Honor 8 Pro brings flagship features to Huawei offshoot in a 5.7-inch package
First there was the Honor 8, an ultra-shiny 5.2-inch smartphone. Now there’s the Honor 8 Pro, a 5.7-inch flagship which packs oodles of power into a lesser shiny body.
The 8 Pro – which is the V9 in other markets, such as India – has a number of firsts for Honor. It’s the first time the company has squeezed a Quad HD resolution into any of its phones, with those 1440 x 2560 pixels making for ultra-crisp viewing. It’s also the first time Honor has released a phone so big – the Pro is almost like-for-like in size against the iPhone 7 Plus, but a touch slimmer in its sub-7mm form. And within that shell there’s a huge 4,000mAh battery capacity – matching that of the Mate 9.
At launch a key element of the Honor 8 was its ultra-glossy rear, which caught the light in a dazzling display of reflections… and fingerprints. The 8 Pro has changed things up: this time its soft matte rear comes in blue, black or gold options, which we feel look more refined overall.
- Honor 8 Pro full review: Flagship that’s no money pit
Under the hood the Honor 8 Pro comes with the latest and greatest Huawei flagship power. That means an octa-core Kirin 960 processor with 6GB RAM, just as powerful as you’ll find in the Huawei P10 Plus. The only difference compared to its Huawei cousin is that the Honor has 64GB on board storage rather than 128GB – but there’s a microSD slot, so that’s no bother.
Like the original Honor 8, the Pro also comes with dual cameras. Both are 12-megapixel sensors, with 28mm f/2.2 equivalent lenses delivering images to colour and monochrome sensors. There’s none of the Leica-endorsed snazziness of the Huawei flagship range here, but the Honor does offer the Wide Aperture mode in its software, for a software-produced f/0.95 equivalent, to deliver those soft, melty backgrounds.
Perhaps best of all is the price: at £475, the Honor 8 Pro undercuts the current flagships on the market by a couple of hundred pounds, while remaining within reach of the £399 OnePlus 3T.
Honor 8 Pro review: Flagship that’s no money pit
Big phones are a big deal. And the Honor 8 Pro is the company’s largest phone to date, with a whopping 5.7-inch screen wrapped into similar-to-iPhone-7-Plus proportions. If you want screen real estate and resolution then this is the Honor for you.
However, the Pro is a rather different proposition to the mid-level, smaller-scale Honor 8. The Pro is obviously larger, but it also does away with the hallmark ultra-gloss rear in favour of a softer blue matte option (black and gold are also available). It still looks great, but lacks that core point of distinction of the original. Unlike the smaller handset the Pro also offers flagship power – with a specification roughly matching its Huawei P10 Plus flagship cousin.
But the real carrot dangle is the price. At £475 the Honor 8 Pro undercuts the current flagship competition – Samsung Galaxy S8, LG G6, iPhone 7 Plus (ok, that last one is from 2016) – by over £200 a piece, while remaining within touching distance of the OnePlus 3T. There are some marginal compromises, as we’ve found from our 72-hours of use, but nothing that doesn’t befit the asking price or undermine that “Pro” name.
Honor 8 Pro review: Design
- Sub-7mm thickness
- Navy blue, platinum gold or midnight black
- Dual SIM (second slot as microSD)
- Rear-positioned fingerprint scanner
With the Honor 8 Pro was placed into hand the first thing we could feel is just how wide it is. For us it’s a smidgen too wide – but then we’d say exactly the same thing about the iPhone 7 Plus and, having put these two phones literally face-to-face, they are practically identical in size. How you feel about that width will be entirely down to preference, but in the world of taller phones with more cinematic screen ratios – the Galaxy S8 and has a larger diagonal screen measure, for example, but is far less wide a device – this Honor feels less future-thinking in that regard.
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What it does have on its side is a slender build. At just under 7mm, it’s actually thinner than the iPhone 7 Plus, yet crams a much more capacious battery (at 4,000mAh) under its metal skin. The joins between said metal and the screen edge don’t show-off chamfered edging, like in the Huawei P10, a feature that’s reserved only for the Pro’s diamond cut edging of the rear-positioned fingerprint scanner. This scanner’s circular form cuts into the back elegantly, although we feel it’s placed a little too high up the design for always natural use.
The 8 Pro doesn’t hide the antenna lines from sight like in the P10 either – instead they intersect through the top and bottom of the rear, although the top one has been thoughtfully integrated into the design by cutting through the centre of the dual camera module and centre-aligned flash. It looks pretty good.
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Above all else, though, the standout feature of the Honor 8 Pro is its blue colour (well, if you pick the navy blue finish). It has a soft sheen to its appearance and, unlike the smaller Honor 8 with its high-gloss rear, doesn’t attract fingerprints too heavily. We prefer it over the textured Huawei P10 backs, too, especially as these can get marked easily.
In the same breath we’re perplexed at the decision to entirely remove the high-gloss as an option from the Pro, given how defining it is in the original Honor 8. That’s a decision made all the more apparent given how glossy the Pro’s front screen and its surrounding bezels are – something that can be distracting with overhead lighting.
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In addition to USB-C charging, there’s a bottom-positioned 3.5mm headphone jack, while a dual SIM tray – slot two doubles-up as a microSD slot for storage expansion beyond the 64GB standard – lives to the side edge.
Honor 8 Pro review: Screen
- 5.7-inch, 2560 x 1440 resolution IPS LCD panel
The colour’s grabbed your attention, but so will the Honor 8’s screen. This is the largest panel in the company’s handsets, at 5.7-inches diagonally, but also shows off a super-high quad HD resolution. That’s a first for Honor.
And it really shows in use. Yes, the screen is a bit too wide and its colour balance by default isn’t as popping as some – it’s not as warm or as bright as the Huawei P10 Plus which we’ve looked at side-by-side, but the difference is so slight that you won’t notice in isolation – but it’s got all the brightness, acute viewing angle ability and crisp resolution you could want.
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The screen can get a bit smeary during use, but it doesn’t present rainbow-coloured streaks when there’s too much fingertip secretion – unlike the Huawei P10 which has an issue with this once the screen protector is removed. The Pro has no factory-fitted screen protector, but it is coated in Gorilla Glass 3.
Honor 8 Pro review: Power, software and battery
- Kirin 960 chipset, octa-core (4x 2.4GHz, 4×1.8GHz)
- 6GB RAM, 64GB on-board storage (plus microSD)
- EMUI 5.1 (built over Android 7.0 Nougat)
- 4,000mAh battery capacity, QuickCharge
Why hello there flagship innards. Whereas Honor handsets typically aim at the mid-level, the Pro – as its name might suggest – is cutting in higher up the ranks. Its Kirin 960 chipset is every bit as proficient as you’ll find in the P10 Plus, including 6GB RAM to go along with it (the only difference is 64GB on-board storage rather than 128GB of the Plus).
The experience we’ve found to be every bit that of the P10 Plus, too. Now, in that higher-positioned model we had some criticism of apps not seeming to always run at full proficiency. At the price of the Honor 8 Pro, however, this doesn’t feel like an issue to the same degree. Because, overall, the experience is top notch: whether a Candy Crush addict or more into Real Racing, none of that will be a problem here.
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There’s an added gaming quirk, too: the 8 Pro’s box doubles-up as a cardboard VR viewer. And with Jaunt VR installed from the off, if you want to dabble in the entry-level of VR then this phone has all the power and resolution that you’ll need. A great fun idea.
Software-wise, the Pro also runs EMUI 5.1, the latest iteration of Huawei’s operating re-skin (which sits over Android 7.0). The software experience isn’t always the best-looking – some of the Themes really aren’t pretty – but it can be tweaked to suit. What the software does bring, however, are some great features like WhatsApp and Facebook apps per SIM (App Twin), which isn’t possible on many other phones; there are also knuckle-based commands (for when fingertips just aren’t enough!), and machine learning for an optimum long-term user experience.
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That’s one thing Huawei (and, in this instance Honor) is really hot on: longevity. We’ve only had this phone for three days, so can’t comment on how it’ll feel three months down the line, but on each of those days we’ve been getting from a full battery down to around 35 per cent after 16-hours of considerable use with a mixture of day-to-day tasks and casual gaming. Go lighter and we’d expect approaching two days from the Pro, especially if limiting the CPU with the battery optimiser mode. There’s also QuickCharge for speedy top-ups when you do need to reach for the plug.
Part of this longevity per charge is down to the considerable 4,000mAh battery on board (the benefit of a large device size), but it’s also to do with the software. EMUI 5.1 is fairly heavy in its alerts and prompts, by default it closes apps, too, such as Slack not pushing messages without opening the app itself, for example. This all aids lower consumption, but it does affect the user experience too. Some intervention deep in the menu system can force apps to remain open and you can cease prompts to close apps (per app) too, to make for a more streamlined, personal user experience.
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Ultimately the Honor 8 Pro has battery life on its side. And not because its scrimping on the spec front. This is one powerful, long-lasting and affordable phone that’s every bit as good as – if not better – than the Huawei P10 Plus, all things considered.
Honor 8 Pro review: Cameras
- Dual camera technology, 28mm f/2.2 lenses
- One colour, one monochrome sensor; each 12MP
If you’ve been following Huawei’s camera journey of late then you’ll have noticed the Leica-approved lenses and software in its phones. Honor skips this top-end part of the camera package, however, but it has a similar overall experience, with dual lenses – one colour, one monochrome sensor, both of which are 12-megapixel – able to capture and depth-map images for pseudo bokeh effect (that melty soft background effect).
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The lenses are each 28mm equivalents with f/2.2 apertures, meaning plenty of light can get in to capture a shot. The Wide Aperture mode can be set from f/0.95 through to f/16 if you want software-applied adjustments – which vary in their success, just as we’ve said of the Huawei P10 and P10 Plus, along with other manufacturers operating this kind of software solution.
In the right situations, however, the melty background effect can look decent, so long as you’re not viewing the image outside of the phone where edge-softening imperfections can often be seen. Still, it’s a fun effect that people will enjoy and can even be applied in real-time to video capture (up to 4K).
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In addition to standard capture, a swipe from left to right of screen will open the menu, where Pro Photo – for full manual control – and Monochrome modes exist, alongside a handful of other options. It’s easy to access and you can switch off the current mode from the main screen whenever you want, reverting back to standard shooting.
For us it’s the standard shooting that’s best of all. It’s not got the world’s fastest autofocus. It’s not got best-in-class sensors or resolution. And by default the colours are oversaturated. But for a sub-£475 device the cameras are decent in a variety of conditions, they focus just fine – even up-close – and offer all the modes that you’re likely to need. Take a lot at the shot of a paint pot, below, complete with lots of detail in the surface.
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And because EMUI 5.1 is running in the background, the device also brings the benefit of Highlights. With GPS activated, location tagging is possible and the 8 Pro will arrange your shots into named galleries in the Discover section of the app. These even come with (GoPro Quik) video reels, which you can save, delete or edit to your heart’s content – or tell the phone to stop creating them, if you don’t want them.
Verdict
The Honor 8 Pro might not be quite as future-facing as 2017’s latest flagships, but it’s still a decent affordable phone. At this price point, given all the power and capability on board, it’s a real alternative to consider over the OnePlus 3T should you not want to go and spend mega bucks on the priciest of handsets.
However, we feel the Pro is too wide in the new world of taller phones (look at the LG G6 or Samsung Galaxy S8), its fingerprint scanner is positioned too high, and it’s a shame the defining ultra-gloss finish isn’t available as an option (that said the navy blue does look great). The software can be a bit heavy handed on the prompts and isn’t the prettiest either, but it’s the most mature EMUI outing to date. And in the order of things those are all minor qualms.
If you’re looking for a big-screen phone that’s long-lasting and powerful, but which won’t destroy your bank account, the Honor 8 Pro is well worth considering. Just don’t say we didn’t warn you about the width.
The alternatives to consider…
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OnePlus 3T
The so-called “flagship killer” has always had price on its side. It might not have as capacious a battery or as high a screen resolution as the Honor 8 Pro, but that sub-£400 price point is what makes it really appeal. And it’s not quite as wide which, for us, makes it the preferable device.
Read the full review: OnePlus 3T review
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Huawei P10 Plus
If you’re feeling a little more flush and don’t want a phone quite as wide then, well, Honor’s cousin Huawei has a great offering in the P10 Plus. It’s a little slimmer, but just as powerful and has better dual cameras too.
Read the full review: Huawei P10 Plus review
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iPhone 7 Plus
Whether you’re interested in iOS or Android will depend on whether the iPhone 7 Plus is a device for you or not. The reason its in this comparison is simple: it’s so similar is size and stature to the Honor 8 Pro that it’s impossible not to compare them. Honor has been clever here by delivering almost as much flagship for a lot less money in an Android package.
Read the full review: iPhone 7 Plus review
How to scale apps to fill LG G6’s screen
With the LG G6, the Korean tech giant opted for a somewhat unique approach to building a bezel-free display. Instead of sticking with the usual TV-style 16:9 ratio screen, the company went with a long 18:9 panel instead.
- LG G6 tips and tricks: Get to grips with the long-screened flagship
This means the phone is almost all screen, with minimal framing around the sides, or top and bottom. It also means a phone that’s narrow and easy to hold. But as with any new technology, it takes time to adapt, especially for developers.
Scaling LG G6 apps: Why do it?
The answer to that question is pretty simple: because no one likes black bars or letterboxing on their videos and games. Without scaling adjusted, a lot of apps and games will either be letterboxed or have the virtual buttons permanently on the bottom of the screen.
With the scaling adjusted to fill the screen, the virtual buttons are pushed away, leaving you with nothing but the app you’re trying to use on screen.
Scaling LG G6 apps: How to do it
There are a couple of methods to adjust scaling of apps on the LG G6. The most direct way is to head to Settings > Display and then scrolling down to select “App scaling”.
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Once selected, you’ll see a long list of all the apps installed on your phone. Select which ever app(s) you want to fill the entire screen and a pop-up window appears with three options.
- Compatibility (16:9)
- Standard (16.7:9)
- Full screen (18:9)
You want to choose the bottom option from the list, at which point another popup warning appears to tell you that some apps might be missing content on the edges.
If – after launching an adjusted app – you decide you don’t want it to fill the screen anymore, you can go straight back to the app scaling settings by swiping the virtual buttons on to the screen from the bottom, then selecting the blue floating action button. This takes you directly to the app scaling menu. It’s worth noting, this only appears when you’re using an app that you’ve told to run in 18:9.
Scaling LG G6 apps: The end result
For regular apps and games, the end result is usual your graphics filling the entire screen with some of the content at the edges missing. However, for apps like Netflix which show content scaled to 18:9, it’s ideal.
- LG G6 review: The first truly great flagship phone for 2017
Many of Netflix’s original series are shot and produced in 18:9. Titles like Stranger Things, The Crown, Iron Fist and so forth all fill the entire screen without any black framing or letterboxing. And – even better – once the update is pushed, the mobile app will be able to push HDR content to your mobile too, making the videos look even more vibrant.
Pocket-lint nominated for a Webby award, vote for your favourite website now
Pocket-lint has been nominated for a prestigious Webby award and we need your votes to help us rise to the top.
The Webby Awards are hosted annually by the International Academy of Digital Arts & Sciences and and are now in their 21st year.
They are the internet’s highest honour for websites across multiple genres and Pocket-lint is in the running in the Consumer Electronics category, so we really need your help. After all, you read our website because you enjoy what we do, so all we ask in return is to quickly vote for us on the dedicated Webby Awards page to show your appreciation.
Just head to here: vote.webbyawards.com and click on the big vote button under “Pocket-lint”. And if you’re really kind, we’d also love you to tweet or Facebook share your vote to spread the word too.
Voting is open until Thursday 20 April, so you’ll have to get a wriggle on. And thanks for all your support and loyalty in advance.
The Webby Awards has many other categories you can vote in too, including Games, Cars and even Media Streaming. The nominees are generally enormous, corporate concerns so it’s great for us to be included against such heavyweights.
Your vote for the “little guy” will therefore be much appreciated.
Driverless pods begin ferrying the public around Greenwich
It’s been almost a year since the UK’s Transport Research Laboratory (TRL) opened sign-ups for a driverless pod trial in Greenwich. The original plan was to start before Christmas, but given today’s date that obviously didn’t happen. Still, better late than never, eh? Over the next three weeks, roughly 100 people will clamber aboard “Harry,” a self-driving shuttle named after clockmaker John Harrison. It will take them around a two-mile course in London’s North Greenwich, near The O2, to demonstrate how the technology could be used for “last mile” trips in urban areas.
The shuttle is a repurposed Ultra Pod, which is already in operation at London’s Heathrow Airport. With a maximum speed of 10MPH (16KPH), it’s not the fastest electric vehicle — you could beat it on a Boosted Board — however it’s hoped the leisurely pace will reassure pedestrians and minimise dangerous incidents. Each pod carries up to four people, including a safety operator who can pepper the breaks in an emergency. It’s able to ‘see’ it’s surroundings using a mixture of cameras and lasers, and use that information to track obstacles and create a collision-free route. Notably, it doesn’t need to rely on GPS for any of these calculations.
The purpose of the trials is to see how the public reacts to self-driving vehicles, and to examine how the technology can best be applied in built-up areas. Each trip will give the research team a wealth of valuable information — four terabytes of data every eight hours, to be precise. It’ll be supplemented with passenger interviews, taken before and after each trip, and written feedback that anyone can submit online through an interactive map. “It is critical that the public is fully involved as these technologies become a reality,” Professor Nick Reed, academy director at TRL said.
The “GATEway Project” at Greenwich is one of many research initiatives being funded by the UK government. We’ve already seen the “Lutz Pathfinder” pod, which is being tested in Milton Keynes, and a modified Land Rover that’s serving as a research testbed in Bristol. Plans are also underway for a 41-mile “connected corridor,” which will be used to test LTE, local WiFi hotspots and other forms of connectivity in self-driving vehicles. In the private sector, Nissan is testing its electric Leaf cars in the capital, and Roborace is developing a driverless motorsport. It’s an impressive hub of activity, even without Google and Uber’s involvement.
Via: BBC
The Morning After: Wednesday, April 5th 2017
Welcome to the middle. Apple is sorry about its Mac Pro, and promises something big next year, while in other mea culpa news, the makers of Mass Effect: Andromeda will release a bunch of fixes both this week and in the coming months. Rounding it off, we took a closer look at Sonos’ new Playbase speaker — possibly the only speaker you’ll need in your living room.
The only speaker your living room needs
Sonos Playbase review

As with most everything Sonos does, the Playbase is both excellent and expensive, according to Nathan Ingraham. It might not be for everyone, but the combination of top-notch sound quality, versatility and simple setup makes it an extremely compelling speaker for the living room.
The next one will be a ‘complete rethink.’
Apple is sorry about the Mac Pro

The last new Mac Pro was announced back in 2013, and not much has changed much since. The iconic shiny object proved a difficult fit for its pro users, and as a consequence, Apple is apparently fundamentally rethinking its top-end computer series and everything that comes with it. You won’t see any of these products for a while, however. That’s because Apple’s engineering team is apparently still working to design a system that can easily and efficiently be upgraded — the biggest issue many had with the current Mac Pro.
In other Mac news…Apple is making an iMac with pros in mind

When you think “pro desktop,” you probably don’t think of the iMac. You can get one with a pro-quality display and a high-end (consumer) processor that will do the job for many tasks, but you probably wouldn’t buy one for massive 3D modeling or video projects. Apple would like to change your mind soon.The company’s Phil Schiller has promised that there will be iMac configurations made “specifically with the pro customer in mind” later in 2017. And, before you ask: no, this doesn’t mean a touchscreen.
It starts on Thursday, but it’s going to take months to complete.
How BioWare will fix ‘Mass Effect: Andromeda’

The internet’s reaction to Mass Effect: Andromeda has been pretty negative. Whether the game’s pitiful user ratings on review sites are actually representative of what most players think is a question for another day, but it’s fair to say that the game had more than a few technical issues at launch. Animation glitches, framerate drops and other bugs have marred the launch, as have general complaints about gameplay oddities. Things got so bad that BioWare promised an update last week and a patch arrives this Thursday that “addresses technical fixes” like crashes and improves performance, and also adds further tweaks to gameplay and in-game systems.
We’ll finally know what Project Scorpio has under the hood.Microsoft will unveil the next Xbox’s specs on Thursday
Microsoft’s mid-generation successor to the Xbox One, known as Project Scorpio, was in no shape to try beating Sony’s PS4 Pro to market, but it’s rumored to be a far more powerful system. Just how much beefier has been confined to rumor and isolated reports, but soon we’ll have the official word on Scorpio’s technical guts ahead of its planned full reveal at E3 2017. Microsoft plans to announce the full specs this coming Thursday.
Keep your helipad clear.DARPA tests out an electric X-Plane

In the future, DARPA figures planes with vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) capability will fly further and faster than current hover-capable aircraft. The agency just announced some progress on that front, with the completion of tests on a sub-scale version of its XV-24A. While the plan is to put a hybrid turboshaft engine and generators in the full-size 12,000-pound plane, this unmanned 322-pound demonstrator tested out its design with 24 electric motors aboard.
TNF just doesn’t have the same ring to it
Amazon picks up streaming for Thursday night NFL games

While the NFL will continue to broadcast Thursday night football games on its NFL Network, CBS and NBC, its partner for streaming will change this fall. The league has sold internet rights to Amazon for a reported $50 million, well above the $10 million Twitter paid last year after a bidding war including that also included YouTube and Facebook. While Twitter streamed the games for free via its apps and website, Amazon plans to make them available on the internet just for Prime subscribers.
But wait, there’s more…
- Zoe Quinn’s ‘Crash Override’ book about fighting online hate arrives September 6th
- Invasive, self-destructing iOS hack is even worse on Android
- Netflix reveals ‘The Defenders’ arrival in security footage
- Graphene sieves are a cheaper way of making saltwater drinkable
- Samsung’s in-house OS is a security nightmare
The Honor 8 Pro is Huawei’s best flagship yet
There’s Huawei, and then there’s Honor. While both are technically the same company, the Honor brand takes some of the best bits of Huawei’s smartphones and packages them up in new devices that don’t take as much of a bite out of your bank account. That’s been the general distinction between the two, anyway, but the line has become blurrier as Honor has begun breaching the mid-range with smartphones like the Honor 8. And now, it’s been all but scrubbed out with the announcement of the £475 (nearly $593) Honor 8 Pro today, which is every bit a new Huawei flagship.
Let’s get down to the nitty gritty. Tucked away inside the Honor 8 Pro is Huawei’s best homegrown chip: the Kirin 960 with four 2.4GHz cores and four 1.8GHz cores. With 6GB of RAM and 64 gigs of expandable storage backing that up, it’s a beast by any account. It’s also running the latest version of Huawei’s EMUI (5.1), which is built on top of Android 7.0 Nougat. Among the improvements are a better blue light filter and new camera feature co-developed with GoPro called Highlights, which automatically creates video stories from what’s available in the gallery (much like HTC’s old Zoe highlights feature, then).
Like some other Huawei devices, the Honor 8 Pro uses machine learning to optimize performance, predicting your daily Facebook check so the app loads faster than it would do otherwise. Algorithms also promise to delay the inevitable slowdown of the device as file fragmentation and other forms of wear and tear take their toll. Apparently, you can expect the device to still function at 80 percent efficiency after 500 days of use.

This won’t become apparent for some time, of course, but what’s immediately obvious is just how gorgeous the Honor 8 Pro is. Whereas the Honor 8 was clad almost entirely in glass, the Pro is mostly metal (barring the Gorilla Glass 3 covering the display) The navy blue model I’ve been playing around with catches the light in all kinds of visually appealing ways — this will be the only color available at launch, but black, gold and potentially more hues are in the pipeline. It looks and feels like a seriously premium device, and there are soft curves in all right places. With antenna bands running horizontally close to the top and bottom ends of the handset, there’s no denying the Honor 8 Pro gives off strong iPhone vibes.
The only downside to this beautiful body is that it’s a bit on the big side, though it’s still nice and thin at 6.97mm deep. This does mean, however, there’s enough space for a 4,000mAh battery with fast-charging support that’ll apparently keep the thing going for two days of regular use. More importantly, though, there’s room for a vibrant, stunning 5.7-inch Quad HD (2,560 x 1,400) display. To showcase this striking screen, the Honor 8 Pro comes with the Jaunt VR app preinstalled, and the device’s box actually converts into a cardboard VR viewer. It’s not particularly comfortable, but it’s a nice touch to include this accessory as standard, and in a clever way.
I kinda feel like Huawei’s shot itself in the foot with the Honor 8 Pro. All things considered, I don’t know why you’d buy the new Huawei P10 flagship over the Honor 8 Pro, especially as the former has a few inferior specs and is significantly more expensive at £549. The P10 does have the Honor 8 Pro beat in the camera department, though, at least on paper. Still, you’re getting an excellent dual 12-megapixel camera setup (f/2.2 on both) on the new Honor device that takes some delightful shots, as well as an 8MP shooter up front for selfies. In wide aperture mode, you can play around with focal point and background blur, which is always fun, and as one of the two sensors is monochrome, you can snap native black-and-white pictures. Low-light performance is also very impressive as far as my brief experience with Honor 8 Pro has shown.
The Honor 8 Pro is available to pre-order in the UK today from Huawei’s vmall store for the introductory price, including various accessories, of £474. The official launch is set for April 20th, at which point it’ll also hit Amazon. There’s no word on US pricing or availability yet, but I’m fairly sure we’ll hear more about that in due course as Honor continues to push its brand in the region. And what better phone to do that with than the gorgeous Honor 8 Pro?
Disqus wants to help rid the web of toxic commenters
In recent years, commenting services have come and go, but one has maintained a consistent presence on some of the world’s biggest websites: Disqus. It’s spent the past ten years helping brands and news media develop their own communities, while simultaneously amassing hundreds of millions of users of its own. The service is big enough that its commenting tools have been deployed on websites that host unsavory content, which it has, in turn, become associated with. Disqus has said it has no tolerance for hate speech but continues to host discussions on websites that promote toxicity. Now, it says, it wants to do more about it.
In a blog post, Disqus VP of People and Culture Kim Rohrer spelt out the steps the company will take. The first is the introduction of a feedback tool that allows users to highlight when a website is violating its Terms and Policies. Individual commenters can still be flagged, but if a community is exhibiting toxic language, harassment and hate as a whole then Disqus will decide whether they should be allowed to remain on its platform.
Ultimately, though, the onus will remain on publishers and moderators. Some publishers, including alt-right political sites like Breitbart, have no interest in moderating their discussion forums, but for those that want to promote free speech but eliminate trolls, Disqus says it’s developing new tools to discourage them. In the future, moderators will be given the ability to shadow ban users, making their comments invisible to everyone except that person, and allowed to give commenters timeouts.
Disqus believes it can automate some of these processes by flagging content through machine learning. Algorithms could detect repeat occurrences of certain words and phrases, helping publishers by bringing toxic comments to their attention. In a nod to recent incidents on YouTube, the company will also allow advertisers to choose where their assets appear, so they don’t run alongside discussions they don’t want to be associated with.
“If a publication is dedicated to toxic or hateful discourse, no software or product solutions will help to combat hate speech or toxicity,” Disqus said in statement. “In those cases where a site is determined to be in purposeful violation of our Terms of Service, we will assert our stance and enforce our policy.”
Via: FastCompany
Source: Disqus
Samsung to Declare Record Q1 Results, Bumper 2017 Predicted on S8 Profits
Samsung is on course to record a three and a half year high in first quarter profits this year, with analysts predicting record earnings for the rest of 2017 as the company gears up to start selling its Galaxy S8 smartphone (via Reuters).
Shares in the tech giant are nearing record highs after gaining nearly 17 percent since the beginning of Q1, coming on top of a 43 percent surge in 2016. The numbers are particularly impressive, given the costly discontinuation of its fire-prone Note7 in October and an ongoing corruption scandal involving the company’s chairman Jay Y Lee, who is currently on trial for bribery and other charges. Samsung will issue its earnings guidance early on Friday.
Its resilience is being put down to its dominance in the NAND flash memory market and a boom in memory chips spurred by demand from smartphones and servers. Estimates suggest its January-March operating profit from could hit 9.4 trillion won ($8.44 billion), with its chip division alone making up 5.8 trillion won of that figure, which would stand as the South Korean firm’s highest profit since Q3 2013.
Analysts expect tight supply conditions for memory chips to continue this year, particularly in NAND flash chips used for long-term data storage. Factor in uncertainty over the fate of Toshiba’s flash unit, which accounts for 20 percent of the market and is currently the subject of a bidding war, and that leaves Samsung’s mobile division as its key earnings variable.
Analysts are bullish about Samsung’s prospects, however. The Galaxy S8 has been praised following its March 29 launch, with sales expected to exceed the S7 and set a new record for the company.
“We think the S8 series will definitely be a strong flagship for Samsung and help it gain back market share,” Counterpoint analyst Tom Kang said.
“The launch of the fully revamped iPhone 8 will also be threatening. But there is also pent up demand for Samsung devices rolling over from last year due to the disappearance of the Note 7,” he said. “So those 2 factors will balance out.”
Samsung share prices have already benefitted from reports that the firm will be Apple’s sole provider of OLED displays for the highly anticipated “iPhone 8”. Earlier this week, reports indicated Apple has already placed orders for 70 million OLED panels for the phone, which is expected to feature a major design overhaul with an edge-to-edge display, glass body, and a premium price tag.
Tags: Samsung, Galaxy S8
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Ulysses 2.8 Update Brings Touch ID Text Library Support, New Filter Options
Popular writing platform Ulysses was updated to version 2.8 on Wednesday, bringing some notable new features and improvements including Touch ID and password support.
The release of the new version means iOS users can now protect their text library via Touch ID, while Mac users without access to fingerprint recognition, or who prefer not to use it, can alternatively rely on a personal password. The idle time after which the app locks itself can also be customized.
Beyond the new access protection, the update enhances Ulysses’ document management features, like groups and filters. Filters can now be used to narrow down the library content based on negative criteria. In other words, users can search for texts that don’t contain a specific word, phrase or keyword.
In addition, a number of new icons for labelling groups and filters have been added. Combined text statistics for groups and filters, so far limited to the Mac version of Ulysses, are now available on iPad and iPhone as well.
Elsewhere, update improves the support of x-callback-urls on both macOS and iOS, and adds a number of new x-callback-actions. X-callback is used by certain applications for automating action sequences, among others the iOS app Workflow which was recently acquired by Apple.
Lastly, the update adds support for VoiceOver to its Touch Bar controls, and adds a number of performance improvements and bug fixes.
Ulysses 2.8 is a free update for existing users on both iOS and macOS. Ulysses for Mac costs $44.99 on the Mac App Store, while the universal app for iPhone and iPad costs $24.99 on the App Store.
Tag: Ulysses
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