OnePlus 5 render shows off dual cameras and metal body
OnePlus’ upcoming flagship is rumored to sport dual rear cameras.
OnePlus is getting ready to launch its 2017 flagship, which will allegedly be called the OnePlus 5. Tetraphobia — the fear of the number 4 — is a common superstition in Asian countries, and in Chinese culture the number is considered unlucky as it sounds similar to the Mandarin word for “death.” Anyway, it looks like OnePlus doesn’t want to jinx its upcoming phone, so it’s skipping a number.
As for the device itself, a render leaked by India Today suggests the phone will have a dual camera setup at the back along with a brushed aluminum body similar to what we’ve seen on the OnePlus 3T.

The render comes from “people who have seen the phone and have possibly worked on the OnePlus 5,” with the publication stating that the device will make its debut within the next two months with simultaneous launches planned for China and India.
Chinese manufacturers have introduced various implementations of the dual camera system — Huawei used the secondary lens as a monochrome sensor on the P9 and this year’s P10, and Xiaomi decided to offer a telephoto lens with the secondary sensor in the Mi 6. It looks like OnePlus will leverage the technology to improve the device’s low-light shooting capabilities.
There aren’t any details when it comes to internal hardware, but it is likely the OnePlus 5 will be powered by the Snapdragon 835.
Refurbished Galaxy Note 7 could go on sale in South Korea in June
Refurbished Note 7 will be $250 more affordable than the original.
Samsung announced at the end of last month that it would bring back the Note 7 as a refurbished device in select markets. The refurbished model was spotted undergoing Wi-Fi certification earlier this week, and a report out of South Korea suggests the phone will be available at the end of June.

The refurbished Note 7 will feature a smaller 3000mAh battery, but the rest of the components will be unchanged from last year’s model. Samsung has around 3 to 4 million units of the Note 7, and plans to sell 10% of them — or 300,000 units — in its home market. The phone is likely to be called the Note 7R, and is estimated to go on sale for 700,000 won ($620), which is $250 less than what the Note 7 retailed for last year.
As of now, there’s no information regarding other markets where the phone will be made available, but it is possible Samsung will bring the Note 7R to other Asian countries.
Samsung Galaxy Note 7
- Galaxy Note 7 fires, recall and cancellation: Everything you need to know
- Survey results: Samsung users stay loyal after Note 7 recall
- Samsung Galaxy Note 7 review
- The latest Galaxy Note 7 news
- Join the Note 7 discussion in the forums!
Samsung Galaxy Note 7 vs. Galaxy S8+: Total recall
The Note 7 may be the butt of every bad joke right now, but ignoring it altogether leaves a huge gap in the history of Samsung’s design language. Many of the design traits that make the Galaxy S8+ — the company’s latest big-screened superphone — so great, can be traced back to its explosively flawed predecessor. Though it’ll forever be associated with faulty batteries and an embarrassing global recall, the Note 7 was the first to showcase a true symmetrical glass and metal design, and organic curves that went a step beyond the “edge” phones of old.
The same is true on the software side, with the Note 7 debuting the “Grace” UX — a significantly refined interface that paved the way for the clean lines, rounded rectangles and brilliant whites we see on the S8+. And as the last Samsung flagship to feature traditional physical home keys and a 16:9 display, it’s an interesting stepping stone between the old and the new.
Check out our video comparison above, as Russell takes a look at Samsung’s most infamous phone next to its latest and greatest.
- Android Central on YouTube
- Samsung Galaxy S8 review
- Galaxy S8 + S8+ video review
OnePlus 5 confirmed to feature dual rear-camera, possible embedded fingerprint sensor
OnePlus has always produced phones that offer flagship specs and features without the flagship prices. The OnePlus 5 looks set to be no different, and the latest report from India Today Tech suggests it will come with a dual rear-camera, a feature that many of 2017’s flagship have.
- OnePlus 4/OnePlus 5: What’s the story so far?
It’s not clear what image sensors will be fitted to the upcoming “flagship killer”, but it’s thought the front-facing snapper will be the same 16-megapixel sensor as found on the OnePlus 3T.
India Today Tech has also come up with an image of the OnePlus 5, which is based on information from people who have either seen it or worked on it, and it shows no rear-mounted fingerprint sensor.
This, says India Today Tech, means the upcoming device will have a sensor under the screen on the front where you would normally find a physical button. This could mean the OnePlus 5 will have a screen that takes up the entirety of the front, similar to the Samsung Galaxy S8, LG G6 and possibly even the iPhone 8 if rumours are to be believed.
The image also shows no antenna lines on the rear, and the seamless look could eliminate the slight variation between the screen and rear as seen on the OnePlus 3T. It’s claimed the OnePlus 5 will have a 5.5-inch display, but it’s not clear if it will stick to full HD 1080p, or take a bump up to 1440p.
Other specs are thought to include the Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 processor that features in many of the 2017 flagship devices, at least 6GB of RAM, as the 3T had 6GB, and 64GB/128GB storage options.
- OnePlus 3T review: The best mid-price phone, now with Nougat sweetness
There’s no word on pricing just yet, but we can be sure it will be a fraction of the cost of several 2017 flagships. OnePlus co-founder Carl Pei told India Today Tech: “”Some people think we have the best product while some think we have the best product at a given price. This caveat is something I don’t want. We just want to create the best products. Period. No caveats”.
“We don’t want consumers to see the price of the phone”.
The next OnePlus phone is said to skip the number 4 and go straight to 5 as 4 is seen as unlucky number in Asia.
This real-life Dawn of War III power fist can punch through toilets, oh yes!
With Dawn of War III released tomorrow, Sega has created something unique to promote it. It has built a real-life, fully-working power fist.
Based on the pneumatic gloves space marines have worn since Games Workshop first unveiled Warhammer 40K, the working version was partly 3D printed but utilises weapons-grade aluminium for the fingers and punching fist itself.
It weighs almost 10kg and is capable of delivering a maximum force of 3300 Newtons. Basically, it can punch through a brick wall. And ceramic toilet.
The power fist was built by UK production company Rewind and requires a harness to support its weight. The harness also contains two air canisters, which power parts from an old industrial pneumatic cylinder. It can deliver up to 3,000 PSI to the first in order to augment the user’s strength.
Sega used the working version on a number of hapless targets, including a dolls house, but it eventually gave up the ghost after ploughing through a series of computers and other metal objects. It expects to have it up and running again soon and Pocket-lint is hoping to give it a test in the coming days.
Dawn of War III will be available for PC from Steam and Amazon.co.uk from tomorrow, 27 April.
The Morning After: Wednesday, April 26th 2017
In case you missed it yesterday, one Google cofounder is making a flying (kinda) car, while the other has a secret blimp, Uber is having a pretty awful year (already), and there’s a for-real tricorder. The makers of it reckon it’s better than the Star Trek one. Bold claims.
It’s not even May.
Uber’s terrible, horrible, no good, very bad 2017

Uber could be the world’s most valuable startup, with estimates pegging the company as being worth around $70 billion. Its business, and its CEO, have always garnered controversy, but Uber has been able to survive whatever slings and arrows were thrown its way. So far. This year, however, has been, well, tough.
Wouldn’t you?
Of course Sergey Brin has a secret zeppelin

Since his Google co-founder Larry Page is working on a “flying car,” it only makes sense that Sergey Brin has an aerial hobby project too. In this case, Bloomberg reports that the mission is a dirigible, with an ex-NASA director leading the project. Even if it flies, however, the biggest hurdle could be explaining the difference between helium and hydrogen.
The X keeps it fresh
LG has OLED, Samsung has QLED and so Vizio has XLED

Vizio has finally unveiled its new for 2017 4K sets, and like Samsung, it’s rebranding LCDs to compete with OLED. Whatever you call it, the new P- and M- series televisions should bring high picture quality at value prices, but without that tracking scheme the FTC fined it for.
The XPrize Tricorder winner is half real medical device, half Dr. McCoy.
XPrize winner says its Tricorder is better than ‘Star Trek’

The Tricorder XPrize finally has a winner. The Final Frontier Medical Devices’ DxtER isn’t so much an all-in-one scanner as collection of noninvasive medical-diagnosis gadgets. Even so, its creators claim the DxtER package is better than Star Trek’s fictional tricorder. Unlike the fictional tricorder, the winning XPrize entry is actually a small collection of specialized and smart medical devices that interact with the user’s tablet. This includes a compact spirometer that can measure the strength of a patient’s lungs, a Mono test kit, medical-grade heart-rate and respiration monitors, and devices like the DxtER Orb, which doubles as a thermometer and stethoscope. Perhaps most importantly, it’s designed for patients to use themselves.
Fight as Rocket Racoon, Chun Li, Hulk and more this September.
The Avengers take on gaming icons in ‘Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite’

After a year of silence, Capcom has announced eight new characters for its crossover fighter — Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite. Doubling down on Marvel’s Cinematic Universe, Hulk, Thor, Hawkeye, Ultron and Rocket Racoon join the playable roster. On the Capcom side, you’ll be able to duke it out as Street Fighter’s Chun Li, Resident Evil’s Chris Redfield, and Strider’s Strider Hiryu. It launches on PS4, Xbox One and PC on September 19th for $59.99.
An artificial womb could transform care for extremely premature infants.
Scientists successfully grew fetal lambs inside ‘uterus-like’ bags

Doctors at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia have developed a new artificial womb that could benefit the tens of thousands of critically preterm (younger than 26 weeks) births in the US each year. According to a new paper published in the journal Nature Communications, the research physicians successfully kept fetal lambs alive inside a “uterus-like” plastic sack for up to four weeks — longer than any similar device before it.
It didn’t take long for the supercomputer to figure out how anxious I am.
IBM’s Watson looked into my soul and ‘drew’ my portrait

IBM’s “Art with Watson: Hidden Portraits,” is an exhibit featuring portraits of historic personalities like Marie Curie and Nikola Tesla, which Watson helped artists create by feeding them data collected using its natural language and personality insights APIs. IBM also had a Watson cognitive photo booth, where the supercomputer made portraits of visitors based on five different aspects of their personality: anxiousness, openness, agreeableness, extraversion and conscientiousness. Watson asks a set of personality trait questions, then draws a cognitive portrait represented by tiny icons of each of those aforementioned traits.
Come spend some time in the Genius Grove.Apple sees its redesigned retail stores as community spaces

Apple is banking on the (vaguely) social aspect of its stores. It’s both redesigning its 100 largest stores and launching new workshops to turn its stores into community spaces of sorts. The shops are still very much geared toward sales, but you’ll have more reasons to swing by on a frequent basis. The workshops revolve around new in-store Creative Pros who host free sessions based around Apple tools and Apple-friendly devices.
But wait, there’s more…
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- ‘Star Wars: Episode IX’ ends the trilogies on May 24th, 2019
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- A Doritos bag is all you need to play the ‘Guardians 2’ soundtrack
- These Japanese drones are the first ones to carry spherical LED displays
- ‘Treehugger’ VR project lets you become one with a giant redwood.
Pioneer and Onkyo slip Chromecast support into more audio devices
Owners of some recent audio products from Onkyo and Pioneer don’t need a dongle for Chromecast support anymore. At CES in 2016 Google announced a push for Chromecast support in more audio products, but it’s taken until now for updates adding the feature in many of last year’s receivers, Hi-Fi systems and other devices. Once they’re updated, all it takes is being on the same WiFi network with your smartphone, laptop or Google Home and they’re ready for all kinds of casting or multiroom audio — check below for a full list of supported model numbers.
Onkyo:
PR-RZ5100, TX-RZ3100, TX-RZ1100, TX-RZ810, TX-RZ710, TX-NR676E, TX-NR656, TX-NR575E, TX-NR555, TX-NR474, HT-S7800, TX-8270, TX-L20D, LS7200, LS5200, R-N855, NS-6170, NS-6130, and NCP-302.
Pioneer:
SC-LX901, SC-LX801, SC-LX701, SC-LX501, VSX-1131, VSX-932, VSX-832, VSX-831, VSX-S520D, VSX-S520, SX-S30DAB, NC-50DAB, N-30AE, FS-W50, FS-W40, XC-HM86D, X-HM86D, X-HM76D, X-HM76, MRX-5, and MRX-3.
Source: Onkyo, Pioneer
Twitter is gaining more users, losing less money
Twitter has updated us on the state of its business and, if you squint, you can almost see that things are picking up for the service. The company revealed that while revenues fell by $164 million, it managed to trim its quarterly losses down to just $62 million. By comparison, Twitter burned $167 million in the last three months of 2016 and $80 million in the same quarter last year.
Twitter’s also had a problem with perma-stagnant user growth, with the number of monthly users hovering around the 310 – 320 million mark for the last year. Not so this quarter, which saw the number of daily users spike in the last three months, taking the total to 328 million.

User numbers are up, losses are down, but Twitter can’t yet make its advertising service work, and that’s a problem. The company saw ad engagement fall, as well as the amount of money advertisers spent with the service. But, as a counter to that, Twitter beat its own estimates, raking in $548 million when it expected to earn $511.9 million.
In his remarks, CEO Jack Dorsey says that he is “encouraged by the audience growth momentum,” and believes that profitability is coming. He does concede, however, that the company will face “revenue headwinds,” as the service struggles to carve out an identity for itself in the face of so much competition.

Twitter doesn’t speculate on why, suddenly, user numbers are up so high, but we can, and it’s probably down to you know who. Since the current incumbent of the White House uses the service as his own personal megaphone, people are likely to tune in.
Another reason for optimism is that Twitter lost a lot of cash last quarter thanks to restructuring charges and severance costs. In October, the company let around 350 employees go in the hope of trimming costs, as well as shutting down the 6-second video platform Vine.
Not to mention, of course, that Twitter has started to make some changes to its platform to address its abuse problem. It has instituted automatic blocking of abusive accounts and has moved to restrict users who misuse the platform to spread hate speech. Oh, and it blocked noted assholes Martin Shkreli and Tila Tequila, so it’s clearly doing something right.
Source: Twitter, (2 .PDF)
Day One Journal App Now Offers to Print Journals as Bound Books, Starting at $14.99
The company behind Mac and iOS journaling app Day One this week began offering U.S. users the chance to create printed, bound books using the content of their digital journals.
Day One Books can be designed from within the Day One iPad and iPhone app, with options to customize the cover, and include maps, stats, and full-color photos in the content.
The journals can have a flexible amount of pages (up to 400 max) and are printed on “high-quality paper” with a “coating material”, according to Day One, although no other details on the specific stock are given.

The journals can be purchased through the iOS apps using Apple Pay, and prices for the journals start at $14.99 for 50 pages, rising to $49.99 for 400 pages, with the option of a hard cover for an extra $5.

The company says all digital files are “securely transferred” to the printing facility and printing is automated without any manual handling of the files, after which the digital files used are automatically deleted.

Day One Books ship to their destination within 7-12 business days after ordering within the app, and tracking codes are not provided. Day One is also promising support for international orders in the future.
A full pricing breakdown for Day One Book options can be found here.
Day One is a $4.99 app on the iOS App Store and costs $39.99 on the Mac App Store.
Tag: Day One
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China to Get Netflix Originals in Content Deal With Local Streaming Service
Netflix has signed a licensing deal with a Beijing-based video platform in order to avoid regulatory restrictions and get its content into China’s huge entertainment market (via The Hollywood Reporter).
The streaming giant announced the news of its content agreement with iQiyi on Tuesday at the APOS industry conference in Bali, Indonesia.
“China is an important market for obvious reasons; it’s also a challenging market for obvious reasons,” said Robert Roy, Netflix’s vice president of content acquisition. “Right now what we will do is look to license content into China. We closed a deal with iQiyi, which is exciting.”
“For us, it does a couple of things,” Roy added. “It gets our content distribution into the territory and builds awareness of the Netflix brand and Netflix content.”
A subsidiary of Chinese giant Baidu, iQiyi is currently switching from an advertising-supported streaming service to a subscription model in the same vein as Netflix. The subsidiary reportedly commands the largest customer base and content portfolio in China, however it has been looking to broaden its appeal as rivals like Tencent Video and Youku Tudou compete for viewers in the country’s market.
It is understood that Netflix will make some of its upcoming original content available on iQiyi at the same time as it appears in other Netflix-serving countries, but further details on which shows would be included in the deal were not forthcoming.
Both Amazon and Netflix have been unable to enter China’s market because of regulatory hurdles, although Netflix’s House of Cards briefly achieved viral status in China thanks to a deal with local service Sohu. The show was apparently even known to Chinese president Xi Jinping, but it was later withdrawn from local streaming services by regulators.
Last year, Apple faced its own issues with Chinese state regulators regarding a controversial independent movie which led to the shut down of iTunes and iBooks in the country.
Tags: China, Netflix
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