Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

Capital Market 

Sales decline 97.86% to Rs 0.07 crore

Net Loss of Promact Impex reported to Rs 0.17 crore in the quarter ended June 2020 as against net loss of Rs 0.16 crore during the previous quarter ended June 2019. Sales declined 97.86% to Rs 0.07 crore in the quarter ended June 2020 as against Rs 3.27 crore during the previous quarter ended June 2019. ParticularsQuarter EndedJun. 2020Jun. 2019% Var.Sales0.073.27 -98 OPM %14.293.67 -PBDT-0.15-0.14 -7 PBT-0.17-0.16 -6 NP-0.17-0.16 -6

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

First Published: Wed, September 16 2020. 16:50 IST
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Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan Condoles Death Of Army Soldier Aneesh Thomas In Pak Firing

Kerala Chief Minister Condoles Death Of Soldier In Pak Firing

Leader of Opposition in the assembly, Ramesh Chennithala expressed grief over the demise of the jawan and offered his condolences to the bereaved family.

Kerala Chief Minister Condoles Death Of Soldier In Pak Firing

Aneesh Thomas is survived by a wife and a six-year-old daughter.

Thiruvananthapuram:

Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan on Wednesday condoled the death of soldier Aneesh Thomas, who was killed in a ceasefire violation by Pakistani troops using heavy fire along the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir.

Leader of Opposition in the assembly, Ramesh Chennithala expressed grief over the death of the soldier and offered his condolences to the bereaved family.

A statement from Chief Minister's office said Pinarayi Vijayan condoled the death of Aneesh Thomas, 36, a native of Alumuk in Kollam district.

Aneesh Thomas was killed and two others, including an officer, were injured on Tuesday after Pakistani troops fired with small arms and shelled mortars along the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir's Rajouri district.

Officials said his remains will be brought to Kerala on Thursday.

Aneesh Thomas is survived by a wife and a six-year-old daughter.

Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

India Shreds Pakistan At UN: Their Prime Minister Admits Training Terrorists For Jammu And Kashmir

"Their PM Admits Training Terrorists For J&K": India Shreds Pak At UN

The diplomat said that it was not surprising that other relevant multilateral institutions have been raising serious concerns on Pakistan's failure to stop terror financing.

'Their PM Admits Training Terrorists For J&K': India Shreds Pak At UN

India also slammed Pakistan for abusing various HRC mechanisms (Representational)

Geneva:

India on Tuesday described Pakistan as an "epicenter of terrorism" and said no one deserves unsolicited lecture on human rights from Islamabad that has consistently persecuted its ethnic and religious minorities including Hindus, Sikhs and Christians.

Exercising the Right of Reply to the statements made by Pakistan at the 45th session of Human Rights Council (HRC), the Indian representative said that it has become habitual for Pakistan to malign India with false and fabricated narratives for its self-serving malicious purposes.

"Neither India nor others deserve this unsolicited lecture on human rights from a country that has consistently persecuted its ethnic and religious minorities, is an epicenter of terrorism, has the distinction of providing pensions to individuals on UN Sanctions list and has a Prime Minister who proudly admits training tens of thousands of terrorists to fight in Jammu and Kashmir," the Indian diplomat said.

The diplomat said that it was not surprising that other relevant multilateral institutions have been raising serious concerns on Pakistan's failure to stop terror financing and lack of effective actions against all terror entities in Pakistan.

Highlighting the nefarious designs of Pakistan in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, the diplomat said, "the mass influx of outsiders has whittled down the number of Kashmiris to an insignificant number in Pakistan occupied parts of Indian Union Territories of Jammu and Kashmir and Laddakh."

"In its zeal to reassert its theocratic ideology, it has ensured that ethnic and religious minorities have no future through systematic persecution, blasphemy laws, forced conversions, targeted killings, sectarian violence and faith-based discrimination," the diplomat said.

"Thousands of Sikh, Hindus and Christian minority women and girls have been subjected to abductions, forced marriages and conversions in Pakistan."

On the plight of people in Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Sindh, the Indian diplomat said, "Not a single day has gone by when a family in Balochistan doesn't find its members picked up or kidnapped by the security forces of Pakistan."

"Pakistan does well when it comes to intimidation and attacks against journalists, human rights defenders and political dissidents in particular by its state machinery. It is not without a reason that Pakistan has been highlighted by international organizations as a country where journalists are slain and their killers go scot free," the diplomat said.

India also slammed Pakistan for "abusing various HRC mechanisms and platforms for raising issues, which are extraneous to the mandate of the HRC and which relate to internal affairs of India, with a view to distract the attention of the international community from serious human rights violations committed by it against its own people, including in Indian territories occupied by it."

India also rejected the reference made by the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to Jammu and Kashmir, which is an integral part of India.

"The OIC has no locus standi to comment on internal affairs of India. The OIC has allowed itself to be misused by Pakistan to subverse its own Agenda. It's for the members of the OIC to decide if it is in their interests to allow Pakistan to do so," the Indian representative said.

India also advised Turkey to refrain from commenting on its internal affairs and develop a better understanding of the democratic practices.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

Sony Xperia Z1 Review

Sony Xperia Z1 Review

By Vishal Mathur | Updated May 22 2019
Sony  Xperia Z1 Review
DIGIT RATING
77 /100
  • design

    79

  • performance

    72

  • value for money

    75

  • features

    80

  • PROS
  • Elegant design
  • Excellent performance
  • Camera at 20MP does fairly well
  • Much improved battery life with Stamina Mode
  • Sony's new UI is growing on us!
  • CONS
  • Glass at the back catches scratches easily
  • Camera Auto Modes restrict aspect ratio and megapixels
  • For a 5-inch screen, the phone is too tall, Sony could reduce the space at the top and bottom beyond the display area to make the unit more compact.

Verdict

This is essentially the Xperia Z's form factor, with the power of the Xperia Z Ultra. Simply put, the successor to the Xperia Z is on paper the most powerful smartphone available in India. It carries on with almost the same design tone, the water and dust resistance capabilities, but improves on the display, battery life and to a certain extent, the camera as well. It does cost a lot of money, which may make the potential customer think about the investment.

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Sony Xperia Z1 detailed review

The Sony Xperia Z1 is pretty much Sony telling its rivals that they will not be left behind in the flagship smartphone battle. In fact, it has pretty much taken over the smartphone spec sheets with the adoption of the Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processors, which the likes of HTC haven’t, yet. And, yes, it also towers over its competition when it comes to price.


Build & Design: More of the same
We had said this when we reviewed the Xperia Z Ultra, and we will say this again - the Z1 carries forward the design theme that started with the Xperia Z. You have the slab-like design, with the glass at the back. The water and dust resistance ratings mean the ports and slots get the similar looking flap covers. It's still fairly slim, at just under 9mm, but the glass and the metal frame adds to the weight, tipping the scales at 170g.

 

This is still a pretty big phone. Sony now has settled on a design accent, that seems to be consistent across all new Xperia flagships. 

Up front is the 5-inch display, but nothing else to distract you because the usual touch sensitive controls are integrated into the UI itself. The left side spine of the Z1 has the dock connector and the covered slots for the memory card and the micro USB port for charging. There is the dock connector as well. The right side spine has the SIM card slot, with the helpful tray to slot it in. And also the volume rocker, the shutter button and the attention grabbing power key. Speaking of the dock for a second, you might consider getting one, if you believe that opening and closing the charging port flap on a daily basis will do it no good. Also, if you are taking this phone in the pool with you, and your earphones are water-proof, the Z1 will have absolutely no issues - the 3.5mm headphone jack is also waterproof internally.

 

The water and dust resistance ratings continue as is. The flaps protect the water from seeping in. Even the 3.5mm headphone jack, which doesn't have a flap cover, is internally sealed away. 

While the dimensions of the Z1 are much more in control when compared to the Z Ultra, the phone still retains the slippery nature of its predecessors, thanks to the glass at the back. It's interesting to note that the Z1 has a slightly bigger  footprint than the Xperia Z, but that can be attributed to Sony packing in a bigger battery and the better camera hardware. But, because it is slippery and doesn’t grip very well, you will need to hold this carefully when attempting to use it with the same hand.

While such a design has its issues, there is no doubt that the straight lines and flat surfaces on the Xperia Z1 look stunning and very different from what the other flagships offer. The phone is built well, no disappointments in the terms of how it has been put together and the quality of materials used. But surely, the entire package could have been designed in a way so that it was also easier (and safer) to hold.

Display: Building on the good stuff
The Xperia Z was one of the first phones to sport a Full HD display, and the Z1 builds on that. The Triluminos technology makes this display a very good one to watch movies on, because the colours are much more vibrant and the details have improved as well. Not surprisingly, text rendering has seen an improvement as well, which is something we are very thankful about. The X-Reality engine boosts colour and sharpness, and while it does slightly increase the battery consumption, we found that it does make a huge difference while browsing through pictures.

The video playback experience on the Xperia Z1 is miles ahead of the Xperia Z, with the Triluminos technology ensuring that the colours are a lot richer now. 

But for a natively bright display, the reflective glass above the screen does sort of complicate matters. Visibility in sunlight will be compromised if you don’t have the auto-brightness setting turned on, and even group viewing of a picture will not be ideal, because the people sitting at the sides will be treated to reflections most of the time.

Performance: Blazing fast
After spending ages lagging behind, it is good to see Sony finally giving importance to the specs powering their phones, with the Xperia Z1 packing in the Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processor and 2GB of RAM. The Xperia Z Ultra has the same specs, and was comfortably ahead of the likes of the HTC One and the Samsung Galaxy S4 in the benchmark test scores. The Z1 Ultra’s performance, therefore, isn’t surprising.

The specs translate brilliantly into the real world usage performance scenario, with apps opening instantaneously, and the background app load not bothering us one bit. As a primary smartphone, its interesting to note that the Z1 never felt sluggish, something that even the HTC One could not completely claim because every once in a blue moon, it also had that moment of sluggishness craving for a restart. Tap on the Real Racing app on both phones at the same time, the Z Ultra wins the race by a couple of seconds. Even within the app, race loading times are lesser. All in all, be it serious work or some fun gaming, the Z Ultra handles both with such comfort that it borders on arrogance.

However, for a phone that packs in so much power, there is the inevitable heating issue. Use the camera to take around 10-12 shots, or the web browser for 5 minutes and the back heats up considerably, particularly just above the Sony logo and slightly to the left of it. For anyone considering packing this inside a case or a skin, that really wouldn’t be the best idea. Also, the Z Ultra did not heat up this much, under the same usage pattern, just for reference’s sake.

Battery life from the massive 3000mAh pack is quite good. With the Stamina Mode turned on, this one lasted me from 8am full charge one day till 3:30pm the next day, as a primary phone with calls, mails, messages and IM. Throughout, the brightness was set at around 40%. Stamina Mode allows you to set which applications can use the data connectivity when the phone is in stand-by mode. For example, if I only want the Gmail client and Facebook to refresh and not have the other apps doing the rigmarole, it allows for that.

Camera: Has its good points
Using the camera on the Xperia Z1 is a rather simple experience, pretty much the traditional methods of either accessing it via the icon on-screen, or long pressing the shutter button. The UI, once you open the camera, is pretty similar to the Xperia flagships of the recent past - three buttons on top, from where you can select the settings for the camera and which mode you want to shoot in. In addition to the plethora of auto modes, the manual mode offers some sense of flexibility to serious photographers. Without doubt, the Superior Auto mode will be the most commonly used , but this does come with a rather serious drawback - the aspect ratio is locked to 16:9 and the maximum image resolution is set at 8 megapixels. We looked everywhere for an option to change the resolution back to 20 megapixels, but no luck. The only way to get maximum resolution out of the Xperia Z1 is by switching the shooting mode to Manual, something many users may not be comfortable with. This pretty much does away with the “take out of the pocket and shoot” experience, for someone who is paying for the 20MP goodness.

The manual mode continues with the confusion, because it does not let you set the aperture or shutter-speed. What you can tweak are the white balance settings, exposure compensation and the ISO. You can tap to focus, and also tap to shoot, and the menu options provide for the flexibility of either/or, or even both.

The Sony Xperia Z1, when shooting at 8 megapixels, in Superior Auto mode, tends to capture far less details and the overall image quality suffers when compared to the 20 megapixel counterpart. We believe this is because the Z1 is capturing the image at a full 20 megapixel, but then proceeds to down-sample it to 8 megapixels, which has a negative impact on the detailing.

You can read the detailed camera comparison between the Sony Xperia Z1, the Nokia Lumia 920, the Apple iPhone 5 and the HTC One, here

You can view all the test shots below:





Images shot with the Sony Xperia Z1 (click on images to enlarge in new window)

To buy or not to buy: A flagship that’ll show the way for the next wave
Clearly, spending so much money on a smartphone is no easy decision. But, when one has to be made, it just needs to be the smartest one possible. Today, the Xperia Z1 is the sensible choice, if this is what your budget allows. You can consider the HTC One and the Galaxy S4, but for the fans of pure performance, the Z1 is the most attractive proposition. With a screen this big, there will always be issues with the single hand operations and the form factor footprint. But, we're happy to note that the experience is enhanced by the better display and a camera that is fairly competent.

With camera test inputs from Swapnil Mathur.

Sony Xperia Z1 Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 04 Sep 2014
Variant: 16GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    5" (1080 x 1920)
  • Camera Camera
    20.7 | 2 MP
  • Memory Memory
    16 GB/2 GB
  • Battery Battery
    3000 mAh

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Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

Zara Owner Inditex Returns To Profit In Second Quarter
1-MIN READ

Zara Owner Inditex Returns To Profit In Second Quarter

Zara Owner Inditex Returns To Profit In Second Quarter

Fashion retailer Inditex, owner of Zara, returned to quarterly profit in the three months from May to July but reported sales down 31% on the yearago period as viruswary consumers stayed away from city centre shopping districts.

  • Last Updated: September 16, 2020, 12:03 PM IST

MADRID: Fashion retailer Inditex, owner of Zara, returned to quarterly profit in the three months from May to July but reported sales down 31% on the year-ago period as virus-wary consumers stayed away from city centre shopping districts.

The owner of Massimo Dutti and Bershka said 98% of its stores were open again. Looking to the new financial period, it said sales in store and online were 11% lower at constant exchange rates from Aug. 1 to Sept. 6 from the year-ago period.

Shares closed 5% higher on Tuesday after Swedish rival H&M beat quarterly profit forecasts as it bounced back faster than expected from the pandemic-induced slump. Inditex’s stock has fallen 24% in the year so far.

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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Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

Mi Wireless Power Bank 30W Launched, Doubles Up as Wireless Charging Stand | Technology News

Mi Wireless Power Bank 30W Launched, Doubles Up as Wireless Charging Stand

The Mi Wireless Power Bank 30W is claimed to deliver up to 30W wireless charging support.

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Mi Wireless Power Bank 30W Launched, Doubles Up as Wireless Charging Stand

Photo Credit: Mi.com

Mi Wireless Power Bank 30W comes with a 10,000mAh lithium-ion polymer battery

Highlights
  • Mi Wireless Power Bank 30W has a USB Type-C port
  • It can also be charged through the USB Type-C port
  • Mi Wireless Power Bank 30W comes in black colour

Mi Wireless Power Bank 30W has been launched in China. The new power bank from Xiaomi doubles up as a wireless charging stand and comes with a 10,000mAh lithium-ion polymer battery. It will be offered in Black colour and packs a connecting dock that has five connector/ pogo pins to charge it. Once placed on the connecting dock, the power bank becomes a wireless charging stand for smartphones and looks somewhat similar to the Pixel Stand that was launched by Google.

Mi Wireless Power Bank 30W price

The Mi Wireless Power Bank 30W is priced at CNY 199 (roughly Rs. 2,100) and is available for pre-orders on Mi.com in China. As mentioned, it comes in black colour. There is no word on its release outside China right now.

Mi Wireless Power Bank 30W features

The Mi Wireless Power Bank 30W has a black colour finish and a wireless charging icon on the surface to depict the wireless charging support. It has a 10,000mAh lithium-ion polymer battery but the rated capacity is just 5,600mAh. The power bank from Xiaomi comes with a dock that has five pogo pins that charge the power bank. When connected with the dock, the power bank becomes a vertical wireless charger.

Mi Wireless Power Bank  30W intext Mi Wireless Power Bank 30W

Mi Wireless Power Bank 30W packs a connecting dock that has five pogo pins to charge it
Photo Credit: Mi.com

If you want to charge your phone, just place the power bank on the dock, and then place a smartphone on it to charge wirelessly. At this time, the dock charges the power bank and the power bank charges the smartphone. The LEDs present on the side of the power bank show the battery level and light up when it is connected to the dock.

As far as ports are concerned, the power bank comes equipped with a USB Type-A port with a maximum output capacity of 27W. There is a USB Type-C port that is claimed to deliver a maximum output capacity of 30W. The power bank can also wirelessly charge devices at up to 30W depending upon the wireless charging support that the device comes with.

In case you don't want to charge your power bank with the dock, you can also juice it up with the USB Type C port that has a maximum power input of 18W. The power bank is charged at a maximum power output of 10W via pogo pins.


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Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

OnePlus 7 256GB Review

OnePlus 7 256GB Review

By Subhrojit Mallick | Updated Oct 23 2019
OnePlus 7 256GB Review
DIGIT RATING
77 /100
  • design

    70

  • performance

    85

  • value for money

    76

  • features

    68

  • PROS
  • Lag-free, super smooth performance
  • Better ergonomics than the OnePlus 7 Pro
  • HDR-enabled display
  • CONS
  • Camera takes time to focus
  • Lacks water resistance
  • No 3.5mm headphone jack

Verdict

The OnePlus 7 is the phone to get if you prefer the OnePlus brand and hope for flagship performance. The camera is where the phone falters but it makes up for that with the display, design and performance.

Read the full review to find out more —

 

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OnePlus 7 256GB detailed review

With the OnePlus 7 Pro now becoming the de facto flagship of the company, OnePlus in 2019 is a changed company with one foot on the premium side while one still drags along the lines of a budget flagship. Not to forget its roots, OnePlus announced the regular OnePlus 7 alongside the Pro version with some obvious downsizing. The company went from launching one flagship smartphone a year, to a 6-month refresh cycle and now, we have two OnePlus phones vying for your attention at the same time. It’s no longer the case where one device will get all the attention. Instead, the focus was divided between two — Everything’s that’s premium (90Hz display, triple cameras) will be present in the Pro variant while everything that isn’t (a regular AMOLED display, dual cameras) will be reserved for the regular variant. Does this bode unwell for OnePlus fans? You still get the flagship Qualcomm processor along with more RAM and storage that you can possibly put to use, but here’s the thing. The OnePlus model of success is now copied by almost everyone. Sitting in the second half of 2019, we have more flagship phones south of Rs 50,000 than above it, and while that’s definitely a good thing for the consumer, it’s something OnePlus would probably be spending a lot of sleepless nights thinking. So with the OnePlus 7 now coming in a crowded space, does it still hold the same promise as before? Let’s find out.

OnePlus 7 vs competition

The OnePlus 7 is pitted against the Asus 6z, Oppo Reno 10X Zoom and the Black Shark 2. The upcoming Redmi K20 Pro will also give tough competition to the smartphone. All of these devices are powered by the Snapdragon 855 processor and as such, good flagship performance is more or less guaranteed. Where the OnePlus 7 excels is in offering a good software experience. It’s better than most budget flagships out there. OxygenOS 9 stays updated regularly, offers smooth, lag-free performance and a minimalist design. However, the OnePlus 7’s camera might not be up everyone’s taste. The Oppo Reno 10X Zoom’s camera, in my opinion, offers punchier, more vibrant colours and the flexibility to go up to 10X zoom and 120-degree wide-angle. The Asus 6z is also unique in its own way. The flip camera on the phone doubles up as both the rear and front camera, with the same 48MP camera coming on both sides. The OnePlus 7, as a result, stands out, for covering the basics really well and offering just a little bit more in terms of uniqueness.

Performance and battery

Let’s start off with the most important aspect first. The performance of the OnePlus 7 is pretty flawless while the battery life is enough to power through the day. The Snapdragon 855 inside the phone is coupled with up to 8GB LPDDR4X RAM and 256GB UFS 3.0 storage. There’s no question of the phone slowing down anytime soon. The components OnePlus has used in this are the same as the Pro variant, save for the lack of a 12GB RAM variant. As a result, the performance of the phone is one of the best on an Android device. Credit should also be given to OxygenOS that’s based on Android 9 Pie and brings onboard interesting optimisations that ultimately result in faster app launches, unlock and boot-up and the likes. Having said that, if you are coming from the OnePlus 6 or the OnePlus 6T, it’s likely you won’t notice any significant boost in speed.

Benchmark analysis reveals the OnePlus 7 is just as fast as its sibling and even ahead in some cases when compared to other Snapdragon 855-powered phones. You can see the scores projected in the graphs below to get a better idea of where the OnePlus 7 stands. For a more detailed analysis, check out our performance comparison between the Asus 6z, Oppo Reno 10X Zoom and the OnePlus 7.

Part of OnePlus 7’s blazing fast speed is also because of the software the phone uses. It’s a customised take on Android 9 that’s very close to the stock Android interface in terms of the aesthetics and there are deep-seated optimisations in place that make the phone run super smooth. On top of that, there are now a handful of India-centric features like parking location, live cricket scores and a dedicated gaming mode which frees up resources, puts calls and notifications on hold and the likes. Then there’s the Zen Mode which I found particularly useful. When the mode is turned on, you can’t do anything on your phone for 20 minutes. The aim is to wean users off smartphone addiction and while it pretty much failed to do so in my case, the mode did allow me to focus on my work much better.

The 3,700mAh battery on the OnePlus 7 is the same as its predecessor. But while the capacity is the same, there is a slight increase in the screen-on time, thanks to the 7nm efficiency Snapdragon 855 brings to the table. On Geekbench Battery Test, it took around 10 hours 15 minutes to drain the battery while 15 minutes of PUBG Mobile drained the battery by around 5 percent. On the other hand, 30 minutes of Netflix (with HDR on) drained 7 percent battery and an hour of navigation brought down the charge by 8 percent. These are decent numbers and in line with most other Snapdragon 855-powered phones, so the efficiency is more or less at par with other budget flagships out there in the market.

Camera

The camera is the second most important thing in a smartphone. Straight off, it becomes clear the OnePlus 7 Pro was what the company was more focused on, while the OnePlus 7 camera comes off as an afterthought. The 7 Pro’s triple-camera offers flexibility with an ultra-wide angle lens, a 3X telephoto lens and a 48MP primary sensor. For the OnePlus 7, only the 48MP sensor was brought down and paired with a 5MP depth sensor. By default, you are restricted to shooting either the regular wide-angle photos or portrait shots with blurred backgrounds. There is 2X zoom, but that’s digitally acquired and doesn’t offer the same quality as optical zoom.

As for the images themselves, they carry the typical OnePlus look. Neutral colours, excellent HDR performance, and now extra sharpness thanks to the pixel binning that the camera performs by default every time it takes a photo. As such, the OnePlus 7 camera is pretty reliable in taking landscape photos, but struggles to take close-up shots. The AF system in the 48MP sensor has difficulty locking focus even after tapping the region you wish to be focused. For instance, in the photo below, you can see the branch being in focus while the flower is blurred out despite both being approximately at the same distance.

There’s OIS in the camera which helps take a stable shot when zoomed in, but it particularly helps while shooting videos where the OnePlus 7 does a decent job and focusing is much more reliable. This could just be a bug in the camera software and if highlighted, could be fixed via an OTA update.

Then there’s the portrait mode. The feature has mostly worked well on previous OnePlus phones, at least when assisted with enough light, and on the OnePlus 7, it works well in objects that are near the camera. Objects that are a little further away has inconsistent subject separation which is ironic considering the only use of the secondary 5MP depth sensor is to get better depth of field.

There’s also the nightscape mode which works pretty well, but not without its own flaws. For one, it takes a long time to shoot the image irrespective of the amount of light available. For instance, phones from Huawei, we have observed, take less time to shoot multi-frame night mode images when there’s at least some level of illumination. In case of the OnePlus 7, the number of shots, and as a result, the take time, is a constant. Thankfully, there are algorithms in place that controls the amount of exposure the shot needs. The shots are also sharper when you shoot with night mode (provided the subject is steady for the time it takes to shoot), but don’t expect too much out of them. Zooming into a nightscape shot will show the details are artificially rendered and touched up with a lot of noise reduction.

As such, the OnePlus 7’s rear camera stack is reliable, but not exciting. Around the price of the OnePlus 7, you have phones that come fitted with a wide-angle camera, while paying a little extra will get you all three lenses including a telephoto lens with 10X hybrid zoom.

Design and Display

Even though the OnePlus 7 is built out of glass, it feels pretty solid. There’s Gorilla Glass 5 on the back and Gorilla Glass 6 on the front allowing at least some level of protection. There’s a screen-protector built-in to the display that got scratched easily and the mirror red finish that we received for review looks pretty swell. Unlike the OnePlus 7 Pro that offers a new design, the OnePlus 7 is quite identical to the OnePlus 6T — A waterdrop notch, thin bezels, curved rear panel and a sturdy aluminum frame. What’s changed is the gigantic bump around the camera module that makes the phone wobble when placed on a flat surface. Otherwise, the button quality and the tactile response is pretty solid and gives a feeling of longevity.

The OnePlus 7 doesn’t have an advertised IP rating, but OnePlus did assure there is some level of water resistance but water damage is not covered under warranty. What’s missing is the 3.5mm headphone jack but the dual stereo speakers have made their way to the OnePlus 7 as well along with support for Dolby Atmos. There’s also an in-display fingerprint sensor that’s visibly faster than the OnePlus 6T, and is pretty accurate too. However, face unlock still works faster and I hardly got the chance to use the in-display fingerprint sensor on the phone.

The display on the OnePlus 7 will come off as a big compromise if you get your hands on the OnePlus 7 Pro. For one, this is a smaller 6.41-inch AMOLED panel  interrupted by the waterdrop notch in the middle. It’s FHD+ instead of QHD+ on the Pro and the screen refresh rate is 60Hz instead of 90Hz. Not that all that makes the OnePlus 7 look bad or anything, but once you use the display on the Pro, there’s no going back to the regular ones. Having said that, the OnePlus 7’s display is bright and vibrant. It’s HDR rated and also supports Netflix HDR.

Bottomline

The OnePlus 7 is the budget flagship OnePlus was known for before they started getting into the very segment they intended to kill. The good thing about that is while the OnePlus 7 Pro breaches the Rs 50,000 mark, the OnePlus 7 starts at a price lower than what the OnePlus 6T did. For a lesser price, you not only get the same raw performance as the OnePlus 7 Pro, but also an HDR display and a sturdy build. In fact, one of my coworker told me he found the OnePlus 7 more handy than the OnePlus 7 Pro for the form factor it retains from its predecessor. The OnePlus 7 Pro, on the other hand, is heavier and the curved display often results in accidental touches. If OnePlus is your brand of choice and spending over Rs 50,000 is out of the question, the OnePlus 7 is the phone to get.


OnePlus 7 256GB Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 14 May 2019
Variant: 64GB , 128GB , 256GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    6.4" (1080 X 2340)
  • Camera Camera
    48 + 5 | 16 MP
  • Memory Memory
    256GB/8GB
  • Battery Battery
    3700 mAh

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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.

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Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

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.)

Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

MSI GT73VR 7RF Titan Pro 4K Review

MSI GT73VR 7RF Titan Pro 4K Review

By Hardik Singh | Updated Nov 01 2019
MSI GT73VR 7RF Titan Pro 4K Review
DIGIT RATING
80 /100
  • design

    75

  • performance

    93

  • value for money

    75

  • features

    78

User Rating : 5/5 Out of 1 Reviews
  • PROS
  • Excellent 4K display
  • brilliant 1080p gaming performance
  • Good audio output
  • VR capable
  • CONS
  • Heavy and large in size
  • Expensive

Verdict

The MSI GT73VR is a high-end gaming grade desktop that’s meant for the hardcore gamers and enthusiasts. If you’re one of them, give this laptop a thought.

BUY MSI GT73VR 7RF Titan Pro 4K
Buy now on amazon Out of Stock 334990

MSI GT73VR 7RF Titan Pro 4K detailed review

Whenever someone asks me whether they should be investing in gaming laptops or a desktop, I tell them to invest in a desktop if they play only at home. But, there are many who want to game on the move, or do not want to undertake the hassle of building and maintaining a gaming PC. For these people gaming laptops are the solution. They offer portability (to some extent) and are usually plug-and-play, which is tougher for desktops. However, when I saw this giant MSI GT73VR 7RF Titan Pro for the first time, the concept of a laptop being portable was immediately out the window. There’s also the price tag. At Rs. 3,34,990, costs almost as much as a new car, so one must determine whether it’s worth the premium.


Tech specs of our test machine:

Display: 17.3-inch, 4K, IPS Panel

CPU: Intel Core i7-7820HK

RAM: 32GB

GPU: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080

Storage 1: 2 x 512GB SSD (Raid 0)

Storage 2: 1TB HDD 7200RPM

Battery: 75 whr

Price: 3,34,990

Looks and aesthetics

Gaming PCs or laptops are expected not only to perform well, but to have its extreme appearances. They should either look understated or should go all out with wild angular accents, fins, large heat vents, LED stips, you get the drift. The GT73 Titan Pro does the latter. It has all the right angles, paint schemes, design aesthetics, and screams gaming. You get red metal inlays on the lid, the dragon logo is backlit, the power button sits underneath an angular cut-out on the keyboard deck, the vents have red accents and the bottom has a red perforated grille. The MSI GT73VR 7RF Titan looks dramatic, which will appeal to the gamer.

MSI has almost nailed the design here, but I believe it could have been better. Machines like the Asus G752VY not only look good visually, but are distinctive as well, whereas the MSI GT73 settles for the same old black-and-red design. That being said, it is as unwieldy as the Asus machine, weighing over 4kg and its about 2-inches thick. 

Build quality and I/O

Like the design, the build quality leaves little room for complaints. The lid and the keyboard deck are metallic, laid over a plastic sub-frame. The machine feels quite sturdy and there is minimal flex in the body. There’s some flex in the display, but it is not a really deal-breaker. Since this is a gaming laptop, there are plenty of grilles and vents. The keyboard is well laid out and the keyboard deck offers plenty of space to rest your palms on. The base of the laptop is plastic and has more perforated grilles for air flow. 

The display hinge is one of the smoothest I have seen in awhile and opens to about 140 degrees, leaving enough room for third party cooling pads. While the base of the laptop is removable and some things, like the RAM and storage, can be user replaced, warranty will be voided if you do so.

On the I/O front, you get almost everything you may ask for. You get three USB 3.0 Type-A ports on the left and two on the right. On the back, there’s a standard RJ54 ethernet port, mini DisplayPort, Thunderbolt 3 via USB Type-C (USB 3.1 / Gen-2) and an HDMI 2.0 port, which will support a 4K output @60Hz. You also get an SD card reader on the right, but a DVD drive is not included. DVDs are indeed obsolete today, but the company provides one on its much cheaper GE62 laptop, so not providing one here seems a bit odd. Also, I expected at least two USB Type-C ports on the laptop.

Keyboard and touchpad

The MSI GT73VR shares the same keyboard and touchpad layout we saw on the much cheaper GE62 a few months back. It’s a Steelseries designed keyboard, with RGB lighting and a  large but slightly stiff touchpad keys.

The keyboard has nice large keycaps and offers more travel than most of its counterparts. Each key-press feels precise, but if you are accustomed to a mechanical keyboard, you might want to stick to that. As for the light settings, there are plenty to choose from (RGB) and you can tweak them from the MSI Dragon centre app. While the keyboard works for gaming to some extent, I would have preferred a row of macro keys as well. It will take some getting used to, due to the unorthodox key layout. For example, the right Shift key is shortened to make space for the top arrow key, there is no Windows key under your left thumb and the Delete key sits on the top row above the keypad, breaking the flow whenever you use it. 

I also find the the function keys quite cumbersome. They are smaller in size and would have been better if brightness controls and media volume controls were integrated. That said, I am pretty sure nobody would be buying this machine to use Word and Excel.

The touchpad is good, as is expected from a high end laptop. The cursor speed is not calibrated to cover the 4K screen in a single swipe by default, but that can be toggled with in the settings. Once that was done, I didn't find the experience lacking in any way. The trackpad itself is smooth, supports gestures, and is quite accurate. The left and right click buttons are stiff to press, which pushed me to connect a mouse immediately. You will be a using a mouse most of the times anyway, as the touchpad is not really meant for gaming. Meanwhile, RGB lovers will love the illuminated ring around the touchpad.

Display

The MSI GT73VR has one of the best displays we have seen on a laptop. While it is available in 120Hz FHD panel, only the 4K (@60Hz) variant is available in India. It has impressive colour saturation and very good viewing angles. There is no light bleed and the display is quite bright with a recorded max luminance of 480 lux at the centre. What is even more impressive, is that the brightness remains uniform all over the display. In addition to great colours and uniform brightness, the 17.3-inch matte display is also G-Sync enabled. This is supported by the heavy hitting hardware the laptop packs.

Performance

With an Intel Core i7-7820HK at the helm and an 8GB NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 to handle graphics, the GT73VR Titan Pro undeniably houses the best gaming hardware available on a laptop. Both the CPU and GPU can be overclocked using BIOS and afterburner software, respectively. Although, you don't need extra processing power since the system already has plenty in stock mode. Our test machine was configured with 32GB of DDR4 RAM and dual storage solution, with two Samsung SSDs in Raid 4 and one 1TB Toshiba HDD @7200rpm. 

With such powerful hardware on the laptop, it wasn't a surprise that it blitzed through each and every benchmark we threw at it. While the scores are considerably higher than last year’s G752 from Asus, performance is very close to the Asus ROG G20CB (1080 revision) gaming PC I reviewed late last year. Compared to the Asus ROG G20CB desktop, one can easily see the difference or lack thereof in performance of a last gen Intel desktop processor and a current gen top of the line Intel mobile CPU.

So, whether you look at the PCMark 8 Creative scores or Cinebench, the Intel Core i7 6700 (not K) processor used on the G20CB performs at par with the latest Intel Core i7 7820HK used in this MSI GT73VR notebook. Although this is an apples-to-oranges comparison, the fact of the matter is that a desktop class processor, albeit last generation will give you similar performance.

Same goes for the desktop and laptop variant of the NVIDIA Geforce GTX 1080 GPU. In 3DMark synthetic benchmark, the desktop grade GTX 1080 performed marginally better than its mobile cousin, and that just goes to show how NVIDIA has closed down the performance gap between desktop and its mobile class GPUs, although a slight performance difference is still there.

Synthetic benchmarks aside, the GT73VR works like a charm on the gaming front and chews through every game we threw at it in 1080p or even 2K. Newer titles like Battlefield 1 and Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands run flawlessly punching more than 70 fps easily on 1080p. Even when I tried gaming on an external display, the drop in performance wasn't much. 4K rendering is still not particularly great, though. You can play most games in 4K in high or ultra settings, and it really helps if the game supports DX12. Older titles do struggle to provide you favourable frame rates.

Games like Tom Clancy’s Division, which is a heavy title, managed just 40 fps at 4K ultra settings, keeping it playable. However, older games like Metro Last light, known to bring GPUs to their knees, occasionally brought the frame rates down to single digits when testing on high graphic settings.

I even tested the machine with HTC’s Vive VR headset, which again works without any issues. I tried more than half a dozen experiences and they all worked fine, with occasional stutters, although it could be because of other reasons as well.

I am truly happy with the cooling on this machine, which is really loud, but does the job well. There are four vents on the laptop, two on the back and two on the side, pulling in air from the bottom and cooling the hardware inside. Even at high temperatures I recorded less than 40 degrees on the keyboard deck, which is quite good for a powerful machine like this.

I should also talk about the 4.1 speaker system on this machines, which is enabled by Nahimic audio and produces crisp and loud audio output throughout. The software can be set for different types of games.

Software

To help you toggle all the performance settings and various others, MSI has added its Dragon Centre application on the laptop that one can use to check system stats, change the RGB keyboard settings or change performance and cooling modes. The laptop will even connect to an app by the same name on your phone, giving you the vital stats of your laptop in the palm of your hand.

Battery Life

This is a gaming laptop, and the rule of thumb is that these machines don’t have good battery life. With a 75whr battery on-board, I wasn't expecting great battery life and the GT73VR didn't prove me wrong. In fact, the laptop ran for just an hour and a half, before dying on the PCMark8 Creative battery test. If you are using it for browsing or writing Word docs (I am judging you now), the system easily lasts for two hours or more, but beyond that you may have to pick up the 1.2kg power brick to charge this device.  

Bottomline

The MSI GT73VR 7RF Titan Pro is quite simply a desktop replacement for all your gaming needs. Yes, you can build a similar PC, but it will be only marginally cheaper if you include a 4K G-Sync display, keyboard-mouse and a 2.1 speaker system to match the GT73VR evenly. So, it is certainly worth the price, but do you need this much processing power? You don’t, unless you plan to game in 4K only.

In conclusion, the MSI GT73VR 7RF Titan Pro is the perfect gaming laptop, although not the one you and I would be able to afford. It is primarily meant for enthusiasts or hardcore gamers, who have the cash to spend for it. For most of us out there, building a gaming PC would be easier and you can keep updating it in future. 

MSI GT73VR 7RF Titan Pro 4K Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 07 Jan 2017
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • OS OS
    Windows 10 Home 64 bit
  • Display Display
    17.3" (3840 x 2160)
  • Processor Processor
    Intel Core i7 (7th generation) | NA
  • Memory Memory
    1 TB with 512 GB SSD SATA with SSD/64GB DDR4

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Hardik Singh

Light at the top, this odd looking creature lives under the heavy medication of video games.

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MSI GT73VR 7RF Titan Pro 4K

Buy now on amazon 334990

MSI GT73VR 7RF Titan Pro 4K

Buy now on amazon 334990

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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Kim Kardashian, Other Celebrities Freeze their Facebook, Instagram Handles for #StopHateForProfit Campaign
3-MIN READ

Kim Kardashian, Other Celebrities Freeze their Facebook, Instagram Handles for #StopHateForProfit Campaign

File image of Kim Kardashian.

File image of Kim Kardashian.

Actors like Sacha Baron Cohen have joined forces with the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) to launch the campaign calling on Facebook to crack down on hate speech, violence, and misinformation on its platforms.

  • Last Updated: September 16, 2020, 1:54 PM IST

As much as we love Facebook and Instagram for connecting us with our favourite actors and influencers, we cannot ignore the fact that the social media has been giving a platform to hate speech and misinformation also. To urge Facebook to reform its policies against hate speech, celebrities like Kim Kardashian, Jennifer Lawrence and others are going to quit social media for a day under the #StopHateForProfit campaign.

Actors like Sacha Baron Cohen have joined forces with the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) to launch the campaign calling on Facebook to crack down on hate speech, violence, and misinformation on its platforms. In one of its recent tweets, ADL said, “Facebook does not protect its users from hate or disinformation. Facebook has shown us time & time again that profits come before people. That’s why we are “freezing” our Instagram account for 24 hours.”

The "freeze" is part of the campaign’s "week of action”, which kicked off Monday. Members plan to continue to share information on "how Facebook’s failures lead to real-life violence and sow division" and call for change through the end of the week.

Businesswoman and social media influencer Kim Kardashian also urged Facebook to stop providing platform to hate speech which is dividing America. She tweeted, “I can’t sit by and stay silent while these platforms continue to allow the spreading of hate, propaganda and misinformation - created by groups to sow division and split America apart only to take steps after people are killed. Misinformation shared on social media has a serious impact on our elections and undermines our democracy.”

Actor Mark Ruffalo has also called on Facebook to take substantial steps to stop hate speech, misinformation on its platform and has frozen his accounts this Wednesday.

With the US Presidential elections just a month away, social media platforms have become an essential platform for politicians and other interest groups to target its voters and influence the election results. The political scene in the United States has been polarised since President Donald Trump took office with some help from Facebook as explained by Netflix documentary The Great Hack. The recent Black Lives Matter protests and President Trump’s ways of curbing it have only raised questions on social media companies' responsibility in tackling fake news which can endanger marginalised people’s lives.

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Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

Pebble Time Review

Pebble Time Review

By Sameer Mitha | Updated May 22 2019
Pebble Time Review
DIGIT RATING
81 /100
  • design

    86

  • performance

    91

  • value for money

    64

  • features

    68

  • PROS
  • Good battery life
  • Clean UI
  • Large library of apps
  • Good display
  • CONS
  • Buttons interface is tedious when compared to the Gear S2’s wheel
  • No Google Now or Siri like voice functionality

Verdict

The Pebble Time has a 5-day battery life, a clean and easy to navigate OS and the always-on colour e-ink display is a treat. On the downside, the buttons feels old when compared to the wheel interface on the Samsung Gear S2. If battery life is a concern for you on a smartwatch then the Pebble Time trumps the Android, Tizen and Watch OS options out there. If its style you are looking for and don’t mind compromising on battery life, then you are better off looking elsewhere.

BUY Pebble Time
Buy now on amazon Available 26675

Pebble Time detailed review

During the review process of the Moto 360 second gen or the LG Watch Urbane, the biggest problem I had was that the smartwatches either died or were about to die towards the end of the day. There were times when the watch was on my wrist and someone asked me the time and I found the watch dead. The only smartwatch that we have come across that has the ability to last a few days has been from the house of Pebble. 


Today we have with us the Pebble Time. With a colour e-ink display and a simple design. Could this be your next smart timepiece?

Build and design

Kicking things off with the design of the Pebble Time, the smartwatch has a simple, elegant design. While a lot of smartwatches like the Moto 360 Second Gen, LG Watch Urbane and the Samsung Gear S2 sport a round design, the Pebble Time has a square design. Sure there is a Pebble Time Round available in the market, but we haven’t managed to get our hands on it yet. 

Moving on, you have a Tough 2.5D curved glass protecting the display and it is surrounded by a stainless steel bezel. There have been occasions where I have bumped my regular watch to the sharp edges of a table, rendering the display cracked. The glass protecting the Pebble Time isn’t extremely strong but it does manage to protect the device from such accidents. The display is surrounded by a stainless steel bezel making the design quite sturdy. Surprisingly the thick bezel doesn’t make the display look small. 

The Pebble Time weighs 42.5 grams making it relatively light to wear and also feels sturdy at the same time. The Pebble Time is available in three colours – red, white and black and the review unit we received was the black one. The straps can easily be removed in case you want to replace them.

The Pebble Time doesn’t have a touchscreen but has four physical buttons - three on the right and one of the left. The left button is the back button and on the right you have the up, down and action button. Having used a touchscreen smartwatch, using the physical buttons can take some getting used to. The buttons are sturdy and well built and require that you really press them to respond. This isn’t a bad thing, as the buttons won’t get pressed accidentally. Over the course of using the device, I started enjoying the experience of reading mails on the smartwatch by scrolling through them using the buttons. For some reason it felt a lot better than scrolling using a touchscreen. That was of course before we at Digit got our hands on the Samsung Gear S2. The rotating dial on the Gear S2 feels a lot more intuitive and the best navigation experience so far on a smartwatch.

Coming back to the Pebble Time, it is very well built. The black colour option that we received for review looks elegant whether you wear it with formals or casuals. It has a neutral design and won’t turn heads. 

Performance and Battery life

Kicking things off with compatibility, the Pebble Time works with Android and iOS and it works really well with both. Simply download the companion Pebble app from the App store or the Play Store and you are good to go. Before we get into the number of things you can do with the watch, let’s get the battery life out of the way. The maximum battery life I got out of the watch was about 5 days. On the lower side it died in three days. The Pebble Time has the best battery life when compared to other smartwatches we have reviewed. 

Coming to the performance, there is a lot that you can do with the smartwatch. You have to keep digging to find some really cool apps. There are of course a slew of watch faces and my new personal favourite has to be the 8 bit NES heroes, which changes the NES character each minute. It was fun looking at the NES character on the watch and remembering the good old days of gaming. 

The Pebble Time has an interface called the Timeline and overall the UI is very clean and easy to navigate. You can install all the apps you want on the smartwatch through the companion smartphone app and you can also control what apps notifications appear on the watch. Some interesting apps include Uber, Misfit, Tiny Bird (a version of Flappy Birds), Tripadvisor, to name a few. There are also a bunch of games that you can play from the comfort of the watch itself and some of these games are quite addictive. 

The apps library of the Pebble Time is very large. Compared to Watch OS and Android Wear, the Pebble Time doesn’t have Siri or Google Now voice services and that is a bummer. But you can reply to a WhatsApp message or an SMS from the comfort of the Pebble Time without removing your phone from your pocket. You can reply using emojis, standard preloaded replies or dictate a reply yourself. For the most part the voice recognition works well but there were times when it couldn’t understand my accent. You can forget about the device recognizing Indian names. The only downside here is that not all emojis are recognized and WhatsApp messages sent in Hindi look like boxes on the Pebble Time.

There are a bunch of fitness apps for the device too and there is a built-in Health app as well that tracks your steps and sleep. I wouldn’t trust the accuracy of the app much. One morning I woke up at 7AM, as I had to move my car and came back to bed at 7:15am. When I woke up at 9AM the watch showed that I was up at 7. On the plus side, the app shows you your deep sleep for the night as well. It’s a nice way of tracking your sleep. Just don’t trust it blindly. 

Coming to one of the best features of the watch, the colour e-ink display. Yes it’s a colour e-ink display and the best way to describe it is that it looks a lot like the first colour Gameboy but with a wider colour gamut. The display is always on and is easily visible in sunlight. The fact that it has a display that’s easily visible in the sun and gives you five day battery life is a big deal when compared to other watches. Comparing the display to the Samsung Gear S2, the display on the Pebble Time looks a lot like Mario from the SNES days and the Gear S2’s display looks like Super Mario Galaxy and that isn’t necessarily a bad thing. 

Bottom Line

I could not justify the purchase of a smartwatch simply because the battery life on these devices really sucked. The Pebble Time however needs to be charged once in four days, and that is the main reason why you will get hooked to it. Once you are hooked, the deeper you dig, the more functions you will find. During the course of writing this review, I have found a bunch of watch faces I like, a bunch of apps I’d like to explore and reading mails on the watch at night while my phone charges in a corner was a pleasant experience. Sure, there is no dire need to own a smartwatch and the device can be categorized as a luxury gadget but there is some fun to be had, especially since the device won’t die on you. You can last an entire day with just 20% battery if you use the device as a watch only and that’s a very good thing. The Pebble Time is priced at about Rs. 20,000 in India and that is expensive. The display is great for sunlight visibility but isn’t as cool to look at as the Gear S2. The physical buttons are old school and work well with the Pebble Time’s OS but the wheel on the Gear S2 is more intuitive and easier to use. Where the Gear S2 loses out is with the battery life and that’s the only reason I would prefer the Pebble Time. If you are looking for a smartwatch that can last for 5 days, then the Pebble Time is definitely a contender at the top of your list. But if style over battery life is what you are looking for then you are better off looking elsewhere. 

Pebble Time Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 11 May 2016
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Type Type
    Lithium Polymer
  • Power (Battery,mAh) Power (Battery,mAh)
    NULL
  • Compatible OS Compatible OS
    Android 4.0 and above, iOS 8 and above
  • Water Resistant Water Resistant
    Yes
logo
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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Pebble Time

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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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Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

National Education Policy Backward Looking Document: Mallikarjun Kharge In Rajya Sabha

"National Education Policy Backward Looking Document": Mallikarjun Kharge

The NEP-2020 is the first education policy of the 21st century, which was announced 34 years after the previous National Policy on Education in 1986.

'National Education Policy Backward Looking Document': Mallikarjun Kharge

Mallikarjun Kharge said the entire NEP is a "backward looking document". (FILE)

New Delhi:

Terming the new National Education Policy as a "backward looking document", senior Congress leader Mallikarjun Kharge said on Wednesday that education should be based on principles of the Constitution and not on ancient cultural values.

Raising the issue as a Zero Hour mention in Rajya Sabha, Mr Kharge, who was recently elected to the upper house, said the entire NEP is a "backward looking document" that is looking 2000 years back instead of planning and preparing our children for the future.

"Therefore the values of moral education in schools and higher education should be based on the principles of the Constitution and not on ancient cultural values," he added.

The NEP-2020 is the first education policy of the 21st century, which was announced 34 years after the previous National Policy on Education in 1986. The NEP-2020 is directed towards major reforms at both the school and higher education level, the government has said

Mr Kharge noted that a provision in the Constitution states that in state and state-aided institutions there should be no religious instructions.

According to Article 28 (1), no religious instructions shall be provided in any educational institutions wholly maintained out of the state fund, he said.

In cities, Mr Kharge said, children who have access to quality nursery education learn to read and write by the time they join class 1.

However, he said poor children in towns and villages will be at a disadvantage because there is no proper policy defined for training of Aanganwadi teachers. Poor children will start with a disadvantage of not having learnt for three years before joining class 1.

"Nearly 50 per cent of students drop out after Class 10. There is no plan that has been suggested to reduce this drop outs. It is estimated that 32.4 per cent of these student drop outs are Dalits, 25.7 per cent minorities and 16.4 per cent are tribals," Mr Kharge said.

Teachers are already burdened with several duties like elections, census and vaccinations etc. which makes it difficult for them to concentrate on teaching and it is impossible to improve the quality of education, the Congress leader said.

Mr Kharge said the focus should be on mathematics, science and english for providing opportunity of development to rural and backward areas.

"Indian culture will be learnt by students through their language and literature classes. Such kind of activism to promote a single culture of Sanskrit or Hindi by the government will only keep children from backward areas out of modern education," he said.

Meanwhile, Congress leader Partap Singh Bajwa and SAD member Balwinder Singh Bhunder demanded that Punjabi language should be included in the list of official languages in the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir.

Last week, the Union Cabinet approved a bill under which Kashmiri, Dogri and Hindi, apart from the existing Urdu and English, will be the official languages in the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir.

In special mentions, Rajmani Patel demanded establishment of a commonwealth sport centre at Rewa in Madhya Pradesh, while Rakesh Sinha (BJP nominated) sought compulsory disaster management training in schools and colleges.

Amar Patnaik of the BJD wanted formulation of a central sector scheme for the community of weavers.

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

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Nissan Unveils The Z Proto - carandbike

Nissan Unveils The Z Proto

The Nissan Z Proto pays homage to 50 years of Z heritage.

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Nissan has unveiled the Z Proto, signaling the company's intent to launch a new generation of the legendary Z sports car. Shown at a virtual event the prototype car features a new design inside and out, as well as a V-6 twin turbocharged engine with a manual transmission. The Nissan Z Proto pays homage to 50 years of Z heritage.

Penned and developed by the design team in Japan, the Z Proto boasts of a fresh, attractive exterior design with a silhouette that looks more like the old model. It sports a bright yellow pearlescent paint – a tribute to a popular paint scheme on both the first generation Z (S30) and the 300ZX (Z32) – and a black roof.

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The Nissan Z Proto sports a bright yellow pearlescent paint – a tribute to a popular paint scheme on both the first generation Z 

Nissan CEO Makoto Uchida said, “The Z, as a pure sports car, represents the spirit of Nissan. It's a key model in our Nissan NEXT transformation plan, and it's proof of our ability to do what others don't dare to do, from A to Z. As a Z fan myself, I'm excited to announce that the next Z is coming."

The shape of the hood and the canted, teardrop-shaped LED headlights are both unmistakable reminders of the original Z. The rectangular grille's dimensions are similar to the current model with the addition of oval grille fins to offer an updated modern look. The form continues to exude both sportiness and elegance.

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 The rear takes inspiration from the 300ZX (Z32) taillights, reinterpreted for the modern world.


The link to the original Z is most striking when viewing the Z Proto from the side. The roofline flows from the nose to the squared-off rear to create a distinctive first-generation Z profile whose rear edge was slightly lower than the front fender height giving the Z its unique posture. The signature transition from the rear quarter glass to the low-slung position of the rear tail adds to the effect.

The rear takes inspiration from the 300ZX (Z32) taillights, reinterpreted for the modern world. Set within a rectangular black section that runs across the rear and wraps around the outer edges, the LED taillights convey a sharp glow. Lightweight carbon fibre treatments on the side skirts, front lower lip and rear valance are all there to enhance performance and the 19-inch alloy wheels and dual exhausts complete the Z Proto's looks. 

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The roofline flows from the nose to the squared-off rear to create a distinctive first-generation Z profile  

The interior design team sought advice from professional motorsports legends to give the Z Proto an ideal sports car cabin, both for road and track. This can be seen in the Z's instrumentation. All vital information is found in the 12.3-inch digital meter display and arranged to help the driver grasp it at a glance, such as the redline shift point at the twelve o-clock position.

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All vital information is found in the 12.3-inch digital meter display and arranged to help the driver grasp it at a glance, such as the redline shift point at the twelve o-clock position. 

The new, deep dish steering wheel offers the driver quick access controls without losing its vintage aesthetic. Yellow accents are found throughout the cabin, including stitching on the instrument panel. The seats feature special yellow accenting and a layered gradation stripe in the centre of the seats to create depth.

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The Nissan Z Proto gets a 6-speed manual transmission  

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Under the elongated hood is a V6 twin-turbocharged engine mated to a six-speed manual gearbox. As a prototype, work is now underway on synchronizing the power so we don't have the figures yet from Nissan. 
 

For the latest auto news and reviews, follow carandbike.com on Twitter, Facebook, and subscribe to our YouTube channel.

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Goliath destroys David this time

Goliath destroys David this time

THE EDITOR: TKR is now a four-time CPL T20 champion after blasting the St Lucia Zouks away – Goliath this time destroying David.

Congratulations to Kieron Pollard for his excellent leadership and showing the team how it is done. A tower of strength, he led from the front.

TKR performed as a united unit and deserved to raise the trophy after winning 12 straight games. In the final everyone did what they were expected to do, both with the ball and the bat. Pollard led the way in the bowling department with four wickets for 30 runs and was well supported by the other bowlers.

But the icing on the cake came with the partnership of 100 plus runs between Lendl Simmons (84 not out) and Darren Bravo (58 not out). They took the Zouks to pieces, showing no mercy on anyone – like true champions.

So to the entire team, you deserve to win for you were far the best team in the CPL. I look forward to seeing you retain the trophy in 2021.

To all the members of the team including the manager, coaches and other support staff, keep reaching for the stars and using your gifts to bring joy and entertainment to the world.

ARNOLD GOPEESINGH

via e-mail

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HP Envy 15 Review
HP Envy 15 Review

HP Envy 15 Review

Swapnil Mathur   |  26 Aug 2020
DIGIT RATING
76 /100
  • design

    77

  • performance

    79

  • value for money

    76

  • features

    70

  • PROS
  • Elegant Design.
  • CPU-GPU do not throttle.
  • Handles video editing very well.
  • CONS
  • Keyboard surface can get hot.
  • No charging over USB-C.

Verdict

The HP Envy 15 is a sleek looking laptop that's aimed squarely at content creators. Powered by the 10th generation Intel Core i7-10750H processor and an Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660Ti which are both kept cool using a Vapour Chamber cooler. There's also super-fast 1TB NVMe by Samsung and a decent 16GB of DDR4 memory. All this allow the HP Envy to be a solid machine for content creation. You won't be let down irrespective of whether you want to edit on it or use it as a rendering station. The laptop also doubles up as a gaming machine in case you want to blow off some steam. For content creators, the HP Envy offers great performance in a very elegantly designed machine at a price point that is much lower than its competitors.

BUY HP Envy 15
Price 149999

HP Envy 15 detailed review

With content creation starting to occupy more of the occupational landscape today, OEMs are finally starting to see the segment as a standalone business opportunity. Apple’s had this clarity for as long as they’ve had the MacBook Pro lineup, but the PC side of things is just starting to realise that creators have very specific needs, not all of which are met by gaming machines. Asus got on the bandwagon by having the display on many of their gaming machines be “Pantone certified” and Dell pivoted their XPS 15 to be more of a creator laptop than a gaming machine. Now HP is stepping up its game with the Envy 15, having it be tailor-made to cater to the need of those who produce content for a living. The Envy makes a few choices that set it apart from gaming laptops, but at the end of the day, is this the right laptop for content creators or should they look somewhere else?

HP Envy 15 Specifications

Processor: Intel Core i7-10750H
RAM: 16GB DDR4
GPU: Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660Ti (6GB VRAM)
Storage: 1TB Samsung NVMe
Display Resolution: 1920x1080
Display Refresh Rate: 60Hz

HP Envy 15 Creative Performance

Our standard testing for creative workloads involves Adobe Lightroom and Adobe Premiere. In addition, we also tested the Envy using DaVinci Resolve, Blender, Apophysis fractal rendering program and Photoshop to see just how the laptop keeps up with these specific workloads. We exported a batch of 50, 100 and 500 RAW files all shot using a Nikon Z7 through Adobe Lightroom Classic. This test w do for all our gaming and creator-centric laptops. In this test, the Envy surprisingly recorded some very slow render times. The HP Omen 15 (Review) that we reviewed recently has the same CPU and a lower-end GPU but still managed to complete the export task much faster.

HP Envy 15 Adobe Lightroom Classic Render test

Switching over to Premiere Pro, we see a completely different behaviour. Now Premiere Pro intelligently shifts the loads between the CPU and GPU depending on the matter being rendered. Here, faster renders are also aided by Intel’s QuickSync technology. Here, we noted that the HP Envy does admirably well, recording the fastest render times across all the 10th gen gaming laptops and even the Ryzen 4000 ones we’ve tested. You can see the render times in the chart below.

HP Envy Premiere Pro render performance test

HP Envy Thermals

What’s particularly interesting is that the HP Envy trades the traditional copper pipe-based cooling system for a vapour chamber. While running our standard 4K 20-minute timeline export, the Intel Core i7-10750H stays well in the 80s for the most part, spiking into the early 90s only momentarily. The vapour chamber does manage to keep the CPU-GPU well within their respective operating temperatures. We also didn’t find the fans to be too loud even when operating at their max. While the internals maintain a good temperate zone, the surface temperature is a different story. The use of aluminium for the keyboard island allows it to also act as a heat dissipator, hence, you will feel the heat from the inside. You can feel the heat at the centre of the keyboard, which clocked 47-48 degrees while the WASD keys clock 40 degree Celsius. Perhaps the most surprising find was the palm-rest, which we measured to be at 41.5 degrees Celsius. Suffice to say, if you’re gaming on this thing or running a sustained render load, this thing is definitely going to feel hot.

HP Envy 15 Gaming Performance

HP is not positioning the Envy 15 as a gaming laptop, but it would be ridiculous to not consider it as one. We ran our standard suite of games on the Envy and found that it actually manages the 60fps mark across most games with their graphics setting set to the High or Medium preset. The Envy sports only a 60Hz display, so we’re more than happy to see games hit that mark. It's smooth and free from any kind of tearing and that’s pretty much all you can hope for. Where the Envy falters as a gaming system is due to the fact that after a few hours of sustained gaming, the surface temperatures do get really hot. Good thing that HP isn’t targeting gamers with this machine.

Keyboard, Trackpad and I/O

The HP Envy 15 features a nice white backlit chiclet-style keyboard. White backlighting is starting to become very commonplace these days, especially in laptops that have silver keycaps. It's best to keep the backlight turned off during the day and only turn it on while using the laptop in dark environments. The keyboard itself is a treat to use, with generously sized keycaps and decent distance between the keys, it was super easy to get used to. Where the keyboard IS a little weird is that it removes the right CTRL key and puts a fingerprint sensor there. It’s a weird spot for a fingerprint sensor, but it does fit into the scheme of things, at least aesthetically.

The trackpad on this machine is definitely smaller than the one on the Dell XPS 15 and the 16-inch MacBook Pro (Review). Like much smaller. However, you do a get a good trackpad, one with unified clicks and also using Windows Precision drivers. The trackpad is usable for the basic stuff like navigating Windows and even simpler photo and video editing.

The I/O on the Envy is rather impressive. You get two Thunderbolt 3.0 ports, a full-sized HDMI port and two USB 3.0 ports. For any creator, this should be sufficient enough. While the Thunderbolt 3 ports are great for further expansion, it is sad to see that they do not support PowerDelivery.

Display

The HP Envy 15 packs a full HD IPS panel with a rated brightness of 300 nits and 100 percent sRGB coverage. We measured the panel brightness numbers to be very close to what HP claims and as for the colour accuracy, the display seems to be calibrated right out of the box. The white point is set for the sRGB colourspace, which is nice. However, if you're going to be using this for colour sensitive work, calibrating the display using a Spyder or an Xrite is absolutely necessary. This is because while the panel may be set to reproduce colours in the most accurate way, the ambient lighting in our working environment has an impact on the way we perceive colour. Professional colour calibration of the display tunes the display's colours taking the ambient light into account which allows for better colour accuracy when it comes to colour-sensitive work. The Envy 15 can easily be used for the purposes of professional photo editing, video editing and even colour grading.

The HP Envy 15 offers a FHD IPS display

Verdict

The HP Envy 15 is trying to take on brands that have practically ruled the kingdom. However at the same time, the MacBook Pro and the new Dell XPS 15 are considerably expensive, so the HP Envy 15 does fill up a massive price gap that currently exists. The review unit we received retails for Rs 1,49,999, currently being the cheapest of the creator laptops with Intel’s 10th generation processors. You could bump up the specs to an RTX 2060 and an OLED display if you wanted and still not hit the price point of the Dell or the MacBook Pro. The Envy does manage to deliver on the promise of good performance for creative workloads and can also easily hold its own when it comes to gaming. For the price, it does truly offer solid value for money and can be a solid recommendation for those who don the role of content creators and gamers.

HP Envy 15 Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price: ₹149999
Release Date: 25 Aug 2020
Variant: None
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • OS OS
    Windows 10
  • Display Display
    15" (1920 x 1080)
  • Processor Processor
    Intel Core i7-10750H | 2.6 GHz
  • Memory Memory
    1 TB SSD/16 GBGB DDR4

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Rossi keen on having Dovizioso as Yamaha MotoGP test rider
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Rossi keen on having Dovizioso as Yamaha MotoGP test rider

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Rossi keen on having Dovizioso as Yamaha MotoGP test rider
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Valentino Rossi says he would "sign now" if Yamaha has the chance to recruit outgoing Ducati star Andrea Dovizioso as a test rider for 2021.

Dovizioso's future in MotoGP is uncertain after he announced during last month's Austrian Grand Prix weekend that he would be quitting Ducati at the end of the season, bringing to an end an eight-year partnership that has yielded 14 victories and three runner-up spots in the championship.

At the time, Dovizioso admitted he had no "plan B" for his future, and the MotoGP points leader still has no update to offer.

He has been linked to ride with Aprilia - which has also been speaking to Cal Crutchlow - but CEO Massimo Rivola conceded Aprilia likely couldn't afford Dovizioso.

Dovizioso is open to taking a sabbatical in 2021, with a test rider role likely to involve wildcard appearances - though only Aprilia would be able to offer him more than three owing to the concession rules.

With Jorge Lorenzo's role as Yamaha test rider not secured beyond this year, Rossi was asked if he would like Dovizioso as an alternative.

"About Dovi [as Yamaha test rider], for sure," he replied. "I'd sign now to have Dovi as a test rider.

"But I think, and I hope that he will find a bike for racing, because I think he is young and fast to race."

After his disastrous 2019 campaign with Honda, Lorenzo retired from racing at the end of year and returned to Yamaha as a test rider.

However, he has only completed two days on a 2019-spec M1 so far this year - one at the Sepang shakedown, and once during the official Sepang test.

He is due to ride the Yamaha at the Algarve circuit in the coming weeks as part of a Michelin tyre test ahead of November's season-ending Portuguese Grand Prix.

In an exclusive interview with Motorsport.com this week, Lorenzo said his "priority" was to renew his deal with Yamaha for next year - though confirmed rival brands have spoken to him.

Rossi and Fabio Quartararo questioned Yamaha's decision not to test with Lorenzo at Misano in June to try the new surface when its rivals did.

Yamaha later revealed this was a result of its test team, which is largely based in Japan, being unable to get to Europe owing to COVID-19 restrictions.

Yamaha did have a European-based test team headed by Jonas Folger in 2019 as well as its Japanese arm, but it was thought better to combine the two teams going forward.

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Alex Rins was also asked about the possibility of Dovizioso being signed by Suzuki to bolster its test team for 2021.

He believes the Italian would be an "interesting option" because of his experience of Ducati, Yamaha and Honda machinery in the premier class.

"For sure, will be an interesting option because to have Sylvain [Guintoli] and Dovizioso will be perfect, because Dovi has a lot of experience and he knows the rest of the bikes," Rins said.

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Lenovo Thinkpad T460 Windows 10 Review

Lenovo Thinkpad T460 Windows 10 Review

By Hardik Singh | Updated Nov 01 2019
Lenovo Thinkpad T460 Windows 10 Review
DIGIT RATING
66 /100
  • design

    70

  • performance

    67

  • value for money

    57

  • features

    71

  • PROS
  • Decent Performance
  • Rugged build
  • Spill resistant keyboard
  • best-in-class keyboard
  • CONS
  • No SSD
  • No USB Type-C port

Verdict

The Lenovo T460 is a rugged offering under the Thinkpad range which does provide a solid build quality along with decent performance. However, it is not the best machine for your office unless ruggedness is a priority.

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Lenovo Thinkpad T460 Windows 10 detailed review

The Thinkpad line of laptops are built with a particular purpose in mind, offering understated looks and dependable performance, alongside added security features an enterprise customer may need. It goes from the basic Thinkpad 13 or the high-end Carbon X1, but Lenovo also has a T-series Thinkpad range that fits somewhere in between and adds semi-ruggedness to the Thinkpad portfolio. In typical Thinkpad fashion, it’s a 14-inch laptop and is mainly aimed at corporate customers, who buy in bulk. So, while you or I may not be able to buy it, those niche buyers may need to know more about it.


Design : The usual 

If you have seen a Thinkpad laptop earlier or read our earlier reviews, then the looks of this one won’t surprise you. In fact, the T460 looks exactly like the T450, its predecessor. You get a standard black plastic shell, which at 0.83-inch is somewhat thicker than the usual Thinkpad laptops, but has the same 14-inch form factor we love. As for the overall looks, it is not particularly a head turner, but it will not go completely unnoticed either. Especially the signature Thinkpad keyboard and touchpad.

Build - Ruff and tuff

Lenovo claims that the T460 can take more abuse than a standard Thinkpad. According to the company, the laptop fulfils 11 military grade testing parameters. The company claims that it can basically work under extreme temperatures, pressure and humid conditions. It is also resistant to vibration, dust, fungus and salt. Lenovo says you can literally bake this laptop or put it in the freezer, and it’ll live through those conditions. To test, we actually put it in a pre-heated oven (heated to 180 degrees) for a minute with no damage to the laptop. The same is true for freezers as well.

We took the battery out for safety purposes, but this is impressive indeed. You may not need this in real life, but for that niche audience, it’s a handy thing to have.

Amongst Lenovo’s claims is also one that says the Thinkpad T640 stands drops from up to 4 feet, which is how high most tables are. And the claim seems true as well. I dropped this laptop often, probably a dozen times over the course of the review, and from heights ranging between 2 feet to 5 feet. I tried dropping it on sand, grass, marble and even concrete. 

The other thing I like is the spill resistant keyboard, that is a big plus for any laptop. It can handle basically up to 500ml of water, coffee or some other liquids, and yes, it passed this in real life as well. However, that doesn’t necessarily mean it’ll manage all kinds of drops. Coffee, water, wine and some regular liquids should be fine.

Lenovo has relied on its premium plastic material, plus rubber mountings on some of the internal hardware to offer this level of ruggedness. The spill resistant keyboard has channels below the keys, which direct the liquid away from internal components and underneath the keyboard. Then there is how the hardware is laid out inside. All this combined make it the toughest laptop in the Thinkpad line. If you are wondering, there are tougher machines out there, like the Panasonic Toughbook, which are even for even more specialised conditions.

It’s worth mentioning that the overall fit and finish of the laptop does not feel as premium as the Thinkpad Carbon X1, but it will do the job. Moreover, there is almost no flex in the display or on the keyboard. The hinge is quite good and precise and has metal mountings which add to the laptop’s rugged quotient.

NOTE: After all this torture testing and literally tossing the laptop around, the hard drive gave up finally. So, I would add that even though the machine is tough and can withstand occasional drops easily, you should not do it intentionally as if your luck runs out, you might brick your laptop and loose your precious data.  

Display and I/O: Ticking the right boxes

Like previous Thinkpad laptops we tested, the T460 also has a 14-inch IPS panel. It has 1920 x 1080p resolution and good viewing angles. It is certainly not the best out there, but if all you want to do is view documents or watch an occasional movie, it does the job well enough. At just 198 lux luminance, it is not a bright display either, but the matte finish on the display does help curb legibility issues under bright light to some degree.

As for the I/O, you have everything you may need from a laptop of this calibre, with the exception of a USB Type-C port. On the left of the machine you have the standard Lenovo power connector, one USB 3.0 port, an exhaust and a microphone headphone combo. On the right side, it has a SIM card slot, two USB 3.0 ports, ethernet jack, a mini DisplayPort and an HDMI-out. The left USB port will even charge your phone with the lid down, or even when the laptop is off.

Keyboard and Touchpad

There is nothing new as far as the keyboard and touchpad are concerned, and for good measure. The legendary Thinkpad keyboard needs little change, with its non-slip matte black finish, offering ample key travel and excellent feedback. It also has white backlighting, which is not as aggressive as some prior Thinkpads, and is now subtler and in-line with the rest of the lineup.

Same goes for the touchpad, which is precise and offers smooth glides across the touch area. The touch area in turn is slightly roughened, which feels somewhat awkward compared to the smooth matte finish we used on previous Thinkpads, but it gets the job done. Moreover, the three physical keys below the touchpad are precise, and offer excellent travel, although, there is no audible click here. Also, the red trackpoint is a delight to use every time.

You also get a fingerprint scanner, which is linked to Windows Hello and works well, although, you will face some difficulty if you try to use it with greasy hands.

Performance - Acceptable

While the Thinkpad has an exceptional keyboard, the overall performance of the machine is just about good enough. There is an Intel Core i5-6200U processor, which is a widely used processor, combined with 8GB of RAM. The silicon is not the problem here. My qualm lies with the HDD storage, which occasionally hit 100% usage during testing, making the laptop freeze. At first, I thought it was a hardware issue that may have occurred due to those numerous drop tests I did previously. Although after ascertaining via various software that the HDD was healthy, I rested the PC, which resolved the issue. That said, the single HDD storage is still slow and at its price the T460 should have included an SSD based storage as standard.

I did not try any heavy gaming on the machine, but be assured that it can run games like Dota 2, Hearthstone and more. Our PCmark 8 and Cinebench scores suggest that the performance is just average when compared to the category, which further justify my findings.

Battery life - Reliable

Amidst the current generation of laptops, most of which do not have a user replaceable battery, the T460 features a large 72 whr removable battery. This gives the laptop a lot more flexibility in terms of portability and provides enough juice to last a normal work day at 25% screen brightness. By normal, I mean browsing, streaming audio, docs and some light photo editing only. I should also add that the batteries are not impact resistant and if you see white smoke coming out of the laptop after you accidently drop it, DO NOT turn it on or use it.

Bottomline

The Lenovo T460 is a slightly more expensive alternative to the standard Thinkpads (L-series), but it’s rugged and offers enterprise class security as well. It is not the first machine a company or corporation’s purchase department should think of, unless ruggedness is the need of the hour. In addition, I reckon Lenovo could have added a better storage solution or at least a Core i7 chip to match the asking price.

Lenovo Thinkpad T460 Windows 10 Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 07 Feb 2017
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • OS OS
    Windows 10 Pro 64 bit
  • Display Display
    14" (1366 x 768)
  • Processor Processor
    Intel Core i5 (6th generation) | NA
  • Memory Memory
    1 TB SATA/4GB DDR3

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HP Envy 15 Review

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Hardik Singh

Light at the top, this odd looking creature lives under the heavy medication of video games.

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Lenovo Thinkpad T460 Windows 10

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Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

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The road to Rs 15 lakh crore market cap

The rise in the stock price of Reliance Industries over the last few months on the back of stake sale in Jio Platforms has renewed investor interest in the company. Here is Reliance's story

The road to Rs 14 lakh crore market cap

Reliance Industries is the first-ever Indian company to cross the Rs 10 lakh crore market cap, with its one-year return (as on August 17, 2020) at over 67 per cent. Until two years ago, the stock was a slowly growing one. For some time, TCS had overtaken Reliance in terms of the largest Indian company by market cap. But then happened the turnaround, thanks mostly to Reliance Jio. Jio not just helped Reliance become net debt-free, it has also turned an otherwise boring oil-and-gas stock into a Street heartthrob. Over the last few months, Jio Platforms has helped Reliance raise over Rs 1.5 lakh crore.

Another feather in the company's cap is its retail business, which is growing by leaps and bounds. Talks are underway between the Future Group and Reliance for a stake sale in the former. For Reliance investors, a lot has happened over the last one year or so. It's likely that a lot of steam is still left. Here's Reliance's journey to its current market cap of over Rs 14 lakh crore.

The graph below traces the rise in stock price of the company. Here are some important milestones
FY10-11
Enters into partnerships in North America for shale-gas exploration Strategic alliance with BP for domestic oil-and-gas exploration Forays into telecom, gets pan-India broadband wireless licence by acquiring 95 per cent stake in Infotel Broadband Services for Rs 4,202 cr
FY11-12
With 1,300 stores, Reliance Retail becomes a leader in food, apparel and consumerelectronics retailing
FY12-13
Retail business crosses Rs 10,000 cr sales in FY13. Buys back Rs 3,366 cr of stock Renames Infotel Broadband Services as 'Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd', RJIL.
FY13-14
Retail business crosses 10 mn square feet of retail space and breaks even on a net-profit basis Reliance Jio acquires the right to use spectrum in 14 key circles across India in the 1,800 MHz band Enters into infrastructure-sharing arrangements with other telecom players
FY14-15
Invests over Rs 1 lakh cr during the financial year across various businesses To boost its media business, acquires the control of Network18 and its subsidiary TV18
FY15-16
Capex of over Rs 1.12 lakh cr (US$17 bn) in FY16, the highest-ever by any Indian corporate Beta testing of Jio with over 1.5 mn test users Launches 4G smartphones under the 'LYF' brand Sells 49.9 per cent stake in a US shale oil and gas pipeline joint venture for $1.07 bn
FY16-17
Jio adds 100 mn subscribers within 170 days of launch. Offers free voice calls. Jio Prime membership gains over 72 mn subscriptions Jio announces that it will start charging customers for data services
FY17-18
Constructs the world's largest petcoke gasification unit at Jamnagar Jio earns a profit of Rs 723 cr on turnover of Rs 23,714 cr in its first year of commercial operations Jio forges partnerships with the likes of Balaji Telefilms, Eros International and Saavn to build entertainment and media-content offerings.
FY18-19
Retail business crosses Rs 1 lakh cr in revenue and the store count of 10,000 Jio crosses 300 mn subscribers. Becomes the largest 4G carrier in India. Enters into a series of content partnerships with Disney and Star India, among others Invests in Hathway Cable and Datacom and DEN Networks to expand the Jio Fiber business The petchem business has a record production of 37.7 MMT and the highest-ever earnings Wins $1.7 bn arbitration claim by the government over siphoning gas from ONGC's KG-D6 basin
FY19-20
In talks with Saudi Aramco for a stake sale of 20 per cent in oil-tochemical division. Completes rights issue of Rs 53,124 cr Raises over around Rs 1.52 lakh cr from global tech companies and private-equity firms by selling stake in Jio Platforms. Post the stake sale, owns about 65 per cent in Jio. Forms strategic partnerships with Microsoft to grow cloud business and with Facebook to grow digital retail business through WhatsApp Forms a new JV with BP to grow the network of retail service stations network and aviation fuel business across India

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Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

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Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

Boyfriend who killed Natalina Angok in Melbourne was suffering from untreated 'schizophrenia' | Daily Mail Online
 
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Violent boyfriend who choked his girlfriend to death after an incredible ice binge before leaving her body in Chinatown was suffering from an 'untreated schizophrenic illness'

  • Christopher Allen Bell, 33, pleaded guilty to the murder of Natalina Angok, 32 
  • Ms Angok's body was found early on April 24, 2019, in a laneway in Melbourne 
  • Bell killed Ms Angok after an ice and alcohol 'bender' in the city and left her body
  • Doctors believe he suffered untreated schizophrenic illness for five years before

Natalina Angok was a sweet soul with a heart of gold, whose life was ended by a man she chose to love.

The 32-year-old, described as the light of her family, was strangled to death in a Melbourne laneway by her boyfriend in April last year.

Christopher Allen Bell, 33, had a history of family violence against Ms Angok throughout their nine-month relationship.

Natalina Angok was strangled to death in a Melbourne laneway by her boyfriend in April last year

Natalina Angok was strangled to death in a Melbourne laneway by her boyfriend in April last year

Christopher Allen Bell, 33, had a history of family violence against Ms Angok throughout their nine-month relationship

Christopher Allen Bell, 33, had a history of family violence against Ms Angok throughout their nine-month relationship

A police officer is seen on Little Bourke St where Ms Angok's dead body was found on April 24, 2019

A police officer is seen on Little Bourke St where Ms Angok's dead body was found on April 24, 2019

He pleaded guilty to killing her in the early hours of April 24 last year after an ice and alcohol 'bender' in the city.

When police confronted Bell about the discovery of Ms Angok's body in a Chinatown laneway he initially claimed 'I don't have a girlfriend', but told them he sometimes had blackout episodes.

He later admitted he 'choked the life out of her until she breathed no longer'.

CCTV captured their final evening together. Prosecutor Jeremy McWilliam told a pre-sentence hearing in Victoria's Supreme Court that Bell had tried to steal a bottle of wine from a liquor store and aggressively challenged a security guard to a fight after he was caught.

Ms Angok apologised to staff for his behaviour, and a taxi driver who picked them up said she had been angry and upset with him afterwards.

They went to a hotel and later walked through Chinatown, where they were shown having 'animated' discussions.

Ms Angok was choked to death
Bell pleaded guilty to killing her

Bell (right) admitted he 'choked the life out of her until she breathed no longer'

Ms Angok's body was found in Little Bourke St (pictured) in Melbourne on April 24 last year

Ms Angok's body was found in Little Bourke St (pictured) in Melbourne on April 24 last year

Ms Angok was strangled to death by Bell. She fought back during the fatal attack and Bell's DNA, from a scratch on his neck, was found under her fingernails

Ms Angok was strangled to death by Bell. She fought back during the fatal attack and Bell's DNA, from a scratch on his neck, was found under her fingernails

Just after 5am Ms Angok walked into Celestial Avenue, followed by Bell. Her body was found there by a member of the public at around 6.30am.

Bell described his memory of the incident as 'hazy like it was real but not real'.

His lawyer Rohan Lawrence said Bell was remorseful.

'He reports he immediately regretted what he had done and was weeping while berating himself,' he said.

But he then spent an hour gambling at Crown Casino and bought food, cigarettes, wine and an Anzac badge.

He had been released from prison shortly before meeting Ms Angok and was released from inpatient mental health care a week before the murder.

'You were supposed to love and protect her ... even if my life depended on it, I will never forgive you,' Ms Angok's sister said

'You were supposed to love and protect her ... even if my life depended on it, I will never forgive you,' Ms Angok's sister said

Doctors believe Ms Angok had become part of his complex delusions and that he had suffered untreated schizophrenic illness for four to five years beforehand.

She had been encouraged to leave Bell by her sister in the days before her death, because of Ms Angok's concerns he would kill her.

'You were supposed to love and protect her ... even if my life depended on it, I will never forgive you,' she said.

Ms Angok fought back during the fatal attack. Bell's DNA, from a scratch on his neck, was found under her fingernails.

Bell has four children from two previous relationships, but no longer has contact with them.

Justice Lex Lasry said there appeared to be a 'well entrenched pattern' of violence by Mr Bell against partners, including before the onset of his schizophrenic symptoms in 2014.

The hearing is continuing.

Boyfriend who killed Natalina Angok in Melbourne was suffering from untreated 'schizophrenia'

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Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

Senator: Allowing College Athletes NIL Pay Is 'Huge Mistake'
3-MIN READ

Senator: Allowing College Athletes NIL Pay Is 'Huge Mistake'

File-Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., listens during a Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing, Tuesday, June 23, 2020 on Capitol Hill in Washington.   A fourth congressional hearing this year on how to allow college athletes to earn money off their names, images and likenesses came Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2020, with a stern warning from one senator. I think this is a huge mistake,  Burr, said of athletes profiting from NIL.  (Greg Nash/Pool via AP, File)

File-Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., listens during a Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing, Tuesday, June 23, 2020 on Capitol Hill in Washington. A fourth congressional hearing this year on how to allow college athletes to earn money off their names, images and likenesses came Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2020, with a stern warning from one senator. I think this is a huge mistake, Burr, said of athletes profiting from NIL. (Greg Nash/Pool via AP, File)

The fourth congressional hearing this year on how to allow college athletes to earn money from their names, images and likenesses came Tuesday with a stern warning from one senator.

  • Last Updated: September 16, 2020, 3:24 AM IST

The fourth congressional hearing this year on how to allow college athletes to earn money from their names, images and likenesses came Tuesday with a stern warning from one senator.

I think this is a huge mistake, Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) said.

The U.S. Senate Committee of Health, Education, Labor & Pensions held a hearing on compensating college athletes as the NCAA changes its rules to allow athletes to profit from their fame.

University of Wisconsin Chancellor Rebecca Blank and Utah State athletic director John Hartwell were among those who testified along with Ramogi Huma, a former UCLA football player and advocate for college athlete rights, and Ohio State director of track and field Karen Dennis.

Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), chairman of the committee, opened the hearing by defending the NCAA and its model for amateurism. He suggested athletes should have to share any money they earn with their athletic programs.

Alexander also said Congress should protect the NCAA’s right to make rules regarding NIL compensation.

I do not see a good ending to allowing a few students to be paid by commercial interests while most of their teammates are not, said Alexander, who ran track at Vanderbilt in the 1960s. If young athletes want to be part of a team, enjoy the undergraduate experience, learn from coaches who are among the best teachers and be paid a full scholarship that helps them earn a degree worth $1 million during their lifetime their earnings should benefit student-athletes at that institution.

If they prefer to keep the money for themselves, let them become professionals,” he added.

The NCAA is working to change its rules restricting athletes from earning money for things such as endorsements, in-person appearances and social media posts. All three divisions must come up with plans by November for legislation that could be voted on in January.

The NCAA has faced sharp criticism on the topic and increasing pressure to do something. On Monday, New Jersey became the fifth state to pass a bill that would give college athletes the right to earn NIL money, joining California, Florida, Nebraska and Colorado. The Florida bill is the first scheduled to go into effect, in July 2021.

Blank said the NCAA needs a very narrowly crafted anti-trust exemption” to protect it from a hodge-podge of state laws. The NCAA is seeking a federal law for that very reason.

Burr said college athletes are already compensated with scholarships and a valuable education. He said name, image and likeness payments could corrupt college sports and turn amateurism into pay for play, which would hurt non-revenue generating sports.

Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) pointed out that basketball and football players can’t access the NFL or NBA directly out of high school and have limited avenues to turn pro without passing through college sports.

Its the only multibillion-dollar industry in this country where we allow for the employers to collude in order to fix the wage for a majority of their employees, said Murphy, who has been one of the leading advocates for government regulation of college sports to protect athletes’ rights. We can say the workers, the athletes, should be happy wit the cost of tuition, but that’s not how the free market works.

Previous hearings on college sports and name, image and likeness have been held in held in both the Senate and House. Lawmakers in both bodies are working on legislation, but all have conceded that any bills will likely come after the elections in November.

Murphy was among a group of senators to lay out a plan last month for a c ollege athlete bill of rights that could be the foundation for comprehensive legislation.

___

Follow Ralph D. Russo at https://twitter.com/ralphDrussoAP and listen at http://www.westwoodonepodcasts.com/pods/ap-top-25-college-football-podcast/

___

More AP college football: https://apnews.com/Collegefootball and https://twitter.com/AP_Top25

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Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

Bose Noise Cancelling Headphones 700 Review
Bose Noise Cancelling Headphones 700 Review

Bose Noise Cancelling Headphones 700 Review

Shubham Sharma   |  18 Dec 2019
DIGIT RATING
77 /100
  • design

    65

  • performance

    75

  • value for money

    60

  • features

    72

  • PROS
  • Clear, accurate audio reproduction
  • Minimal detail loss
  • No cracking audio at high volume
  • Good noise cancellation
  • Succinct bass response
  • Good battery life
  • Dual pairing works well
  • CONS
  • Lower mids sound slightly recessed
  • Neutral sound signature might not be for everyone
  • No in-app EQ customisations
  • Non-foldable design
  • Slightly heavy
  • Noise cancellation slightly affects sound quality
  • Active Noise Cancellation could be further calibrated

Verdict

The Bose Noise Cancelling 700 is an excellent addition to the company’s headphone lineup. It looks great, sounds excellent and offers notable options when connected with the Bose Music app. While Bose remains true to its sound profile and delivers impressive audio with the Bose NC700, it still lags behind its primary competition, the Sony WH-1000XM3, in terms of noise cancellation and customisation to the said audio profile via the companion app. The Bose NC700 is a great headphone for audio enthusiasts and one of Bose’s best wireless consumer grade headphones launched so far but, it still lags behind the competition. 

BUY Bose Noise Cancelling Headphones 700
Price 34500

Bose Noise Cancelling Headphones 700 detailed review

For the longest time, Bose’s QC series of headphones were the benchmark when it came to over the ear headphones featuring ANC (Active Noise Cancellation). Sony, however, turned the tables with its WH-1000XM3 headphones, which we tested and found to be a great sounding pair of cans that set a new benchmark. However, in August this year, Bose released its new, completely redesigned Noise Cancelling 700 (the NC 700) headphones that are supposed to take the crown back from Sony. Will the latest pair of Bose headphones be able to overthrow Sony to reclaim its top spot as the best consumer-grade wireless headphones? Find out in our review. 

In-the-box

Bose Noise Cancelling 700 headphones 
Type-C charging cable
3.5mm audio cable
Carry case

Audio Performance

Diving right into how the Bose NC 700 performs, we noticed that the device’s drivers have been further tuned to deliver better sound quality than the company’s previous offerings. The new cans are quite stable over the entire range of the audio spectrum and also sport the well-known Bose sound signature, which is neutral. This means there’s no notable emphasis on any particular range of the sound spectrum, be it the lows, mids or the highs. While such a sound signature setting would be appreciated by purists, standard consumers, who prefer boosted bass frequencies, might not find the sound signature as exciting since most headphone manufacturers these days slightly boost the lower frequencies. 

Bose is well known for its almost flat sound signature and the Bose NC 700 is no exception. The headphone has a neutral sound signature and in ṭhe low end of the audio spectrum, we noticed it is capable of accurate bass response with good depth and precise decay. The quality of lower mids is easiest to tarnish since most overlapping frequencies in this range tend to blend similar sounding instruments. However, the headphones managed to preserve the subtle continuous soft thumping bass drum kick in the track, Howlin For You by The Black Keys. It does the same for the extremely subtle and fast bassline tab in Knights of Cydonia by Muse, which can easily be lost in the heavily layered track. 

The Bose NC700 is also capable of handling the mids almost perfectly. It has smooth mids so that longer listening sessions don’t fatigue the listener but there’s a slight tradeoff in terms of detail when the Active Noise Cancellation is turned on. However, this is a standard case for almost all earphones that come equipped with the option and in the Bose NC700, the phenomenon is noticeable in the lower-mid audio range. Vocals of singers with baritone voice types can sound a bit boxy and the prime example of this is the track Call On Me by Chris Rea where some detailing of the singer’s husky voice is lost during the chorus. Do note that this is us nitpicking, since most details are well preserved in the upper-mid and mid audio section. 

We remember that audio on the Bose QC 35 II exhibited some crackling when we tested tracks at high volumes but this doesn’t happen on the Bose NC700. We did notice a little sibilance while listening to some tracks like Boulevard Of Broken Dreams by Green Day and In The Name Of Love by Martin Garrix and Bebe Rexha, when the volume was pushed beyond 90 percent. Below the 90 percent volume mark, there’s no noticeable sibilance and the overall highs are relaxed with a smooth roll-off at the extreme high-end of the audio spectrum. 

Tuning soundstage is something that Bose excels at and it has nailed it this time as well with the Bose NC700. It performs well in our standard test song Hunter by Björk where the attenuated bass that’s prominent throughout the track has a wide stereo trajectory. Similarly, soundstaging plays a prominent role in the heavily layered Patakha Guddi by A.R. Rehman and the headphones do justice to the track with its wide and spacious soundstage. Imaging and positioning are also remarkably handled by the new Bose cans. 

Positioning of various instruments in the track The Look by Metronomy is almost perfect. While the percussive tones start off on the left, the Bose NC700’s render the drums and the guitar riff right in the front and center. The acapella bits in the track also rise distinctly from the left and then the right, before meeting in the center, whereas the washboard can be clearly heard on the far left. We can surely say that wide and spacy soundstaging, combined with the intricate handling of imaging makes the Bose Noise Cancellation 700 a pretty good pair of headphones. 

Noise cancellation performance

Bose has worked hard in improving noise cancellation on the Bose NC700 headphones but it is not perfect, yet. The passive seal formed by the headphone’s earcups is good enough to block low noises from the surroundings. We tested the Bose NC700 in multiple scenarios to find that when the Active Noise Cancellation (ANC) is turned to 10, which is the maximum setting, most low hums like light keyboard taps, and the noise made by an AC are tuned out by almost 90 percent. However, the headphone lets through sharp or shrill sounds like a honking horn or the clanking of a mechanical keyboard that’s placed a few feet away. 

We also tested the headphones on a flight and it managed to drown out about 50 to 60 percent of the total ambient noise. While Bose NC700’s ANC is not as good as we expected on its own, turning the music up by at least 50 percent completely drowns out the ambient noise. Overall, active noise cancellation on the new Bose headphones are much better than its predecessor, but it is still lagging behind the competition. 

The level of noise cancellation can be seamlessly toggled between three levels, with the help of a single button on the left earcup and it can be further tuned with the Bose Music app. We will talk more about the app and its features in another section. If excellent ANC is what you seek, we believe that the Sony WH-1000XM3 (review) will serve you better. 

Gaming, movie and call audio performance

Headphones and other audio devices were never restricted to a specific usage. While audiophiles tend to have different devices for their audio needs, most people use the same pair of cans to listen to music, watch movies and/or play games. The wide soundstage is of immense help while playing battle royale games like PUBG and Apex Legends as it becomes easier to figure out which direction the enemies are approaching from. However, while watching action movies, we noticed that the regular gunshots and explosions weren’t as impactful, even though audio clarity is superb and the overall audio is a few steps shy from perfect. 

The Bose NC700 is equipped with a new eight microphone system and four mics work in tandem to deliver enhanced voice pickup. While on calls, the person on the other end could hear us clearly, even with some noise and chatter in the background. Bose says it employs a beamform-array to isolate speech and adds a ‘rejection-array’ to mute background noise. It clearly works to accurately pick up what you are saying, if you are on a call or while commanding voice assistants. 

Build and design features

Bose has outdone itself when it comes to rehauling the design of its headphones. While we don’t know if its future headphones will feature a similar design, the company has completely revamped the Bose NC700. While the headband and earcups are still constructed out of sturdy ABS plastic, they feel premium with a glossy finish. Its complete inner, and the upper outer section, are covered with soft rubber that not only imparts a premium look and feel to the device, but also more comfortable while wearing it for a prolonged period of time or while it’s resting on your neck. 

The ear cup supports protrude out and end like an arching pillar, which we think looks bolder and better. The overall design of the ear cups has also changed as they are now slightly bigger in shape to fit your ears better. The memory foam earpads offer notable clamping force, which makes for excellent passive noise isolation but it might be uncomfortable for some when listening to music for a longer period of time. It took a few hours before I had to take a break from the Bose NC 700. However, a colleague of mine was able to use it for eight hours straight, without any discomfort whatsoever. 

Both the earcups on the Bose NC700 feature pill-shaped buttons, which are tactile, easy to locate and deliver good feedback. The left earcup has only one button that can be used to toggle between three pre-set noise cancellation levels, which can also be manually changed from the Bose Connect app. Long press this button to enter Conversation Mode, which feels like there’s no headphones on as the music is paused and ambient sounds are enhanced. There are two buttons on the right earcup, one for enabling Bluetooth and pairing, while the other one is a dedicated button for invoking the smart assistant on your phone. 

 

With the NC 700, Bose finally introduces gesture controls, which are incorporated on the right half of the right earcup. One can simply swipe up or down on the right half of the earcup on the Bose logo to increase or decrease the volume and swipe right or left to change tracks. Single tap will play/pause the current track and press and hold for a voice notification that informs about remaining battery life. The gestures work flawlessly but there’s a small hitch in the new design and the gesture implementation. 

While the design is notable, it’s not all roses. Due to the new design, the earcups face inwards when the headphones rest on your neck. We noticed that multiple times, the headphone would automatically commence playing songs due to ghost touches. While not a big deal, this surely can be a bit annoying when you are talking to someone and hear tracks or faint dialogues, even when you’ve paused media playback.

Battery life, dual-pairing and App interface 

While Bose claims a battery life of up to 20 hours on a single charge on the NC700 we squeezed out around 21 hours with noise cancellation set at maximum. Since the headphones feature a Type-C port, charging them is not much of a hassle, although fully charging it can easily take about a couple of hours. If we are nitpicking, the battery life on the Bose NC700 could have been a little better. The new headphones can be connected to two devices at once and Bose has almost nailed dual-pairing this time. 

We connected the headphone to a laptop and a smartphone to find that the smartphone takes precedence while receiving a call. As soon as media playback on the phone ceases, the audio source is switched to the laptop. The switch is not seamless though as it can take about four seconds, which is enough to skip some dialogues while watching a movie. However, dual-pairing on the Bose NC700 is one of the best implementations of the feature we have come across yet, and we expect it to get better with software updates over time. 

While not mandatory, the Bose NC700 can be paired with the Bose Music app for enhanced functionality. Connecting the headphones with the app is a breeze and once paired, you can access a host of options like granular control over noise cancellation, switching between different sources and more. One notable feature that Bose has added is Self Voice, which enables you to hear your own voice on a call. This is really helpful to not end up screaming because of not hearing your own voice when you have headphones on. However, one feature that continues to be missing is the ability to tweak the overall sound profile using a built-in EQ.

Bottomline 

The Bose NC700 is an excellent pair of headphones when we talk about overall audio performance. Although the Active Noise Cancellation could be better, it works well in most scenarios. Add to it the new and upgraded design and additional options that you get with the app, there’s no denying that the Bose NC700 is Bose’s best headphones yet. If you need top of the line consumer-grade audio, the Bose NC700 won’t let you down. However, if you prefer better noise cancellation, don’t mind a warmer sound signature and need additional sound customisation options the Sony WH-1000MX3 from last year is still a great option. 

 

 

Bose Noise Cancelling Headphones 700 Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price: ₹34500
Release Date: 17 Dec 2019
Variant: None
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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Shubham Sharma

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Bose Noise Cancelling Headphones 700

Price : ₹34500

Bose Noise Cancelling Headphones 700

Price : ₹34500

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Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

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Promact Impex reports standalone net loss of Rs 0.17 crore in the June 2020 quarter

Using virtual simulation to achieve maximum validation coverage for ADAS/AD - Mobex

Using virtual simulation to achieve maximum validation coverage for ADAS/AD

Dr. Manaswini Rath, Vice President and Global Head, Autonomous Driving, KPIT | LinkedIn

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, KPIT‘s Dr Manaswini Rath provides details of how to achieve validation coverage in virtual simulation for ADAS and AD features. Dr Rath also demonstrates how KPIT’s automation framework and scenario library can accelerate validation to achieve coverage.

Key topics and takeaways:

  • How 95% of ADAS and AD feature validation is achieved through data-driven virtual simulation methods
  • How validation coverage is computed in the virtual simulation
  • How to create critical, safety and SOTIF scenarios
  • Key considerations in closed-loop simulations
  • How data-driven open-loop simulation is performed for sensors (camera, radar, lidar) validation

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