो एक्ट्रेस बीते साल कलंक और टोटल धमाल में नजर आई थीं. माधुरी दीक्षित रियलिटी टीवी शो पर बतौर जज वापसी करने वाली हैं. रियलिटी शो 'डांस दीवाने' के नए सीजन में वह नजर आएंगी. क्वारंटीन अवधि को ध्यान में रखते हुए उन्होंने डांस के प्रति उत्साही लोगों से अपने घरों के किसी भी कोने को चुनने और फिर अपनी डांस प्रतिभा दिखाने के लिए एक वीडियो रिकॉर्ड करने का आग्रह किया है. माधुरी दीक्षित आने वाले दिनों में कई बड़े प्रोजेक्ट्स में नजर आएंगी.

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Royal Enfield Bullet 350 Price Increased In India - carandbike

Royal Enfield Bullet 350 Price Increased In India

The Royal Enfield Bullet 350 has become more expensive by Rs. 2,756, and prices now start at Rs. 1,27,093 for the Bullet X 350 variant.

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Prices for the Royal Enfield Bullet 350 begin at Rs. 1.27 lakh (Ex-showroom, Delhi)

Highlights

  • Prices for the Royal Enfield Bullet 350 now begin at Rs. 1.27 lakh
  • The RE Bullet 350 is the most affordable Royal Enfield motorcycle
  • 346 cc, fuel-injected engine makes 19.1 bhp of power, 28 Nm of torque

Royal Enfield has increased prices of the entry-level model in the company's motorcycle range, the Royal Enfield Bullet 350. Both two variants of the Royal Enfield Bullet 350 have become dearer by ₹ 2,756, and this is the second time this year, prices have been increased for the Bullet 350. The Bullet 350 is the most affordable Royal Enfield motorcycle, and even with the price hike, which seems to be across all the models in the Royal Enfield portfolio, the Bullet 350 remains the entry-level Royal Enfield model.

Also Read: Royal Enfield Classic 350, RE Himalayan Prices Increased

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The Royal Enfield Bullet 350 ES is available in three colours - Regal Red, Royal Blue and Jet Black

The Royal Enfield Bullet 350 is available as a standard variant and the Bullet 350 ES, with an electric start. The standard model with kick-start is available in four colours, Bullet Silver and Onyx Black, as well as Black and Forest Green with the trademark hand-painted "Madras Stripes". The Bullet 350 in Bullet Silver and Onyx Black is priced at ₹ 1,27,094 (Ex-showroom, Delhi), while the Bullet 350 in Black and Forest Green is priced at ₹ 1,33,261 (Ex-showroom, Delhi). The Bullet 350 ES is available in three more colours, Regal Red, Royal Blue and Jet Black, and is priced at ₹ 1,42,705 (Ex-showroom, Delhi).

Also Read: Royal Enfield Bullet 350, RE Classic 350 Prices Hiked In May 2020

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The Royal Enfield Bullet 350 Kick Start is also available with the traditional, hand-painted 'Madras Stripes'

Both the Royal Enfield Bullet 350 with kick-start, and Royal Enfield Bullet 350 ES are powered by the same 346 cc, single-cylinder, fuel-injected engine which makes maximum power of 19.1 bhp at 5,250 rpm and 28 Nm of peak torque at 4,000 rpm. Power is transmitted via a 5-speed constant mesh gearbox. The Bullet 350 runs on 19-inch spoked wheels front and rear, suspended from telescopic 35 mm front forks, and twin shocks at the rear with 5-step preload adjustability. The Bullet 350 KS has a kerb weight of 186 kg, while the Bullet 350 ES has a kerb weight of 191 kg. A single 280 mm front disc and 153 mm rear drum, with single-channel ABS, takes care of braking duties.

Also Read: Royal Enfield Interceptor 650, Continental GT 650 Prices Hiked

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The Royal Enfield Bullet 350 Kick Start is the brand's most affordable model

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Royal Enfield has the Bullet 350 and the Royal Enfield Classic 350, based on the same 346 cc engine platform with single-downtube chassis. In a few weeks, Royal Enfield will be introducing an all-new 350 cc motorcycle, the Royal Enfield Meteor 350, based on a completely all-new platform, with a new engine. The RE Meteor 350 will co-exist with the RE Bullet 350 and the RE Classic 350.

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