Friday 31 March 2017

Reliance Jio Summer Surprise offer: Here’s everything you need to know

Reliance Jio Summer Surprise offer: Here’s everything you need to know


Reliance Jio has extended a Summer Surprise offer to all customers. It has also extended the deadline for subscribing to the Jio Prime offer by 15 days.
As part of the new offer, those who subscribe to Jio Prime and subscribe to the Rs 303 or higher value tariff plan, will get that plan extended till the end of July for free. A subscriber need not pay anything extra till that time.
WATCH VIDEO HERE:
Essentially, there are three things you need to do to avail the offer:
  • Acquire a Reliance Jio SIM
  • Subscribe to Jio Prime before 15 April
  • Activate a Rs 303 or higher tarriff plan on your SIM before 15 April
The Summer Surprise offer is now activated.
If you have already recharged for such an amount and subscribed to Jio Prime, the service will already have been activated.
The Reliance Jio Rs 303 plan offers unlimited voice, SMS and data and is valid for 28 days. Users will get 1 GB of high speed data per day, totaling 28 GB of high speed data a month. Post the 1 GB limit, users will still get data at 128 Kbps. On top of this, users will have access to unlimited high speed data in the night.
This offer is only valid for Jio Prime subscribers for now.
Jio Prime is a yearly subscription pack that gives a subscriber access to the Jio Happy New Year offer till March 2018. Jio Prime subscribers also get access to complimentary access to Jio Media services such as JioTV, JioCinema and more. They can also avail exclusive offers on tariffs.
Details will be available on the MyJio app and on jio.com
Reliance Jio’s services have been offered for free to subscribers since September last year. These free services ended on 31 March.
Reliance Industries’ Chairman Mukesh Ambani said issued a statement in which he said that the extension of the Jio Prime subscription deadline was to give subscribers “breathing room” during the transition from a free to a paid service.

Reliance Jio extends offer till April 15

Reliance Jio extends offer till April 15



"Enrols 72 million customers for its Prime service; more pain in store for incumbent operators"


Reliance Jio Infocomm (RJio) has enrolled 72 million customers for its Jio Prime service.

Further, the company has extended the offer, which was to end on March 31, by two weeks to April 15, calling it a “Jio Summer Surprise”. Customers, who enrol for this service by paying a one-time fee of Rs 99 and opt for Rs 303 or a higher plan by April 15, will get three months of complimentary service.

Those who have already paid the one-time fee as well as Rs 303 or more for the plan, will also be eligible for complimentary service.

The complimentary service means the company would effectively start charging only from July 1, implying more pain for incumbents such as Bharti Airtel, Vodafone, Idea Cellular and others. “This will mean an additional quarter of pain for the incumbent operators. The markets had factored in a paid system for RJio from April 1, but the latest move will force operators to respond with similar plans,” said an analyst at a foreign brokerage. Consequently, their stock prices could see some pressure when markets open on Monday for trading.

The numbers put out by the company is more than the Street estimates and has surprised analysts who had initially pegged the subscribers at 22-23 million.

“In just one month, over 72 million (and still counting!) Jio customers have signed up for Jio Prime. We, at Jio, are honoured and grateful for this tremendous response,” Mukesh Ambani, chairman of Reliance Industries, stated.

The company indicated the extension had been made to provide breathing space for users to avoid service disruption during the transition from free to paid services. The company also said the complimentary service is the first of many surprises for Jio Prime members. This would spell more trouble for the current market leaders trying to keep their premium subscribers within their fold.

The company said that customers who do not recharge by April 15 will experience degradation and/or discontinuation of services.

Samsung details the Galaxy S8 camera

Samsung details the Galaxy S8 camera


While the year-old 12MP camera of the Galaxy S7 is hanging around, Samsung has improved it on the Galaxy S8 with clever software and use of image stacking thanks to a snappier Exynos chipset.
In an article dedicated to the new camera Samsung lays out all the improvements the Galaxy S8 and Galaxy S8+ bring in the camera department.
The most meaningful upgrade looks to be the Multi-frame image processing. With it the camera takes three photos instead of one and stacks them for a sharper, less noisy image.
This technique works for digitally-zoomed photos too and better yet Samsung says Multi-frame image processing is so quick that people won't be able to tell that the Galaxy S8 is taking more photos and processing them on the fly.
Next up are filters and stickers - the cornerstone of every social-media pic these days. There are a total of 16 filters including 8 beauty ones.

There are 34 stickers and 50 stamps to add to your snaps. But what should be really fun is the animated facial stickers - the camera's facial recognition is able to recognize and track your face and apply fun stickers to it - like glasses or hats.

Like the Galaxy Note7, the Galaxy S8 has one-handed control - a series of swipes on the camera screen launches different options. A swipe to the right opens up the shooting modes while a left swipe shows the filters. Up or down switches between the front and back camera.

We can't wait to get our hands on the handsome pair of Galaxies and you can be sure we'll thoroughly test their cameras and see how they compare to their peers and predecessors.

Samsung Galaxy S8 uses two different camera sensors

Samsung Galaxy S8 uses two different camera sensors

It turns out that Samsung is using two different sensors for the back and front camera in the Galaxy S8 and S8+.
Units have been spotted using a Sony IMX333 sensor and a S5K2L2 ISOCELL sensor made by System LSI, a subsidiary of Samsung. The same goes for the new 8MP autofocus front-facing camera - underneath the optics is either a Sony IMX320 unit or an ISOCELL S5K3H1.

The different cameras share the same specs across the board though. No matter if you get a Sony or a Samsung-made main camera you still have a 1/2.55" 12.2MP sensor with Dual Pixel autofocus and naturally the optics are the same as well - f/1.7 aperture and optical image stabilization. So the pictures from either camera should ultimately be the same - no need to worry.
It's nothing new for Samsung to use two different camera sensors - the Galaxy S6 and S7 both used both Sony and Samsung's own ISOCELL sensors too.

Sunday 26 March 2017

Samsung Galaxy S8: Six big questions - and answers

Samsung Galaxy S8: Six big questions - and answers



What you need to know about Samsung's big launch this week.


Samsung's latest flagship smartphone, the Galaxy S8, makes its debut this week. Here's what you need to know about the week's biggest technology launch.
1. How important is the Galaxy S8 to Samsung?
It's incredibly important. Samsung is the biggest smartphone maker in the world, selling over 300 million smartphone last year and accounting for one in every five sold. But following the Galaxy Note 7 battery fire debacle it was narrowly overtaken by Apple in the fourth quarter of 2016. Chances are that Samsung will bounce back into the top spot this quarter anyway, but it still needs the Galaxy S8 to be a success, because rival Huawei is coming up quickly.
Gartner Research VP Annette Zimmerman told ZDNet that Samsung needs to act fast: "They definitely need a new flagship product to maintain their position. We definitely see one of the strongest contenders here is Huawei."
Huawei has been delivering smartphones on a par with those from Samsung and Apple and adding high-profile partnerships like Porsche and Leica with the aim of becoming a global brand. If this continues we could see a three-way tie at the top of the smartphone market between Apple, Samsung and Huawei.
2. Is the Galaxy S8 the beginning of the end for black slab smartphones?
Maybe: Samsung has certainly stolen a march over Apple recently when it comes to design. The Galaxy S6 and S7 both came with curved-screen versions, and if the rumours are true the S8 might come with one as standard. That's not to say the wraparound screen adds a huge amount of new functionality, but it looks good and shows a confidence in industrial design that's nice to see when most smartphones are boring blocks. Expect to see rivals (maybe even Apple) adding curved screens to more devices, even if we never quite get back to the insane variety of devices we saw back in the feature-phone era.
3. Hello Bixby: But does anyone really want a digital assistant on their smartphone?

Probably not: Siri and Cortana and Google Now are already crammed into our smartphones, but are barely used because we're more comfortable talking on our phones than talking to our phones. And yet the Galaxy S8 adds another digital sidekick called Bixby.
Where digital assistants do seem to be popular is in the home, where Amazon's Echo with its Alexa assistant is making a lot of the running. That could give Samsung an opportunity, because it has already said that it plans to make Bixby available across more devices. If Bixby can tie together the smart home and the smartphone via appliances like washing machines, fridges and microwaves, that could give Samsung a big advantage.
4. Does the flagship phone matter anymore?
Yes: It's true the gap between the Samsung and Apple's top-of-the-range handsets and mid-range devices continues to narrow: mid-range phones have most of the capabilities that the high-end phones had a couple of years ago, and the functionality that's exclusive to the flagship phones (like mobile payments) isn't something that most people want to use anyway.
And increasingly the mid-range is the new battleground. According to Gartner, the average selling price for mid-range phones is actually going up, not down as you would expect. People are starting to spend a little more money on those devices because they offer good technology at a good price.
But high-end phones are still a growing segment, with healthy margins -- something that's lacking in much of the rest of the market. Also, as the smartphone market reaches saturation vendors will put more effort into persuading people to trade up to premium devices.
5. Is there any innovation left in smartphones?
Maybe: Apart from the curved screen, there are suggestions than the Galaxy S8 will pack an iris scanner as well as the fingerprint scanner, which moves to the back. Unlocking your phone with a glance is cute, but is it really the innovation that smartphones are crying out for? Virtual reality in phones is still at an early stage, but apart from that it's hard to see what the next big jump forward will be.
"Upgrading regularly is something that is in danger because we don't have the huge technology leaps any more. The replacement cycles are lengthening," noted Gartner's Zimmerman.
6. What does all this mean for the iPhone 8?
Even more pressure to get it right. Once the Galaxy S8 is out, attention will inevitably switch the next version of the iPhone -- presumably the iPhone 8, presumably arriving sometime in the autumn. A successful launch piles more pressure onto Apple, and there was already plenty of that, considering the iPhone 8 marks the tenth anniversary of the original iPhone. Samsung has already managed to tweak its basic Galaxy design with the introduction of the curved screen: can the iPhone really continue to look the same?

Samsung Galaxy S8 accessories range with price details leaked ahead of March 29 launch

Samsung Galaxy S8 accessories range with price details leaked ahead of March 29 launch

Samsung will unleash a new range of accessories specifically designed for the Galaxy S8.



After the Note 7 fiasco, Samsung chose to skip the MWC expo for its new flagship smartphone launch this year. The company later revealed it will be showcasing the smartphone at an ‘Unpacked event’ on March 29. Ahead of the official launch, details about the Samsung Galaxy S8 have leaked multiple times, leaving little to our imaginations. Now that we are just a couple of days away from the event, details about Samsung’s new range of accessories have leaked online.
The new range of accessories is rumored to be launched alongside the new Galaxy S8 series. According to a German website, the range includes new earphones and a power bank with 5,100mAh capacity. The range also includes covers, chargers and even screen protectors, exclusively for the Galaxy S8.
The Samsung Battery Pack with fast charging support is priced at 69.99 Euro whereas the DeX Station, a Microsoft’s Continuum-like device, will be priced at 149.99 Euro. Other accessories include Samsung Clearview Standing Cover (59.99 Euro), Samsung LED View Cover (59.99 Euro), Samsung Keyboard Cover (59.99 Euro), Samsung Alcantara Cover (44.99 Euro), Samsung Silicone Cover (29.99 Euro), Samsung Clear Cover (19.99 Euro), Samsung 2-Pieces Cover (19.99 Euro), Samsung Screen Protector (12.99 Euro) and Samsung Wireless Charger Convertible (79.99 Euro).
Do note that the price details have been released via a few screenshots took from several European retailers who will sell these accessories. Samsung could change the price on the launch day.
As mentioned earlier, Samsung’s Galaxy S8 is turning out to be the worst kept secret. According to rumors and leaks we have come across so far, the smartphone will be available in two variants – Galaxy S8 and Galaxy S8 Plus – with two devices sporting 5.8-inch and 6.2-inch display respectively. According to reports, the Galaxy S8 will be powered by Qualcomm’s top-end chipset along with 4GB of RAM and internal storage up to 128GB. 
The smartphones will sport 12-megapixel dual-pixel rear camera with LED flash whereas the front will have an 8-megapixel autofocus selfie camera. The smartphones will be powered by a 3,250mAh battery. In terms of software, the Galaxy S8 will run on Android 7.1 Nougat.
Samsung has already announced the Bixby digital assistant that will debut with the Galaxy S8. Among other important feature the smartphones are expected to come with are fingerprint scanner beneath the display, iris scanner and USB Type-C-based audio support. 

Working Samsung Galaxy S8+ unit spotted in the wilding Samsung Galaxy S8+ unit

Working Samsung Galaxy S8+ unit spotted in the wilding Samsung Galaxy S8+ unit


We're definitely on a row today, even by Galaxy S8 leak standard. First a coral blue dye shot, then a size comparison and an impressively extensive list of official accessories and prices. So, once again from the top, we guess - another set of leaked shots of the Samsung Galaxy S8+ has surfaced online.

Still, you might want to hold up for a bit, before you continue on your way this time around, as these are probably the most detailed and believable shots of the 6.2-inch plablet to date. The stills come from Mexico, as further proven by the handset's UI language of choice. It looks like someone over at androidmx got early access to a properly functional S8+ unit, which he then proceeded to grab a few stills of.


Not only do we get to marvel at the nearly edge-to-edge curved panel this time around, but there is also a small interface tour to be had. As expected, the SM-G955F sports Samsung's new Grace UX look. This time, it is complete with a trio of on-screen controls - a necessity, since there will be no front-mounted capacitive buttons on the S8.
One of the photos also captures the Advanced Features menu, where we can see some pretty familiar options, like Smart Stay, the Game manager, Antispam filters, one-handed operation and Multi Window. However, it is also interesting to note that one of the menus seems to deal with opening and closing apps with the fingerprint reader. Perhaps we can expect some advanced finger gestures from Samsung this time around.


Another interesting system menu that found its way into the leak is the UI resolution selector. If there was still any doubt about the phone's unusual 18.5:9 aspect ratio, there should be non now, since that is exactly what the listed 2960x1440, 2220x1080 and 1480x720 pixel resolutions work out to.


Last, but not least, there is also a camera interface to explore and lo and behold, even it seems to be working fine on this unit, viewfinder and all. As originally believed, the main shooter is a 12MP unit, while the front captures at 8MP. Sadly, there is no mention of autofocus on the front camera on this screen - unfortunate, since that has been a rumor for some time now


Be sure to check out the photos for yourselves and if you catch something we missed, leave us a comment

Saturday 25 March 2017

LeEco Le Pro3 a solid option for a high-end smartphone with a budget price tag

LeEco Le Pro3 a solid option for a high-end smartphone with a budget price tag



Here in the U.S., we live in a world ruled by Samsung, LG and Apple.  You can’t deny that.  None the less, there are other companies worth paying attention to that are working hard to break into the smartphone, TV and accessory market.  LeEco is one of them.  I had a chance to test out their high-end LeEco Le Pro 3 smartphone that sells for an amazingly low price.

Hardware
I was immediately impressed with how solid the Le Pro 3 feels.  At a sub $400 price tag I expected something plasticky.  The Pro 3 is anything but.  It has a glass front and a metal back.  It has a decent weight to it and feels like a solid smartphone.  On the back there is a fingerprint scanner right underneath the 16 Megapixel camera.  On the front is a 5.5" HD screen that appears to go edge to edge until you turn it on.  There is a slight bezel along the edges that you'll see when you power up the screen.  Deal breaker?  No way but it is deceiving at first glance.
The screen looks good.  It did seem a tad light to me even when I tried tweaking the color settings.  Most people probably wouldn't even notice but I'm a geek like that.
On the bottom you'll find speaker holes and a USB-C port.  There is no headphone jack.  A set of USB-C earbuds and an adapter for your old headphones is included in the box.  This move away from headphone jacks kind of stinks.  I don't like it either but this is where the industry is going.  Fight it if you wish but I think the 3.5mm headphone jack is dying a slow death.
The battery in the Le Pro 3 is something to point out too.  It's 4070mAh which means you'll likely get a solid full day or more with a full charge.  For comparison the iPhone 7 reportedly uses a 1960mAh battery and the Samsung Galaxy S7 uses a 3000 mAh battery.  With that said, software and hardware optimization can often make a big difference so the mAh rating doesn't always tell the whole story.  The Le Pro 3 supports Quick Charge 3.0 that helps you juice up the phone quickly.
Camera
Best in class?  Not necessarily but impressive nonetheless!  The 16 Megapixel shooter does a good job with pictures and video.  It even includes a slow-motion mode.  It's another aspect of the Pro 3 that surprised me for the price.
Software
I'm an Android purist.  I like my Android straight-up.  The Le Pro 3 runs a "massaged" version of Android.  There are some changes that I like (their multi-tasking menu) and some things that drive me crazy (their drop-down options.)  You'll get used to it.  Samsung has their changes, LG has their changes and so does LeEco.  Personally I'd probably install the Google Now Launcher or Nova Launcher.  It's all personal preference.
Free media
LeEco prides itself on being a streaming media company first.  This means the included LeEco app packs a bunch of free shows and movies.  My short time browsing through the selection reminded me of Netflix.  Most of the options are Movies and TV shows that I've never heard of but there are a few gems mixed in there (All Dogs Go To Heaven for the kids, The Usual Suspects for the adults.)   In the U.S. LeEco worked out a deal with DirecTV to give users 3 free months of DirecTV NOW with their phones and TVs.  It's a good deal considering the NOW service runs $35+ per month if you sign up on your own.
Conclusion
For $349, I'd be hard pressed to find a smartphone with this power and build quality.  It's easily among the best smartphones under $400 and in my opinion it plays well against the big dogs from Samsung, Apple and LG.  Sure, there are a few trade-offs and I would prefer a cleaner Android software experience but for the price, it's hard to beat.  Nearly impossible.
You can find the LeEco Le Pro 3 for $350 directly from LeEco or from BestBuy.

Xiaomi Mi 6 and Mi 6 Plus new Leaks Reveal all the Specs

Xiaomi Mi 6 and Mi 6 Plus new Leaks Reveal all the Specs


Xiaomi Mi 6 and Mi 6 Plus is going to release both its phones very soon. Xiaomi Mi 6 will be packed with a small display and Mi 6 Plus is packed with a larger display same as Samsung Galaxy S8 and Galaxy S8 Plus.





According to the Leak Xiaomi Mi 6 is packed with 5.15-inch 1080p display, it is packed with 2.45GHz Snapdragon 835 processor which is paired with 4GB of RAM and will have a UFS 2.0 storage size of 32GB, 64GB, or 128GB. It is packed with 19 MP Sony IMX400 sensor at the back and 8 MP camera at the front. The phone is backed up by the 3200 mAh battery and runs on MIUI 8 based on Android 6.0 Marshmallow out of the box.
Coming to the Xiaomi Mi 6 Plus, it is packed with the bigger display i.e. 5.7-inches display with 1920 x 1080p resolution. It is powered with the same Snapdragon 835 SoC. Mi 6 PLus is paired with 6GB of RAM and 64GB / 128GB storage options. It is packed with 12 MP dual Sony IMX362 sensors as we reported earlier and in the front Xiaomi have given 8MP ultrapixel sensor. The phone is backed up by the 4500mAh battery and runs on Android Nougat 7.0 out of the box.

Friday 24 March 2017

Apple patent reveals docking gadget to turn iPhone and iPad into a complete computer

Apple patent reveals docking gadget to turn iPhone and iPad into a complete computer





APPLE has a simple plan to turn your iPhone or iPad into a new type of MacBook that is possibly Apple’s smartest, and dumbest, computer ever.
A day after news of Samsung’s smartphone dock broke, the US Patent office has approved an Apple patent to use the smarts in the iPhone or iPad in a “dumb” MacBook dock.
Unlike the Samsung dock, which adds ports to a Samsung smartphone but no extra keyboard, the Apple idea for the iPhone and iPad is a more complete computing solution.
While some patents, by the time they are approved, show ideas that are several years old, this latest patent by Apple was only lodged about the time Apple released the iPhone 7 last year.
Apple has been granted a patent for the “Electronic Accessory Device” that would drop an iPhone into the keyboard of a MacBook-style dock, so that the iPhone screen becomes the trackpad, or in another version the iPad becomes the MacBook-style dock’s screen — unlike a real MacBook, would still be a touchscreen.
The patent, discovered by Apple Insider, isn’t just as simple as a keyboard with a hole for the iPad or iPhone.
Certainly, with the patent description of the MacBook shell as not having a processor, you’re relying on the computer power of the iOS to drive the thing. So, in that way, the device would not be dissimilar to current iPad docks like the Clamcase that adds an aluminium shell and keyboard.
But with the Apple patent, the dock would offer more.
“The accessory device, however, can provide auxiliary processing resources, such a graphical processing unit, or GPU, or other processing resources that can support the functions of the portable computing device,” the patent says.
So, the dock could boost the graphics capability, or add some needed battery power, and perhaps even include a USB-C port which, even by itself, would be something of a game changer for the iPhone.
Apple is not the first smartphone company that has played with the idea of using the smartphone as the brains of a computer-style dock.
And, just because it has a patent, it does not mean that it will become a product.

Still, if you like the idea of travelling with a really light laptop, Apple could be working on something that is just the thing.

New 'iPhone' Leak Comes Directly From Apple?

New 'iPhone' Leak Comes Directly From Apple?



There’s a problem with the iPhone 8 that no one seems able to solve, but then it struck me: Apple AAPL -0.37% itself has spent the last few years quietly trying to tell us…
It all boils down to a very simple question: What is the name of the 2017 iPhone? If you follow leaks then you’ll know the hot favourite is ‘iPhone 8’ but other names to have been floated include the ‘iPhone X’, ‘iPhone Edition’ and even what would be the traditional successor: iPhone 7S.
And yet none of these make sense. iPhone 7S is set to be reserved for incremental iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus successors which are expected to be launched alongside a radically redesigned new iPhone flagship with a glass chassis, OLED display, on-screen fingerprint reader and wireless charging. iPhone 7S just doesn’t cut it.



Neither does iPhone 8. Why call a potentially groundbreaking new iPhone the ‘8’ when it’s the 10th anniversary of the original iPhone? Why also call it the iPhone Edition when ‘Edition’ is currently reserved for such a niche model of Apple Watch it has zero brand awareness.
So maybe iPhone X makes sense, it means ‘10’ after all? Also Apple famously has ‘macOS X’ - except it doesn’t. Apple just dropped the ‘X’ from the latest macOS release: it is simply called ‘macOS Sierra’. Were it looking for brand unity that would not have happened. So again, no deal.
But then the clues keep coming. When Apple announced the second generation Apple Watch what was it called? ‘Apple Watch’ (with a tiny ‘Series 2’ almost in brackets). With the MacBook Air on its way out, Apple decided its long term ultraportable successor would be called ‘MacBook’ - and when it was upgraded to its second generation the name was? MacBook. And earlier this week Apple ditched the iPad Air and the new entry in the line-up was called? Yep, iPad.
And of course there’s macOS which does retain a second moniker with each new version, but that’s also because of the continuous upgrading of software rather than the annual line-in-the-sand upgrades to hardware. And even so, the ‘X’ is gone.
So how do you reinvigorate a line with a new definitive model like, for example, an OLED sporting, glass chassis-based, fast charging, wireless charging, on-screen fingerprint reading iPhone? You’re ahead of me: you call it iPhone.

Apple

Of course the fly in the ointment here is Apple’s love of the term ‘Pro’ for its most premium products, so perhaps ‘iPhone Pro’ is possible. Then again it seems unlikely Apple wants to trawl the iPhone 7S/8/8S/9/9S path for much longer so a reset to iPhone in 2017 with the overhauled model would then allow for the introduction of a larger ‘iPhone Pro’ to complement it in 2018 and the numerical models can be slowly put out to pasture.
On paper it all makes sense: iPhone and iPhone Pro, iPad and iPad Pro, MacBook and MacBook Pro. Maybe there could even be some semblance of order to the maze that is Watch models if Apple chose to separate its two sizes into Watch and Watch Pro.
Needless to say, there’s every chance I could be wrong.
It could well be that hot favourite ‘iPhone 8’ will indeed be what Apple thinks is the best name to celebrate the 10th year of the iPhone. Doesn’t sound great though, does it? And if I am right? Well that’s only because Apple seems to have spent the last two years laying out a trail of breadcrumbs as it quietly strips numbers and extraneous subcategories from its products in a move back to basics.
Besides wouldn’t it be just like Apple to have enjoyed hiding this in plain sight the whole time…

LG Stylus 3 Priced At Rs 18,500 Launched in India With 5.7 Inch Display and 3,200mAh Battery



LG Stylus 3 Priced At Rs 18,500 Launched in India With 5.7 Inch Display and 3,200mAh Battery




LG has finally launched the LG Stylus 3 in India at a price point fo Rs 18,500. Yes, it does come with a Stylus if you don't like touching the screen of your phone.
The device sports a 5.7-inch HD screen with 1280 x 720 resolution and is powered by a 1.5GHz Octa Core processor backed by 3GB RAM. You get 16GB of internal storage on the device that's expandable up to 2TB via a microSD card.
The phone is powered by the latest Android 7.0 Nougat OS and is available in two colour options of Metallic Titan and Pink Gold.
The LG Stylus 3 comes with a 13-megapixel sensor with an f/2.2 lens as a primary camera and an 8-megapixel front camera. There is also 3,200 mAh battery on-board. The device is also loaded with a fingerprint sensor at the back and also comes with gesture controls.
The specs of the phone are just about average but the icing on the cake is provided by a 'Pen Pop 2.0' stylus with a 'Precision Tip'. It might remind you of the good old Samsung Galaxy Note.

Verizon launches LG K20 V, Samsung Galaxy J7 V

Verizon launches LG K20 V, Samsung Galaxy J7 V


Today Verizon is adding two new smartphones to its roster, both of the mid-range type. They are the LG K20 V and the Samsung Galaxy J7 V, both Verizon-specific variations of devices we've already heard about. While the LG K20 V is basically just a K10 (2017) with a different paint job and new chipset, the Galaxy J7 V is this carrier's interpretation of the Galaxy J7 (2017) that's yet to become official.





The LG K20 V comes with a 5.3-inch 720p touchscreen, a 13 MP rear camera, a 5 MP selfie snapper, the Snapdragon 425 SoC, 2GB of RAM, 16 GB of expandable storage, and a 2,800 mAh removable battery. It runs Android 7.0 Nougat. It can be yours for $168 full retail or $7 per month for two years if you go with an installment plan.



The Galaxy J7 V has a 5.5-inch 720p display, an 8 MP main camera, a 5 MP secondary unit, the Snapdragon 625 chipset, 2GB of RAM, 16GB of expandable storage, and a 3,300 mAh battery. It too runs Android 7.0 Nougat. You can purchase one for $240 or 24 monthly payments of $10.

Google improves Photos and Duo for lousy connections

Google improves Photos and Duo for lousy connections



Google's been pretty busy this week. It added a location-sharing feature to the Maps app, started allowing sports teams and artists to post directly to its search results, teased us with a preview of Android O and vowed to make sure all Android phones are updated quickly. But it's not done. The company also introduced ways to improve the speed of its Photos and Duo apps, even when network signals are weak.
Those who use Photos on Android should experience faster image backups when they're not connected to WiFi, as the app will automatically save files in a lightweight preview quality first. When a WiFi connection is later detected, Photos will replace these with the full, high-quality versions. The iOS and Android versions of the app will do the same when you're sharing pictures with your friends on low connectivity -- first sending them a lower-resolution image and then pushing the full-quality original over when a stronger signal is detected.
As for the video-calling Duo app, Google is adding a voice-only option so you can talk to your friends without the image stream sucking up all your bandwidth. The company said in a blog post that this feature will "work well on all connection speeds" and rolls out first in Brazil before going live in the rest of the world "in the coming days."
Google's chat app Allo also gets an update to support document-sharing, so those who use the app on Android can send .pdf, .mp3, .apk, .zip and .doc files to each other. This addition isn't related to connection speeds, but it's a handy tool that makes Allo more useful than before. The connectivity-related optimizations for Duo and Photos, on the other hand, are sure to be welcome by those who either have limited data plans or often find themselves in areas with poor coverage.

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