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19
Aug

2,732×2,048 ‘iPad Pro’ With Model Identifier ‘iPad6,8’ Shows Up in Analytics


Mobile analytics firm AppSee reports that an iPad with model identifier “iPad6,8” and a resolution of 2,732×2,048 pixels — likely the 12.9-inch “iPad Pro” — has appeared within its analytics logs. The firm is also seeing the “iPhone8,1” and “iPhone8,2” in its logs, as others have, which are likely the model identifiers for the so-called “iPhone 6s” and “iPhone 6s Plus.”

ipad_pro_2732
A few months ago, Taiwanese iOS developer Hiraku Wang shared iOS 9 beta code that suggested the 12.93-inch “iPad Pro” could have a 2,732×2,048 pixels resolution at 264 PPI based on Apple’s @2x high-resolution modifier. Research firm DisplaySearch also reported in January that Apple had a tablet display with a resolution of 2,732×2,048 pixels and 265 PPI under development.

With new devices beginning to show up in analytics, it is likely that Apple is nearing the final stages of testing new iPhone and iPad models that are expected to be announced in the near future. Apple is rumored to hold a media event on September 9 to unveil the “iPhone 6s” and “iPhone 6s Plus,” but it remains unclear if the “iPad Pro” will also be announced or held back until later in 2015 or early 2016.

KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo issued a note to investors today that claims the “iPad Pro” will have a Force Touch-enabled stylus and enter mass production in September or October. Kuo expects that Force Touch will become a standard feature on all Apple products, similar to how Siri, Touch ID, Retina displays and other features were released on one device before expanding to others.


19
Aug

iPhone 6s Materials Analysis Confirms Stronger, Less Bendable Aluminum Alloy


Back in April, we first heard rumors about Apple planning to use 7000 Series aluminum alloys for the upcoming “iPhone 6s,” taking advantage of some of the expertise gained in using the material for the Apple Watch Sport to make for a stronger iPhone body compared to the 6000 Series aluminum used on the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus. That device received significant “Bendgate” attention after some early users found the device bending slightly under pressure in their pockets.

Increasingly reliable reports of 7000 Series aluminum for the iPhone 6s followed by hands-on impressions of a “stronger body” and ultimately some measurements showing thickening of the shell’s weak points have all pointed toward Apple making some changes to improve the strength and durability of the next iPhone.

MacRumors has recently received data on the elemental composition of the iPhone 6s shell, revealing that the aluminum alloy being used by Apple does indeed include roughly 5 percent zinc, which is in line with many 7000 Series alloys and not found in the iPhone 6 shell. A just-published video from Unbox Therapy is showing similar results, as well as test results showing a significantly stronger body more resistant to bending.

iphone_6s_shell_samplesSample points on milled surface of iPhone 6s rear shell
Interestingly, the data we received showed high iron levels of around 8 percent on average, although the iron composition varies significantly among test samples. Unbox Therapy, however, is not seeing particularly high levels of iron in its sample.


We’ve been told that some iron can be introduced into the shell during the milling process, which can account for some of the variability in measurements shared with MacRumors. The small quantities of iron at levels seen by Unbox Therapy can be used to enhance durability and make the material easier to work with during the casting process.

iphone_6s_shell_compositionElemental composition at each sample point
As shown in electron microscope images shared with MacRumors, the iPhone 6s shell is covered with a roughly 10-micron thick anodized aluminum oxide layer to help protect against corrosion. The anodization layer also enables Apple to introduce dyes for various color options.

iphone_6s_anodizeScanning electron microscope image showing 10-micron anodization with lighter aluminum color above. Chipped particle can also be seen.
Unbox Therapy also subjected the iPhone 6 and 6s shells to bending tests, finding that while the iPhone 6 shell began experiencing significant bending at roughly 30 pounds of pressure, while the the iPhone 6s shell withstood at least twice as much pressure before bending.

Apple is expected to unveil the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus at a media event on September 9. If tradition holds, the company would begin taking pre-orders a few days later and officially launch the new phone on Friday, September 18. The iPhone 6s should appear largely identical to the iPhone 6 but contain a number of hardware upgrades including Force Touch support, a new A9 chip with 2 GB of RAM, camera improvements, and more. A new rose gold or pink color option has also been rumored.


19
Aug

ICYMI: Thought-controlled exoskeleton, textingbrella & more


ICYMI: Thought-Controlled Exoskeleton, Textingbrella and More

Today on In Case You Missed It: Thought-controlled exoskeletons are walking around a lab in Korea and we remain impressed. An advertisement for a redesigned handle on an umbrella is making us all shout #firstworldproblems. And this may have happened back during MakerFaire, but it’s news to us: A 15-year-old beat out everyone else at a “Game of Drones” competition that pits drones against one another, Fight Club style.

We also loved this video of two ‘freerunners’ who basically use parkour and camera angles to commit all sorts of entertaining visual trickery.

If you come across any interesting videos, we’d love to see them. Just tweet us with the #ICYMI hashtag @engadget or @mskerryd.

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Tags: cyborg, drone, dronecompetition, drones, engadgetdailyshow, engadgetvideo, exoskeleton, freerunning, GameofDrones, icymi, InCaseYouMissedIt, KoreaUniversity, Olleh, phonebrella, textingumbrella, TheOffice, umbrella

19
Aug

Hack puts custom faces on your Apple Watch


A custom face on an Apple Watch

You don’t have to wait for a possible software update to put custom faces on your Apple Watch… if you’re willing to throw caution to the wind, anyway. Developer Hamza Sood has written code that lets you load the watch face you want, such as a silly animation with variable colors. It’s crude (you’re modifying a hard-coded list of supported faces), and will most definitely void your warranty while you’re using it. However, this might scratch the personalization itch if Watch OS 2’s Photo face doesn’t go far enough.

Filed under:
Wearables, Mobile

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Via:
SlashGear

Source:
Hamza Sood (Twitter), GitHub

Tags: applewatch, diy, hamzasood, homebrew, mobilepostcross, smartwatch, video, watch, wearable

19
Aug

UK research finds vaping is 95 percent safer than smoking


California Department of Public Health Calls E-Cigarettes A Health Threat And Calls For Regulation

Vaping just took a huge step forward in its quest for public acceptance. A report published today by Public Health England (PHE), an agency sponsored by the UK’s Department for Health, has concluded that e-cigarettes are 95 percent less harmful than traditional smokes. In addition, it’s recognised their potential to help people quit smoking altogether, and says it looks forward to the day when the NHS can prescribe medicinally regulated devices. “E-cigarettes could be a game changer in public health, in particular by reducing the enormous health inequalities caused by smoking,” Professor Ann McNeill from King’s College London, and one of the review’s independent authors said.

The problem, the research found, is that close to half of the UK population (44.8 percent) isn’t aware that vaping is less harmful than tobacco. In fact, a growing number of people think e-cigarettes are just as dangerous, if not more so than the regular kind — 22.1 percent hold this view in 2015, up from 8.1 percent in 2013. PHE hasn’t suggested that vaping is a healthy pursuit — it’s likely not risk free — but it believes public perception could be stopping smokers from trying e-cigarettes and, eventually, dropping the habit entirely. “Local stop smoking services should look to support e-cigarette users in their journey to quitting completely,” Professor Kevin Fenton, Director of Health and Wellbeing at PHE said.

Legislation due in October will ban under-18s from buying e-cigarettes in the UK, in part because their long-term health effects are still unknown. Today’s report isn’t an all-clear for lifelong vaping, but it could help the technology slowly shake its troubled image.

[Image Credit: Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images]

Filed under:
Misc

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Source:
Public Health England

Tags: departmentforhealth, ecigarette, ECigarettes, publichealthengland, vape, vapers, vaping

19
Aug

Knock twice for friendship with this app


Say you’ve just met someone at a party. It turns out you guys go to the same school, hang out at the same coffee shops and are both really into John Steinbeck. Now it’s time for you to part ways and you want to keep in touch, but it seems a little forward to just ask for the person’s phone number since you barely know each other. But if both of you have a new app called Knock Knock, you could extend him or her your contact info by just knocking twice on your phone. Not only that, but you can select what kind of contact info you want to share — maybe you’re only comfortable sharing your Twitter and Instagram info and not your phone number (at least at the beginning of your budding relationship, anyway).

Here’s how it works, assuming you both already have the app. To initiate contact, you knock twice on your phone. This will bring up the Knock Knock app, even when the screen is off and the phone is locked. That’s because the knocking not only utilizes your phone’s touchscreen, it also uses your phone’s accelerometer and gyroscope. On the app, you’ll see only the people who have Knock Knock installed who are within Bluetooth range (it uses beacon technology to create a Bluetooth mesh network). Tap that person and they will get a knock notification on their phone. From there, they can either choose to connect with you or not, and you can also select just what information about yourself you want to share.

Once that other person knocks back, they’ll be automatically connected to you on all the relevant social channels — Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and so forth — as long as they agree to it. If you’d rather not share anything but you still want to chat, you can just chat through the app itself. The app will instantly note when and where you met, so that it’s easier to remember who that person is on your contacts list.

Knock Knock was created in part by Ankur Jain, who’s also the founder of Humin, a contact management platform that hooks into your phone’s address book. He says the app was created because there’s still a lot of awkwardness around meeting people for the first time. “There’s the awkwardness of asking someone for their number when they don’t really want to give it to you, or forgetting someone’s name a mere 10 minutes after you’ve met,” he says. Knock Knock, however, aims to remove that friction.

“The easiest way to think about it is this. In a real life situation, say you’re at a conference. If you wave at someone, and they wave back, it’s an invitation to talk and chat,” he says. “At the end of that, you can leave and there’s no commitment. Or you can choose how you want to stay in touch if you want to take it further.”

Aside from connecting one-on-one, you can also create Knock Knock groups for a group chat — you can just knock the phone to instantly join the group — and from there, group members can connect individually if they want. This, Jain says, is great for finding friends at crowded events or meeting up with mutual buddies. Perhaps even a bit of matchmaking, if that’s something you’re into. Even in a group chat situation though, you’re free to choose just what information about yourself you want to share with the group.

You also don’t need to be in the same room to respond to a Knock. Say you weren’t paying attention to your phone at the party, and went home, where you suddenly see that guy you talked to at the party had sent a Knock to you to stay in touch. You can then respond (or not) to that notification if you like. “It’s super low commitment,” says Jain, likening it to the casualness of Snapchat but applied to messaging like WhatsApp.

It’s worth noting here that by default, only your first name can be seen on that Bluetooth mesh network. If you prefer, you can also opt for other privacy settings like to not be noticed by strangers, only sharing your initials or not displaying a photo. Unlike apps like Highlight that simply display who you are if you’re in a nearby location, Jain says, Knock Knock lets you control how much you’re willing to share.

So what happens if the other person doesn’t have Knock Knock but you still want to tell that person what your username is on the various social networks? Well, you can still use the app to send that info to them, but you’ll need their phone number — it simply sends it to them in a text message.

“We’re launching this mostly for college students,” Jain says. “They’re frequently in scenarios where they’re meeting new people.” Also, now that there’s a litany of ways to keep in touch with one another — Snapchat, Instagram, Facebook and Twitter just to name a few — it’s a little weird to just list them all to your newfound buddy and hope they follow you back. It’s far easier to just give them a list and have them decide to follow you or not, says Jain.

Thanks to Jain’s connections, the team was able to put together a promo video for the app starring Richard Branson, will.i.am and Sophia Bush (seen above). If that’s enough to persuade you, you can go ahead and download the app — it’s available for both Android and iOS — starting today.

Filed under:
Software

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Source:
Knock Knock

Tags: app, knockknock

19
Aug

Virgin Media’s new WiFi network uses customer routers


Virgin Media customers already have access to several free WiFi networks, but come September, they’ll have even more options. On top of the company’s own WiFi hotspots on the London Underground, and its agreement with The Cloud that mobile subscribers benefit from, Virgin Media’s turning its own broadband customers into WiFi providers. In the same way that BT uses its customers’ routers to bulk out its public WiFi network, Virgin will open up its Super Hub routers to share connectivity. Using an as-yet unreleased app, Virgin broadband and mobile customers will be seamlessly connected to this new WiFi network whenever a hotspot is in range.

As Virgin explains, Super Hub users needn’t be worried about poor personal service, since strangers’ WiFi traffic will be piped through a completely separate connection. However, even with this assurance your bandwidth won’t suffer, you can still opt out of being a part of the network if you choose. But, by doing that, you give up the right to use the new WiFi network yourself, so it’s a case of share and share alike.

[Image credit: afagen / Flickr]

Filed under:
Wireless, Internet

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Via:
Pocket-lint

Source:
Virgin Media

Tags: virgin, virginmedia, virginmediawifi

19
Aug

Microsoft studio wants you to choose and shape its next game


Press Play

Press Play, the Danish developer behind Max: The Curse of Brotherhood and Kalimba is opening up its doors to seek advice on its next game. The Microsoft-owned studio is entering what it calls “open development.” For now that means the public can choose which of its game concepts gets greenlit, but it’ll soon mean a lot more.

There are three ideas being batted around the Press Play office: Dwarka, Karoo, and Knoxville. Dwarka is an “action-packed first-person co-op game,” Karoo is a “physics-based multiplayer construction game.” and Knoxville a “third-person multiplayer action-survival game.” Here are the teaser trailers for all three:

You wouldn’t know it from the teasers, but each of the concepts is already at the prototype phase of development. Press Play’s site has gameplay demos for all three, with Karoo probably being the furthest along. Once a title is chosen, Press Play says it’ll continue to work with the community during development. Some of its plans include “sharing early builds of the game and having community members join meetings and project reviews via Skype.” If you’ve ever wanted more than the regular video diaries and blog posts created by game creators, Press Play’s initiative seems like a unique chance to get involved in game development.

Filed under:
Gaming, Microsoft

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Source:
Microsoft

Tags: microsoft, PressPlay

19
Aug

OnePlus 2 review: a worthy sequel, flaws and all


I don’t envy the team at OnePlus. After shipping a smartphone that made us rethink what we could get — nay, what we deserved — for $299, it was tasked with building an even better follow-up. If this were some schlocky ’80s, teen coming-of-age film, it’d be time for a montage, but here we are a year later with a more confident, experienced startup and a new device that still promises to “never settle.” At $329 for the basic 16GB model (or $389 for the 64GB version), the new OnePlus 2 isn’t quite as wallet-friendly as the phone we got last year, and more than a few rivals have since come out with low-cost, high-power phones of their own. So, did OnePlus do the impossible again? Did it actually create a worthy sequel to a fan-favorite device, amid crazy competition in the world of cheap, fantastic unlocked phones? Well, yes, but it’s not without its flaws.Slideshow-312946

Hardware

OnePlus 2 Review

Last year’s OnePlus One set a high bar for how much performance you could squeeze out of a $299 smartphone, and its sequel doesn’t disappoint. Tucked away inside the 9.85mm-thick frame is one of Qualcomm’s octa-core Snapdragon 810 chipsets partnered with either 3GB or 4GB of RAM, depending on which version you choose. You’ve also got a sealed 3,300mAh battery (and I do mean sealed; there’s nothing but curved plastic under the battery cover), a tray that holds two nano-SIM cards (only one of which is usable) and either 16GB or 64GB of internal storage. As our comments section continues to make clear, the lack of expandable memory options is a downright dealbreaker for some of you. I’m more of a “streaming everything” kind of guy so the 53GB of free space in the higher-end model I tested was more than enough, but keep that limit in mind before you punch someone in the face for an invite. Oh, and there’s no NFC this time around, a puzzling omission that’ll keep your OnePlus 2 from doubling as a wallet whenever Android Pay finally launches.

There’s so much going on inside the OnePlus 2, in fact, that the designers clearly didn’t feel the need to give it a brand-new look. What we got instead is a thoughtful refinement of the original’s design that makes the whole thing feel more premium than its price tag suggests. To wit: The chassis itself is made of polycarbonate, but a magnesium and aluminum band runs around its sides, with drilled vents for the speaker and a USB Type-C charging port along the bottom. A quick look at the phone’s left edge reveals something new: a three-stage notification slider that lets you select how obnoxious you want the phone to be when tweets, status updates and emails roll in. This is, in short, a revelation. It’s a staggeringly useful addition, and other smartphone makers would do well to add something similar.

The most eye-catching addition is the fingerprint sensor that doubles as a home button. Pity that it’s not as sensitive as it should be. It sometimes took multiple tries to unlock the phone with my finger (a reality, sadly, for just about any smartphone with biometric security) and you have to hit it with more force than you might expect. It’s nice, in a way — an ill-placed glancing blow won’t disrupt your gaming sessions — but I’d prefer more touch-pressure consistency between the home button and the two soft keys on either side of it.

If you’ve played with the original model, the OnePlus 2’s back will seem like a blast from the past. The changes here are pretty modest, and they mostly boil down to the fact that the 13-megapixel camera and dual-LED flash have been shifted south a few millimeters. This time, though, the camera itself is sandwiched between the flash and an LED autofocus module that promises to lock onto targets in as little as 0.2 second. My review unit came with the company’s trademark sandstone black rear panel, which has been a point of contention among the people I’ve shown it too. Some (myself included) love the gritty, tactile feel of the sandstone finish because it’s so drastically different from the glass-and-metal monoliths we usually play with, but it just left others scratching their heads. You can swap it out for bamboo, Kevlar, black apricot or rosewood covers for a little extra cash, and don’t worry: It’s much, much easier to remove this time around.

All told, OnePlus did a wonderful job putting its second-generation flagship killer together. It’s light, but not too light, and there’s not an iota of give when you start twisting the device (not that you should really do that in the first place). Between the OnePlus 2’s handsome design, sturdy construction and Gorilla Glass 4 screen you’ve got a real looker that can stand up to even the silliest drunken drops. Just… trust me on that last bit.

Display and sound

We’re looking at yet another 5.5-inch, 1080p IPS LCD display this year, which means the same number of pixels squeezed into each linear inch as the original OnePlus One (that’s 401 ppi, to be exact). The rest of the madding crowd might be embracing those gorgeous Quad HD panels, but really — we’re hardly worse off with a full HD screen here, especially considering the cost. I wouldn’t be surprised if a few people reading this could somehow pick out individual pixels on the OP2’s high-def screen. Well, I can’t anyway, and the staggering majority of people can’t, either. You’re not missing out on anything.

As you might expect from an IPS screen, viewing angles are great even from odd positions (good news for over-the-shoulder screen peekers). Just don’t expect the punchy colors you’d get from a Samsung phone’s AMOLED display. I happen to like when my retinas are scorched by saturated screens, but the OnePlus 2’s is considerably less in-your-face. Things are even cooler and subtler here than on the LG G4’s “Quantum display,” which strove for eye-catching color accuracy above all else. All told, it feels a little dull, a little lifeless, but I might be in the minority on this one. Still, those subdued colors also mean viewing the screen in direct sunlight can be tricky (though cranking up the brightness helps).

Meanwhile, the single speaker on the phone’s bottom side does a fine job belting out tunes, although things can get muddled when you crank up the volume. OnePlus included the MaxxAudio equalizer app for good measure, and you can toggle it from the volume shade if you need some extra oomph. Honestly, the equalizer’s effects are more noticeable — and more valuable — when you’re using them in tandem with a pair of headphones. Just be careful when MaxxAudio is enabled; I couldn’t get the volume up to 50 percent without feeling like I was thrashing my eardrums.

Software

Before we go any further, a brief software note: Our OnePlus 2 is running a pre-release build (A2005_14_150807, if you’re curious), and the company tells us an OTA update that’s “close” to what I have is going live shortly.

Bon voyage, CyanogenMod. After a prolonged, public breakup (and at least one Taylor Swift joke), the OnePlus 2 comes loaded with a mostly clean version of Android 5.1.1 with just a handful of OnePlus’ custom OxygenOS interface tweaks for added flavor. I really do mean “clean,” too. As I mentioned earlier, my 64GB model had 53GB of storage ready for me to use out of the box, and just about all of that reserved space is taken up by Android proper. There are only two preloaded apps to be found here — that MaxxAudio equalizer and SwiftKey’s not-for-me keyboard — and both can be disabled without much headache. Too bad you can’t uninstall them. The rest is basically unfettered Lollipop and it looks and runs just as nicely as you’d expect it to.

Now we’re left with those Oxygen tweaks, most of which are surprisingly useful. There’s a dark theme if you’re tired of Material Design’s decided whiteness, and you can fire up some onscreen navigation keys if the insensitive physical home button really gets on your nerves. OnePlus also cribbed a few notes from Oppo with its onscreen gestures, so drawing a circle or a V on the display while the phone is off launches the camera and flashlight, respectively. Oh, and a double-tap on the screen will rouse the phone from slumber, a la LG’s most recent G series devices. Perhaps the biggest question mark is the Shelf, which you can access by swiping right on your home screen. It puts your most frequently used apps and contacts in one place, and throws in your local weather report and some space for widgets down at the bottom. It’s nice to have, I guess, but I’ve used the feature precisely zero times over the last week (unless you count the times I just showed people it was there).Slideshow-313575

Alas, not all is well with the OnePlus 2’s software. Some third-party apps — Todoist, Fenix, Falcon Pro, AquaMail, and Relay for Reddit, among others — don’t display properly because of a bug related to the way OxygenOS invokes Material Design’s Light theme. Relay’s probably the best, most publicized foul-up, as none of the comments on any Reddit post are visible, since they’re rendered in white on a white background. Fenix and Falcon Pro, on the other hand, refuse to switch into their light themes. We’re told that the team’s working on a fix to be delivered in an update, but there’s no public word on when that will arrive. Beyond those aesthetic issues, the OnePlus 2 is prone to random restarts; in fact, it happened while I was writing this very sentence. These random restarts happened about three times over the course of the week: twice while trying to launch the camera and once while it was just sitting on my desk charging. I’m really not sure what that’s about; hopefully there’s an update for that coming too. For what it’s worth, OnePlus told us at least two OTA updates — the one dropping now and another that seems focused on camera tweaks — are coming, but wouldn’t confirm whether the random reboots were fixed.

Camera

Last year’s OnePlus One had a camera that didn’t make for many thrills, so it’s no surprise the team paid a little more attention to imaging and optics this time ’round. That 13-megapixel rear camera sensor sits behind an f/2.0 lens and it’s better at sucking up photons because of its (relatively) large 1.3-micron pixel size. All that boils down to a mostly great shooting experience, especially when the sun’s out or your lights are on. Just about all of my test photos had poppy, vibrant colors, along with plenty of detail.

Still, the camera shoots at a 4:3 aspect ratio so photos look a little odd on widescreen displays. It’s surprisingly easy to get some good-looking shots while using the Auto mode, and OnePlus’ controls are dead-simple. A quick tap of the shutter button snaps a photo, and you can fiddle with the exposure by tapping to focus on something and dragging a Sun icon around the focus ring. Swiping right lets you jump into video, panorama, slow-motion and time-lapse modes (all of which work exactly the way you’d expect), while a Clear Image mode stitches together multiple shots into one super-crisp photo. I wound up hardly ever using Clear Image, though, just because my normal photos usually came out looking great.Slideshow-313585

Smartphone cameras have a tendency to suck hard in low-light conditions, but the OnePlus 2 does a little better than you might expect. The autofocus (which normally works like a champ thanks to the laser module on the back) has a hard time doing its thing when your environs grow too dim, and after a while your photos come out murky and grainy. If your hand is steady enough, you can fire up the HDR mode to help mitigate some of these issues, but be prepared to see a bit of lag between shots while the phone processes your images. Really though, the steady hand trumps all; I managed to snap a sweet shot of the Ben Franklin Bridge without the help of HDR and didn’t hate the results:

Performance and battery life

We can keep this bit relatively short: The OnePlus 2 moves with almost all the speed and fluidity you’d expect from a 2015 flagship phone. Qualcomm’s octa-core Snapdragon 810 has gotten a bad rap since before day one because of its supposed overheating issues, but there’s hardly any of that here — just about everything runs incredibly smoothly, and games like Dead Trigger 2, The Talos Principle and Asphalt 8 didn’t never produced any hiccups, even at max graphics settings. Yes, you’ll notice some warmth in the top half of the OnePlus 2’s body during prolonged gaming sessions, but the sandstone cover seems to diffuse it nicely. All told, the heat was never unpleasant, per se. The reason I’ve been couching things with words like “almost” and “just about” is because I occasionally saw some apps take longer to launch than normal, if only by a second or two. It doesn’t seem like cause for concern; I’d wager it’s just a little Android flakiness and really, the issue sticks out more than it should because of how fast the phone is otherwise. Seriously, the OnePlus 2 brings the speed.

OnePlus 2 Samsung Galaxy S6 ZTE Axon LG G4
AndEBench Pro 9,945 10,552 7,961 8,352
Vellamo 3.0 3,025 3,677 3,086 4,065
3DMark IS Unlimited 23,598 21,632 24,802 18,572
SunSpider 1.0.2 (ms) 1,516 674 1,489 725
GFXBench 3.0 1080p Manhattan Offscreen (fps) 25 25 25 15
CF-Bench 79,168 62,257 62,117 71,260
SunSpider 1.0.2: Android devices tested in Chrome; lower scores are better.

Now, about that battery. We’re working with a sealed 3,300mAh cell here, and it stuck around for just over nine hours in the ol’ Engadget rundown test (looping a video with WiFi on and the screen brightness set to 50 percent, in case you forgot). That puts the OnePlus 2 just ahead of both the Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge, but LG’s G4 still wins with its 11-hour runtime. And mind you, that’s with a smaller, removable battery and a Quad HD screen. I’d be concerned for your well-being if you just watched videos on a phone for nine hours without moving, and thankfully the OnePlus 2 fares even better when you’re going about your day. On average, I’ve been able to get through a full 12-hour workday (with lots of Hangouts chatting and YouTube videos, plus the occasional game and work email) with 15 or 20 percent left in the tank. Most people will only have to charge their OnePlus 2’s once a day, which is definitely a good thing — there’s no QuickCharge here so the USB Type-C connector takes longer to charge the phone than most other flagships.

The competition

I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: There’s never been a better time to buy an unlocked smartphone. This year’s crop of no-contract hardware has been first-rate, so keep these alternatives in mind before you make your decision. ZTE’s $450 Axon threw me for a loop with its top-tier spec sheet and more-or-less clean version of Android. Audiophiles will dig its music-friendly software enhancements and performance tweaks, and the Quad HD display is pretty too, but be prepared to give yourself over to the cloud. There’s only 32GB of internal storage and nary a memory card slot, an omission it shares with the OnePlus 2. I don’t mind the lack of expandable memory as much as others do, but man: limiting users to only 32GB is pretty ridiculous. I’d recommend you stay away from the 16GB version of the OnePlus 2 as that’s even more limited, but its $329 price is =hard to argue with.

I’m also looking forward to seeing how the OP2 stacks up against Motorola’s new $400 Moto X Pure, which pairs a hexa-core Snapdragon 808 with 3GB of RAM and a bigger 5.7-inch Quad HD screen. You’ll be able to customize the dickens out of it once it launches, but that’s not even the most important thing here. You see, software updates usually take ages to pass through carriers’ rigorous testing and distribution processes. Motorola software chief Seang Chau told me this won’t be the case, though: Since the company isn’t going to sell the Pure edition through carriers, it has full control over how quickly it will receive new updates, as well as new versions of Android. Oh, and you won’t have to scramble for an invite to buy one, either.

Wrap-up

OnePlus has plenty to be proud of. After all, the company managed to make a phone that improved on the already-excellent original in every way that mattered. The OnePlus 2 is a powerful, well-built device, offering the best blend of price and performance you’ll find in an unlocked phone. The thing is, the version I tried is still haunted by a few pesky software issues that should be fixed soon. Maybe it’s a good thing you haven’t gotten your invite yet.

Even if we put aside these fixable software flaws, it’s clear this phone won’t be for everyone. No NFC means you won’t be using it to make Android Pay payments when the service launches later this year. The lack of a memory card slot means you’ll have to be careful about what you download or shoot. It’s easy to forgive these shortcomings because of the price — the trade-off is a worthy one in my book — but competitors like the Moto X Pure Edition didn’t have to compromise nearly as much. In the end, the OnePlus 2 is worth your cash if you’re looking for a capable, powerful Android phone on the cheap, but you’d do well to wait a few weeks to see how the competition stacks up.

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Cellphones, Mobile

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Tags: android, mobile, mobilepostcross, oneplus, oneplus2, oxygen, oxygenos, smartphone, uk-reviews, video

19
Aug

Deal: snag a LG Watch Urbane for just $240


LG Watch Urbane-8

The LG Watch Urbane is one of the best looking smartwatches around right now, but not everyone is prepared to plump down over $300 on an accessory for their smartphone. However, you can currently grab an Urbane for just $240, after applying several discounts over at Newegg, which makes the smartwatch quite a bit more tempting.

The biggest chunk of the discount comes from a $60 coupon code. Simply enter EMCAWKW92 into the promo code box at checkout to grab the saving, although you will also have to sign up to the Newegg newsletter to use it. There’s also a $30 instant discount already applied to the usual retail price and a $20 mail-in rebate which you can claim back with your purchase. Although waiting for a rebate is a little bit of a pain, it’s fortunately the smallest part of the discount.

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In total, the various discounts will save you $110 off the LG Watch Urbane. The smartwatch usually retails for around $350 and is available in either silver or rose gold colors. It’s not clear how long the discount code will last for, so don’t delay.

Any takers out there?

Grab a LG Urbane for $240