Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

| Source: Nass Valley Gateway Ltd

In a Move to Be Among the Industry’s Leading Natural Seed Hemp Growers in the World, Company Gains Access to Significant Farming Acreage and Manufacturing Capabilities to Exponentially Bolster Production

Vancouver, BC, Sept. 16, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via NEWMEDIAWIRE -- Nass Valley Gateway LTD. (NVG), (CSE: “NVG.CN”) (OTC Pink: NSVGF) (Frankfurt: “3NVN”) a distributor of top quality THC-free, broad and full Spectrum CBD consumables, is pleased to announce that the Company has signed a partnership agreement with New Hope Labs, positioning management to be able to further capitalize on additional sales channels, expand its product matrix, and meet growing market opportunities.

New Hope Lab Farms, the farming and manufacturing/fulfillment side of New Hope Labs, is a nationwide Clinical Research and Development Company that focuses on the development of resources using only natural hemp seed. New Hope Lab Farms brings a network of partnerships and combined assets to the table. Collectively between ownership and partnership, this relationship combines current 12,000 acres in Colorado and 20,000 acres in Montana, positioning the Company to potentially become a leading hemp grower in the global market sector. New Hope’s operations include a presence in Montana, Colorado, Arizona, Wisconsin, Illinois, Tennessee, South Carolina, North Carolina, Vermont, New York, New Mexico, and Oregon, with extraction and manufacturing operations going back over 20 years in New York, Colorado, and Oregon.

Current manufacturing capabilities include the production of over 4500 different consumer SKU items ready for retail sales, with new product lines being unveiled monthly. Daily manufacturing volumes facilitate the production of well over 500,000 items daily.  Additional daily shifts can be increased to 2 or 3 and therefore seamlessly double and triple those volumes, potentially producing of over 1.5M units per day, bottled, labeled, boxed, and prepared for shipment.

According to the agreement, New Hope Labs will provide Nass Valley Gateway access to Natural Hemp Seed only products, farming, extraction facilities, manufacturing facilities, and fulfillment, enabling Nass Valley to enter new market sectors, build a fully-integrated hemp products company, maximize scalability, revenue growth, and shareholder value.

About New Hope Labs: New Hope Labs consists of a dedicated team of medical doctors, scientists, researchers, and farmers, whom all came together to make a real-world difference in population health and well-being. The team’s combined experience brings decades of knowledge and experience in medicine, agronomy, and the production of the premium natural medicinal products. With over 28 years of experience as plant geneticists and farmers, New Hope Labs has successfully achieved large scale farming and cultivation in every climate and region of the world.

ABOUT NASS VALLEY GATEWAY LTD.

Neither the CSE nor its Regulation Services Provider has reviewed or accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of the contents of this news release.

We seek Safe Harbor.

Neither the CSE nor its Regulation Services Provider has reviewed or accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of the contents of this news release.

Company: Nass Valley Gateway Ltd.
422 Richards Street, Suite 170
V6B 2Z4 Vancouver
Canada

E-mail: info@nassvalleygateway.com
Corporate Website: www.nassvalleygateway.com
Product Website: www.nassvalleyproducts.com

Investor Relations

Michael Semler.
+1 (609) 651-0032
Michael.s@nassvalleygateway.com

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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Bill Gates Sr., father of Microsoft co-founder, dies at 94

Bill Gates Sr., father of Microsoft co-founder, dies at 94

“My dad’s wisdom, generosity, empathy, and humility had a huge influence on people around the world,” Bill Gates wrote in a tribute.
Image: Bill Gates, Sr., co-chair and CEO of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Bill Gates, Sr., co-chair and CEO of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.Cheryl Hatch / AP file

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By The Associated Press

SEATTLE — William H. Gates II, a lawyer and philanthropist best known as the father of Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, has died at 94.

Gates died peacefully Monday at his beach home in Washington state from Alzheimer's disease, the family announced Tuesday.

In an obituary the family credited the patriarch with a “deep commitment to social and economic equity,” noting that he was responsible for the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation's first efforts to improve global health as well as his advocacy for progressive taxation, especially unsuccessful efforts to pass a state income tax on the wealthy in Washington.

“My dad’s wisdom, generosity, empathy, and humility had a huge influence on people around the world,” Bill Gates wrote in a tribute.

Born in 1925, Gates Sr. grew up in Bremerton, Washington, where his parents owned a furniture store. He joined the Army following his freshman year at the University of Washington and was en route to Japan when it surrendered in 1945.

He served a year in war-torn Tokyo before returning to the United States and resuming his education, his family said. After earning his law degree in 1950, he began working in private practice and as a part-time Bremerton city attorney.

Bill Gates Sr., father of Microsoft Inc. founder Bill Gates, speaks during an interview with Bill Gates in Alexandria, VA.Andrew Harrer / Bloomberg via Getty Images file

He formed a Seattle law firm with two other partners that eventually became Preston Gates and Ellis — now known as K & L Gates, one of the world's largest law firms. The firm was one of the first to work with the region's technology industry.

Gates Sr. met his first wife, Mary Maxwell, at the University of Washington. They had two daughters and a son — Gates Jr. — and remained married until her death in 1994. Two years later he married Mimi Gardner, then the director of the Seattle Art Museum, with whom he spent the last quarter-century of his life.

“When I was a kid, he wasn’t prescriptive or domineering, and yet he never let me coast along at things I was good at, and he always pushed me to try things I hated or didn’t think I could do (swimming and soccer, for example),” Gates Jr. wrote in the tribute. “And he modeled an amazing work ethic. He was one of the hardest-working and most respected lawyers in Seattle, as well as a major civic leader in our region.”

That civic work included serving as a trustee of the Greater Seattle Chamber of Commerce, Planned Parenthood and United Way, and as a regent of the University of Washington, where he led fundraising drives. He also served as the president of the state and local bar associations and in the leadership of the American Bar Association, helping create diversity scholarships and promoting legal services for the poor.

“Bill Sr. was a person who cared about the plight of many, and he had the resources and never-ending civic commitment to do something about it,” Washington Gov. Jay Inslee said in a statement. “He made the choice to use his wealth and influence to advocate for and improve equity in our communities.”

Gates Sr. was a towering figure by reputation and in person — he stood 6-foot-7 tall — and his counsel was often sought. Former Starbucks Chairman Howard Schultz has said that when he was struggling to raise the money to buy the six-store coffee chain in 1987, Gates Sr. stepped in to rescue him from a rival buyer — not only by investing, but by personally taking Schultz to visit the rival, demanding as he loomed over the rival's desk: “You are going to stand down and this kid is going to realize his dream. Do you understand me?”

Gates retired from law in 1998 and took on prominent roles with the Gates Foundation, helping launch its work in global health.

The family said that due to restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic, a memorial service would be held later.

Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

First Gene-Edited Livestock Created That Can Serve as 'Super Surrogates' | Technology News

First Gene-Edited Livestock Created That Can Serve as 'Super Surrogates'

The research would allow more precision breeding in animals such as goats where using artificial insemination is difficult.

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First Gene-Edited Livestock Created That Can Serve as 'Super Surrogates'

The surrogate sires were confirmed to have active donor sperm

Highlights
  • The researchers used the gene-editing tool CRISPR-Cas9
  • The male animals grew up sterile but otherwise healthy
  • The surrogate sires were confirmed to have active donor sperm, they said

Scientists have created first gene-edited livestock that can serve as viable "surrogate sires," males that produce sperm carrying only the genetic traits of donor animals, an advance that they say could improve food production for a growing global population.

The research, published in the journal PNAS, could speed the spread of desirable characteristics in livestock, and provide breeders in remote regions with better access to genetic material of ''elite animals'' from other parts of the world.

The advance would also allow more precision breeding in animals such as goats where using artificial insemination is difficult, the researchers said.

"With this technology, we can get better dissemination of desirable traits and improve the efficiency of food production. This can have a major impact on addressing food insecurity around the world," said Jon Oatley, a reproductive biologist at Washington State University in the US.

"If we can tackle this genetically, then that means less water, less feed and fewer antibiotics we have to put into the animals,” Oatley said.

The researchers used the gene-editing tool, CRISPR-Cas9, to knock out a gene specific to male fertility in the animal embryos that would be raised to become surrogate sires.

They produced mice, pigs, goats and cattle that lacked a gene called NANOS2 which is specific to male fertility.

The male animals grew up sterile but otherwise healthy, so when they received transplanted sperm-producing stem cells from other animals, they started producing sperm derived from the donor's cells, according to the researchers.

The surrogate sires were confirmed to have active donor sperm, they said.

The surrogate mice fathered healthy offspring who carried the genes of the donor mice, the researchers noted, adding that larger animals have not been bred yet.

The team is refining the stem cell transplantation process before taking that next step.

Scientists have been searching for a way to create surrogate sires for decades to overcome the limitations of selective breeding and artificial insemination, tools which require either animal proximity or strict control of their movement, and in many cases, both.

Artificial insemination is common in dairy cattle who are often confined so their reproductive behaviour is relatively easy to control, but the procedure is rarely used with beef cattle who need to roam freely to feed.

For pigs, the procedure still requires the animals be nearby as pig sperm does not survive freezing well. In goats, artificial insemination is quite challenging and could require a surgical procedure, the researchers explained.

The new technology could solve those problems since the surrogates deliver the donor genetic material the natural way, through normal reproduction, they said.

This, the researchers said, enables ranchers and herders to let their animals interact normally on the range or field.

This technology has great potential to help food supply in places in the developing world, where herders still have to rely on selective breeding to improve their stock, said Irina Polejaeva, a professor at Utah State University in the US.

"Goats are the number one source of protein in a lot of developing countries. This technology could allow faster dissemination of specific traits in goats, whether it's disease resistance, greater heat tolerance or better meat quality," Polejaeva said.


Is Android One holding back Nokia smartphones in India? We discussed this on Orbital, our weekly technology podcast, which you can subscribe to via Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or RSS, download the episode, or just hit the play button below.

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Further reading: Gene editing, Embryo, CRISPR
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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Parents arrested after 12-day-old baby mauled to death by family dog

Parents arrested after 12-day-old baby mauled to death by family dog

The parents were arrested on suspicion of gross negligence manslaughter but were released on bail.

Emergency services responded to a call on Sunday, September 13 in Doncaster, South Yorkshire. At the home in the village of Woodlands, they discovered that a dog had savagely mauled an infant named Elon. The large dog was eventually restrained and the baby was rushed to a hospital. Animal control took the dog from the custody of the family. The child passed away due to his injuries. The South Yorkshire Police arrested the child's parents, Abigail Ellis and Stephen Joynes, but they were released on bail.

Elon was attacked by one of the family's three dogs right inside their home. Emergency services received a call about a dog attack at around 3:30 pm. When the police arrived at the home, they found that the child was severely injured. He was taken to Doncaster Royal Infirmary where he succumbed to his injuries.

The dog that attacked the 12-day old baby was reportedly kept outside the home in a kennel. The breed of the dog is unknown but witnesses claim that it was a big dog with long golden fur. Witness Sarah Hooley claimed that the dog was so strong that it was dragging three police officers on the road. Eventually, it was restrained and removed from the property.

Ellis and Joynes were arrested on the suspicion on manslaughter by gross negligence. They were released on bail but are under investigation.

Speaking to The Sun, an unnamed friend of the 27-year-old mother of four revealed that the child's death was the second tragedy that struck the family in the past 18-months. Ellis had been with her former partner, named Joel, before his death last year from sepsis. The childhood lovers had planned on getting married but the man died before the couple could tie the knot. After losing the father of three of her children Ellis was left shattered.

The grieving woman got a second chance at a happy life after she met 35-year-old Joynes. The couple had Elon and have been engaged.

The South Yorkshire Police are investigating the incident. The authorities have not revealed if the dog has been put down.

A child hospitalised after dog attack in Glasgow (Reuters)
12-day-old baby died after being mauled by family dog. (representational image)

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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

HTC Desire 828 Dual SIM Review

HTC Desire 828 Dual SIM Review

By Sameer Mitha | Updated May 22 2019
HTC Desire 828 Dual SIM Review
DIGIT RATING
69 /100
  • design

    76

  • performance

    72

  • value for money

    55

  • features

    70

User Rating : 2.5/5 Out of 2 Reviews
  • PROS
  • Good display
  • Good sound output
  • Comfortable build
  • Sense UI is one of the better skins overlaying Android
  • CONS
  • Average camera
  • Power button and volume rocker feel hidden in the side bezel
  • 16GB built-in storage

Verdict

The Desire 828 has a good display and the front facing speakers add to the multimedia experience. But when you consider the competition at the sub 20K price point, you may want to access your requirement before choosing the right smartphone. This price point is flooded with smartphones offering a unique experience based on your requirement. 

BUY HTC Desire 828 Dual SIM
Buy now on amazon Available 15999
Buy now on flipkart Out of Stock 15490

HTC Desire 828 Dual SIM detailed review

I must admit there was a time I would look forward to the phones that HTC would launch. I am talking about the era when the first HTC Desire was launched back in 2010. The HTC Desire was my first Android phone and I was in love with it. The Desire was actually the Nexus smartphone that HTC made for Google but with HTC’s Sense UI overlaying it and with an improved track pad (yes, smartphones once upon a time had track pads). Personally, after that smartphone I moved on to a Nexus. I still reviewed HTC’s smartphones at the time and for the era, they were “quietly brilliant”. After the launch of the Samsung Galaxy S2 HTC went on to becoming quietly ignored. But the smartphone maker persisted and launched phone after phone and despite doing some things brilliantly (boom sound), the smartphones never really excited many. I failed to understand why as there are a few gems hidden beneath all the marketing hype (UltraPixel jargon), something only an HTC fanboy would understand  (if any of those are still out there).


Today we review the HTC Desire 828. The smartphone is simple, elegant and competing in a price point dominated by the Chinese invasion. Does it have what it takes to stand out?

Build and design

The build of the HTC Desire 828 is similar to its predecessors. The review unit we received has a black matte finished back and a golden brown border that surrounds the phone. The rear back panel is non removable but if you try really hard, you can get it off. The phone is really slim at 7.9mm and is very comfortable to hold. The matte rubberised back of the smartphone gives it a really good grip, better than some phones with a metal body. Considering the design on offer with the HTC Desire 828 it was extremely comfortable to hold especially when using the keyboard to type.

Coming back to the design, you have the standard port placement – MicroUSB port at the bottom, headphones jack on the top, SIM card slots on the left and the power button and volume rocker on the right. Moving to the power button and the volume rocker, they aren’t textured or protruding. From a design standpoint this is very good. From a functional standpoint, it isn’t easy to locate. It takes some getting used to and there is a leaning curve to remembering its position. Maybe I’m getting old but I prefer the textured power button. Its easier to identify without looking.

The front of the smartphone is clean and simple with HTC traditional Boomsound speakers at the top and the bottom of the display. 

The smartphone doesn’t house a fingerprint sensor, which can be a bummer especially if you are one that has used a smartphone with a finger print sensor in this price bracket. A fingerprint sensor does make it easy for you to unlock your smartphone if nothing else and using it is like getting used to an elevator with automatic doors. Its just convenient and you really don’t like the manual door elevators even though they require nothing more than a slight effort. 

Overall the build and design of the phone is quite good. It has a 5.5-inch form factor and even though that isn’t much of a difference when compared to the 6-inch behemoths floating around, it feels compact in one's hands.

Display and UI

Kicking things off with the display, the smartphone has a 5.5-inch LCD display with a 1920x1080 pixel resolution. The display is crisp, vibrant and placed along side other smartphone displays in the same price bracket, has better colour reproduction. Text looks good, whites look white and it’s a treat watching videos. I spent a lot of time watching animated movies and the colour reproduction was good and the display is vibrant. 

Coming to the UI, if you have used an HTC smartphone in the past, you will feel right at home here. The smartphone runs on Android 5.1 Lollipop, skinned with the HTC Sense 7.0 UI. Sense UI 7.0 has a few tweaks when compared to its predecessor. It still has BlinkFeed with a few tweaks here and there but overall, the sense UI 7.0 is a good one.  

Overall, the display of the smartphone is one of its biggest highlights and the UI is functional, which is what’s important.  

Performance

Before we get into the performance of the smartphone here is a quick look at the specifications. As we’ve mentioned, the HTC Desire 828 has a 5.5-inch 1080p display. Under the hood, the smartphone has the Mediatek MT6753 chipset with the Octa-core 1.5GHz CPU. The device has 2GB RAM and 16GB built-in storage which can be expanded up to 200GB via a microSD card. The rear has a 13MP OIS camera and the front has a 4MP UltraPixel camera. A 2800mAh battery powers the entire package. 

Here is a look at how the HTC Desire 828 competes with the OnePlus X, Lenovo Vibe P1, Meizu MX5 and Moto X Play in the benchmark comparison.

HTC Desire 828 performance scores
Create bar charts

 

It isn’t a surprise, but the HTC Desire 828 isn’t the best performer but it isn’t the worst either. Its performance is good. 

Moving on to the real world performance the Desire 828 has the ability to hold its own. Multitasking is a breeze and the device ran all the popular apps and games we threw at it. Sure, it isn’t a powerhouse but for multimedia consumption it is a great device. 

Moving on to call quality, it’s surprisingly good. The audio is well audible at both ends and unless I faced a call drop issue, the experience of using the 828 as a phone was good.

Coming to the battery life, the smartphone survived for 7 hours and 50 minutes in the GeekBench Battery test and that’s about expected when compared to the competition. Moving to real world performance, the device lasts through the day with above average use including, calls, messaging, social media, light gaming the device was at about 20% by nightfall. 

Moving to the camera, the HTC Desire 828 has a 13MP rear camera. Getting the worst out of the way, the camera has difficulty focusing when the object is very close. This is the case with a lot of cameras on smartphones in this price bracket. 

Click to enlarge

Low light images taken from the camera of the HTC Desire 828 are soft and have a lot of noise. Colours are dim in low lit conditions but true to source. In well lit situations the colours reproduction is good. In the normal camera mode, getting the right focus point to get depth perception might be an issue but the camera does have a Bokeh mode to help with creating the effect of depth perception. 

Click to enlarge

Bottom line

The competition for the best smartphone under Rs. 20,000 is pretty stiff. You have great performers like the Asus Zenfone 2, Moto X Play, Lenovo Vibe S1 and Meizu MX 5 gunning for that position. The HTC Desire 828 falls somewhere in the middle. It isn’t a powerhouse like the Zenfone 2, that has 4GB RAM, but the Desire 828 is a smooth performer nonetheless. It doesn’t have a fancy curved glass back like the Lenovo Vibe S1, but the matte rubberised finish gives the device a good grip. It has no fingerprint sensor but we really aren’t complaining about that. It doesn’t have the Marathon M5’s battery but it can last a day. What it does have going for it is a great display and some good sound. Overall this is your run of the mill sturdy and trustworthy smartphone with a comfortable form factor, good sound and display and an average camera. You can consider it among the other smartphones mentioned on this list.

HTC Desire 828 Dual SIM Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 11 May 2017
Variant: 16GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    5.5" (1080 x 1920)
  • Camera Camera
    13 | 4 MP
  • Memory Memory
    16 GB/2 GB
  • Battery Battery
    2800 mAh

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Sameer Mitha

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

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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Djokovic Back To Winning Ways In Rome After U.S. Open Default
1-MIN READ

Djokovic Back To Winning Ways In Rome After U.S. Open Default

Djokovic Back To Winning Ways In Rome After U.S. Open Default

Novak Djokovic turned the page on his contentious U.S. Open exit and began his claycourt season with a convincing 63 62 victory over wildcard Salvatore Caruso in the second round of the Italian Open on Wednesday.

  • Last Updated: September 16, 2020, 7:36 PM IST

Novak Djokovic turned the page on his contentious U.S. Open exit and began his claycourt season with a convincing 6-3 6-2 victory over wildcard Salvatore Caruso in the second round of the Italian Open on Wednesday.

The world number one was disqualified in New York after accidentally hitting a line judge with a ball during his fourth round match against Spain’s Pablo Carreno Busta.

Djokovic’s frustration boiled over after dropping his serve against Carreno Busta in the opening set at Flushing Meadows but 10 days on in Rome he did not face a single break point in an imperious display against the unseeded Caruso.

“Obviously I had an early exit (at the U.S. Open) so had more time to prepare,” Djokovic said courtside. “I did practice for a week now and tried to play some sets coming into this ATP 1000 match.

“Caruso is a claycourt specialist and it was a great challenge today.”

On arrival in Rome, an apologetic Djokovic vowed to be “the best version” of himself on and off the court and he kept his emotions in check against local hope Caruso.

Four-times Rome champion Djokovic, who received an opening-round bye, broke Caruso’s serve in the eighth game before serving out the opening set.

Caruso, who battled past American Tennys Sandgren in the opening round for his first ATP Masters 1000 match win, dropped his serve in a see-saw third game of the second set which lasted nearly 12 minutes.

With momentum firmly on his side, top seed Djokovic broke his opponent for a third time in the match before celebrating victory by blowing kisses into the empty stands at the Foro Italico.

Having recorded 51 victories in 60 matches, Djokovic is the second most successful player in the tournament’s history – just behind nine-time champion Rafael Nadal.

Djokovic has won 27 of his 28 matches this year and will resume his hunt for an 18th Grand Slam title at the French Open, which begins on Sept. 27.

“My best results have come on hardcourt but I enjoy competing on clay,” said Djokovic. “It’s a demanding surface where you have to be patient and construct your points.”

Djokovic will face either fellow Serb Filip Krajinovic or Italian Marco Cecchinato for a place in the last-16.

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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

HTC One Max Review

HTC One Max Review

By Vishal Mathur | Updated May 22 2019
HTC One Max Review
DIGIT RATING
50 /100
  • design

    80

  • performance

    70

  • value for money

    50

  • features

    80

  • PROS
  • Good display
  • Consistent performance
  • CONS
  • Ridiculous price
  • Fingerprint sensor isn't anything more than a show-off feature

Verdict

The One Max was supposed to build on the One’s good work. But, this is a prime example of a competent phone, ruined by ridiculous pricing. No doubt the display is very good, the phone offers consistent performance and undeniably good build, but you get much better alternatives at lesser price points - namely, the Samsung Galaxy Note 3 and the Sony Xperia Z Ultra. And if you are willing to consider an alternate OS, the Nokia Lumia 1520 is what I would strongly recommend.

BUY HTC One Max
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HTC One Max detailed review

One thing is certain - big screen phones are here to stay. Samsung’s extremely popular Galaxy Note series is the biggest proof of that. Sony’s recent Xperia Z Ultra is an extremely powerful option to have. Now, HTC has decided to give the big screen market another try, after the Butterfly. And, on paper, it seems to be a sensible deal to build on the good points of the HTC One. But, the One Max, for all its potential, does not tick enough boxes on the checklist.

Build & Design
HTC has taken the adage of “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” a tad too seriously. So, they took the HTC One stretched it enough to fit in a 5.9-inch display. And in this case, it does not work. Yes, the HTC One’s brilliant design and attention to detail was appreciated by one and all, but the One Max is just not up to that level.


First up, the issue of weight. For a phone that weighs over 215 grams, this immediately falls in the unwieldy and uncomfortable category. Compared to this, the Galaxy Note 3 looks compact, and that says something! The One's single block of finely crafted anodized aluminum has been replaced by a white polycarbonate frame running around the phone. This just looks out of place, and is completely unexpected.

The One Max’s dimensions read 164.5 x 82.5 x 10.3 mm, compared to Samsung's Note 3 (151.2 x 79.2 x 8.3mm) and Sony Xperia Z Ultra’s (179.4 x 92.2 x 6.5mm). Important to note (no pun intended) that the other phones are thinner than the One Max, which makes a lot of difference. This neatly brings me to the next point about the sheer form factor of the One Max. The thickness and the weight means that even someone with big hands - the type of audience that is comfortable using the Galaxy Note - would feel the One Max is just impossible to hold without being petrified that it’ll fall over.

In the midst of all this depressing news, there are some shards of positive news. The removable back panel means you can access the SIM card and the memory card slot with relative ease. And not have to search for a SIM slot opening pin. The key to unhinge the panel sits on the left side spine (assuming you are looking at the phone front on). However, the battery still remains out of bounds. One change from the HTC One is the shift of the power key, from the top spine to the right side spine, near the volume keys. Instead, that space has been used for the IR sensor. The earpiece and speaker grille above and below the screen are still as finely chiseled as we had first seen on the HTC One. The rest of the design elements remain pretty much the same.

 

 

 

Performance & Battery
The hardware and specs just add weight to the argument that the One Max is a spin-off, rather than the succeeding flagship. It packs in a Snapdragon 600 processor, which while isn’t top of the line, is definitely no slouch. Performance isn’t slow by any stretch of the imagination, and handles app load rather well. Yes, it does fall behind in the benchmark tests when compared to the Snapdragon 800, but those sheer numbers don’t really tell the complete tale. Among the big screen options right now, the One Max, technically has the most inferior specs - with the Galaxy Note 3, the Xperia Z Ultra and the Nokia Lumia 1520 leading. But, like we said, for the most part, the Snapdragon 600 does fairly well. Unless you are getting into the battle with a friend using one of the other three phones, to see who is able to load the Real Racing 3 game first. Speaking of which, the gameplay is extremely good, with no stutters or skips. The change though is with the One Max heating up a lot lesser than the HTC One, because of the additional space internally for heat dissipation.

With the humongous 3300mAh battery, the One Max does offer a rather positive change as well, with the phone lasting two days on a single charge, under the same load that would drain the HTC One inside a day. Admittedly, the display brightness was around 50% most of the time, but for this 5.9-inch real estate, this is bright enough in most cases - indoors and outdoors.

Display
If you can get used to the sheer mammoth size of the phone, the display is something you will really enjoy. Bright and crisp, off the bat, and the 1080p SLCD3 offers extremely even colours. Even though some may claim that this looks less richer than the AMOLED screens, the accuracy you get is a lot more. The extra real estate means the on-screen keyboard is very comfortable to use. While we may be criticizing the One Max for other shortcomings, the display is just excellent, no matter what you use it for - video watching, web browsing or plain and simple reading.

 

Fingerprint scanner
The deployment of the fingerprint scanner on the HTC One Max is of the traditional type. The scanner itself sits on the back panel, below the camera. The idea being - you will naturally hold the phone, with one finger that will always be near the sensor. In a nutshell, it is nothing like the TouchID on the iPhone, in terms of precision though you can set up to three fingers. For starters, we never got as much accuracy with the One Max’s sensor as we did with the iPhone 5s. And that meant a bit of anger did creep in when the detection didn’t work. Interestingly, you can set each of the three fingers to open a separate app. Ideally, you can keep one to simply unlock the phone, while two could be used to open apps.

UI with BlinkFeed
It is always good to see continuity in terms of product updates, but in this case, the UI just doesn’t cut it as it is. HTC has carried forward the exact same UI as the One, and replicated it on a much bigger 5.9-inch screen. This means, you still get a grid size option of a maximum of 4x4, meaning 16 app icons show up on the screen at any point of time, in the app drawer. Unlike Sony, who tweaked the UI for the Z Ultra to add a lot more info on one screen, the One Max’s UI just looks under-populated, because it is all so sparse!

Camera
With the UltraPixel first seen on the HTC One, you would expect that the company would only improve the optics in future versions. Instead, HTC has removed Optical Image Stabilization from the One Max’s camera, making this pretty much a run of the mill smartphone snapper. The stills taken in good light are not bad, but in the face of the ever improving competition, this just doesn’t cut it anymore. Low light shots aren’t comparable to the competition, like the Lumia 1520.

However, one thing to really like is the HTC camera app. It is extremely simple, has a nice layout and is very intuitive to use. You will never really get lost in the settings, something that Sony can emulate for the Xperia smartphones.

 

Indoors, without HDR (left) and with HDR (right)

 

Indoors shots, good light. While text is clear, the edge noise and soft corners are very apparent.

 

Indoor test scene - good light (left) and low light (right).

 

Both shots of the flowers were taken outdoors in good light, and the detailing of each flower is more than evident. However, the problem of soft edges remains. Colours are handled well.  

Buy or not buy?
The One Max was supposed to build on the One’s good work. But, this is a prime example of a competent phone, ruined by ridiculous pricing. No doubt the display is very good, the phone offers consistent performance and undeniably good build, but you get much better alternatives at lesser price points - namely, the Samsung Galaxy Note 3 and the Sony Xperia Z Ultra. And if you are willing to consider an alternate OS, the Nokia Lumia 1520 is what I would strongly recommend.

HTC One Max Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price: ₹56500
Release Date: 15 Oct 2013
Variant: 16GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    5.9" (1080 x 1920)
  • Camera Camera
    4 | 2.1 MP
  • Memory Memory
    16 GB/2 GB
  • Battery Battery
    3300 mAh

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Oppo Reno4 Pro Review

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Vishal Mathur

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HTC One Max

Buy now on flipkart 17990

HTC One Max

Buy now on flipkart 17990

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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1More Stylish True Wireless Review
1More Stylish True Wireless Review

1More Stylish True Wireless Review

Dhriti Datta   |  04 Nov 2019
DIGIT RATING
68 /100
  • design

    52

  • performance

    76

  • value for money

    60

  • features

    77

  • PROS
  • Earbuds function independently as well
  • aptX and AAC codec support
  • Overall well-rounded sound
  • CONS
  • No volume controls
  • Inconsistent charging
  • Dated micro-USB charging

Verdict

It really requires some gall to put in the word ‘Stylish’ in your device name since the pressure to match up to the adjective is enormous. The earphones certainly don’t look unappealing, but they are not too ‘stylish’ as well. However, the 1More Stylish True Wireless earphones have a lot going for them that warrants them being a satisfactory purchase. The earphones provide a comfortable fit and good battery life. Additionally, audiophiles can rejoice, since these earbuds offer surprisingly competent audio reproduction, and feature AAC and aptX support as well, which is not even present in some of its more expensive competitors in the market. 

 

BUY 1More Stylish True Wireless

1More Stylish True Wireless detailed review

Even though 1More hasn’t yet achieved the status of being a household name in the audio world, the company has begun creating waves in this market. Their pocket-friendly devices often sport a high-quality look and feel, and they attempt to achieve the same with their new entrant in the true wireless IEMs segment - the 1More Stylish True Wireless. While the earphones have a lot going for them, there are also certain drawbacks that hold us back from asking you to leave your comfy seat right now and get your hands on these babies. Let’s see if 1More’s latest offering lives up to the calibre of their popular Triple Drivers.

Performance

Competing against the Apple AirPods is something most True Wireless earphones end up doing since they popularised this growing audio segment. We can confidently say that the 1More Stylish True Wireless earphones surpass the audio quality derived from the AirPods, all without the high-end price tag that comes attached to the Apple AirPods. 

The audio generated by the 7mm dynamic drivers is extremely crisp, warm-sounding, and rich. There’s an unmistakable thump of bass, prominent across several genres. The bass response is not too overwhelming in most cases, however, in some genres, they did veil some of the finer details in the mids. Speaking of bass response, it is essential that you find the right fit of ear tips and O-Hooks since they are key to obtaining the intended bass response. Also, with the right seal, you will find that the noise-floor of these earphones is nearly silent and there is no hiss in the void when no music is playing. However, passive isolation is certainly lacking since we could hear the clicking of our mechanical keyboard while listening to music, which isn’t ideal.

In Centuries by Fall Out Boy, you will see that the earphones can extend highs without producing any harshness or sounding tinny. There’s also no distortion at high volumes, which we tested when we cranked this song out on maximum volume which often spells disaster for budget earphones we’ve tested in the past. Uptown Funk by Mark Ronson ft. Bruno Mars really highlight the bass as being tight and punchy without being overbearing, since the vocals are quite clear despite the bass thumps in the background that encompass the entire song. However, the mids sometimes seem a little recessed on these earphones, which may hamper some details.

Audio separation is great as well and the soundstage is pretty decent for a pair of true wireless earphones. The instruments in Pink Floyd’s Shine On You Crazy Diamond and Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody are easily distinguishable and both the songs' right and left channel separation holds and translates well on these buds. These earphones lean more towards being warm-sounding but bright tracks also play quite well, especially with the right seal which lends the buds a more balanced and well-rounded sound signature.

Wireless connection strength and stability is good as well. We rarely experienced any lags or skips and the connection stays put until you go round about 30 feet away (company claim is 33 feet). While watching media on Netflix and YouTube, there is a slight latency delay which is barely noticeable. 

Coming to battery life, in our tests, we found that keeping the volume constantly at around 50 per cent nets us a battery life of 6 hours and 35 minutes on the earphones while bumping it up to 70 per cent brings the battery life down to about 5 and a half hours. The charging case offered three, and sometimes even four additional full charges to the earbuds, which is impressive. 

Unfortunately, where the 1More Stylish True Wireless fails is call-quality. The receiver on the other end said that the reviewer’s voice sounded hollow and unclear, which indicates that the microphone isn’t of the greatest quality and earphones such as the AirPods, Jabra Elite Active 65t and Sennheiser Momentum True Wireless undoubtedly surpass the 1More Stylish True Wireless on this front. This isn’t necessarily a dealbreaker, but 1More could certainly improve considerably here.

Features

In terms of battery life, the 1More Stylish True Wireless earphones offer significant hours of juice. The company claims that the earphones should deliver around 6 hours of battery life while the charging case should be capable of topping them off an additional three times, offering a total of a whopping 24 hours of battery life. So, you will achieve the same amount of juice of out these as the AirPods 2 and RHA TrueConnect earphones, which is commendable. Another quality-of-life feature available is that 15 minutes of charging can get you 3 hours of use, which is just about accurate, as per our tests.

As previously stated, the 1More Stylish True Wireless has a single physical button on each earphone. However, they are fairly limited since there’s no way to control volume using these physical buttons, which is an absolute shame. This means you’re going to have to pull out your phone repeatedly in case you’re the kind of person who likes varying volume levels across different tracks. Also, users will need to pause their music first, and then double click one of the earphones to activate their voice assistant, which feels slightly unnatural and may be difficult to come across unless you canvass the user manual.

Appreciation must be given where due and 1More really impressed us by slipping in the feature which allows users to use the earbuds independently from each other. So, if the battery dies on one of the buds, you can continue watching that Netflix show or listening to those latest tracks uninterrupted as long as the other bud is still going. This is extremely convenient. Unfortunately, this convenience brings us to another drawback. The charging of the buds within the case seems to be significantly inconsistent, where we ended up to 100 per cent charge on the right earbud, while only charging to a mere 20 per cent on the left earbud, which caused extreme levels of annoyance. Either 1More knew about this flaw and included the independent earbuds usage as a relief measure, or we just got a wonky piece for our review. In either case, it's a real shame.

The earphones also come with auto power and pairing capabilities which essentially powers the buds on and connects them to a previously-paired device when extracted from their case. Take this feature with a pinch of salt, since it seemed to work only about 50 per cent of the time we tried it, with us having to manually turn them on by long-pressing the physical buttons in the instances when the aforementioned feature failed to perform. There’s also no accompanying app to tweak EQ settings, so keep that in mind if you enjoy customising your music sound.

On a more positive note, the earphones are sweat-resistant, offer Bluetooth 5.0 connectivity which resulted in seamless wireless connection stability, and even support AAC and aptX codecs. They are priced conservatively at Rs 6,999 which makes the purchase even more attractive, since, as we will cover in the next section, the audio sounds great and balanced.

Build and design

1More has gone with a more inconspicuous and seemingly understated design for their Stylish True Wireless earphones. Unfortunately, contradictory to their name, these earphones did not manage to fit our criteria for being called ‘stylish’, especially the generic-looking black colour variant we received for this review. There are other colours, such as Gold and Pink, that certainly are flashier, but mostly look gaudy in the pictures. 

 

The earphones, as well as the accompanying charging case, are completely made out of plastic. You also get a drawstring pouch in the box to store the charging case. The matte, oval-shaped charging case looks quite generic and the logo which is indented into the centre of the case fails to pop as well. Additionally, it is quite a bulky case and often protrudes out from under your pocket.

 

The case also houses a micro-USB charging port, which is a slight disappointment, but it is expected in budget-friendly true wireless earphones, so we will refrain from complaining too much about this. There’s also an oval-shaped button which pops open the spring-loaded case in an efficient manner to reveal the earbuds resting inside it. Additionally, there’s also a battery indicator LED light which reveals the amount of charge the case has remaining.

Each earphone is shaped like an oval polished pebble (1More has really stuck with the oval design theme with these, it seems), and house a single LED indicator and a multifunction button. The physical button on each earbud does allow you to pause or play music, skip tracks, go to previous tracks, and answer phone calls. 

The earbuds offer a comfortable fit and we listened to music for hours on end without feeling any kind of fatigue. The 45-degree angled ear nozzles, as well as included stability gels (O-Hooks), enhance the fit and comfort. We were extremely pleased to see that 1More included four sizes of ear tips (XS, S, M, L) and three sizes of O-Hooks (S, M, L) which mostly ensures they fit like a puzzle piece for just about anyone. 

Overall, the plastic body of the charging case and earphones make them look and feel flimsy and less premium, however, they are quite lightweight as a result. While the case doesn’t feel as plasticky as the Redmi AirDots case, it isn’t quite as premium-looking as the Galaxy Buds case either. The comfortable and secure fit, as mentioned above, means that you could easily use these buds while taking a leisurely stroll in the park or during your commute to work. However, they tend to slip out sometimes while running, so they’re not exactly built to cater to a fitness-oriented lifestyle.

Bottomline

The 1More Stylish True Wireless earbuds may not necessarily be as ‘stylish’ as the name suggests, but they do sport competitive sound quality, good battery life and a snug seal, as long as you find the right eartips and O-Hooks. They also offer some high-end features such as sweat-resistance, fast charging, Bluetooth 5.0 and voice assistant access, all at a budgetary price point of Rs 6,499. We can’t help but yearn for a USB-C port, a companion app, and volume controls, but we’re mostly just being nitpicky here, minus the case of the absent volume controls, which is a basic feature you’d expect earphones to have.
 
While there are definitely true wireless earphones that sound superior to 1More’s offering such as the Klipsch T5 and Sennheiser Momentum True Wireless, the 1More Stylish True Wireless offers good sound quality for their price point with a relatively balanced, well-rounded sound signature. The earbuds can also function independently from each other which is quite convenient. The somewhat generic design of the matte black version of these buds can be unappealing but the capable sound quality and the support given to high-end audio codecs such as AAC and aptX more than make up for it. However, the Galaxy Buds also prove to be a great alternative to these earphones at this price range. Overall, 1More’s Stylish True Wireless should prove to be a solid budget-friendly purchase.

 

1More Stylish True Wireless Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Release Date: 03 Apr 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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Sony WF-SP800N Review

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Dhriti Datta

Perpetually sporting a death stare, this one can be seen tinkering around with her smartphone which she holds more dear than life itself and stuffing her face with copious amounts of bacon.

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1More Stylish True Wireless

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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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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Global Net Zero Emissions Goal Would Require $1-2 Trillion A Year Investment - Study
1-MIN READ

Global Net Zero Emissions Goal Would Require $1-2 Trillion A Year Investment - Study

Global Net Zero Emissions Goal Would Require $1-2 Trillion A Year Investment - Study

Achieving net zero emissions by midcentury would cost an estimated $1 trillion$2 trillion a year of additional investments, or 11.5% of global gross domestic product, a report by the Energy Transitions Commission (ETC) said on Wednesday.

  • Last Updated: September 16, 2020, 12:42 PM IST

LONDON: Achieving net zero emissions by mid-century would cost an estimated $1 trillion-$2 trillion a year of additional investments, or 1-1.5% of global gross domestic product, a report by the Energy Transitions Commission (ETC) said on Wednesday.

To limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius this century, global greenhouse gas emissions will need to reach net zero.

When this is achieved, the reduction in 2050 living standards in developed and developing countries would amount to less than 0.5% of global GDP, the report said.

The ETC is a global coalition of 40 energy producers, industrial companies and financial institutions, including ArcelorMittal, HSBC, BP, Shell, Orsted and Bank of America, which are committed to achieving a carbon-free economy by 2050.

The report said dramatic improvements in energy efficiency will need to be made; annual global electricity supply will have to grow four to five times to reach 90,000-115,000 terawatt hours and the annual pace of wind and solar capacity will need to be five to six times the increase achieved in 2019.

In addition, buildings, transport and industry sectors need to be electrified and hydrogen should be used in cases where that is not possible. Any remaining energy use should be decarbonised using carbon capture and storage and sustainable bioenergy.

“There is no doubt that it is technically and economically possible to reach the zero-carbon economy which we need by 2050; and zero must mean zero, not a plan which relies on the permanent and large-scale use of ‘offsets’ to balance continued emissions,” said co-chair of the ETC, Adair Turner.

“But action in the next decade is crucial – otherwise it will be too late,” he added.

China has the resources and technology to become a rich, developed carbon-free economy by 2050. All developing nations should be able to reach net-zero emissions by 2060 at the latest but will require development investment to attract private green investors, the ETC said.

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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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Sanjay Dutt And Maanayata Are "Enroute Life" - See Pic From Plane

Sanjay Dutt And Maanayata Are "Enroute Life" - See Pic From Plane

It has been reported that the couple left for Dubai to meet their kids Shahraan and Iqra

Sanjay Dutt And Maanayata Are 'Enroute Life' - See Pic From Plane

Maanayata shared this photo. (Image courtesy: maanayata )

Highlights

  • Maanayata shared a picture from a flight on Wednesday
  • "Enroute life," she captioned the photo
  • Maanayata was living in Dubai with their kids during the lockdown
New Delhi:

Sanjay Dutt's wife Maanayata shared a picture of themselves from a flight on Wednesday. It has been reported that the duo left for Dubai to meet their kids Shahraan and Iqra. Maanayata was living in Dubai with their kids during the lockdown. She returned to Mumbai last month after the actor, who is currently undergoing medical treatment, announced a "short break from work" but more on that later. According to a Times Of India report, Sanjay Dutt and Maanayata took a chartered flight to Dubai on Tuesday. "Sanjay is doing well, and is expected back home in just a week or 10 days. He wanted to see his twins, who are still in Dubai," the publication quoted a source as saying.

Take a look at the aforementioned picture of Maanayata and Sanjay Dutt, the caption on which read: "Enroute life."

uagleedo

Screenshot of Maanayata's Instagram story.

Maanayata also shared a glimpse of a special treat that they received in the flight.

u4f9j30o

Screenshot of Maanayata's Instagram story.

Sanjay Dutt was hospitalised last month after he complained of breathlessness. The actor announced on August 11 that he would be taking a break from work for medical treatment. After his post, Maanayata issued a statement, in which she said: "I thank everyone who has expressed their well wishes for Sanju's speedy recovery. We need all the strength and prayers to overcome this phase... Sanju has always been a fighter, and so has our family. God has yet again chosen to test us to overcome the challenges ahead."

Read Sanjay Dutt's post here:

A post shared by Sanjay Dutt (@duttsanjay) on

Since August, Sanjay Dutt has visited Mumbai's Kokilaben Hospital a few times for his treatment. He was also pictured at Yash Raj Films studios in Mumbai few days ago. He has reportedly resumed the shoot for his upcoming film Shamshera.

The actor was last seen in Sadak 2, which released last month on Disney+Hotstar. Other than Shamshera, his upcoming films are KGF: Chapter 2, Torbaaz, Bhuj: The Pride Of India and Prithviraj.

Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Coolpad Note 3 Lite Review

Coolpad Note 3 Lite Review

By Hardik Singh | Updated May 22 2019
Coolpad Note 3 Lite Review
DIGIT RATING
77 /100
  • design

    72

  • performance

    84

  • value for money

    60

  • features

    91

User Rating : 1/5 Out of 1 Reviews
  • PROS
  • Good Display
  • Reliable performance
  • Super fast fingerprint sensor
  • Excellent battery life
  • CONS
  • Average camera

Verdict

The Coolpad Note 3 Lite is undoubtedly one of the best phones in the sub-7k smartphone category. It offers good build, a fingerprint sensor, reliable performance and stellar battery backup. Where it lacks is with the camera.

BUY Coolpad Note 3 Lite
Buy now on amazon Out of Stock 9500

Coolpad Note 3 Lite detailed review

While 2015, was a good year for the sub-7k smartphone market with the launch of some really good phones such as the Meizu M2 and the Acer Liquid Z530, 2016 has brought a new smartphone which can stand tall amongst the above mentioned devices. Yes, I am talking about the Coolpad Note 3 Lite, the smaller and lighter version of the Coolpad Note 3 which was launched last year. The recipe of the phone is kept same for the most part but to add some flavour, there is a nifty fingerprint sensor at the back and for the first time in this price range, 3GB of RAM. There are some other welcome changes which I will talk about in this review. 


Build and Design
The Coolpad Note 3 Lite is just the like original Coolpad Note 3 for the most part. The build quality of the Note 3 Lite is quite good. The phone carries forward a similar simple candy bar design. The phone also gets the chrome strip which runs around the edge of the smartphone. My review unit we received has a light gold polish on it which adds to the overall design quotient. The phone offers a 5-inch display which makes it quite ergonomic to hold. In comparison, the original Coolpad Note 3 was a bit unwieldy thanks to its 5.5-inch display. A nice addition to the mix is the new textured back cover which give the phone a nice grip. The button position and depth also remains unchanged and they give appropriate feed back when pressed. 

Display and UI
The Coolpad Note 3 Lite does not skimp on the display either and the 7K smartphone features a very good display. The 5-inch IPS LCD has good colour saturation and colour vibrance. The viewing angles good too. Sunlight legibility hasn't been improved from the original Coolpad Note 3 but in our experience, it definitely seems better. 

Talking about similarity between the Coolpad Note 3 and the Coolpad Note 3 Lite, the UI hasn't changed either. The UI is filled with bright icons and remains simple. As we’ve mentioned earlier, the fingerprint scanner is at the back of the smartphone. It is undoubtedly one of the best I have come across. It is fast, accurate and lets you unlock the phone in any orientation. The deja vu doesn't end here, the awful Xploree keyboard remains. Check out my Coolpad Note 3 review to know more about it.

Performance
Mediatek seems to be the choice of SoC for budget phones. The MT6735 which beats inside the Coolpad Note 3 Lite was also there in two of the best phones we have see in the sub-7K smartphone segment — Meizu M2 and the Acer Liquid Z530. On the Note 3 Lite, this 1.3GHz quad-core SoC churns out some great performance for the money and is able to keep up with most tasks required from the smartphone. Using the phone as a daily driver, we found that it could handle daily tasks such as calling, video watching, surfing and even multiple page surfing. I even tried browsing the web while streaming music in the background and found out, the phone worked without a hitch. Gaming performance is also quite good and the phone can easily handle less demanding games. The phone lags slightly with graphically intensive games, but nothing which can’t be overseen at this price. Coolpad has optimised both the SoC and the 3GB RAM well and the phone never felt like a budget offering.

Coolpad Note 3 Lite
Create bar charts

Calling capabilities are good as well and the earpiece is clear, although it could have been louder. The same cannot be said about the rear speaker which felt muffled. However, the sound quality via headphones is the best in this category and definitely louder.

Camera and battery
The 13MP rear shooter isn't that great though. Images taken in normal lighting conditions have oversaturation and while they look good on the phone’s display, they look pixelated on a larger display. Images quality further deteriorates in low light conditions. There is a lot of visible noise which makes images taken in dim light sometimes unusable. The front facing 5MP camera does a decent job in outdoor light but produces average images in low light.

While the battery on the Coolpad Note 3 Lite is small by today’s standards at just 2500mAh, the phone can easily last you one day. In our normal battery test where we loop a 1080p FullHD video on loop until the battery dies, the phone was able to stay up for 12 hours, which is pretty good considering the price point and specs on offer. Using the phone as a daily driver with minimal gaming, the battery lasted till sundown but you will need to plug it in before you hit the bed. Gaming however, does consume the battery rather quickly and in an hour of gaming on the Coolpad Note 3 Lite, I lost about 20 percent battery. The phone does have very good standby time and offers faster charging compared to its rivals.

   

(L-R) Images taken in outside light, low light and (3-4) fluorescent light

Bottomline
The Coolpad Note 3 Lite is undoubtedly one of the best phones in the sub-7k smartphone category. It has a good build, a nice orthodox design, the display is good, performance is reliable and the battery is more than capable of lasting you for a day. You even get a fingerprint sensor at the 7K price point. What the phone lacks is a good camera. Coolpad has done a fabulous job with the Note 3 Lite but I would like to see more Google apps preloaded on the smartphone, especially the Google keyboard. If a good camera is not your priority, then the Coolpad Note 3 Lite is the phone to buy in the sub-7k smartphone segment. However, if a camera on the smartphone is important to you in this price segment, then the Meizu M2 might be the phone to consider.

Coolpad Note 3 Lite Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 11 May 2017
Variant: 16GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    5" (720 x 1280)
  • Camera Camera
    13 | 5 MP
  • Memory Memory
    16 GB/3 GB
  • Battery Battery
    2500 mAh

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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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Coolpad Note 3 Lite

Buy now on amazon 9500

Coolpad Note 3 Lite

Buy now on amazon 9500

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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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Chiranjeevi And Pawan Kalyan's Brother Naga Babu Tests COVID-19+ve, Pledges To Donate Plasma

Chiranjeevi And Pawan Kalyan's Brother Naga Babu Tests COVID-19+ve, Pledges To Donate Plasma

"An Infection doesn't always has to be a suffering, you can always transform it into an opportunity to help the fellow beings," said Naga Babu's post

Chiranjeevi And Pawan Kalyan's Brother Naga Babu Tests COVID-19+ve, Pledges To Donate Plasma

Naga Babu with Chiranjeevi and Pawan Kalyan (courtesy nagababuofficial)

Highlights

  • Naga Babu revealed his COVID-19 diagnosis in a post
  • Naga Babu wrote that he is determined to fight the virus
  • "Will be a plasma donor," he wrote
New Delhi:

Actor-producer Nagendra Babu (popularly known as Naga Babu) - brother of south superstars Chiranjeevi and Pawan Kalyan - has tested positive for COVID-19, which he revealed in a social media post. On his official Instagram, Naga Babu wrote that he is determined to fight the virus and looking forward to a recovery, following which he can be of help to coronavirus patients by being a plasma donor. Here's what Naga Babu wrote in his statement: "An Infection doesn't always has to be a suffering, you can always transform it into an opportunity to help the fellow beings. Tested COVID-19 +ve. Will scuffle and strife through this and will be a plasma donor."

Read his post here:

Last month, Nagendra Babu's daughter Niharika Konidela got engaged to Hyderabad-based techie Chaitanya JV. The festivities were attended by Chiranjeevi and Pawan Kalyan. Ram Charan (Chiranjeevi's son) and his wife Upasana Kamineni Konidela were also part of the celebrations. Congratulating the newly-engaged couple, Naga Babu had written this for his soon to be son-in-law: "Dear Chay, everyone say that she is more like me in many ways than any. I believe in you that you will shower her with all the Love in the world. And also from today onwards, she is officially your problem."

On Mother's Day, Naga Babu shared a fam-jam photo, dedicating a note to his mom:

Naga Babu has featured in films such as ABCD - American Born Confused Desi, Mr. Majnu, Aravinda Sametha Veera Raghava, Geetha Govindam, among others. He has also produced movies such as Naa Peru Surya, Orange, Stalin, Gudumba Shankar, to name a few.

Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Sensex rallies 288 pts; Nifty tops 11,500Sensex rallies 288 pts; Nifty tops 11,500Sensex rallies 288 pts; Nifty tops 11,500Sensex rallies 288 pts; Nifty tops 11,500Sensex rallies 288 pts; Nifty tops 11,500Sensex rallies 288 pts; Nifty tops 11,500Sensex rallies 288 pts; Nifty tops 11,500Sensex rallies 288 pts; Nifty tops 11,500Sensex rallies 288 pts; Nifty tops 11,500Sensex rallies 288 pts; Nifty tops 11,500Sensex rallies 288 pts; Nifty tops 11,500Sensex rallies 288 pts; Nifty tops 11,500Sensex rallies 288 pts; Nifty tops 11,500

Sensex rallies 288 pts; Nifty tops 11,500

 
Domestic equity benchmark Sensex surged 288 points on Tuesday, tracking strong buying sentiment in banking counters amid positive cues from global markets.
The 30-share BSE index ended 287.72 points or 0.74 per cent higher at 39,044.35. The broader NSE Nifty rose 81.75 points or 0.71 per cent to 11,521.80.
IndusInd Bank was the top gainer in the Sensex pack, rallying over 4 per cent, followed by Bharti Airtel, Axis Bank, ICICI Bank, Bajaj Finance, Sun Pharma, HDFC and Kotak Bank.
On the other hand, Titan, Maruti, ITC, Asian Paints, HCL Tech and Bajaj Auto were among the laggards.
Domestic equities traded a positive note through the day tracking firm cues from global markets and sustained foreign fund inflow, traders said.
Foreign institutional investors bought equities worth Rs 298.22 crore on a net basis on Monday, exchange data showed.
Bourses in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Seoul ended with gains, while Tokyo slipped in the red.
Stock exchanges in Europe were trading on a positive note in early deals.
Meanwhile, global oil benchmark Brent crude was trading 1.49 per cent higher at USD 40.20 per barrel.
In the forex market, the rupee tumbled 16 paise to close at 73.64 against the US dollar.

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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Delhi Cops Arrest Man Who Cheated Over 2,500 People Via 'Mobile Phones On EMI' Offer

Delhi Cops Arrest Man Who Cheated Over 2,500 People Via 'Mobile Phones On EMI' Offer

The matter came to notice when a probe was initiated on January 9 on the complaint of one Irfan Pathan, who alleged that in December last year, he wanted to buy a mobile phone and came across a website - www.mobilityworld.in - which offered them on EMIs at cheap rates, the police said.

Delhi Cops Arrest Man Who Cheated Over 2,500 People Via 'Mobile Phones On EMI' Offer

A man was arrested for cheating over 2,500 people by offering phones on EMI (Representational)

New Delhi:

A 32-year-old man was arrested from Ghaziabad for allegedly cheating over 2,500 people on the pretext of getting them mobile phones on EMI (monthly installments) through fake websites, the police said today.

Accused Jitender Singh disclosed to the police that he along with his associates - Praveen Kumar and Rajat Shukla - indulged in cheating people by offering them to provide mobile phones on easy monthly installments.

However, after taking a small amount as down payment from them, they would vanish, police said, adding Jitender Singh confessed to have cheated over 2,500 people across the country this way.

The police said that efforts are being made to trace Jitender Singh's associates Praveen Kumar and Rajat Shukla.

The matter came to notice when a probe was initiated on January 9 on the complaint of one Irfan Pathan, who alleged that in December last year, he wanted to buy a mobile phone and came across a website - www.mobilityworld.in - which offered them on EMIs at cheap rates, the police said.

In order to make a purchase, he was asked to deposit Rs 1,499 by Virtual Private Address (VPA) "paymobile@upi".

He was then contacted by the executives of the website who asked him to deposit further money for getting the mobile phone delivered.

He deposited Rs. 5,998 in three transactions on VPA provided by the executive of the website. But he neither got any mobile phone nor did they return his money, according to the complainant.

Deputy Commissioner of Police (Southeast) RP Meena said that during the course of the investigation, call details of the mobile numbers mentioned on the website and those provided by the complainant were obtained.

On analysis of the Call Detail Record, it was found that one of the mobile numbers used by the accused was registered on the name of Rajat Shukla.

On analysing the details of VPA 'paymobile@upi', it was found that it was linked to a bank account of Rajat Shukla.

However, the money from the said bank account used to be immediately credited into Jitender Singh's account, he said.

Jitender Singh was arrested later from his home in Ghaziabad on Tuesday and two mobile phones used by him in commission of crime were sized, he added.

During interrogation, he disclosed that in last two years, he along with his associates have cheated people through three fake websites created by them, the police said.

They shifted their setup and domain name of the websites to avoid detection and took money through Virtual Private address to make detection difficult, they added.

"They often took small amounts of Rs 1,999 to Rs 7,999 so that the victim would not approach the police," the DCP said.
 

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

Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Samsung Galaxy S8 Plus Review

Samsung Galaxy S8 Plus Review

By Prasid Banerjee | Updated May 22 2019
Samsung Galaxy S8 Plus Review
DIGIT RATING
83 /100
  • design

    92

  • performance

    90

  • value for money

    72

  • features

    61

User Rating : 4.2/5 Out of 5 Reviews
  • PROS
  • Beautiful design
  • Excellent camera
  • Great display
  • Waterproof
  • CONS
  • Battery life could be better
  • Fingerprint sensor is tough to reach

Verdict

The Samsung Galaxy S8 Plus brings flagship class design and is finally a phone that doesn't look like all others. If that piques your interest, then this is the phone you should buy. It's one of the best smartphones out there today, but an incremental update in everything except design.

BUY Samsung Galaxy S8 Plus
Buy now on amazon Available 44499
Buy now on flipkart Available 53990

Samsung Galaxy S8 Plus detailed review

Edge displays may not be the most useful thing you’ve ever seen on a smartphone, but they sure look good. And after three years and five such phones, Samsung has finally perfected its curved flagship design. It was close last year, but 2017’s models scream refinement and the Galaxy S8+ is the bigger of the two smartphones. You’ll read about the curves and edges a lot in this review, because unlike most flagships the Samsung Galaxy S8+ is more about design, and not just the hardware side of it. It's Samsung's best work till date and despite last year's debacle, it raises my hopes as to what the Galaxy Note 8 is going to be like now. But, I digress. Here's the Galaxy S8+ review.


Build and Design

A glass body comes with an inevitable flaw, one that Samsung seems fine with. The Galaxy S8+ and Galaxy S8 offer too much to break. Combined with a slippery body, you’re looking at a bumper case, or at least some kind of cover. That may still pass on the compact Galaxy S8, but on the S8+ it makes for a phone that's a tad unweildy. The last thing you want is to break this display. The display on last year's Galaxy S7 Edge would cost users about Rs. 18,000 for replacement, so one can only assume that this one would cross the 20k mark. That's about a third of the device's buying price.

On the other hand, if you are like me and decided to risk it, then you’re in for a treat. Fingerprints will show on the back, but frankly speaking, I really didn’t mind them. My midnight black unit looks great, and it’s comfortable to hold. Well, at least more comfortable than other 6-inch devices. Truth be told, while the Univisium display does make the Galaxy S8+ narrower than other 6-inch smartphones, it’s not exactly ergonomic.

Samsung has indeed proved what it can do with a curved body and an 18.5:9 display. The slight curves near the rear edges also make the phone easier to grip. That is, as much as is possible with its screen. Placed side-by-side, the Galaxy S8+ is more or less as big as an iPhone 7 Plus (review). That’s no mean feat, but on a personal note, the iPhone 7 Plus isn't the best example for design any way.

The buttons

A big part of the Galaxy S8+’s design finesse is in how the buttons are placed on the device. In order to make the phone feel like it was all screen, Samsung finally used on-screen buttons on its phones. The home, recents and back buttons work just like on any other phone, but there’s an embedded home button below the display as well.

So, when watching content in full screen, you can simply push down on the point where the home button should be and you’ll jump back to the home screen. When not in full screen mode, you can swipe up to bring the buttons back in view. The embedded button works in a similar manner to Apple's Force Touch, but I did find it easier to get used to.

Moving to the hardware buttons, you’ll find the power on/off button on the right, while the volume rocker and Bixby button lie on the left. While all of these are easy to reach on the Galaxy S8, on the S8+ it’s the Bixby button that’ll fall below your finger at all times (unless you have big hands), making you wish there was a way to remap it to the power on/off function.

Slim bezels or no bezels?

There's no real "bezel-less" display, but one can't blame Samsung for calling this one of those. No matter what colour you buy, the front of the Galaxy S8 and S8+ is always going to be black, and for good reason. The bezels are so slim and well hidden that you'll pretty much never spot them. It’s worth noting that Samsung isn’t the first to achieve such a design, but it comes with extra “oomph” due to the curved edges.

Another impact of these slim bezels is that you get a lot of screen real estate, even in the smaller device. They allow the on-screen buttons to feel non-intrusive.

That fingerprint sensor and other biometrics

I have to be honest here. Ever since any of us saw the Galaxy S8 via leaks, the fingerprint sensor placement seemed destined to frustrate, especially on the bigger device. The Galaxy S8+ is just too tall and the fingerprint sensor is too difficult to reach. Combined with the slippery back, it makes for a precarious way to unlock the phone. 

When you do reach it, the fingerprint sensor is quick to unlock the Galaxy S8+, but it’s just too difficult to get used to. Given the excellent design language and choices, this is a gaping hole in the phone that’s supposed to make up for the Galaxy Note 7’s misstep.

I tried using the Iris Scanner and Face Unlock features instead, but they’re neither dependable nor seamless enough to be used regularly. You’ll need to aim the camera correctly, which takes some getting used to. Also, the face unlock feature won’t work in low light, while the iris scanner also trips up a tad too often. It took me 7 tries just to register my iris on the scanner. What's worth noting is that Samsung's Iris Scanner is much easier to work with than Windows Hello on Windows-based phones.

Display

700 words down and we’re just scratching the surface with Samsung's design work. Moving to the next phase — the display. If you haven’t done the math already, QHD resolution on a 6.2-inch panel amounts to 529 ppi pixel density. Translation: the display is as sharp as it gets.

More importantly, Samsung has toned down colour saturation this time. To be clear, you still get pleasantly oversaturated tones, but the yellowish hue is not as apparent as before. Black levels are great, which also helps in hiding the bezels. Samsung allows users to toggle the level of red, green and blue colours on the screen, which is something enthusiasts would appreciate.

I saw a reddish tint appear on the display from minor angles, but the same didn’t happen on the Galaxy S8. Given that this is a reported issue that Samsung has responded to, I’m assuming it’s one specific to my unit. I also noticed a rainbow effect on the Edge part of the S8+’s display and this too wasn’t found on the S8.

Univisium aspect ratio

Univisium may finally turn out to be the future, but it's just a fancy spec at the moment. It allows the display to be taller instead of wide, which is the main reason for this phone’s compact form factor. However, content doesn’t yet conform to it. So, at least for the time being you’ll have to deal with pillarboxing. On the Galaxy S8+, Amazon Prime streams video in a rectangular format, with black bars on the Edge part and on the two sides. On the Galaxy S8, this seems limited to the sides only.

UI

UI design is a big part of designing a smartphone and the Samsung Experience (that’s what Touchwiz is called now) is the best the company has done so far. For the sake of familiarity and simplicity, I’m just going to call it Touchwiz in this review.

UI design is another part of the finesse I talked about earlier. I’m still not particularly fond of Samsung’s always on display, but much like other things on this phone, it looks good. I wish there was more functionality to it, but this will have to work for now. I'm also not completely sure that this is a light UI, but it's lighter than most Samsung UIs I've used before.

Importantly, Samsung has changed Touchwiz’s colour schemes and icon designs this time. Icons have rounded corners and look sharp, and they're colourful to complement the phone's display. To be fair, the company’s been heading this way since last year, but once again it saved the best for the last.

  

If you’ve used a Samsung phone recently, you would have seen the grouped Settings menu as well. There’s a Search button within settings that makes it simpler to find what you’re looking for. That makes customising the phone fast and extremely easy.

As I mentioned before, Samsung’s Edge features are pretty gimmicky and not really useful. However, the company has made a solid change this time. Its game tools icon appears (when needed) alongside the on-screen keys, making it less intrusive. Similarly, notification icons on top appear just in front of the curve (third photo above), while heads up notifications appear seamlessly and without any stutters. If you have texts on WhatsApp etc, you can reply directly from the Notifications drop-down too, and Samsung has its own tasteful take on how this should happen (see picture below). I wish the reply box was a tad bigger, but this still works.

Next, you get the suite of Samsung and Microsoft apps, neither of which can be removed. There are also a bunch of Google apps pre-installed, including Google Duo, but these can be removed from the phone. There’s also an app called Samsung Connect for smart home controls, while My Galaxy brings coupons and some other services to Samsung’s customers.

Most importantly, you’ll find an “expand” option on apps within the Recents menu. This allows you to fit almost every app to the new 18.5:9 display, and use them in full screen mode. I did have problems using some apps like this, which is probably why Samsung has kept it as an optional feature.

Bixby

Samsung's AI assistant has been a much talked about feature on these phones, but in India, it's less an AI assistant and more a replacement for Flipboard right now. It takes over the left most screen from Flipboard and can be called using the hardware button too.

 

First up, Bixby is slow to launch when using the hardware button, which put me off from using it. More importantly, its hands are tied, especially in India. Samsung currently has a tie-up with Pinterest, but that's pretty much all Bixby does. If you use it within the camera app, it'll find photos similar to the ones you pick. If there's text in your photos, Bixby can read that and pick the text out. Shopping features are missing from the country right now, but Samsung should bring them soon. Most importantly, Bixby doesn't have voice support right now, although Samsung has promised to add it soon.

In India, Bixby is pretty much a clone of the Google Now screen on most other smartphones. It shows you information like Alarms, social feeds and News. Like other AI assistants, Bixby will also need time to learn and improve, which means much like the Google Assistant or Apple's Siri, it's a gimmick Indian users will not really find very useful, at least for now. It's there though, as a sign of things to come in future.

Performance

At this point, you know effectively everything there is to know about the Galaxy S8+. But a review wouldn’t be complete without a word about its performance.

On this front though, improvement is only incremental at the moment. To be fair, that’s true for all OEMs and not Samsung alone. The company’s Exynos 8895 SoC (used on the India model) is faster than last year’s phones, but only incrementally so.


AnTuTu Benchmark


Geekbench 4 Single Core


Geekbench 4 Multi Core


GFXBench Car Chase

The Mongoose cores take care of heavy tasks this time. There are four of them clocked at 2.5GHz, while the Cortex A53 cores handle the simpler tasks, clocked at 1.7GHz. As we saw on the Galaxy C9 Pro (review), the Mongoose cores kick in whenever there’s a UI transition happening, keeping things fast and snappy. However, I did see some UI lags on the Galaxy S8 and S8+. They’re nowhere close to hampering regular or heavy usage, but they’re a little unsightly when they happen. You’ll find these most often when using Facebook’s Instant Articles.

The GPU also does well. Samsung chose a Mali-G71 MP20 manages to clock up 60 frames per second in games that allow it. I found steady 60fps frame rates on games like WWE Champions, while Marvel’s Contest of Champions and Asphalt 8 both ran at a steady 30fps too. These games are limited to 30 fps by the developer, so as to provide top performance on most phones.

Heat levels are also decently managed by the Galaxy S8+. Gaming drove temperatures up to 39 degrees on the body over about half an hour, while 4K video recording makes it hotter. That’s with the room temperature regulated to 24 degrees, so you’ll be heating the phone up faster if you’re out in the 40 plus degree heat we have nowadays. However, none of that is abnormal or worrisome.

Overall, the Samsung Galaxy S8+ brings stellar performance, which is what you expect from such a device. However, one wonders how much this will drop over a year or so of usage. Unfortunately, that's one of the inescapable perils of Android smartphones today.

Audio Quality

The Galaxy S8+ is delivers richer audio than most smartphones, but it's no match against phones like the LG V20 or Sony Xperia XZ. That said, the pair of AKG headphones you get in box would be appreciated by many. The headphones are well beyond what we have come to expect from in-box headphones. They're not quite audiophile grade, but you'll still get clearer and richer audio through them, than you usually do.

Camera

We all expected Samsung to pull out all the stops on the Galaxy S8 and S8+, but the company isn’t embracing the dual-camera yet. Samsung probably wanted to reserve that feature for the Note 8, which would be a very Apple-like thing to do, but hey, this camera doesn’t bring up many complaints either.

Samsung used a Sony IMX333 sensor with f/1.7 aperture this time, and the same dual-pixel technology we saw last time. It’s pretty much the same camera, except Samsung says it has improved the algorithms behind the camera this time. You see this in terms of focusing speeds, which seem faster than before. However, the rest remains the same.

These two sample images have been resized for the web. The gallery below them has full sized camera samples

Samsung Galaxy S8+ Camera Samples

The camera produces sharp, bright and pleasantly oversaturated colours. The S8+’s camera is more dependable (than the Galaxy S7 Edge) when shooting on the go, thanks to faster focus. Although, I daresay Samsung needs to improve this aspect a little more. Images can also be a bit softer than is ideal.

Overall, the Galaxy S8+ stands to become one of the best cameras this year, but we’ll have to wait for the next Pixel phones and iPhones to determine whether this is indeed the best. 

Battery

The larger size allowed Samsung to include a 3500 mAh battery on this one. This isn’t huge by today’s standards, but it achieves reasonable battery life. The PC Mark battery test returns 11 hours and 31 minutes. In the real world, this translates to about 12-14 hours of regular usage. I tested this with half an hour of gaming, some video streaming and regular activities like social networking and about 10 phone calls.

To make it simpler, I streamed three continuous hours of HD video on the phone, dropping the battery from just over 80% to nearly 0. When it does discharge, the Galaxy S8+ charges really fast, so half an hour’s worth of charge will get you very close to 50%, enough to last a full 24 hours then.

What’s interesting is that Samsung claims this battery will retain 95% of its battery life after two years. I’ll have to get back to you on this one, but if Samsung can live up to this claim, it’s going to be a big improvement in smartphone batteries.

Bottomline

So, is the Galaxy S8+ the phone to buy this year? It’s too early to say right now. But for the time being, Samsung has done a wonderful job designing this smartphone, while other improvements remain incremental. It’s sad that OEMs can’t innovate on smartphones anymore, which is why one has to give Samsung credit for at least redoing the design. On other fronts, the Galaxy S8+ is a flagship as flagships go. It dazzles on the outside, but beauty is only skin deep.

Samsung Galaxy S8 Plus Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 09 May 2017
Variant: 64GB , 128GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    6.2" (1440 x 2960)
  • Camera Camera
    12 | 8 MP
  • Memory Memory
    64 GB/4 GB
  • Battery Battery
    3500 mAh

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Prasid Banerjee

Trying to explain technology to my parents. Failing miserably.

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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Early Wakeup Tips follow these tips to wake up early in the morning - Early Wakeup Tips: सुबह जल्दी उठने में होती है मुश्किल, तो फॉलो करें ये टिप्स

Early Wakeup Tips: सुबह जल्दी उठने में होती है मुश्किल, तो फॉलो करें ये टिप्स

आप कामकाजी हों या नहीं, हर किसी का सुबह उठने का अपना एक टाइम होता है. लेकिन, अगर हम सुबह जल्दी नहीं उठेंगे, तो अपने सभी काम समय से कैसे पूरे कर पाएंगे या दूसरे कामों के लिए वक्त कैसे निकालेंगे.

Early Wakeup Tips: सुबह जल्दी उठने में होती है मुश्किल, तो फॉलो करें ये टिप्स

Early wakeup Tips: सबुह जल्दी उठने में होती है मुश्किल, तो फॉलो करें ये टिप्स

नई दिल्ली:

देर तक सोना और 8 घंटे की नींद लेना सभी को अच्छा लगता है. लेकिन अगर सुबह जल्दी उठने की बात आती है, तो बहुत से लोगों को सुबह जल्दी उठने की आदत नहीं होती. ऐसे लोगों को सुबह जल्दी उठने में बहुत मुश्किल होती है, यहां तक कि कुछ लोग अलार्म बजने के बाद भी नहीं उठ पाते. सुबह जल्दी न उठ पाने का मतलब यही है कि आपकी नींद पूरी नहीं हो पाई है या फिर आप पूरी नींद नहीं ले पा रहे हैं. फिर चाहे आप कामकाजी हों या नहीं, हर किसी का सुबह उठने का अपना एक टाइम होता है. लेकिन, अगर हम सुबह जल्दी नहीं उठेंगे, तो अपने सभी काम समय से कैसे पूरे कर पाएंगे या फिर दूसरे कामों के लिए वक्त कैसे निकालेंगे. तो यहां हम आपको बताने जा रहे हैं कि कैसे और किन आदतों से आप समय पर सो सकते हैं और सुबह जल्दी उठ भी सकते हैं.

यह भी पढ़ें

बेडटाइम रूटीन (Bedtime Routine)

  • सोने से 6 घंटे पहले किसी भी ऐसे पेय पदार्थ का सेवन न करें, जिसमें कैफीन (Caffeine) हो.
  • सोने से कम से कम 2-3 घंटे पहले किसी भी ऐसी मशीन या डिवाइस का इस्तेमाल न करें, जिसकी नीली लाइट आपकी आंखों पर पड़े. नींद न आने की एक बड़ी वजह यह भी है.
  • सोने से पहले खुद को थोड़ा आराम दें. किताबें पढ़ें या फिर किसी अच्छे शॉवर जेल से बाथ लें. ऐसा कोई भी काम न करें, जो आपके शरीर को थकान दे या फिर आपको सोने न दे.
  • दिन में कम ही सोने की कोशिश करें.

यह भी पढ़ें- सुबह जल्दी उठने के सबसे असरदार और आसान 3 Tricks

सोने का समय निर्धारित करें (Get on a sleep schedule)

सबसे पहले यह देखें की कितने घंटे की नींद आपके लिए जरूरी है. ज्यादातर लोग 7-9 घंटे की नींद लेते हैं. ऐसे में उसी के अनुसार अपने दिनभर का काम निर्धारित करें. मान लीजिए, आपको सुबह 7 बजे उठना है, तो आपको रात के 11 बजे तक सो जाना चाहिए. अपने सोने का समय सिर्फ वीकडेज (Weekdays) के लिए ही नहीं बल्कि वीकेंड (Weekends) के लिए भी निर्धारित करें.

आलस की वजह से अलार्म को बजने देना (Snoozing The Alarm)

ज्यादातर लोगों की यह आदत होती है कि वह सुबह जल्दी उठने के लिए अलार्म लगाते हैं, लेकिन आलस की वजह से अलार्म को बंद नहीं करते. अलार्म बजने पर 10 मिनट और सोने की आदत अच्छी तो लगती है, लेकिन यह आपकी सेहत के लिए अच्छी नही है. जब आप थोड़ा-थोड़ा करके सोते हैं, तो यह आदत आपके अंदर ज्यादा आलस पैदा करती है और आपको ज्यादा नींद आती है. तो जैसे ही सुबह आपका अलार्म बजे तो उसे बंद करके आपको तुरंत ही उठ जाना चाहिए.

खाने की आदतें (Eating Habits)

खाने में हेल्दी चीजें ही खाएं, क्योंकि हमारा भोजन हमारे एनर्जी लेवल (Energy Level) पर बहुत प्रभाव डालता है. अगर हम अस्वस्थ चीजें खाएंगे तो इससे हमारे अंदर आलस पैदा होगी. आपके भोजन में फल, सब्जी, ओमेगा-3 से भरपूर पोषक तत्व और अनाज जरूर होना चाहिए.

यह भी पढ़ें- Health Tips: सर्दियों में स्वास्थ्य के लिए रामबाण हैं ये 4 टिप्स! आजमा लिए तो होंगे कई फायदे

एक्सरसाइज (Exercise)

हर रोज़ सुबह उठकर व्यायाम करना न सिर्फ आपके शरीर को स्वस्थ बनाता औऱ आपका वजन कम होता है, बल्कि इससे हमारी नींद भी अच्छी होती है. जिन लोगों को अनिद्रा (insomnia), ज्यादा सोचने (anxiety), और निराशा (depression) की शिकायत है उनके ऊपर भी इसका अच्छा प्रभाव पड़ता है. बल्कि, अगर आप डांस करते हैं, तो यह भी आपकी सेहत के लिए बहुत फायदेमंद है, क्योंकि इससे भी एक तरह से शरीर की एक्सरसाइज हो जाती है. एक्सरसाइज हमारे शरीर के एनर्जी लेवल को बढ़ाती है.

दिन की रोशनी में बाहर निकलें (Daylight Exposure)

अगर आप हर समय घर के अंदर ही रहते हैं, तो सुबह उठकर बाहर टहलने जाएं, अपनी बालकनी में बैठें और अपने घर के पर्दों को भी कुछ समय के लिए खोलकर रखें. इससे आपको बाहर की रोशनी मिलेगी, जो आपके शरीर के लिए बहुत जरूरी है. इससे आपका मूड भी अच्छा होगा और आपका एनर्जी लेवल भी बढ़ेगा.

Listen to the latest songs, only on JioSaavn.com

डॉक्टर से सलाह लें (Professional Help)

अगर ये सभी आदतें होने के बाद भी आपको सुबह उठने में मुश्किल होती है, तो इसके लिए किसी डॉक्टर की सलाह जरूर लें. इसके अलावा अगर आपके जीवन में कोई परेशानी है, जिसकी वजह से आप सो नहीं पाते, तो अपने किसी करीबी से अपनी समस्या जरूर बताए, जिससे वह आपको इस समस्या से बाहर निकलने में मदद कर सके.

अन्य खबरें
 

Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

धर्मेंद्र का आलिशान बंगला: देख दंग रह जाएंगे आप, एंटीक चीजों से भरा है

धर्मेंद्र का आलिशान बंगला: देख दंग रह जाएंगे आप, एंटीक चीजों से भरा है

हिंदी सिनेमा पर सालों राज करने वाले एक्टर धर्मेंद्र भले फिल्मों में कम ही दिखाई देते हैं,अब फिल्मों से दूर अपना ज़्यादातर वक़्त अपने फार्महाउस पर बिता रहे हैं।

Published by Monika Published: September 16, 2020 | 5:47 pm
Dharmendra

Dharmendra farmhouse (file pic)

हिंदी सिनेमा पर सालों राज करने वाले एक्टर धर्मेंद्र भले फिल्मों में कम ही दिखाई देते हैं, लेकिन उनकी लोकप्रियता आज भी बरकरार हैं। सोशल मीडिया के ज़रिए वह अपने चाहने वालों से जुड़े हुए हैं।

धर्मेंद्र का फार्महाउस

वह अब फिल्मों से दूर अपना ज़्यादातर वक़्त अपने फार्महाउस पर बिता रहे हैं। जहां बॉलीवुड में लोग ऐशो आराम ढूंड रहे हैं, वही ये अभिनेता आज भी जमीन से जुड़ा हुआ हैं। इनका लाइफस्टाइल देखकर आप भी यही कहेंगे।कई बार धर्मेंद्र की तस्वीरे वायरल हुई हैं जिसमे वह अपने फार्महाउस के पास खेती करते देखे गए हैं। जहां तमाम तरह के फल, सब्जियां उगाई जाती हैं। फार्महाउस पर बना उनका बंगला अंदर से बिल्कुल रॉयल लुक देता है। तो आइए एक नज़र अभिनेता के इस बंगले पर डालते हैं।

इंस्टाग्राम पोस्ट

हाल ही में धर्मेंद्र ने अपने इंस्टाग्राम पर एक वीडियो शेयर किया था जिसमें उन्होंने अपने घर में वॉक करते हुए नजर आ रहे हैं। धर्मेंद्र के घर के अंदर उनकी तस्वीरें लगी हुई हैं जो उनके पुराने दिनों की याद दिलाती हैं ।

क्लासी लुक देता हैं

घर को क्लासी लुक देने के लिए उन्होंने ज़्यादातर लकड़ी से बने सामान रखे हैं । बैठने के लिए सोफे लगे हैं। कुशन पर धर्मेंद्र की तस्वीर तस्वीरे भी साफ़ दिख रही है। उनके इस बंगले को देख आपने अंदाज़ा तो लगा ही लिया होगा कि इसकी कीमत करोड़ो में होगी। जितना अन्दर से यह बंगला आलिशान दीखता हैं उससे दो गुनाह ज्यादा खूबसूरत है।

हरियाली ही हरियाली

जैसा की आपको पता हैं धर्मेंद्र को खेती करना, पेड़ पौधों से काफी लगाव हैं, इसलिए आपको उनके बंगले के बाहर काफी हरियाली देखने को मिलेगी। मुंबई की भागदौड़ भरी जिंदगी से थकने के बाद धर्मेंद्र यहां आराम फरमाने आते हैं।

यह भी पढ़ें: कंगना से हिला बॉलीवुड: अब कह दी ऐसी बात, पूरी इंडस्ट्री पर उठा भद्दा सवाल

दोस्तों देश दुनिया की और खबरों को तेजी से जानने के लिए बनें रहें न्यूजट्रैक के साथ। हमें फेसबुक पर फॉलों करने के लिए @newstrack और ट्विटर पर फॉलो करने के लिए @newstrackmedia पर क्लिक करें।

न्यूजट्रैक के नए ऐप से खुद को रक्खें लेटेस्ट खबरों से अपडेटेड । हमारा ऐप एंड्राइड प्लेस्टोर से डाउनलोड करने के लिए क्लिक करें - Newstrack App

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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

The latest Ryanair, easyJet, TUI and BA flight cancellations as FCO warns against more countries - North Wales Live
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The latest Ryanair, easyJet, TUI and BA flight cancellations as FCO warns against more countries

The FCO recently extended its 'all but essential' travel to cover additional countries - but can you still fly out?

Ryanair
The latest updates from Ryanair and other airlines as the FCO extends its quarantine list

The Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) still advises against "all but essential" travel to some areas.

It's been removing destinations from its quarantine-exempt list recently amid Covid-19 outbreaks abroad.

Restrictions were updated over the weekend with the likes of Hungary removed from the safe list.

Passengers who travel to the country - including to its capital Budapest - are now subject to quarantine.

Those visiting such an area must self-isolate upon their return to the UK for a period of at least 14 days.

It's not the only destinations currently excluded from the FCO's quarantine-exempt list though.

Other locations affected include Portugal, parts of Spain, Crete, Mykonos, the Czech Republic and Jamaica.

So what do the new restrictions mean for flight availability? Here's the latest update on the situation.

easyJet

easyJet is still operating flights to quarantine-required destinations

easyJet is continuing to operate most flights and hasn't cancelled any due to self-isolation restrictions.

It means customers can still travel to a number of destinations that are no longer quarantine-exempt.

This includes flights to Mykonos and Crete from Manchester Airport, scheduled for today (September 16).

Passengers will need to self-isolate for a period of 14 days upon their return but can still go on the holiday.

The airline is however offering those who no longer wish to fly the chance to change their booking for free.

In a statement, easyJet explained: "Due to a number of countries imposing quarantine restrictions, we understand that customers may wish to change their travel plans."

It further said that staff want to provide "some flexibility" to those that are currently in this situation.

Those booked on a flight to or from a destination subject to quarantine rules and due to fly within 14 days, can now transfer their flight without a change fee by contacting the Customers Services Team.

Requests must be made within 7 days of the government announcing such restrictions though.

Anyone whose booking is more than 14 days away can transfer their flight without a fee through the Manage Bookings section of either the website or easyJet's mobile app.

This can be done directly and passengers in this scenario do not need to contact customer service.

Ryanair

Ryanair has been flying to destinations on the quarantine list and this approach has yet to change.

It previously warned that it would operate a reduced capacity in September and October though.

The airline assured that routes wouldn't close entirely, with just the frequency of flights affected.

This was in response to "uncertainty" over bookings due to the ongoing global coronavirus pandemic.

It means passengers can still travel to the likes of Hungary and Portugal despite quarantine requirements.

This includes flights to Budapest and Lisbon, which are operating from Manchester Airport this week.

Customers who no longer wish to travel will not be eligible for a refund - unless their flight is cancelled.

Ryanair however recently dropped its change fee so that it now covers bookings originally in September.

British Airways

A BA 747 is in distress over North Wales
BA is keeping its schedule 'under review'

British Airways has made no changes to its flight schedule despite the latest FCO advice.

The airline however is said to be keeping its operations under "constant review" though.

A spokesperson suggested to the Express that some flights may still be cancelled.

They said: "If a customer's flight is cancelled they are entitled to a voucher or a full refund.

BA's 'Booking with Confidence' policy now covers those due to travel up to the end of September.

This allows them to book a trip now knowing that they can change the date or destination.

The rebooked journey however is only valid for travel until April 2022, the airline explained.

The spokesperson added: "This means that if a customer wants to change their booking they can.

"[Whether that's a] re-booking or taking a voucher for future travel."

TUI

TUI has cancelled a number of its flights following recently introduced restrictions.

The temporary suspension affects routes to countries including Portugal, Greece and Spain.

The airline has cancelled all holidays to Faro in Portugal up to and including September 24.

And it's cancelled trips to the following destinations up to and including September 30:

  • Crete (Chania and Heraklion)
  • Mykonos
  • Jamaica
  • Santorini
  • Zante (Zakynthos)

TUI has also extended cancellations to areas within Spain amid continued FCO guidance.

This affects holidays booked through the travel company to the following destinations:

  • Canary Islands due to depart on or before September 30.
  • Malaga, Majorca and Alicante due to depart on or before September 30
  • Ibiza, Menorca and Reus due to depart on or before October 31.

And due to localised outbreaks recently, the airline has also cancelled holidays to the resorts of Laganas, in Zante, and Malia, in Crete, until October 31.

All customers affected by any of these cancellations will be notified of such by TUI.

They'll be offered to amend the booking or cancel and receive a full cash refund.

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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Vivo V7 Plus Review

Vivo V7 Plus Review

By Hardik Singh | Updated May 22 2019
Vivo V7 Plus Review
  • PROS
  • Good selfie camera
  • Well built
  • 18:9 aspect ratio display
  • CONS
  • Average performer
  • call reception issues

Verdict

While we personally believe that smartphones need to be a complete package, Vivo is still pursuing its motto “camera and music” quite single mindedly. The new Vivo V7+ has a good front facing camera and great audio quality, but considering its price, the company could have done a much better job with the performance and battery life.

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Vivo V7 Plus detailed review

In the beginning of the year, dual cameras were a craze and after the Samsung Galaxy S8 and LG G6 came into the picture, the edge-to-edge display became a feature to have. While we have already seen phones like the LG Q6 and the Micromax Canvas Infinity bringing that technology to the mass market categories, Vivo is putting its own twist into the mix. Meet the new Vivo V7+, which is Vivo’s first phone to feature the new 18:9 aspect ratio display in addition to the 24MP front facing camera. Being a Vivo phone, the selfie feature was a given, but the phone also has a DAC inside for audio lovers. So, to find out whether the Vivo V7+ can live up to Vivo’s motto of “camera and music”, we took the phone through its paces in our review.


Selfie camera
We don't know about you, but we are a little weary of all the selfie phones Vivo has to offer. That being said, it seems consumers are unhappy with the quality of their selfies and that they are more than likely to be the primary buying factor. Hence, the 24MP front facing camera on the Vivo V7+ seemed to be fit for the job. We took multiple selfies in various light conditions and observed that while the front facing camera lives up to its megapixel count, it is just decent. Images in natural lighting conditions or come out to be good with decent details and almost true to source colour. However, as soon as you move indoors or in dim lighting, images tend to be noisy. Now, we can do some nitpicking here about the overall quality, but the fact of the matter is that the selfies you will achieve with this camera will be usable on social media, which is often all you need from selfies. 

(L-R) - Normal mode, Beauty mode

The phone features a front facing flash as well, which Vivo says allows you to take “moonlight selfies”. However, besides blinding you and taking an overexposed image most of the times, there is nothing new here, we would recommend against using it as long as possible.

You still get softer focus as default to undermine those skin blemishes, but it does not make you look as artificial as some others. Although, if you want, you can do that too by tweaking the toggles on the beauty mode. You can also click a wide selfie with the phone and the phone uses the panorama method to take this image. These images only look good when your subjects maintain their expression through the process, otherwise you end up with a rather funny image.

Group Selfie

Rear camera
The 16MP rear camera on the other hand is better than the front camera. It is not a huge leap in terms of what we usually get in this segment, but it serves its purpose well. Images taken in ideal daylight conditions come out to be good with rich colours and you won’t find the minor lack of details unless you’re pixel peeping.Images however start getting grainy as soon as you move indoors or anywhere with improper lighting. Image details, however, remain intact and images themselves are fairly usable. It does take the camera an extra moment to capture photos at night, which is not really an issue at its price and considering the quality, in our opinion.

The other good thing about the rear camera is that the separation of the foreground and background seems slightly superior compared to its peers.

You also get tons of filters, face beauty mode for the rear camera, an ULTRA HD mode that stitches multiple image captures to produce a 64MP image, but doesn’t really look much better, and a professional mode. You also get a ‘Live’ mode similar to the one we have seen on the iPhone, which takes a 3 second video of the subject alongside the image, but otherwise does not add much value. Although, you might like the feature for making gifs.

Build and Design
All these images are presented on a large 5.99-inch IPS LCD display, which comes in a 18:9 aspect ratio. As you may have noticed from the TV adverts and the images in this review, the phone does have thinner bezels and higher screen-to-body ratio. However, even with the thinner bezels and a relatively slim design, the Vivo V7+ is not much more ergonomic than a 5.5-inch device. That being said, the display certainly plays a major part in the looks of the phone and while it does not make it intriguing, it is certainly interesting to watch video on such a display.

The screen is wrapped in an all metal unibody shell that looks and feels quite premium and is lightweight as well. Vivo has done a good job of integrating the antenna lines with the metal body, although it looks quite similar to the six string antenna lines we saw on the Oppo F3 Plus. The two physical keys on the right are tactile and have good feedback. However, the buttons as well as the fingerprint scanner are a little higher up, which means one might have to shuffle the phone in hand to reach them. So, it is most certainly a two handed device, which is well designed and features good build quality. I would also like to add here that the phone misses out on a USB Type-C port and has a slight camera bump, which does not look good.

Display and UI
As we mentioned earlier, one of the key USPs of the phone is its display and it is an extremely good one at that. Even with lower resolution, Vivo has managed to make the display look good, so once you get over the fact that you can’t view 1080p content on this display, it is not bad. Colour reproduction is decent, as is the touch response. What seems quite impressive though is how auto-brightness on this display works. It is not super fast, but it calibrates the brightness just right, somewhat like an iPhone. The display is quite bright as well, our luminance meter touched almost 700 lux on the Vivo V7+ display, which is in the flagship territory.

What is a bummer though, is Android is not yet mature enough to solve the app scalability issue with 18:9 aspect ratio. Hence, almost older apps have black pillars in full screen, which breaks the purpose of this elegant display.

As for the UI, it is business as usual and by usual we mean, iOS inspired. We have called Vivo out earlier for making an identical looking UIs to iOS, but it seems FunTouch OS won't be changing anytime soon. Vivo has tried to make the UI look as identical as possible and has even gone to the effort of hiding essential message settings in the main setting menu, instead of the app itself. The quick toggle menu is a swipe up from the bottom and if you give a closer look at the icons, they appear to be pretty much the same. 

All that said, everything remains very functional and is easy to use. Using a Vivo phone comes with a small learning curve, but once you are through that, it is as easy to use as any other device. We are not going to go into the app duplication bit and the theme manager and the V-appstore, as that is something that has been carried forward for a long time now.

On the security front, the rear mounted fingerprint scanner is fast enough and for that extra something, you also get face recognition. While the fingerprint scanner works as intended, face recognition works with the display on and does not work properly in low light situations. Vivo does mention that this method is not very secure and can be fooled. However, in our testing the device didn't unlock with a picture.

Performance
While the camera does a decent job and we have just minor complaints about the design, the performance something which we are not very happy about. Vivo has employed a relatively new Qualcomm Snapdragon 450 SoC for the task. While this chip is as powerful as the Snapdragon 625 in benchmarks, it feels slightly less ‘snappy’ compared to the latter. Using the phone for more than week, we saw slight lag in animations more often than expected, making it noteworthy. The phone, however has 4GB of RAM, and manages all kinds of tasks reasonably. It is certainly not the fastest while switching between apps, but if you are not counting time on a stop-clock, it is not a deal breaker either.

Gaming on the phone is not bad either and games like Vainglory do take advantage of the extra screen space, offering better view of the game and your characters. We did not find any major issues with gaming on the device, apart from some occasional lagging. Game load times are certainly a bit slower, but you’ll probably not care about it.

Call quality on either end is quite good. However, we did observe call drops a lot more than usual while using this phone. We also observed loss of total connectivity in underground parkings and other secluded areas, where other test phones have worked in the past. 

Lastly, we need to address the audio quality on this phone, which is indeed best in it class. Vivo has employed a (AK4376A) Hi-Fi audio chip, which makes the sound output via headphones much better than usual. The phone truly excels if you have a high fidelity audio on your phone and a good pair of headphones. 

Battery life
While performance is not the Snapdragon’s 450’s strongest suit, the chip is not very power hungry. Powering a 5.99-inch display and taking care of all the apps we threw at it, the phone survived through the day easily. Gaming and camera do burn the battery quickly, but not at a very alarming rate. In our battery test, the phone scored 6 hours and 33 minutes, is expected from a relatively smaller (by today’s standards) 3225 mAh battery. The phone also supports fast charging and Vivo bundles a fast charger with the device. Although, it is not as fast as a OnePlus or even Samsung’s A series devices.

Bottomline
The Vivo V7+ is a decent phone, but at an asking price of Rs 21,990, it is not something we would recommend. The front facing camera is good, but could have been better and the same can be said about the rear camera. We do like the large display and battery life is reasonable, but it would have been a more compelling device if it had better performance as well.

How it compares
Is it the best selfie phone in the market? Well, no. If you compare selfie-to-selfie, the older Oppo F3 Plus beats the Vivo 7+ squarely. The Vivo V7+ does take better selfie than the Asus Zenfone 4 Selfie Pro, which gives it an edge. However, we’d still recommend an Oppo F3 or F3 Plus, depending on your budget. 

As for the overall performance, the Xiaomi Mi Max 2 is a better phone than this. If you can raise your budget by around 4K, you will have the Oppo F3 Plus and the OnePlus 3T as option.

Vivo V7 Plus Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 07 Sep 2017
Variant: 64GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    5.99" (720 x 1440)
  • Camera Camera
    16 | 24 MP
  • Memory Memory
    64 GB/4 GB
  • Battery Battery
    3225 mAh

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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

School Leader: B1G Football On Hold Until Questions Answered
1-MIN READ

School Leader: B1G Football On Hold Until Questions Answered

FILE - In this Aug. 31, 2019, file photo, the Big Ten logo is displayed on the field before an NCAA college football game between Iowa and Miami of Ohio in Iowa City, Iowa. Big Ten presidents voted 11-3 to postpone the football season until spring, bringing some clarity to a key question raised in a lawsuit brought by a group of Nebraska football players. The vote breakdown was revealed Monday, Aug. 31, 2020, in the Big Ten's court filing in response to the lawsuit. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 31, 2019, file photo, the Big Ten logo is displayed on the field before an NCAA college football game between Iowa and Miami of Ohio in Iowa City, Iowa. Big Ten presidents voted 11-3 to postpone the football season until spring, bringing some clarity to a key question raised in a lawsuit brought by a group of Nebraska football players. The vote breakdown was revealed Monday, Aug. 31, 2020, in the Big Ten's court filing in response to the lawsuit. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)

The University of Wisconsin chancellor said Tuesday that Big Ten football will remain on hold until there are answers to questions about COVID-19 testing and tracing, along with possible long-term heart issues related to the coronavirus.

  • Last Updated: September 16, 2020, 12:21 AM IST

The University of Wisconsin chancellor said Tuesday that Big Ten football will remain on hold until there are answers to questions about COVID-19 testing and tracing, along with possible long-term heart issues related to the coronavirus.

Chancellor Rebecca Blank said once the Big Ten university leaders have their concerns addressed we will try to plan a delayed season.

A month after postpoing games, conference leaders are considering playing a fall season after all. There were weekend meetings on a plan to begin play as soon as mid-October.

Blank, appearing at a congressional hearing on compensation for college athletes, was asked by Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) about the Big Tens decision last month and whether the conference might reverse course.

There were several main reasons for that, Blank said. One was that we were uncertain we could do the level of testing and contact tracing that we needed to keep athletes safe. Secondly, there was this growing evidence about heart-related myocarditis and that evidence was uncertain and it wasnt clear what it means and we wanted to know more. There were a few other minor reasons.”

She would not predict which way a vote to return to play would go.

Decisions within the Big Ten are largely majority based decisions, but Ill be honest, we almost always decide everything by consensus. We very rarely take votes, Blank said.

A court filing earlier this month disclosed that Big Ten presidents and chancellors voted 11-3 in favor of postponing all fall sports. Iowa, Nebraska and Ohio State voted against the move.

When the next decision comes from the Big Ten was unclear, though KETV in Omaha posted video Tuesday of University of Nebraska President Ted Carter saying, Were getting ready to announce the Huskers and Big Ten football tonight,” before he spoke at an unrelated news conference.

Carter later told KLKN in Lincoln that statement was taken out of context.

When there is any news to share or confirm regarding any Big Ten board decision, it will be announced by the Big Ten, University of Nebraska spokeswoman Deb Fiddelke said.

___

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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Top cop who conned innocent families becomes first female police officer to be jailed in Victoria  | Daily Mail Online
 
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Top cop who conned innocent families out of thousands of dollars by renting out empty properties that didn't belong to her becomes the first female police officer to be jailed in Victoria

  • Rosa Catherine Rossi used her role to steal six  empty homes and rent them out
  • Was sentenced to four-and-a-half years behind bars over scam on Wednesday
  • Former police sergeant, 58,  is the first Victorian female cop to be jailed

A disgraced police officer who conned innocent victims to build a fraudulent investment empire has become the first Victorian female cop to be jailed. 

Former police sergeant Rosa Catherine Rossi, 58, was sentenced to four-and-a-half years behind bars with a non-parole period of two years and four months in Victoria's Country Court.

Wearing a headscarf and face mask in an unsuccessful attempt to disguise herself, Rossi was surrounded by a media scrum as she arrived for sentencing in Melbourne on Wednesday.  

Rossi used her position of authority to steal six vacant homes between April 2016 to June 2017 by claiming 'squatters' rights'.

Rosa Catherine Rossi (pictured) arrives at County Court of Victoria on Wednesday, where she was sentenced to four-and-a-half years jail

Rosa Catherine Rossi (pictured) arrives at County Court of Victoria on Wednesday, where she was sentenced to four-and-a-half years jail

She then changed the locks of the properties and rented the homes out to pocket the cash. 

The elaborate scam began with three small Willaura homes in western Victoria worth $50,000 and $108,500 before it expanded to Melbourne properties worth up to $1million in Malvern, Chadstone and Brooklyn.

She used the police database to research at least one property owner's details.

On one occasion she went to a suburban Melbourne council office in police uniform to demand an owner's number.

Rosa Catherine Rossi (pictured as a police sergeant) used her position of authority to steal empty properties, change the locks and rent them out to tenants to make cash

Rosa Catherine Rossi (pictured as a police sergeant) used her position of authority to steal empty properties, change the locks and rent them out to tenants to make cash

She also created false documents as part of deception to change the addresses with water and power companies.

When a concerned neighbour called police after spotting Rossi at one Willaura home, she said she was an officer, had keys and was buying the property.  

Investigators later discovered the home was owned by a man in South Africa, who was not selling the property.

Rossi eventually resigned from Victoria Police and pleaded guilty to nine charges including of obtaining property by deception, perjury, and unauthorised access to police information following an anti-corruption investigation.

She rose through the ranks of Victoria Police after joining in 1994 and spent 24 years in the force before her resignation in 2018.

The former police sergeant (pictured) will spend at least two years and four months in jail

The former police sergeant (pictured) will spend at least two years and four months in jail

One of her victims was a disability pensioner, who told the court he felt 'like a fool'. 

'It didn't seem right to me that a police officer would be up to anything fraudulent,' the man told the court in a statement.

'I was gutted. I felt like a fool.

'I still don't know why she did this.'

Anther victim Karen Lang had her home taken over by Rossi while she was living in Melbourne with her partner.

When she returned to the Willaura property, the home had been cleaned out and the locks had been changed.

Rosa Catherine Rossi was facing up to 10 years behind bars when she arrived for sentencing

 Rosa Catherine Rossi was facing up to 10 years behind bars when she arrived for sentencing

'I think she has no shame,' Ms Lang told A Current Affair in June. 

'For a police officer to do something like that to a family, is pretty appalling. We've got special needs children too and she stole from special needs children.'

Another victim 'couldn't believe' the lengths the former cop went to take over his almost $1-million property in Malvern.

'That was probably the creepiest part of it,' Kev told the program.

Rossi was facing up to 10 years behind bars. 

Judge Martine Marich had stern words for Rossi during Wednesday's sentencing.

'Your conduct was brazen and callous to the rights of the true owners,' the judge told the court.

One of six vacant homes targeted by Rossi to build her fraudulent investment empire

One of six vacant homes targeted by Rossi to build her fraudulent investment empire

Top cop who conned innocent families becomes first female police officer to be jailed in Victoria 

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Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

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

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

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

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

माधुरी दीक्षित (Madhuri Dixit) का डांस वीडियो वायरल

नई दिल्ली:

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

यह भी पढ़ें

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

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

Listen to the latest songs, only on JioSaavn.com

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

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

अन्य खबरें
 

Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Carry Minati Will Be Seen In Bigg Boss 14 Salman Khan Show Contestant List - कैरी मिनाती Bigg Boss 14 में आ सकते हैं नजर, रिपोर्ट में हुआ खुलासा

कैरी मिनाती Bigg Boss 14 में आ सकते हैं नजर, रिपोर्ट में हुआ खुलासा

मीडिया रिपोर्ट्स के मुताबिक मशहूर यूट्यूबर कैरी मिनाती (Carry Minati) 'बिग बॉस (Bigg Boss 14)' में नजर आ सकते हैं.

कैरी मिनाती Bigg Boss 14 में आ सकते हैं नजर, रिपोर्ट में हुआ खुलासा

कैरी मिनाती (Carry Minati) 'बिग बॉस 14' में आ सकते हैं नजर

खास बातें

  • कैरी मिनाती 'बिग बॉस 14' में आएंगे नजर
  • मीडिया रिपोर्ट्स में हुआ खुलासा
  • 3 अक्टूबर से शुरू होगा बिग बॉस का 13वां सीजन
नई दिल्ली:

टेलीविजन का सबसे पॉपुलर रियलिटी शो 'बिग बॉस (Bigg Boss 14)' का 14वां सीजन जल्द ही शुरू होने वाला है. हाल ही में 'बिग बॉस 14' का नया प्रोमो वीडियो भी रिलीज हुआ था, जिसमें सलमान खान (Salman Khan) जंजीरों में जकड़े नजर आ रहे थे. वीडियो को शेयर करते हुए कलर्स टीवी ने बताया था कि बिग बॉस 14 का ग्रैंड प्रीमियर 3 अक्टूबर को होगा. शो के कंटेस्टेंट को लेकर फैन्स में काफी एक्साइटमेंट है. कुछ सेलेब्स के नाम का तो खुलासा भी हो गया है, जो बिग बॉस 14 का हिस्सा रहेंगे. वहीं, हाल ही में यह खुलासा हुआ है कि मशहूर यूट्यूबर कैरी मिना (Carry Minati) भी सलमान खान के शो का हिस्सा बन सकते हैं.

यह भी पढ़ें

दरअसल, मीडिया रिपोर्ट्स के मुताबिक कैरी मिनाती (Carry Minati) भी बिग बॉस (Bigg Boss 14) के घर में रहेंगे. जब से यह खबर सामने आई है, तभी से कैरी ट्विटर पर ट्रेंड कर रहे हैं. लोग इस खबर पर अपनी प्रतिक्रिया दे रहे हैं. मीडिया रिपोर्ट्स के मुताबिक कैरी मिनाती अभी क्वारंटीन हैं और 14 दिन बाद रियलिटी शो में शामिल होंगे. बिग बॉस घर में जाने वाले सभी 14 कंटेस्टेंट्स का मेडिकल टेस्ट होगा और शूटिंग से पहले सब लोग क्वारंटीन रहेंगे. 

हालांकि, कैरी मिनाती के नाम को लेकर अभी तक आधिकारिक तौर पर कोई बयान नहीं दिया गया है. बता दें, बिग बॉस के 14वें सीजन को लेकर नैना सिंह, जैस्मीन भसीन (Jasmine Bhasin), निशांत संह मल्कानी (Nishant Singh Malkani), शगुन पांडे (Shagun Pandey), पवित्रा पुनिया, कुमार जानू, सारा गुरपाल के नाम का खुलासा हो चुका है.

Listen to the latest songs, only on JioSaavn.com

अन्य खबरें
 

Nass Valley Gateway Ltd Enters Strategic Partnership With New Hope Labs to Heighten Scalability and Propel Growth

Sandalwood Drugs Case: Diganth, Aindrita Ray Questioned In Karnataka By Bengaluru Police

Kannada Movie Stars Diganth, Aindrita Ray Questioned In Drugs Scandal

Diganth and Aindrita Ray are not the first movie stars in Karnataka to be linked with what the police believe to be an illegal drug racket that involved the procurement of illegal drugs and their use at parties.

Kannada Movie Stars Diganth, Aindrita Ray Questioned In Drugs Scandal

Kannada actors Diganth and Aindrita Ray were questioned at the CCB HQ in Bengaluru.

Bengaluru:

With the drugs scandal involving prominent names in the Kannada film industry only getting bigger, it was the turn of actor couple Diganth and Aindrita Ray to find themselves being probed by the Bengaluru police on Wednesday.

The two actors had been summoned by the investigating team to appear at the headquarters of the Central Crime Branch or CCB in the morning and they arrived soon after 11 am to be quickly engulfed by jostling camera teams.

Diganth and Aindrita are not the first movie stars in Karnataka to be linked with what the police believe to be an illegal drug racket that involved the procurement of illegal drugs and their use at parties.

These parties, the police have said, were attended by members of the Kannada film industry among others.

Among those arrested in the case so far are a foreign national believed to have supplied drugs, Loum Pepper Samba, and a party organiser, Viren Khanna.

Actor Ragini Dwivedi was among the first to be arrested - suspected to be involved in supply of drugs - and is in judicial custody.

Another actor, Sanjjanaa Galrani, also thought to be involved in the parties, was arrested last week and is in police custody.

On Tuesday, a property belonging to the family of Aditya Alva, the son of late Karnataka politician Jeevaraj Alva, was searched by the police who believe parties were held there - and that drugs were available at those parties. Aditya Alva has not yet been arrested and his whereabouts are unknown.

The police said they had also arrested another suspected drug dealer in the case, Benald Udenna, who they say supplied drugs to the parties.

Additional Commissioner of Police, Sandeep Patil, said Aindrita and Diganth were questioned and will be called again for further inquiry at a later date.

The state government says it inherited the drug problem.

Dr Ashwath Narayan, Deputy Chief Minister, said, "When Kumaraswamy was there, the drug menace was not there? When Siddaramaiah was there, the drug menace was not there? In all the previous governments, this issue was there, but they were not able to address it though it was a very important issue."

H K Patil, Congress leader told NDTV, "Unfortunately only a few faces are being shown. The real people who are behind this drug trafficking are still not exposed. I would like the real culprits to come up. Whoever it is, that party, this party, this minister, that minister - all should be exposed."

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Huawei P20 Lite 64GB Review

Huawei P20 Lite 64GB Review

By Subhrojit Mallick | Updated May 22 2019
Huawei P20 Lite 64GB Review
DIGIT RATING
69 /100
  • design

    76

  • performance

    66

  • value for money

    51

  • features

    78

  • PROS
  • Bright Display
  • Well-tuned camera
  • CONS
  • Aged hardware
  • Poor battery

Verdict

The Huawei P20 Lite is a sign of good things to come from Huawei. The company ignored the Indian market for the past few years, but returned with a bang with its two camera-centric offerings. It’s a phone meant for taking good photos, but when it comes to performance, it lags behind almost everyone in the mid-range segment. 

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Huawei P20 Lite 64GB detailed review

Huawei made a comeback last month to the Indian smartphone market with the flagship Huawei P20 Pro with three cameras at the back, and the toned-down, but similar-looking P20 Lite. While the P20 Pro set a benchmark for the smartphone camera, the Huawei P20 Lite doesn’t have an USP like that. Heck, it doesn’t even have the Leica branding at the back. What it does have is the notch cutout from part of the display and a dual camera setup at the back. It’s no doubt the P20 Pro is the flagship here, but can the P20 Lite set a precedent in the mid-range market similarly? We find out.


Design

Rarely do mid-range phones try to look good without compromising on the feature set. The Huawei P20 Lite is not an original design by any means, but it does look elegant for the price it is offered. Hold the phone and you’ll know where the inspiration came from. The P20 Lite rocks a display notch and is not the first Android device to do so. Now, a lot of controversy has happened over the notch, but truth be told, the notch serves a purpose. The demand for full-screen phones are at an all time high and the notch allows phone makers to utilise more free space on the body for the screen, than ever before. The iPhone X of course has more use for the notch. It needs the TruDepth camera to be centrally positioned to facilitate Face ID, but the Huawei P20 Lite has no such sensors housed in the notch. Instead, the notch houses the front camera, the ambient sensor and the microphone. The notch is also much smaller than the iPhone X. Amidst phones with univisium display with the more common taller form factor, the P20 Lite is easily distinguishable thanks to the notch and its compact size. But with more ‘notched’ phones incoming this year, that advantage may soon be gone.

Now, the purpose of the notch is to utilise the free space on the top and the bottom of the body. But while the Huawei P20 Lite shave off inches from the top, the bottom chin has a lot of free space where the Huawei moniker is placed. It sort of defeats the purpose of the notch and one could question Huawei’s design choice for simply following a trend more than anything else.

The notch, however, isn’t omnipresent. Huawei gives an option to hide it by simulating a black patch over it. The area still houses the notification badges and the network icons, but the content doesn’t take up the extra space. Note that by ‘removing’ the notch, you will be giving up roughly 0.2-inches of screen real estate.

But enough about the notch. Turn the phone around and you will be greeted by a vertically aligned dual camera setup placed raised above the glass body. Huawei’s colour choices are interesting. The phone is available in a deep midnight black which we received for the review. It’s akin to the iPhone 7’s Piano Black variant but with a slightly glossy glass body. There’s also a blue and pink colour variant along with a new twilight variant that can change colours based on the angle you’re looking at. Unfortunately, the twilight variant is not available in India. Hopefully, Huawei will introduce it soon.

As mentioned above, the phone does have a glass body, which requires it to be handled very carefully. Once again, the design choice of putting a glass back is somewhat pointless. Apart from better aesthetics, glass back is used to facilitate wireless charging. The P20 Lite has no such provision. As a result, it comes off being intentionally brittle. One drop might shatter the back and take away all the beauty the phone boasts of. The frame, however is made of solid aluminium. It’s polished to give a smooth finish that adds to the elegance. The phone uses a USB-Type C port to charge which is placed at the bottom, flanked by the 3.5mm headphone jack and the external speakers on either side.  The more expensive P20 Pro houses an infrared sensor as well, but that’s missing on this one.

All said and done, the P20 Lite is one of the most compact full-screen phones out there right now. It fits a 5.84-inch display in a 5.85-inch body which makes it score high on ergonomics. It feels nice to hold and the finger can reach the other end of the display quite easily. There’s nothing to complain about Honor’s craftsmanship save for the reasons behind certain choice of materials.

Display

The panel on the Huawei P20 Lite is one of the brightest we have seen at the sub-20k price range. It’s an IPS LCD panel of full HD+ resolution and stretches to 5.84-inches diagonally. The colours are also quite vibrant and at medium brightness, it tends to pop out when indoors. Outside under the sun though, the colours seem a little faded, but thanks to the higher max brightness, texts are legible enough.

Huawei does offer a lot of options to tweak the display though. You can cycle between a cooler and warmer colour temperature, but you’re better off sticking to the default option. There’s a blue-light filter, which has become more or less standard across smartphone. What’s interesting is that you can switch between 720p and 1080p resolution. Dialling down the resolution helps save battery. There are also options to tweak the text size and font as well as the above-mentioned option of hiding the notch. However, even after hiding the notch, you can still make out its presence as the panel is LCD which cannot selectively turn off pixels to achieve full black.

Furthermore, not all apps support the notch currently. While common apps like Facebook, YouTube and WhatsApp supports it, games like PubG and Asphalt haven’t been optimised for the cutout in the middle.

Videos and photos on the display are rich and well-detailed. The sharpness is also commendable. The colour temperature by default is a little on the cooler side, but that doesn’t come in the way of enjoying content on the screen.

Performance

Now, the P20 Lite may score high on aesthetics and imaging prowess, but Huawei has held back in upgrading the performance. The P20 Lite is powered by the same HiSilicon Kirin 659 chipset that powered all of Honor’s mid-range devices last year, including the Honor 9i, the Honor 7X and more recently, the Honor 9 Lite. That is coupled with 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage. The Kirin 659 was a challenger to the Snapdragon 625 last year, and for the most part, it did give a good competition to one of Qualcomm’s most popular chipsets. However, with current mid-range devices being powered by the more powerful Snapdragon 630 and the Snapdragon 636, the Kirin 659-powered Huawei P20 Lite lags far behind.

The same is evident in benchmark results. The P20 Lite registers an AnTuTu 7.0 score of 88282 which is way lesser than the Redmi Note 5 Pro's score of 112652. It proves that despite being priced higher, it cannot match up to the performance of more affordable devices. The CPU performance of the phone is also lesser than the current industry average, although the phone can hit a max clock speed of 2.36GHz which is higher than any other mid-range chipsets currently. However, clocking that high a frequency will require a lot of computational load for a long duration. Also, at full power, the CPU will drain the battery a lot faster. It’s not the highest frequency that matters when it comes to mobile chipsets, but how efficiently can the CPU allocate the resources and get the job done without stuttering and stumbling.

Speaking of which, the real-world performance of the phone was more or less satisfactory. The EMUI UI on top of Android 8.0 tends to put a lot of load on the processor which does tend to bog down the phone sometimes. Huawei claims to use machine learning to understand the user’s usage habits and tunes the phone accordingly. Frankly, I didn’t see a difference after a week-long use of the phone. There are occasional lags and stutters in the UI and apps take a wee bit longer to launch. Once running, there was no slowdowns or stutters though. Gaming is also quite satisfactory. PubG mobile runs on medium settings and I didn’t encounter any frame drops while playing.

The EMUI interface is what takes away from the elegance of the phone. It’s a premium phone if you don’t turn on the screen. Once you do, it feels like one of those amateurish interfaces seen in budget Chinese phones. The asymmetrical icons, the choppy animation and a bunch of bloatware apps makes it one of the lesser appealing interfaces on a phone. Having said that, EMUI comes loaded with a lot of personalisation options. The Settings app is a long scroll packed with options ranging from security features and accessibility options. There’s a face unlock option as well which isn’t secure but works when there’s light outside. In fact, the phone was easily unlocked when someone else pointed it to my face. Otherwise, the rear-mounted fingerprint sensor is as fast as it can get.

Camera

While the performance aspect of the P20 Lite is underwhelming, it more than makes up for it in terms of imaging prowess. The P20 Lite may not rock the Leica branding like its more expensive elder sibling, but the dual cameras at the back are one of the most effective we have seen in that price range.

The P20 Lite sports a 16-megapixel sensor with f/2.2 aperture and 1.0um pixel pitch along with a 2-megapixel depth sensor. That’s the usual dual camera setup seen in mid-range phones. But Huawei does some magic behind the scenes that makes the colours come out quite vibrant and more or less accurate. The daytime imagery is more than satisfactory with the right amount of exposure and dynamic contrast. Highlights and shadows are well-balanced and comes close to what the Xiaomi Redmi Note 5 Pro can produce with the rear camera.

Closeup shots can give good details and sharpness although the algorithm tends to simulate the depth of field which makes the background blur a little inconsistent. The colours are lush and vibrant and nothing to complain about.

Low-light is where it aces, though. The P20 Lite can take good photos even there’s little light. There is some noise, but the details and sharpness are well-preserved. It’s perhaps the most well-tuned camera at the mid-range.

The only place where it falters is in the bokeh mode. The background blur in the P20 Lite isn’t as very consistent although it can produce circular bokeh, which is a mark of a professionally shot  photo.

As for selfies, the 16-megapixel shooter is good enough. It has the added beautification modes and software-based bokehs, which tends to make you look quite artificial. It will remove all blemishes and spots and make the skin look softer. It’s up to the user to decide whether to use it. In case you don’t, there’s an option to turn it off.

Battery

The P20 Lite is powered by a 3,000mAh battery that just about does the work. When used lightly, the phone will last over a day, but a little stress can drain the battery by the end of a typical work day. Using the phone over a week, I felt the battery drain is higher when taking photos and browsing the internet. Gaming is more optimised. Playing PubG for an hour drained the battery by around 30 percent, which is more impressive than some flagship-grade phones. Huawei claims to use machine learning to tune the battery to eke out more juice, which seems to be the case considering how certain tasks are less stressful for the battery while some are more. However, we can never know for sure. In the PC Mark 2.0 Battery test, the phone lasted around 6 hours, which is decent enough for its price.

Bottomline

The Huawei P20 Lite is a welcome offering at the sub-20K price point. It’s a tad overpriced, yes, but considering the design chops of the phone and the camera, the price is quite justified. Is it better than the Redmi Note 5 Pro? If you consider the value for money, then no. Otherwise, the camera is at par with Xiaomi’s offering. The P20 Lite feels like the younger sibling to the P20 Pro in every sense. They have similar designs and cameras that are class-leading in their own segment. Save for the battery life and the performance, the Huawei P20 Lite can be hailed as one of the better mid-range phones around.

Huawei P20 Lite 64GB Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price:
Release Date: 20 Mar 2018
Variant: 64GB , 128GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    5.8" (1080 x 2280)
  • Camera Camera
    16 + 2 MP | 16 MP
  • Memory Memory
    64GB/4 GB
  • Battery Battery
    3000 mAh

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Subhrojit Mallick

Eats smartphones for breakfast.

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Xolo Q600S Review

Xolo Q600S Review

By Prasid Banerjee | Updated May 22 2019
Xolo Q600S Review
DIGIT RATING
65 /100
  • design

    65

  • performance

    57

  • value for money

    63

  • features

    74

User Rating : 4.5/5 Out of 2 Reviews
  • PROS
  • Looks are good.
  • Camera is good for a phone priced below Rs 10,000
  • CONS
  • Build quality is not good.
  • UI is sluggish.
  • Battery is not the best.

Verdict

A smartphone that looks good is not necessarily a good smartphone and the Xolo Q600s is a good example of that. It is definitely one of the best looking smartphones in this range, but if only that were enough.

BUY Xolo Q600S
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Xolo Q600S detailed review

A very good thing about smartphones today is that manufacturers have started paying attention to the looks, build and design even in the lower price segments. If only that was enough to sell a smartphone though. Lava chairman and MD, Hari Om Rai, has often asserted that his two brands, Lava and Xolo, are not only competing against others, but also each other. A few days ago, I reviewed the Lava Iris X1, which knocks it out of the park in the looks department, but fails in most others. Now, I have the Xolo Q600s, which is the same price as the Iris X1 and is again, a good looking phone that pales when you put it to the test. Here’s how.


Build and Design

 

The Iris X1 looked almost exactly like Apple’s design for the iPhone. The Xolo Q600s is a smaller, plastic version of the Xiaomi Mi3, built by the ‘Apple of China’. It’s got the sharp corners and rounded edges, which give the Mi3 its impressive looks. It’s missing the metallic finish of the Mi3 though, among other things. Still, the Xolo Q600s is one good looking smartphone and much better than many others in the segment, with the exception perhaps of the Iris X1 and Asus Zenfone 5. (Click the photos to enlarge)

 

Good looks don’t mean a good phone though and here’s why. The Q600s has a somewhat glossy back cover, which isn’t the best against falls and bumps. You may end up bruising it quite easily. Moreover, if you look around the body, you’ll see gaps in the places where the back cover attaches to the rest of the device. This points towards lack lustre work.

So, overall, while the Xolo Q600s, does look good, it doesn’t do quite as well build wise. In fact, the Iris X1 has better build quality than this, even though I wasn’t very impressed with that one either.

Display and UI

The display on this phone is a 4.5-inch 720p IPS LCD version, which is not very bad. It is in fact one of the better things about this phone. Here again, the screen is a fingerprint magnet, which forces me to penalise it. Moreover, it isn’t the brightest screen that you will find and coupled with your fingerprints, makes for bad sunlight visibility. Still, it is not the worst display in the under 10k price segment.

  

I’m actually quite happy with the choice of UI though. Xolo chose to stay away from customisations and keep a stock UI for the Android KitKat 4.4.2 OS on this. There’s not much that Xolo has done, except the coloured SIM (SIM 1 and SIM 2) card symbols on the top.

 

Performance

From all of the above you would have gathered that I was quite disappointed with this phone. But nothing disappointed me more than its performance. The Q600s has a 1.2 GHz Broadcom BCM23550 quad core processor, with a Broadcom Videocore IV GPU for graphics. This is the same as the Iris X1, but not only did the Iris X1 perform better, but so did other phones in this range.

I tried all kinds of games on this one, from the simple Subway Surfer and Temple Run to high-end ones like Dead Trigger 2. It doesn’t do well, practically or in synthetic benchmarks. While Antutu X and others may give you a ‘good’ rating, there are plenty of other phones in this segment that have way higher rankings than the Q600s. While Subway Surfer and other less resource intensive games perform all right on the phone, this is not one for high-end gaming. Then again, you do not expect that out of a device in this range either.

One of the benefits of having a stock UI is that it doesn’t lag easily. The UI on this though is sluggish and slow, which is a let down for a phone that looks this good. The only saving grace was the battery life, which is not all that bad. Still, it is not the best and you could get better options from brands like Intex, Sony, Asus, HTC and even Lava (with the Iris X1).

Camera

The camera on this smartphone is a 5 MP rear shooter, while the front selfie camera has a VGA sensor. The rear camera performs quite well for one in this range. The pictures taken were vivid, with minimal noise, which is good. The camera UI is also stock, with a few settings options that can be accessed from the top right. While the camera on its sister brand’s competitor is slightly better, the Q600s definitely has a better camera than the Moto E and some other smartphones in this range. Under proper lighting conditions, the camera actually took some pretty decent pictures. (Click the photos to enlarge)

 

Conclusion

Overall, the Xolo Q600s is not a phone that I would recommend. If you want a phone in this range then the Asus Zenfone 5 is a much better choice. If you don’t want to spend the couple of thousand for that, then the Moto E is a better choice. You could also consider the Karbonn Titanium S1 Plus, which gives a more fluid performance, albeit with lower battery life.

In addition, the 4GB internal storage will haunt you if you download a lot of apps onto your phone and a micro-SD card is a must.

Xolo Q600S Key Specs, Price and Launch Date

Price: ₹7499
Release Date: 08 Jun 2014
Variant: 4GB
Market Status: Launched

Key Specs

  • Screen Size Screen Size
    4.5" (540 x 960)
  • Camera Camera
    5 | 0.3 MP
  • Memory Memory
    4 GB/1 GB
  • Battery Battery
    2000 mAh

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Prasid Banerjee

Trying to explain technology to my parents. Failing miserably.

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Xolo Q600S

Buy now on flipkart 3999

Xolo Q600S

Buy now on flipkart 3999

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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