Google sneaks Olympic-themed minigames into its mobile app
The 2016 Rio Olympics officially kicks off today with the opening ceremony, and Google’s already got the fever. In addition to peppering search results with easy-access schedules, stats, highlights and other pertinent info, big G wants to indulge our competitive sides, too. The 2016 Doodle FruitGames is a collection of seven colorful tap-and-tilt titles playable within the Google app for Android and iOS until August 21st, when the Olympics draw to a close.
Hiding behind the Doodle in Google’s mobile app, the games all feature simple control schemes typical to the search giant’s previous pick-up-and-play titles. The mixture of endless scrollers, time-sensitive point maximizers and the like are the kinda games you can spend two minutes playing or dump hours into, ensuring you’ve got the best sprinting strawberry time of all your peers. And who knows… being a champion spider-riding, hurdling grape around might well be your calling.
Source: Google
HP Chromebook 13 review: a great laptop that doesn’t come cheap
Just over a year ago, you basically had two options for buying a Chromebook: Spend $999 on Google’s excellent but overpriced Pixel or buy an inexpensive laptop that was inevitably compromised in one way or another. That’s starting to change, however. Dell’s Chromebook 13, which launched last fall, proved you could pack a sharp screen and keyboard into a device with strong performance and battery life. It was a bit pricier than the competition, but a little extra cash was well worth the upgrades.
Now HP is taking the idea of a “premium” Chromebook to the next level with the new Chromebook 13. It starts at $499 and can be configured up to a whopping $1,029. That cash gets you a much thinner and lighter design than Dell’s Chromebook, along with one of the best screens on the market. After spending some time with HP’s latest Chromebook, there’s no doubt it’s an excellent machine. The question is whether it (or any Chromebook, for that matter) is worth HP’s asking price.
Hardware

There’s no question in my mind that HP hit it out of the park with the Chromebook 13’s design. It’s the nicest Chromebook I’ve used outside the Pixel, which still costs significantly more than HP’s offering. Visually, the Chromebook 13 sticks pretty close to the MacBook Air stylings that continue to dominate the industry. However, a few design notes, including its brushed-metal texture, black screen border and shiny chrome accents (including an overly large HP logo on the cover), lend it some unique visual flair. It’s a nice-looking laptop, if a bit plain and derivative — something that’ll probably help it as a machine targeted at business customers. It’s no Spectre 13.3, though.
At 2.85 pounds and half an inch thick, it certainly has a lot in common with the many popular thin-and-light laptops available, and that’s a place where it diverts from the similarly business-targeted Dell Chromebook 13. That computer is as solid as a rock, but it’s a lot thicker and heavier than many other 13-inch laptops. The HP feels much more portable — but it’s not nearly as solid as the Dell. It’s easy to flex the screen and chassis if you’re so inclined. The screen flexing is particularly noticeable; my co-workers were pretty stunned at how easily I was able to bend the display. Obviously, this isn’t normal behavior, but it does make me concerned about the laptop’s long-term durability. Fortunately, the HP Chromebook 13 felt solid and comfortable in normal use. It’s just not the tank that Dell’s Chromebook is.
Indeed, for real-world use, the HP feels great from the moment you open it up. You can easily lift the screen open with one hand; the body of the computer stays put and doesn’t wobble on your lap or desk when you’re adjusting the display. And what a display it is: The 13.3-inch screen has a best-in-class 3,200 x 1,800 resolution. (You can also save some cash by stepping down to a 1080p panel.) By default, it’s scaled to an effective 1,600 x 900 resolution, but thanks to the pixel density, you get super crisp, readable text and wonderfully detailed images. And for me, 1,600 x 900 is a sweet spot in terms of having a large workspace and text that isn’t too tiny. 1080p feels a bit small to me on a display like this, but if you want more space, there are plenty of scaling options in the Chromebook’s display settings.

I have a couple big complaints about the display, though. After using the Pixel, I’ve grown to love having more vertical real estate; HP’s Chromebook 13 feels a little cramped in this regard. It doesn’t help that the bezel at the bottom of the display is particularly thick: It feels like a 16:10 panel could have fit here without an issue. Of course, basically every computer out there has a 16:9 display aspect ratio, so this is hardly HP’s fault.
More damning is the lack of a touchscreen. With Android apps coming to Chromebooks soon, there’s finally a good reason to have a touch panel, and it should be a default feature on an $819 computer. I could understand it being left off cheaper models in the lineup, but it should at least be offered as an optional upgrade. And while the viewing angles on this screen aren’t bad, it’s not an IPS display, so you won’t get the wide field of view that some other notebooks offer. Despite these few complaints, the screen is a high point. It’s about the best I’ve seen on a Chromebook. That should be the case for an $820 machine, but the fact that you can get the same display on a $500 version of this laptop is a big win.
Beyond the screen, the keyboard and trackpad are of utmost importance, and fortunately HP got both of these things right. I’ve been happily typing away on this computer for over a week, and it feels nearly as good as the Chromebook Pixel and equally as comfortable as the Dell Chromebook 13. There’s an adjustable backlight here, which feels appropriate for a computer in this price range, and the keycaps offer decent travel for a computer this thin. As for the trackpad, the only complaint I have is that, similar to the screen, I wish it were a bit taller. Other than that, it works fine. I’m glad to see laptop manufacturers starting to get touchpads consistently right.

HP touts stereo speakers from Bang & Olufsen, and while there’s only so much you can do with speakers in a smallish laptop, these sound pretty good to me. They’re not any louder than your average notebook audio setup, but they’re definitely crisper and less muddy than on most other computers. You’re still probably better off listening with headphones, but in a pinch these will do — just don’t expect any physics-defying sound here.
As for ports, the HP Chromebook 13 keeps things pretty minimal: There’s one USB 3.0 connection, a headphone jack, two USB Type-C sockets (either of which can be used for charging) and a microSD slot. I’m confounded by laptop makers that insist on microSD; a full-sized SD reader would be far more useful for most people. Having two USB Type-C ports is smart, though: You can dedicate one to power if need be and still have options for plugging in more devices, including the HP docking station designed specifically for this laptop.
Performance and battery life

HP’s Chromebook 13 is the first Chromebook I’ve tried that uses Intel’s newest generation of Core M processors. The $819 model I tested has a 1.1GHz Core m5 processor paired with 8GB of RAM and 32GB of storage space. We’ll talk more about whether this computer is worth that kind of cash, but for now, the most important thing to know is that HP is offering this computer in a variety of configurations.
The base $499 model pairs a Pentium 4405Y processor with 4GB of RAM; $599 steps that up to the Core m3-6Y30 processor with the same RAM allotment. If you’re feeling particularly crazy, you can upgrade to a Core m7-6Y75 processor with either 8GB or 16GB of RAM. HP says you can get that top-of-the-line model from “select retailers” for $1,029.
However, I only had the $819 model to test. At that price (more than nearly any other Chromebook on the market), I was expecting a great experience, and fortunately I was not disappointed. Anecdotally, I was able to run all of my usual apps (Inbox, Chrome, Google Play Music, TweetDeck, Slack, Keep, Docs, Wunderlist, Hangouts) plus more than a dozen tabs with few hiccups. Music would occasionally cut out slightly, and typing text in Keep felt a bit laggy while I was simultaneously doing a video call, but by and large I have no complaints about the performance. And from a benchmark perspective, the Chromebook 13 kept pace with the best you can get when running Chrome OS, including the Pixel.
| HP Chromebook 13 (Core-m5 6Y57, 8GB RAM) | 230ms |
27,908 |
1,053ms |
| Dell Chromebook 13 (Celeron 3205U, 4GB RAM) | 371ms |
14,430 |
2,242ms |
| ASUS Chromebook Flip (Rockchip RK3288C, 4GB RAM) | 700ms |
6,748 |
5,527ms |
| Chromebook Pixel (2015, Core i5, 8GB RAM) | 298ms |
23,907 |
1,428ms |
| Toshiba Chromebook 2 (Celeron N2840, 4GB RAM) | 967ms |
7,714 |
4,284ms |
| Samsung Chromebook 2 (11-inch, Celeron N2840, 2GB RAM) | 525ms |
7,223 |
3,936ms |
| Acer Chromebook 13 (NVIDIA Tegra K1, 2GB RAM) | 609ms |
7,051 |
4,816ms |
| Lenovo N20p (Celeron N2830, 2GB RAM) | 567ms |
7,288 |
4,287ms |
| ASUS C200 Chromebook (Celeron N2830, 2GB RAM) | 483ms |
7,198 |
4,291ms |
| Acer C720 Chromebook (Celeron 2955U, 2GB RAM) | 342ms |
11,502 |
2,614ms |
| Dell Chromebook 11 (Celeron 2955U, 4GB RAM) | 340ms |
11,533 |
2,622ms |
|
*SunSpider and Kraken: Lower scores are better. |
I will say that I’ve had one big issue that I can’t overlook, and that’s the battery life. HP claims that the Chromebook 13 gets 11.5 hours of runtime, with a big caveat: You need the model with the 1080p screen to achieve that result. HP doesn’t offer any estimates for the 3,200 x 1,800 screen I’ve been using, but I only got about 6 hours of battery life doing my normal work routine. This is a major disappointment, especially after enjoying incredibly long battery life on Dell’s Chromebook 13. HP’s machine is smaller and has a sharper, more power-hungry screen — but getting significantly less than eight hours of battery life is a serious bummer.
Our battery test (which involves looping an HD video with screen brightness fixed at 65 percent) bore similar results: The HP Chromebook 13 lasted for 6 hours and 33 minutes. And unfortunately, the computer didn’t charge as quickly as I’d hoped, despite HP touting USB Type-C’s quick-charging features. It took about two and a half hours while in use to go from nearly dead to 100 percent and a good 90 minutes to get to 50 percent.
Battery life
HP Chromebook 13
6:33
Surface Book (Core i5, integrated graphics)
13:54 (3:20 tablet only)
MacBook Air (13-inch, 2013)
12:51
HP Spectre x360
11:34
Apple MacBook Pro with Retina display (13-inch, 2015)
11:23
ASUS C200 Chromebook
11:19
ASUS Chromebook Flip
10:49
Dell Chromebook 13
10:25
Acer Chromebook 13
10:07
Chromebook Pixel (2015)
10:01
Microsoft Surface 3
9:11
Apple MacBook (2016)
8:45
Samsung Chromebook 2 (13-inch)
8:22
HP Stream 11
8:17
Dell XPS 13 (2015)
7:36
Lenovo Yoga 3 Pro
7:36
Lenovo LaVie Z
7:32
Microsoft Surface Pro 4
7:15
HP Spectre 13
7:07
Lenovo LaVie Z 360
6:54
Toshiba Chromebook 2
6:34
Acer C720 Chromebook
6:27 (Core i3) / 5:57 (Celeron)

None of this matters if Chrome OS doesn’t have the apps and services you need to get things done. Fortunately, as I wrote last fall, Chrome OS is pretty capable right now. There are tasks like photo and video editing that the platform is still not suited for, but for the majority of consumers, using a Chromebook might increasingly make sense. I rarely felt like I was hamstrung when using HP’s Chromebook 13, and the Android apps coming this fall will make the platform even more capable. It’s still worth making sure what you typically do on a laptop is feasible with a Chromebook, but Google has closed the feature gap in the past few years.
The competition
As I’ve mentioned multiple times by now, Dell’s Chromebook 13 is the computer most worth comparing to the HP Chromebook 13. HP’s model is the clear winner in terms of design and display, but the Dell counters with a much lower price and far better battery life. Dell also has a variety of configurations: You can step up to a full Core i3 processor, increase the RAM to 8GB and add a touchscreen. If you’re interested in HP’s Chromebook 13, I’d encourage you to also check out the Dell before making a final decision. Unless you really love the HP’s more compact design or its super sharp screen, the Dell wins on bang for your buck.
There aren’t a lot of other Chromebooks that have excellent screens, keyboards, performance and design. The Chromebook Pixel is one, of course — but at $1,299, there’s no way we can recommend that computer to most normal humans. Toshiba’s 13-inch Chromebook 2, released in 2015, is still a strong choice. About $340 gets you a 1080p display, decent construction and an Intel Core i3 processor. The battery life on that laptop isn’t outstanding, but performance will not be a problem. Most other Chromebooks beyond these are compromised in one way or another: cheap construction, small or low-resolution screens, or — worst of all — bad processors leading to poor performance.
Wrap-up

Similar to the Chromebook Pixel that appears to have inspired it, HP’s Chromebook 13 occupies an odd spot in the market. As tested, it’s hard to recommend anyone spend $819 on this laptop. It packs a wonderful screen and keyboard into a thin and light package, and it combines that with solid performance. But the battery life isn’t great, and $819 is still too much to spend on a Chromebook. Yes, they’re better than they ever have been, and they’re going to get a lot more useful this fall when they start supporting Android apps. But even as someone who has wanted a “premium” Chromebook option beyond the Pixel for a long time, I can’t justify the cost of this computer.
Fortunately, HP is making two models that are cheaper than this one. You can still get the same great package, just with less RAM and a slower processor, for the much more reasonable price of $499. I haven’t tested that machine yet, so I can’t give it a full-throated recommendation yet. But if you’ve been searching for a Chromebook with premium build quality like I have, it might be worth seeing if the cheaper versions of HP’s Chromebook 13 can meet your needs.
Photos by Edgar Alvarez.
Apple Sued Over iPhone’s Proximity Sensor in New Patent Troll Lawsuit
511 Innovations, Inc. is the latest patent troll to file a complaint against Apple with the U.S. District Court for Eastern Texas, claiming that the iPhone’s proximity sensor infringes upon five of its patents.
The asserted patents¹, filed between 1999 and 2012, relate to various methods for measuring optical characteristics of an object, such as color spectrums, translucence, gloss, and position detection.
511 Innovations is a Texas-based non-practicing entity that does not appear to sell any sensor-related products, but instead seeks to enforce its patented technologies through litigation. Eastern Texas is a common district for patent holding firms to target larger companies like Apple, which has fought similar lawsuits from VirnetX, Dot 23, VoIP-Pal, and others in recent years.
The small firm acquired the asserted patents in 2013 from JJL Technologies, which claims to have sold world market-leading spectrophotometers, according to court documents filed electronically this week. It then licensed the patents to Spectral Sensors, whose website has been “under construction” since 2013. Further complicating things, JJL Technologies had acquired the patents itself from LJ Laboratories.
511 Innovations has demanded a jury trial and is seeking damages in the form of a reasonable royalty, plus interest and fees, in addition to a permanent U.S. sales ban on iPhones and all other infringing products and services.
Legal battles of this nature can prove costly. Last month, Apple agreed to license Cover Flow- and Time Machine-related patents from Mirror World Technologies for $25 million, and it agreed to pay another $25 million in a Siri-related in April. It is, however, close to escaping a $533 million verdict won by Smartflash, LLC, and a $625 million verdict won by VirnetX was overturned last week.
¹ U.S. Patent Nos. 6,307,629, 7,110,096, 7,397,541, 8,472,012, and 8,786,844.
Tags: lawsuit, patent
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Spotify’s Release Radar is Discover Weekly for new music
Discover Weekly is one of Spotify’s best and most unique features, serving up a personalized playlist full of artists you probably haven’t listened to before. But what happens toward the end of the week, once you’ve cycled through its recommendations a few times? Enter Release Radar, a new playlist that drops every Friday. The personalised mixtape, which sits in the Discover section, will offer a collection of brand-new releases from artists you follow or listen to regularly. Spotify says it’ll also throw in some “new discoveries” which, similar to Discover Weekly, are based on your listening habits inside the app. It could be a handy new feature, provided your favorite artists aren’t those signing exclusives with Apple Music.
Source: Spotify
Apple’s Store app knows what you want and when it’s in stock
Apple’s Store app (not to be confused with Apple’s App Store) that provides info about its bricks-and-mortar retail locations adds a few decent features today, including knowing when your order is ready to pick up, for less in-store loitering time.
The update also adds the ability to recommend products that Apple thinks you’ll like or would be useful based on the devices you already own (a little like a permanently up-selling salesperson in your pocket, let’s just hope it’s a useful one).
You might not have known that Apple Stores run workshops, but they do, and the Store app will flag any that are taking place at your nearest shop, let you see if something on your favourites is in stock and it’ll even let you scan in-store items to check that they’re compatible with the gear you’ve got at home.
The update’s available to download now, but Apple does point out that only some of those features are available globally — exactly which ones are available will depend on your location.
Source: Apple Store
ICYMI: 10-minute cold brew, robospiders and flaming neck shots

Today on In Case You Missed It: A lightning-fast crowdfunded cold brew coffee machine called the Prisma is currently campaigning on IndieGogo. Plus, a pair of spider-bots weave webs of high-strength carbon fiber filament that you can sleep on. And, in the end, we watch as a fame-seeking daredevil gets shot in the neck with a flaming arrow on live national television. Are you not entertained?!
As always, please share any interesting tech or science videos you find by using the #ICYMI hashtag on Twitter for @mskerryd.
Apple Continues to Struggle in India as iPhone Sales Drop 35 Percent in 2016
Despite India’s overall healthy growth in the smartphone market — currently sitting as the third largest behind China and the United States — Apple is having a tough time gaining ground in the country. According to a new report from Strategy Analytics, Apple saw a drastic percentage dip in iPhone users from 2015 to 2016, with 35 percent fewer iPhone devices sold this year. Earlier in May, Apple CEO Tim Cook admitted iPhones are too expensive in India, potentially harming the company’s sales figures as it tries to grow.
In its new report, the market research firm said that Apple sold just 800,000 handsets in Q2 2016, while in the same year-ago quarter, the company sold 1.2 million units. These deflating sales numbers rippled into Apple’s operating system marketshare in India, essentially getting halved down from 4.5 percent in Q2 2015 to 2.4 percent in Q2 2016. Director of Strategy Analytics, Woody Oh, pointed out a few ways Apple might go about course correcting its current struggles in the country, including the ongoing saga of boosting its retail presence in India.
“Apple iOS fell 35 percent annually and shipped 0.8 million smartphones in India in Q2 2016. Apple’s smartphone marketshare has halved from 4 percent to just 2 percent in India during the past year. Apple iOS will need to reduce iPhone pricing to cheaper levels, attract more operator subsidies and enlarge its retail presence through Apple stores or online channels if it wants to regrow significantly in the future.”
Apple Stores aren’t as ubiquitous in India as they are in other parts of the world thanks to the country’s rules on foreign direct investments, which required 30 percent of goods sold by a foreign company to be manufactured or produced within India. Thankfully, after a ruling in June cleared the way for companies to circumvent that law, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi set a precedent by granting Apple a three-year extension on the strict local-sourcing rule, due to its single-brand retail company status selling “cutting-edge technology.” Companies similar to Apple are expected to get similar treatment.
While the relaxation of these rules should help Apple moving forward, it doesn’t change the fact that Android remained the dominant force in India this year. In total, 29.8 million Android smartphones shipped within the country in Q2 2016, growing from 23.2 million in the same quarter last year. Similarly, Google’s Android operating system remained the dominant force in the Indian mobile market with a record 97 percent hold for the quarter, increasing from 90 percent a year ago.
Apple’s retail future in the country might be turning around, but the company is still hitting smaller roadblocks on its route to increasing sales figures in India. In May, Commerce and Industry Minister Nirmala Sitharaman ruled “not in favor” of a proposal laid out by Apple to sell used iPhones in the country. Thanks to Apple’s repeated growth frustrations, Strategy Analytics said that Android’s domination of the Indian smartphone market “looks unbeatable right now, due to its deep portfolio of hardware partners, extensive distribution channels, and a wide range of low-cost apps like Gmail.”
Tag: India
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Spotify Debuts ‘Release Radar’ to Suggest New Music Based on Favorite Artists
Spotify today announced a new curated music section of its popular streaming platform, called Release Radar, that will automatically update every Friday with new music from artists already in each user’s library. The company said that the section will help its listeners stay “on top of the latest singles by your favorite artists,” without having to manually search for new music.
The new Release Radar — which will be found in the New Releases for You section within Discover — will gather up to two full hours “of the newest drops from the artists you follow and listen to the most,” as well as introducing its listeners to new music after intelligently analyzing listening habits. The new update is a version of Spotify’s existing feature Discover Weekly, which gives users music suggestions of entirely new artists and singles every Monday, instead of ones they already have been exposed to.
“With the huge amount of new music released every week, it can be difficult to keep up with the latest tracks,” says Matt Ogle, Senior Product Owner at Spotify. “With Release Radar, we wanted to create the simplest way for you to find all the newly released music that matters the most to you, in one playlist.”
Most streaming services have been giving users similar features over the past few years, including Apple Music’s “For You” tab, which accumulates recommendations based on a liking system coupled with each user’s most listened-to music. Instead of one giant playlist like Release Radar and Discover Weekly in Spotify, Apple Music populates the For You section with custom-created playlists for music streaming based on things like the time of the day and moods, as well as giving basic new artist suggestions.
Apple Music is just over a year old and was reported to have 15 million subscribers on the anniversary of its launch this past June. Since then the service has debuted a number of exclusive tracks from popular musicians, and expanded to a few new territories, including Israel and Korea. In comparison, Spotify said recently that it has 30 million paid subscribers, and 100 million total monthly active users worldwide, who take advantage of its free service.
Over the summer, Apple and Spotify butted heads over a few changes Apple announced coming to the App Store — particularly a new revenue split for subscriptions and ads in search results — which Spotify said was “a nice gesture, but doesn’t get to the core of the problem.” Jonathan Prince, Spotify’s head of corporate communications and global policy, mentioned specifically that “Apple still insists on inserting itself between developers and their customers,” making it difficult to read into subscriber analytics, like finding out why customers churn.
Spotify users should begin seeing Release Radar soon, since the company said its wide rollout begins today. Spotify Music is available for free on the iOS App Store. [Direct Link]
Tags: Spotify, Apple Music
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ASUS is bringing the ZenFone 3 series to India on August 17
ASUS is launching the ZenFone 3 series in India on August 17. The company has sent out invites to the media for its Zenvolution event, where we’ll likely see all three models in the ZenFone 3 series — the ZenFone 3, ZenFone 3 Deluxe and ZenFone 3 Ultra — make their debut in the country.

ASUS already revealed that the ZenFone 3 Deluxe will be the first phone to run the Snapdragon 821 SoC, which has four Kryo cores clocked at 2.4GHz. All three models in the ZenFone 3 series come with 1080p displays, with display sizes ranging from 5.5 inches all the way up to 6.8 inches.
| Display | 1080p 5.5-inch SuperIPS+ LCD77.3% screen to body radio | 1080p 5.7-inch SuperAMOLED79% screen to body ratio | 1080p 6.8-inch IPD LCD79% screen to body ratio |
| Construction | Front and rear Corning Gorilla Glass panels with 2.5D contoured edges and metal frame | Full aluminum alloy unibody with “invisible antenna” | Full aluminum alloy unibody with “invisible antenna” |
| Processor | Qualcomm Snapdragon 625Octa-core 14nm8x1.4GHz ARM Cortex-A53 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 821 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 652Octa-core 28nm4x1.8GHz ARM Cortex-A724x1.4GHz ARM Cortex-A53 |
| GPU | Adreno 506 | Adreno 530 | Adreno 510 |
| RAM | 4GB | 6GB | 4GB |
| Main camera | 16MP ASUS PixelMaster 3.0 (Sony IMX298 sensor)f/2.0, 6-element Largan lens0.03 second TriTech autofocus4-axis OIS3-axis EISColor correction sensorDual-tone LED flash | 23MP ASUS PixelMaster 3.0 (Sony IMX318 sensor)f/2.0, 6-element Largan lens0.03 second TriTech autofocus4-axis OIS3-axis EISColor correction sensorDual-tone LED flash | 23MP ASUS PixelMaster 3.0 (Sony IMX318 sensor)f/2.0, 6-element Largan lens0.03 second TriTech autofocus4-axis OIS3-axis EISColor correction sensorDual-tone LED flash |
| Front camera | 8MP, 85-degree wide-angle lens | 8MP, 85-degree wide-angle lens | 8MP, 85-degree wide-angle lens |
| Wireless | 802.11ac Wi-Fi: 5G/2.4G, MIMOCat 6 LTE | 802.11ac Wi-Fi: 5G/2.4G, MIMOCat 13 LTE + 3CA | 802.11ac Wi-Fi: 5G/2.4G, MIMOCat 6 LTE |
| Fingerprint sensor | Rear sensor, 5-finger registration, 360 degree recognition | Rear sensor, 5-finger registration, 360 degree recognition | Below screen sensor, 5-finger registration, 360 degree recognition |
| Connectibity | Bluetooth 4.2Type-C USB 2.0 | Bluetooth 4.2Type-C USB 3.0 | Bluetooth 4.2Type-C USB 2.0 |
| SIM/SD slots | Slot 1: MicroSIM (4G)Slot 2: NanoSM (3G) or MicroSD | Slot 1: MicroSIM (4G)Slot 2: NanoSM (3G) or MicroSD | Slot 1: MicroSIM (4G)Slot 2: NanoSM (3G) or MicroSD |
| GPS | GPS, AGPS, GLONASS, BEIDOU | GPS, AGPS, GLONASS, BEIDOU | GPS, AGPS, GLONASS, BEIDOU |
| OS | Andorid 6.0 MarshmallowZenUI 3.0 | Andorid 6.0 MarshmallowZenUI 3.0 | Andorid 6.0 MarshmallowZenUI 3.0 |
| Battery | 3,000mAh | 3,000mAh with Quick Charge 3.0 | 4,600mAh with Quick Charge 3.0 |
| Audio | Hi-Res AudioNew 5-magnet speakerNXP Smart AMP | Hi-Res AudioNew 5-magnet speakerNXP Smart AMP | Hi-Res AudioNew 5-magnet speakerNXP Smart AMPDTS Headphone: X 7.1DTS HD Premium Sound |
| Video Processor | ASUS Tru2Life+ featuring PixelWorks 4K TV Grade processorDisplayPort over USB Type C | ||
| Other features | Always on panel | Power bank capability with 1.5A rapid charge | |
| Colors | Shimmer GoldAqua BlueSapphire BlackMoonlight White | Titanium GrayGlacier SilverSand Gold | Titanium GrayGlacier SilverRose Pink |
ASUS counts India as one of its key markets, with the vendor seeing a lot of traction with the ZenFone 2. We’ll be on the ground at the Zenvolution event, and will bring you pricing and availability details. Who’s looking forward to the ZenFone 3 series?
MORE: ASUS ZenFone 3 series preview
Having LTE issues on the Nexus 6? Google is working on a fix
If you’re having LTE issues on the Nexus 6, you’re not alone. Users from all over the world are facing issues with LTE cutting out when used in conjunction with location services. Google has mentioned that it is aware of the issue, and that it is working on a fix.

The issue isn’t limited to a carrier or version number, with users from Australia, Sweden, Canada, Finland, the U.S., and Hong Kong facing random LTE drops. While a fix is in the works, this temporary workaround seems to work for now:
Settings -> Apps -> tap three dots in upper right, Show System, scroll down to Google Connectivity Services, tap three dots in upper right, Uninstall Updates.
Then do a full power down reboot of the N6.
Is your Nexus 6 affected? Let us know if the aforementioned workaround fixes the issue.



