Are you surprised how popular Google’s Pixel phones are?
The Pixel line is great, and Google’s just getting started with it.
Since the launch of the original Pixel in the fall of 2016, Google’s been hard at work to ensure its Pixel brand gets in front of as many people’s eyes as possible. It’s facing stiff competition on all fronts, but thanks to the success of last year’s Pixel 2, sales are increasing at a steady rate.

The Pixel lineup may not be as profitable as Samsung’s Galaxy phones or Apple’s iPhones, but even if you’re not super invested into the technology space, there’s a good chance you’ve heard about the Pixel phones at one point or another — whether it be in a Verizon store or through an ad on TV.
One of our users recently created a thread in the Android Central forums asking if anyone was surprised about how popular Google’s Pixel lineup has become, and these are a few of the responses.
Ry
02-08-2018 05:49 PM“
Nope.
Especially playing up the camera in the marketing. Camera is important to a lot of customers.
Not OS updates.
Not security updates.
Not SD cards.
Not removable batteries.
Not unlocked, no carrier.Reply
Almeuit
02-09-2018 01:03 AM“
I’m not shocked. Google has Verizon helping with the advertising. For the US that’s a big player to be advertising & putting your phone in their store displays.
Reply
L0n3N1nja
02-09-2018 01:13 PM“
Not really, they partnered with Verizon for advertising. They used Samsungs strategy to get Verizon to push their phones and it worked.
Had this phone not gotten the carrier support and heavy advertising, it would of just been another Nexus in terms of sales.
Reply
Morty2264
02-09-2018 07:26 PM“
I’m pleasantly surprised with its prevalence. In today’s land of Samsung and Apple, it’s nice to have a third player in the game.
Reply
Now, we’d like to hear from you — Are you surprised about the Pixel’s popularity?
Join the conversation in the forums!
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Qualcomm is doubling down on LTE before moving onto 5G
Before we get to 5G, Qualcomm is debuting a new LTE chip with twice the speed of today’s phones.

It’s often said that the arc of a mature industry showcases its best products right before it becomes obsolete. This is conveyed as an “S-curve”, where after a burst of investment and innovation, a particular category plateaus and makes way for whatever comes afterward.
We’re in that stage for 4G mobile service, better known as LTE. We’re on the cusp of seeing its successor, 5G, mature enough to ship in phones and practically everything else that connects to the internet, but one purveyor of LTE products, Qualcomm, wants to bring 4G as close to 5G as possible before it moves on to bigger and better things.
Enter the X24 LTE modem. While we’re still waiting on the Snapdragon 845, which will ship with the slower and less power-efficient X20 modem in March, Qualcomm is announcing the X24 to punctuate the notion that LTE still has plenty of life left. To wit, it’s the first modem to support 2Gbps speeds — double that of today’s X16 — and is built on an extremely power-efficient 7nm process.
To achieve those 2Gbps speeds, the chip can combine up to seven connections at once, known as 7x carrier aggregation, with hundreds of potential combinations of both licensed and unlicensed spectrum to find those speeds. The idea here is to allow carriers around the world, in all their spectral varieties, to use as much of their spectrum together as physically possible to reach top speeds. While Qualcomm says that technically the X24 can combine up to seven streams of licensed spectrum, the more likely scenario is for some of those bands to be in unlicensed territory, utilizing the company’s LAA spec to bolt on additional capacity to the average downlink.
We likely won’t see the fruits of this achievement until well into 2019, which puts the X24’s debut on the cusp of the X50’s, Qualcomm’s first 5G NR modem. During an event in San Diego in early February, Qualcomm hosted a so-called “5G Day,” where it displayed the many cellular pies in which it will have hands. Clumsy analogy, but stick with me.
Qualcomm says the X24 may be its last LTE modem.
The company is already looking beyond that initial 5G spec that was finalized in December, demoing the ways that its chips work with hardware from various equipment vendors like Nokia and Ericsson. The intricacies of today’s LTE networks are invisible to most people, but carriers around the world purchase backhaul and tower equipment from many different companies, and they all have to seamlessly work together. At MWC, Qualcomm will demo those first steps towards a unified 5G framework, but also innovative ways that carriers can share spectrum to make for a more efficient internet in general. With 5G expected to debut in 2019 with potential speeds of up to 5Gbps in the millimeter wave spectrum range, efficiency is going to be paramount to ensuring all of that bandwidth is properly used.
But 5G won’t be limited to mobile broadband and phones; Qualcomm wants its chips to be ubiquitous in industrial enterprises — private 5G networks are going to be big, and have the potential to replace wired ethernet setups in many business environments — as well as in cars, which will need a connection to the internet on the way to autonomy, the company argues.
Before we get there, though, we need to continue on the current path, which means maxing out the potential of 4G LTE and making all networks and all phones more efficient. That was the argument last year when Qualcomm marketed gigabit speeds — it’s not just the single user that benefits but the entire system — and now, a year later, we’re at twice the speed with a finalized 5G spec and the potential to disrupt every industry on earth.
How to set your default texting app on Android
I don’t like my default SMS app! How do I change it?

Back in 2014, Google made it possible to change your default SMS app, and forced every phone maker to follow the same rules. There were a number of reasons for this, mainly convenience- and security-related, but the main takeaway is that it’s now possible to specify a texting app that’s different from the one that comes preloaded on your phone.
Every phone maker handles things a bit differently, and in this guide we’re going to show you how to do it on two popular versions of Android: Google’s version that ships with the Nexus and Pixel phones (currently Android 8.1), and on the Samsung Experience, which ships with the most recent Galaxy lineup.
How to change your default SMS app on Google’s version of Android
The first example we’re going to show is how to change the default SMS app on a Nexus or Pixel. This guide shows the steps using Android 8.1, but they should be similar for previous and future versions.
First, you’ll need to download another app. We like Textra but there are many others.
Swipe down on the notification shade.
Tap the Settings menu (cog icon).
Tap on Apps & Notifications

Scroll down and tap on Advanced to expand the section.
Tap on Default apps.
Tap on SMS app.
Select the new default SMS/texting app.

That’s it! Now you can feel free to use a new SMS app as you see fit!
How to change your default SMS app on Samsung’s version of Android
Galaxys are the most common Android phones around, and Samsung has its own way of doing things. It’s easy to change the default SMS app on, say, a Galaxy S7 or Galaxy S8, but it’s in a different part of the settings.
First, you’ll need to download another app. We like Textra but there are many others.
Swipe down on the notification shade.
Tap the Settings menu (cog icon).
Tap on Apps.
Find the three-dot menu button in the top right of the screen and tap on it.
Tap Default apps.

Tap Messaging apps.
Select the messaging app you want to switch to.
Confirm your choice by tapping OK.

The easier way
Some of you may point out that merely opening a new SMS app will usually ask you whether you want to make it your default. That is certainly a possibility, but there are some apps, like Facebook Messenger, that don’t automatically prompt you once you’ve initially dismissed it.
What about other phones?
Phones from other manufacturers will have different methods of changing their default texting app — Huawei’s, for instance, is quite hidden — but they’re all variants of the same set of instructions.
If you have a particular phone you’re struggling with, let us know in the comments and we’ll try to help you out!
The Morning After: Apple HomePod, reviewed
Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.
Happy Valentine’s Day! Now that’s out of the way, we’ve got Apple’s HomePod review (great sound, not so smart), adorable robot skiers and problems with Star Trek Discovery.
The company’s first smart speaker sounds great, but is that enough?
Apple HomePod review: A great speaker that’s not so smart

For Apple, being late to the smart-speaker party isn’t necessarily a sin. The company’s ethos — as explained by CEO Tim Cook time and again — is that Apple cares more about being the best than being first. The $349 HomePod is proof that’s not always true. Apple put considerable time and effort into making its first smart speaker sound better than its rivals, and Chris Velazco argues they succeeded. After a few solid days of testing, he says the HomePod is the best smart speaker he’s ever heard — it’s just not all that smart compared to the rivals.
Looking forward to Samsung’s version of the talking turd.
Samsung’s Galaxy S9 may offer its own version of Apple’s Animoji

Sources claim that Samsung’s Galaxy S9 will include a “3D emoji” feature that — surprise! — counters the Animoji you find on the iPhone X. The smartphone would reportedly use upgraded facial recognition (no word on how closely it matches the iPhone) to create 3D faces that mimic your facial expressions and add a little spice to your messages. The technology would also lead to “more secure financial transactions” — kinda like… well, the iPhone X.
Someone’s angry.
‘Star Trek Discovery’ failed to do what good sci-fi does

Star Trek Discovery’s debut season has wrapped up. Did you see that part with the *spoiler* when they turned out to actually be *redacted*? STD may have been good TV for a lot of its viewers, but not everyone was happy with the latest version of the long-running sci-fi series.
Small size, big performance.
ASUS puts discrete graphics inside its ultra-thin ZenBook

ASUS showed off its ridiculously thin and light ZenBook 13 at CES earlier this year, but the model was missing a key component: a dedicated GPU. Now, though, the new ZenBook 13 UX331 offers the whole shebang at just 0.47-0.55 inches thick and weighing in at just 2.47 pounds, with a discrete graphics card on board and a 13.3″ FHD touchscreen display.
The visual grunt work comes courtesy of an NVIDIA GeForce graphics chip, which will provide extra performance for gaming and GPU-intensive tasks — certainly a boost over the Intel UHD cards found in ultrabook counterparts. ASUS says it’s the world’s thinnest laptop with a discrete GPU, and it’ll no doubt play a role in bumping the brand’s sales of gaming machines.
They’re also playing tour guide and swimming in aquariums.
Robots had their own skiing competition at the Winter Olympics

D’aww!
Phantom 4, eat your heart out.
The Skydio R1 might be the smartest consumer drone in the sky

Autonomous features in commercially available drones are nothing new. Heck, I’m old enough to remember when DJI Phantoms didn’t even offer follow-along technology. Shorter version: Most every drone worth its rotors possesses some level of autonomy. But then there’s Skydio’s R1, which ratchets things up a notch. Or two.
The R1 isn’t so much a drone as it is a flying, self-positioning action camera. Its sole purpose is to record the person it’s following. Built by a team of former MIT engineers, the R1 relies on the 13 cameras studded throughout its exterior to see the world around it and the same NVIDIA Jetson chip used in self-driving vehicles as a processing hub to navigate.
The $400 PA for Americana bands touring coffee shops.
Korg Konnect: A smart amp for small audiences

For large gatherings, PA systems keep you from just yelling at a group of people to share your message. For musicians, a PA is necessary to amplify your voice and instrument to an audience. On the surface, Korg’s Konnect PA speaker does pretty much what every other speaker with a few mics attached to it does: makes things louder so folks can hear them. But look a little deeper, and you’ll see the Konnect takes what Korg knows about sound and performances and shoves it into a four-channel speaker. One you can control with a companion app that’s surprisingly robust.
But wait, there’s more…
- Samsung’s Bixby leader leaves for Google
- Panasonic’s GX9 packs 4K video and more into a tinier body
- ‘Assassin’s Creed Origins’ virtual tours can actually teach history
- Watch Starman and its Tesla get swallowed by the darkness of space
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Google explains how its Chrome ad filter will work
Tomorrow, Chrome will deploy its built-in ad filter that can keep the most annoying types of ads on the internet out of sight even if you don’t use an ad blocker. In a post on the Chromium blog, Google has revealed more details about the filter before it drops, going under the hood to explain how it works more clearly. The big G says it starts by evaluating sample pages from a website to determine whether it has any advertisement that violates the standards set by the Coalition for Better Ads.
If a website doesn’t have the type of ads the Coalition’s testers found especially annoying — such as prestitial ads with countdowns, pop-ups and advertisements that auto-play with sound — it gets a passing grade. Websites that do have them get a Warning, while those that consistently violate the standards and refuse to remove the offending ads get a Failing grade.
When you visit a visit a URL on Chrome, the browser’s filter cross-references it with the list of websites that failed the Better Ads Standards. If it determines that you are indeed visiting a domain with irritating ads, the filter will check network requests on the page against ad-related URL patterns in order to block those ads. That doesn’t mean it’s taking the right to see those advertisements away from you, though. (Hey, if you like watching full-page video ads that blast music on max volume, then more power to you.) The browser will tell you that it blocked ads on the site, and it will give you the choice to allow them to load whenever you visit.

This is what that notice will look like on mobile. On desktop, the notification will show up on the address bar.
Google says that while Chrome’s filter will automatically block ads, its goal isn’t to filter all advertisements all the time. The Chrome team is giving websites 30 days to fix the advertisements that don’t adhere to the Better Ads Standards, and it’s only blocking them if they remain non-compliant even after getting a warning and a month to make things right. By giving them a warning, it’s hoping to convince website owners to remove any intrusive ad themselves. So far, the tech titan’s plan seems to be working: 42 percent of sites that were failing have already resolved their issues and now have passing grades.
Source: Chromium
Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X24 modem will enable 2 Gbps LTE speeds
Even as the race toward real-world 5G picks up steam, LTE technology as it exists will remain crucial for most of us in the next few years. Qualcomm’s latest gigabit LTE modem, the X24, can reach speeds of 2 Gbps (where supported by carriers) — a significant jump from the 1.2 Gbps promised by its predecessor, the X20. And just as that modem was eventually embedded into the Snapdragon 845 chipset announced in December, it’s likely that the X24 will be integrated in Qualcomm’s next premium mobile chip, which we can expect to power many of next year’s flagships. In fact, you can expect it to show up in commercial devices in the first half of 2019, according to the company’s announcement video.
The X24 achieves the speeds it can because it supports “up to 7x carrier aggregation on the downlink” as well as 4X4 MIMO on up to five aggregated carriers. In the uplink, Snapdragon X24 supports Category 20 upload speeds, 3×20 MHz CA and up to 256-QAM. If those words mean nothing to you, here’s an explainer to help make sense of it.
According to Qualcomm, this is the first commercially announced Category 20 LTE modem supporting 2 Gbps speeds to be announced. Not only that, and more impressive, it’s also the first chip built on a 7 nanometer process, which would translate to potential power savings. Qualcomm says it has started sampling the new modem, and expects to demonstrate the X24 live at MWC later this month, in conjunction with Telstra, Ericsson and Netgear. We’ll be sure to check it out for ourselves then to see if these theoretical speeds bear out in the real world.
A lot of other factors affect your data speeds of course, and one of the most important is carrier support. While many service providers have begun working on gigabit LTE in earnest, the faster network still isn’t completely deployed nationwide.
At its 5G Day event in San Diego last week, Qualcomm also demonstrated a trio of trials, showcasing technologies like spectrum sharing and “ultra reliable low latency communication (URLLC)”. These are expected to boost throughput and speeds that will meet recently approved 5G NR standards.
Qualcomm also announced two new software offerings — an SDK for its IoT LTE modem (MDM9206) and a set of “wireless edge” services for enterprise and industrial use. The SDK will make it easier for device manufacturers to design applications for their products, like LTE-connected lamps, cameras, ovens, washing machines, sensors and more.
As we continue to march towards 5G, the technology for gigabit LTE continues to be an important part of mobile data. The X24 modem will likely arrive in devices in consumers’ hands around the same time as the first 5G phones will, making it a key part of a hopefully smooth transition in 2019.
KGI: Apple Could Ship 100 Million Units of New 6.1-inch LCD iPhone, Replacing iPhone 8 and 8 Plus in 2018 Device Line-up
KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo today shared shipment projections with MacRumors for Apple’s rumored 6.1-inch iPhone that he expects to launch in the second half of 2018.
The device is said to have some iPhone X features such as Face ID, but design compromises will enable Apple to put it at a more affordable price point. They could include an LCD screen instead of an OLED display, an aluminum frame, a single lens camera, and no 3D Touch.
We project shipments under the new product life cycle (4Q18-3Q19) for the 6.1″ LCD iPhone, estimated to be launched in 2H18, will reach around 100mn units.
According to Kuo’s research note, shipment projections could fluctuate depending on the selling price of the 6.1-inch LCD iPhone, which Kuo believes will be somewhere between $700 and $800 in the United States. In his analysis, shipments will be around 105-115 million units when priced at US$699, and 95-105 million units when priced at US$799.
The price could also depend on “whether Apple ultimately sees the new 6.1-inch LCD model as the successor of iPhone 8 or 8 Plus,” according to Kuo. In a previous note, KGI Securities has said the 6.1-inch iPhone will have a standard non-stacked logic board and rectangular battery pack like the iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus.
Kuo expects the 6.1-inch LCD iPhone to account for around 50 percent of the new iPhone line-up’s shipments, with sales remaining strong into 2019. On that basis, today’s shipping estimate suggests lifetime sales of 2018 iPhones could reach approximately 200 million units.
The device is expected to be announced around September-October as usual alongside a new 5.8-inch iPhone X and a larger 6.5-inch version dubbed iPhone X Plus.
Related Roundup: 2018 iPhonesTags: KGI Securities, Ming-Chi Kuo
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Professional-Grade Acoustic Tests Support Apple’s Claims About HomePod’s Superior Sound Distribution
HomePod acoustic tests performed by Fast Company and published Tuesday appear to support Apple’s claim that algorithms built into the smart speaker make it capable of distributing sound evenly throughout a room.
According to Apple’s marketing material, music played on HomePod is evenly distributed so that it sounds similar regardless of where the listener is standing or sitting in the room. Apple also claims that HomePod’s output remains consistent wherever it is placed in an environment, thanks to sophisticated always-on sound processing algorithms.
HomePod uses its six-microphone array to record the behavior of the sound waves emitted by the speakers, while the algorithms analyze the incoming data to adjust the output of the speakers and deliver a consistent representation of a piece of music throughout the listening environment. Another microphone deeper inside the HomePod picks up the presence of walls and other large objects that might interfere with the distribution of certain sounds, like the long sound waves of bass notes, and the algorithms adjust the output accordingly.
To test the claim, a HomePod was placed on a 30-inch high table by a wall and a white noise test sound was played through it that produces an equal amount of decibels throughout the frequency spectrum. This output was recorded from four locations in the room, and then each sound profile was compared to see how much variation occurred across the full frequency spectrum. The testing gear used in the experiment was loaned by Liechtenstein-based acoustics company NTi Audio AG.
According to Brian MacMillan of NTi Audio AG, which provided the testing gear used in the experiment, the HomePod’s profile changed very little, with an average variance of less than 0.95 decibels across all audible frequency bands, which is considered below the threshold that can be heard by a human ear. Comparatively, the test team saw considerably more output variation from a Harman Kardon Invoke speaker, which had an average variance of 3.4 decibels.
In short, Apple’s claim that the HomePod can deliver a consistent representation of a piece of music throughout the room looks truthy.
“The developers have done an excellent job of having the HomePod adjust to the room; (it has) impressive consistency in overall level and frequency response,” said NTi’s MacMillan.
“The HomePod automates spatial compensation that previously required a real audiophile’s expertise, tools and time,” he said.
The HomePod’s sound has received praise by both new HomePod owners and media sites that tested the device ahead of its release, although Consumer Reports’ doesn’t believe the HomePod outshines the Google Home Max and the Sonos One. Other reviews have disagreed with that analysis, including an extensive, in-depth review published by a self-professed audiophile on Monday.
Related Roundup: HomePodBuyer’s Guide: HomePod (Buy Now)
Discuss this article in our forums
A major bug is forcing Microsoft to rebuild Skype for Windows
Skype has fallen foul of a security flaw that can allow attackers to gain system-level privileges to vulnerable computers, Microsoft has confirmed. However, the company won’t immediately fix the issue because doing so would require a complete code overhaul. The bug was discovered by security researcher Stefan Kanthak, who says the Skype update can be nefariously tweaked to trick an application into drawing incorrect code instead of the right library. This would let a hacker download malicious code and put it into a user-accessible temporary folder, renaming it to an existing DLL that could be modified by anyone without system privileges. According to Kanthak, once system access is granted, an attacker “can do anything”. However, the hacker would require physical access to the computer to do this.
Kanthak told Microsoft about the vulnerability — which could let hackers steal files, delete data or run ransomware — back in September, and the company acknowledged a fix would require “a large code revision”. Speaking to ZDNet, Kanthak said that even though Microsoft was able to reproduce the issue, a fix will only arrive “in a newer version of the product rather than a security update”, the implication being that patching the issue would require too much work. Microsoft said it’s put “all resources” into building a new client, but has not revealed when that’s likely to land. We’ve reached out to Microsoft for comment.
Via: ZDNet
Xiaomi Redmi Note 5 with 18:9 display and front LED flash unveiled in India for just ₹9,999
The successor to the best-selling phone of 2017 is here.

Xiaomi broke all sales records last year with the Redmi Note 4, with the device enabling the brand to overtake Samsung and become the largest smartphone vendor in the country.
A year on, sales of the Redmi Note 4 continue to be brisk, and with its successor for 2018, Xiaomi is playing it safe. The Redmi Note 5 shares the same core as its predecessor, including a similar design and Snapdragon 625 chipset, but introduces an 18:9 display and a new camera sensor at the back. The best part about the device is the pricing, which at ₹9,999 is lower than the Redmi Note 4’s launch price.
Although Xiaomi is labeling the phone as the Redmi Note 5 in India, the device debuted in China last December as the Redmi 5 Plus. Xiaomi’s reason for rebranding the device for the Indian market is that the Redmi Note series has more brand recall in the country, with the Redmi lineup primarily catering to the entry-level segment.
Coming to the device itself, the main attraction with the Redmi Note 5 is the 5.99-inch 18:9 display at the front, which has a resolution of 2160×1080 (FHD+). The tall display means the bezels have shrunk considerably, with the hardware navigation buttons making way for on-screen keys. The design at the back, however, is virtually unchanged from the Redmi Note 4. You still get a metal back, with plastic antenna inserts at the top and bottom that have a metallic finish.

The internal hardware is also unchanged from last year, with the Redmi Note 5 featuring a Snapdragon 625. The phone will be sold in two variants — one with 3GB of RAM and 32GB of storage, and the other with 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage. We saw the same variants last year as well, but there’s not going to be a 2GB option this time around.
The rear camera is now a 12MP sensor, with the module itself identical to that featured on the Mi A1. The rear camera has large 1.25um pixels, allowing for more light to pass through the sensor. As for the front, the 5MP camera is the same as last year, but it now comes with an LED flash module. The basics are all there — you get an IR blaster, and the 3.5mm jack is thankfully intact.
- Xiaomi Redmi Note 5 specs
- Xiaomi Redmi Note 5 review
The battery has shrunk slightly, from 4100mAh to 4000mAh. It still charges over microUSB, which is a letdown seeing as how other devices in this segment — Xiaomi’s own Mi Max 2 included — feature the newer USB-C standard. There’s no fast charging either, with the bundled charger maxing out at 5V/2A. On the software side of things, the Redmi Note 5 is running the latest version of MIUI 9 atop Android 7.1.1 Nougat.
Clearly, not a lot has changed from the Redmi Note 4, and Xiaomi is touting the new display as the main differentiator. As the hardware is nearly unchanged, the pricing is also the same as last year, which should make the new device much more palatable to potential customers.
The Redmi Note 5 variant with 3GB of RAM and 32GB of storage will retail for ₹9,999, with the 4GB version offering 64GB of storage costing ₹11,999. The phone will go on sale exclusively on Flipkart starting later this month, and will also make its way to Mi Home stores across the country as well as Xiaomi’s offline retail partners. Initial availability was a big problem with the Redmi Note 4, and that shouldn’t be an issue with the Redmi Note 5.
For those looking for a bit more oomph, Xiaomi has also unveiled the Redmi Note 5 Pro in the country for ₹13,999. The Redmi Note 5 Pro has the same 18:9 panel and 4000mAh battery, but offers a 20MP front camera with LED flash, 12MP + 5MP dual rear cameras, and is the first phone to be powered by the Snapdragon 636 platform.
Eager to know more about Xiaomi’s latest products? Be sure to take a look at our extended coverage:
- Xiaomi Redmi Note 5 review: The best just got better
- Xiaomi Redmi Note 5 Pro preview: Possibly the best budget phone of 2018
- Xiaomi Redmi Note 5 Pro vs. Redmi Note 5 vs. Redmi Note 4
- Xiaomi Mi TV 4 preview: The next big thing is here
What do you think of the Redmi Note 5? Share your thoughts in the comments below.




Ry
Almeuit
L0n3N1nja
Morty2264