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jeudi 14 mai 2020

Realme will launch a flagship with 5G and 65W fast charging in China on May 25th

Realme can be considered a young company when compared to the rest of the veterans in the smartphone industry. But its youth does not stop the company from orchestrating a launch blitzkrieg every now and then. It almost feels as if the company had announced its first true flagship just a few days ago in the form of the Realme X50 Pro and then the Realme X50m 5G. Now, the Chinese OEM is planning to launch as many as eight products at an event in China on May 25, and one of them is another flagship smartphone.

Realme is celebrating its second anniversary in China on May 25, and it is commemorating the occasion by launching a slew of products across different categories. The company may not necessarily launch eight smartphones or even smartphone accessories, as it could rely on other lifestyle products to pad up the number. However, there is at least one confirmed smartphone launch, coming in the form of a flagship with an internal name of “Blade Runner”. This smartphone has been certified by the CCC, and has been confirmed to come with 65W SuperDart charging and 5G support.

Realme has shared renders of the phone too, showing off several aspects of the phone.

Realme Blade Runner

In the renders, we can see that the phone comes with a quad-rear camera with the branding “AI Quad Camera” inscribed beside it. The camera island gets a different finish than the rest of the device. The rest of the device is very glossy, as revealed in the real-life images.

Realme Blade Runner

The phone also has a distinct “realme” branding on the left edge.

Other details of the smartphone, and other notable releases as part of the launch lineup, should be revealed soon by Realme themselves. It wouldn’t be too much of a guess to expect a high-end SoC and other premium features on this phone.

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Headspace is now free for unemployed people and health care workers in the US

Headspace is a service that provides instruction for meditation and mental health exercises. With over 10 million installs in the Google Play Store, it’s one of the most popular apps in this genre. A lot of people may feel stressed and anxious in these times, which is why Headspace is offering its content for free to unemployed people and health care workers in the US.

If you are recently unemployed, all you have to do is fill out a form on the Headspace website. The form will ask for your name, where you previously worked, your role, the industry, last date of employment, and ZIP code. There is a checkbox to verify the information is true, but this is basically running on the honor system. Health care workers can learn more about getting free access here.

Once enrolled, you will get full access to all of the Headspace content, which usually costs $70 per year or $13 per month. The offer is only available until June 30th and the access lasts for a year. Here’s what you get with Headspace:

  • Hundreds of guided meditations on everything from stress to sleep
  • Over 40 mindfulness exercises for cooking, eating, commuting and more
  • Super-short meditations you can do anytime. Great for busy schedules.
  • Expert guidance from former monk, and Headspace co-founder, Andy Puddicombe
  • Sleep Sounds to ease the mind into a truly restful night’s sleep
  • Fun, simple animations to help you with your meditation practice and answer any questions you might have

Headspace: Meditation & Sleep (Free+, Google Play) →


Source: Headspace | Via: The Verge

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Google Chrome will soon block resource-heavy ads that eat up your data or CPU

All the way back in 2018, Google Chrome started blocking ads on sites that didn’t comply with the Better Ads Standards. Google continues to work on making sure ads are presented in a non-harmful way, and part of that includes how ads impact performance. Chrome will soon start blocking ads that are especially demanding on your data or CPU.

According to Google, a small percentage of ads (only 0.3%) are using 27% of the network data used by all ads in Chrome. These ads are sucking up data and draining batteries of users. Not only does that negatively affect consumers, but it strains networks and costs money. Starting this summer, Google will cap the resources a display ad can use in Chrome.

Ads in Chrome will be limited to using 4MB of network data or 15 seconds of CPU usage in any 30 second period, or 60 seconds of total CPU usage. If those thresholds are reached, the frame will show an “Ad removed” message and inform the user that the ad has used too many resources.

Google says they will be experimenting with this over the next few months and it will be launched toward the end of August. Google has long worked on blocking certain ads and intrusive video ads. Chrome is notorious for being resource-intensive, and blocking these ads could play a small part in improving the experience.


Source: Chromium Blog

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Google Chrome tests showing Google Search results in a dark theme that syncs with Android 10’s dark mode

The introduction of a system-wide dark mode toggle in Android 10 has had a massive effect on the UI designs of many Android apps. A lot of Android apps have built-in dark themes now, and many of these apps also sync their dark theme with Android 10’s toggle. Google Chrome already does this for its toolbar and settings pages, but soon it’ll also darken Google Search results in sync with Android 10’s dark mode toggle.

Google first introduced dark mode support as a feature flag in Chrome browser version 74. They later introduced a dedicated “Themes” section in Chrome’s settings, and they also added a feature flag to render all web content using a dark theme. While it’s currently possible to display Google search results in a dark theme by using the #enable-force-dark feature flag, doing so may break the experience of many websites that haven’t been designed with darker background colors in mind. With the new #enable-android-dark-search feature flag that was just merged in the Chromium Gerrit, though, you’ll be able to show darkened search page results so long as Chrome’s dark mode is enabled. And since Chrome’s dark mode can be set to sync with the “system default” theme, that means the darkened search results can sync with Android 10’s system-wide dark mode toggle.

This feature is still a work-in-progress, though, as Google search results weren’t being darkened when I enabled the feature flag on a freshly built Chromium APK running on a Pixel 4 on Android 10. As 9to5Google pointed out last week when the commit first emerged, Google could have accomplished this goal through the “prefers-color-scheme” media CSS feature. However, that doesn’t seem to be the approach that Google is taking here.

In a related commit, Google details how the Chrome browser will show darkened search results when the user has Android 10’s dark mode enabled. The description states that “when the user is in night mode and visits Google search (homepage or results),” Google Chrome will “append an extra URL parameter to indicate that this user should get the darkened version of the website.” It seems that Chrome will append ?cs=1 to any Google Search URL if the user has dark mode enabled. Here’s an example of how this URL parameter darkens the Google Search results page:

Google Chrome light theme search results Google Chrome dark theme search results

The #enable-android-dark-search feature flag is currently available in the latest Chromium build but will eventually make its way over to Dev, Beta, and Stable releases. We’ll be tracking this feature as its development progresses.

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[Update: More Countries] RCS support in Google Messages is rolling out in Italy

Update (5/14/20 @ 2:50 PM ET): Google starts rolling out RCS support in Singapore, Portugal, Argentina, Pakistan, Poland, and Turkey.

Rich Communication Services, or RCS, is a communication protocol that’s often described as the successor to SMS or an alternative to iMessage for Android. With RCS, users can exchange media files in high quality, see read receipts, see typing indicators, start group chats, and more over mobile data and even Wi-Fi. However, universal, app-independent RCS support requires carriers to implement the protocol in their networks, which some have done while others have dragged their feet on. Google has been pushing RCS adoption under its “Chat” banner, using the company’s own servers and “Messages” app to bypass the need for carrier adoption. So far, Google has rolled out RCS in the Google Messages app for users in the U.S., Spain, the U.K., and France, but now they’re expanding support to another European country: Italy.

The Italian rollout was first reported by Italian technology website TuttoAndroid (via AndroidPolice). While WhatsApp is widely used in Europe, RCS will prove to be a viable alternative that’s built into the main messaging app on your phone. This is convenient and easily accessible for the average user, which is especially important during these times when we’re all stuck at home because of the COVID-19 pandemic. It is possible that we’ll also RCS roll out to other markets as well in the coming weeks. This is probably just wishful thinking, but we could even see a global release of RCS in the Messages app.

“Google Chat” rolling out in Messages for some users in Italy. Source: TuttoAndroid

TuttoAndroid indicates that the feature is rolling out independent of carrier support, so be sure to download the Messages app and check to see if the feature has rolled out for you. If the feature is available for you, you should be greeted by a “welcome to Chat” pop-up when you launch the app. Take note that all participants in a conversation have to enable “Chat” in order to use RCS features, otherwise you’ll fall back to SMS.


Update: More Countries

Late last month, RCS support in the Google Messages app rolled out in Italy. Today, more countries are being added. Singapore, Portugal, Argentina, Pakistan, Poland, and Turkey can now take advantage of RCS if they use the Messages app. As per usual, it appears to be rolling out via a server-side switch, but you can see if you have it by going to the Settings and looking for “Chat features.”

Messages (Free, Google Play) →

Via: Android Police

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[Update: Rolling Out] Facebook Messenger “Rooms” are video chats for up to 50 people

Update (5/14/20 @ 2:10 PM ET): Facebook Messenger Rooms are now live in the U.S. and Canada and will roll out globally next week.

I’m sure I don’t have to mention again why most of us are forced to stay home: we all know there’s a pandemic out there and that we need to stay safe, follow the World Health Organization’s advice, and practice social distancing at all times to prevent the spread of COVID-19. But practicing social distancing does not mean that we have to be cut off from our friends and acquaintances. Most in-person meetings and classes have been replaced by video chats of multiple people at the same time. The most common choice for that became Zoom in the past few weeks, but the app has also been plagued by some privacy and security issues these days.

Demand for a competitor is, thus, on the rise. Discord, for one, has started to offer video calling services, but Facebook is bringing up the bar with its new “Rooms” service.

Facebook Messenger Rooms brings a twist to the existing video calling service, and it’s the fact that it’s geared specifically towards the times we’re living and the measures these times require. Rooms’ main selling point is the number of people that can join to the same “room” at the same time: the service offers video calling for up to 50 people. Zoom, for one, allows up to 100 people to connect to a single session, so it still has an advantage going for it. 50 people, however, should be enough for most virtual meetings.

Facebook is also putting privacy as a focus on Messenger Rooms, as they also published a separate blog post detailing the privacy aspects of the service, in an attempt to pitch themselves forward as a more secure alternative to Zoom which is currently in the public eye for several security-related controversies. Facebook themselves doesn’t really have a good reputation in the privacy department either, so that should also help clear up some doubts.

It’s one of many different new features that Facebook is offering these days to make stay-at-home orders a bit less boring: WhatsApp, for one, is also extending their video chatting capabilities to allow up to 8 people to connect to a single call, up from 4.

WhatsApp extended group calls

Facebook says that its Rooms service is now available in a few countries, with support for more countries on the way soon.

Messenger – Text and Video Chat for Free (Free+, Google Play) →


Update: Rolling Out

Facebook Messenger Rooms are now available to everyone in the US and Canada. This is Facebook’s attempt to make Messenger video calling much more about groups and social interaction. Mark Zuckerberg talked about how most of the popular group calling services are geared toward work and productivity. They are positioning Rooms and a more casual and social option. Rooms have no time limits and can host up to 50 people. You can create private rooms or post a room to your News Feed for anyone to drop by. Rooms will be available globally next week.

Source: Facebook

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TCL 10L and 10 Pro Review: Great Value Mid-Range Android Smartphones for the US

The TCL 10L and TCL 10 Pro are the first phones as part of TCL’s major push into the US, Europe, and Australia. The TCL 10 Pro is a $450 mid-range phone with a good display and a good camera setup. The TCL 10L is a $250 phone with great cameras and a great display. Both phones are pretty good and pretty great value purchases.

TCL 10L and TCL 10 Pro Specifications

Specifications TCL 10L TCL 10 Pro
Dimensions & Weight
  • 162.2 x 75.6 x 8.4 mm
  • 180g
  • 158.5 x 72.4 x 9.2 mm
  • 177g
Display
  • 6.53-inch LCD LTPS Dotch display
  • FHD+ 2340 x 1080 resolution
  • 395 ppi
  • 19.5:9 aspect ratio
  • 91% screen-to-body ratio
  • 1500:1 contrast ratio
  • Dedicated display engine
  • Real-time SDR to HDR conversion
  • Gorilla Glass 3
  • Top left hole punch
  • 6.47-inch curved AMOLED display
  • FHD+ 2340 x 1080 resolution
  • 398 ppi
  • 19.5:9 aspect ratio
  • 93% screen-to-body ratio
  • 2,000,000:1 contrast ratio
  • Dedicated display engine
  • Real-time SDR to HDR conversion
  • Always-on-display
  • Teardrop notch
SoC Qualcomm Snapdragon 665:
  • 4x Kryo 260 Gold @ 2.0GHz
  • 4x Kryo 260 Silver @ 1.8GHz

Adreno 610

Qualcomm Snapdragon 675:
  • 2x Kryo 460 Gold @ 2.0 GHz
  • 6x Kryo 460 Silver @ 1.7 GHz

Adreno 612

RAM & Storage
  • 6GB RAM + 64GB EMMC
  • 6GB RAM+ 128GB UFS

Micro SD card, up to 256GB

  • 6GB RAM + 128GB UFS 2.1

Micro SD card, up to 256GB

Battery & Charging
  • 4,000 mAh
  • 4,500 mAh
  • Quick Charge 3.0, 18W (50% in 35 minutes)
Rear Cameras Photo:
  • Primary: 48MP S5KGM1, f/1.8, 1/2.25″ sensor, 0.8µm pixels
  • Secondary: 8MP GC8034, super-wide-angle, f/2.2, 1/4″ sensor, 1.12µm pixels
  • Tertiary: 2MP GC2385, macro, f/2.4, 1/5″ sensor, 1.65µm pixels
  • Quarternary: 2MP GC2385, depth, f/2.4, 1/5″ sensor, 1.65µm pixels

Video:

  • 4K @ 30fps
  • 1080 @ 120fps
  • 720p @ 240fps
Photo:
  • Primary: 64MP GW1, f/1.8, 1/1.7″ sensor, 0.8µm pixels, PDAF, CDAF, LDAF
  • Secondary: 16MP 3P9, super-wide-angle, f/2.4, 1/3″, 1.0µm pixels
  • Tertiary: 5MP GC5035, macro, f/2.2, 1/5″ sensor, 1.12µm pixels
  • Quarternary: 2MP OV02K10, depth, f/1.8, 1/2.8″ sensor, 2.9µm pixels

Video:

  • 4K/1080p/720p @ 30 fps
  • 1080p/720p @ 120fps
  • 720p @ 24ofps
  • 720p @ 960fps
Front Cameras 16MP S5K3P9SP04, f/2.2, Single Hole Punch 24MP OV24B, f/2.0, Teardrop Notch
Other Features
  • Rear fingerprint scanner
  • NFC
  • Bluetooth 5.0, Super Bluetooth
  • Wi-Fi: 802.11b/g/n for 2.4GHz
  • Wi-Fi: 802.11a/n/ac for 5GHz
  • Smart key
  • In-Display fingerprint scanner
  • NFC
  • Bluetooth 5.0, Super Bluetooth
  • Wi-Fi: 802.11b/g/n for 2.4GHz
  • Wi-Fi: 802.11a/n/ac for 5GHz
  • Smart key
Audio
  • Audio chipset: WCD9370
  • Audio amplifier: NXP TFA9890
  • 3.5mm audio jack
  • Bottom firing mono speaker
  • Super Bluetooth
  • Audio chipset: WCD9370
  • Audio amplifier: NXP TFA9890
  • 3.5mm audio jack
  • Bottom firing mono speaker
  • Super Bluetooth
Android Version TCL UI based on Android 10 TCL UI based on Android 10,
upgrade planned for Android 11 by FOTA
Price &
Availability
Amazon May 19th, Walmart & Best Buy later this month
  • North America – $249
Amazon May 19th, Walmart & Best Buy later this month
  • North America – $449

TCL provided both units for review purposes. However, they did not have any inputs on the contents of this review.

TCL 10L Forums ||| TCL 10 Pro Forums


Hardware

The hardware on the TCL 10 Pro is actually really interesting. The outside of the phone is really nice to hold. It also has a pretty nice build quality. It is the usual glass sandwich with an aluminum body. The front has a 6.47″ FHD+ AMOLED display. There is a small teardrop notch as well. Under the display is an in-display fingerprint scanner. It isn’t too fast or too accurate. It feels very similar to the sensor in the OnePlus 6T, meaning it is not that great in my experience.

TCL 10 Pro

TCL 10 Pro

The back of the phone is pretty unique. The rear has a matte gray gradient with a bar going through the top quarter of the phone. This bar houses the quad-camera and dual flash setup. This is a very distinct look on TCL’s current lineup, making them stand out from the recent “L”-shaped quad-camera layouts.

TCL 10 Pro

TCL 10 Pro

On the inside, we have Qualcomm Snapdragon 675, Adreno 612, 128GB of UFS 2.1 Storage, 6GB of LPDDR4x RAM, a 4,500 mAh battery, and a headphone jack. These specs might seem great for the $450 price tag, and I agree to some extent. I would have liked to see a Snapdragon 730 or 730G. It might not help now, but budget Android phones are known to get slower over time and with software updates, so having a little more speed headroom would have been nice, but for the price, I can’t complain. Even with the Snapdragon 675, it feels fast and snappy. The concern is just how long that will last.

That 4,500 mAh battery can be charged with 18W Quick Charge 3.0. This charging isn’t too fast by today’s standards but isn’t too slow. It tops it up in a little over an hour. As for battery life, this phone battery wasn’t incredible or horrendous. It lasted me from 8am to 2am with around 15% left. During this time, I had around 3 or 4 hours of screen on time depending on the day. All around I wouldn’t say this is the best in the world or the worst. It’s definitely good for a $450 phone, though.

TCL 10L

TCL 10L

The TCL 10 L is also really interesting. The build quality isn’t quite as good as the TCL 10 Pro. The display is made of glass and the back is made of plastic. It has a 6.53″ FHD+ LCD display with a punch-hole camera. This phone doesn’t have an in-display fingerprint scanner, but instead a capacitive scanner on the back. The top part of the back also houses a quad-camera setup and dual flash.

TCL 10L

TCL 10L

The inside of the TCL 10L is actually really good for it’s $250 price tag. It has a Snapdragon 665, Adreno 610, 64GB of eMMC storage, 6GB of LPDDR4x RAM, a 4,000 mAh battery, and a headphone jack. All of this is actually really good and fairly impressive for the price. It is so good, in fact, I had a tough time finding a comparable phone in the US for $250. From a pure spec perspective, it’s one of the best values in the US. There are, of course, more reasons that this phone is the absolute best value and I’ll get onto those in a moment.

The TCL 10L has outstanding battery. This was much better than the TCL 10 Pro. The 4,000 mAh battery with no fast charging is fine for charging, as you probably won’t be topping up during the day. I believe this outstanding battery is thanks to the LCD panel and the Snapdragon 665. Either way, it lasted me from the same 8am to 2am period with around 30% battery left. This is really good and about what I get on most flagship phones. For $250, I’m very impressed.

Overall, I think both phones are pretty snappy and fast. Over the two weeks, I’ve been alternating between both devices and felt absolutely no issues or slowdowns. Over time, I even forgot that these don’t have a flagship Snapdragon chip. The performance you are going to get is fine. Look, you’re going to be spending under $500 on these phones. If you are expecting a flagship grade processor and speeds as fast as the OnePlus 8 Pro, you’re looking at the wrong phone. It will be fast enough for everything you’ll be doing. It can do some casual gaming, photo editing, and basically handle any day to day tasks. If you were looking for a performance beast, this isn’t your phone. You also probably weren’t looking at a $250 and $450 phone.


Display

The display on the TCL 10L is probably one of the best LCD panels I’ve seen in a long time. So good, in fact, I actually had to double check the spec sheet to make sure I didn’t make a mistake. It is that good. The colors look rich and vibrant without being incredibly over saturated. It all around looks great. There isn’t much discoloration at angles and it gets bright while in direct sunlight. It doesn’t get super bright, but that’s fine for the $250 price tag.

There is a hole-punch camera and it’s fairly large. It’s not too large, like the P40 Pro or S10 5G, but it is a decent size. It’s not going to disturb your viewing experience and it doesn’t look too bad. One thing about a punch hole on an LCD panel is shadows. There is a bit of a dark shadow around the punch hole and corners of this display. This is just the nature of an LCD panel and that’s fine since it is a $250 phone.

TCL 10L TCL 10L

TCL 10L

The TCL 10 Pro is a bit better. It’s an FHD+ AMOLED panel. The display ends up looking pretty good. It’s better than most other phones I’ve used at a comparable price. The only issue I really found was with the color. It was a really weird tint. Everything has a slight green haze over it. It’s not a huge deal because you get used to it over time, but it’s still a little annoying. Otherwise, colors are punchy without being saturated.

TCL 10 Pro TCL 10 Pro

TCL 10 Pro

The one issue across both the TCL 10L and TCL 10 Pro display is auto brightness. It’s really bad. It jumps around a lot and omits out any attempt at a smooth transition. Instead of gradually going up or down smoothly, it just ends up jumping from 5% to 50% instantly. The same thing happens when the brightness is going down. It’s just super jumpy. It’s annoying and not a great experience.

Something both the TCL 10L and TCL 10 Pro have is SDR to HDR conversion in real-time. Is this real HDR? No. It ends up just boosting the brightness and colors like most other video enhancer modes. I ended up turning this off since this really isn’t what I like on a phone. I know a lot of people do like this, so it’s nice to at least have the option. What’s also nice is the Pixelworks chip that powers TCL’s NXTVISION which does this up-scaling.

All around, the display on both the TCL 10L and TCL 10 Pro is good. I have no real complaints about them.


Camera

The TCL 10L camera is actually really good for the price, but the TCL 10 Pro leaves a lot to be desired in the camera department. Generally speaking, the images are very social-media-ready. All colors are vibrant and saturated. The HDR isn’t great all the time and a lot of photos are really hit or miss because of this. I’ve had some really fantastic photos but also some really bad ones. It really depends on the scene and lighting. These drawbacks are easier to ignore on the cheaper phone because of its pricing.

The cheaper of the two, the TCL 10L, has a main 48MP shooter with an aperture of f/1.8 and a pixel size of 0.8μm while un-binned. Next to that is the 8MP super wide camera. It has an aperture of f/2.2 and a pixel size of 1.12μm. The phone also has two 2MP sensors, one for macro and one for depth. Both have an aperture of f/2.4 and a pixel size of 1.65μm. The front camera is a 16MP sensor with a pixel size of 1.0μm and aperture of f/2.2. The front-facing camera is a fixed focus camera, so no autofocus. The phone can record 4K at up to 30fps, 1080p at up to 120fps, and 720p at up to 240fps.

The TCL 10 Pro has a slightly different setup. The main shooter is a 64MP camera with an aperture of f/1.79 and a pixel size of 0.8μm while unbinned. Next to that is the 16MP super-wide camera. It has an aperture of  f/2.4 and a pixel size of 1.0μm. Next is the 5MP macro camera. It has an aperture of f/2.2 and a pixel size of 1.12μm. Lastly for the rear camera setup, a 2MP camera with an aperture of f/1.8 and a pixel size of 2.9μm. The front camera is a 24MP sensor with a pixel size of 0.9µm and aperture of f/2.0. Something else about the camera is the low light video. TCL is one of the few phone companies with a dedicated low-light video mode.

TCL 10 Pro & TCL 10L Full Resolution Photo Samples

The cameras take really good photos when you don’t zoom in. They look good while looking at them on the phone or Instagram or Twitter or Snapchat. They look pretty great like that. When you zoom in for any type of photo editing, you quickly notice that there is a lot of room for improvement. This is fine on the $250 TCL 10L since it’s a cheap phone, and it’s easy to forgive a lot of stuff like that at that price. Unfortunately, this isn’t as easy to forgive on a phone like the TCL 10 Pro when there are better alternatives like the iPhone SE.

Selfies on the TCL 10L are actually not bad. They look crispy and have no beauty modes or skin smoothing. There is no HDR, so taking pictures away from the sun does result in a very blown out sky. The colors also look really natural and not too weird. I think I actually prefer the TCL 10L picture over that of the TCL 10 Pro because of these colors. The TCL 10 Pro has the same crispy photo with no skin smoothing or beauty mode, but the colors look a little more muted. It’s not a huge problem, but it’s just not what I like to see from a phone camera.

Something the TCL 10 Pro has that the TCL 10L doesn’t is night mode. Just having night mode doesn’t always mean it’s a good thing, though. If a phone has a really bad night mode, it might as well not have one at all. The TCL 10 Pro might as well not have it. All TCL is seeming to do is boost saturation, HDR, and sharpness. It’s not really brightening anything. It’s disappointing to see, especially with the 64MP sensor. I sent the photos below to XDA Editor-in-Chief Mishaal Rahman and his response was “that is terrible.” That sums up the night mode pretty well.

Something to mention is the TCL 10 series do have the camera watermark enabled by default. This might be good in some regions, but in the US, it’s a real drag. Luckily, TCL decided that they are going to push an update soon after the launch of the phone switching that watermark off by default. You can still turn it on in settings if that’s your jam.

I know these aren’t a lot of samples, but I was constrained with time due to personal reasons. I’ll keep posting camera and video samples over on my Twitter, @MaxWinebach, so feel free to follow and keep an eye out for more TCL 10 series camera samples.


Software

My first impressions of the TCL UI skin based on Android 10 were actually pretty good. It felt pretty light and all-around close to stock Android 10. I had no complaints… at first. Over time, you start to notice how the software does some weird things where it really doesn’t need to.

The Quick Settings tiles are pretty reminiscent of Android Oreo. It’s missing the circular style that has become popular in skins like One UI, Oxygen OS, and stock Android. This isn’t an issue, but a design choice. I don’t love it or hate it, it’s just what they choose. I do wish they went with a more modern design, though.

There aren’t many stock TCL apps replacing Google apps. In most cases, the apps are Google apps. The default messenger and phone apps were from Google, along with Chrome for the browser. There are a few useless apps included, though. TCL includes a file-sharing app called “Fast Share” and while this might be useful for some families with all TCL phones, it isn’t for most people. Ideally, this app should have been optionally installable through the Play Store instead of being preloaded. TCL also includes app icons for, NXTVISION, Smart Manager, and Smart Key, but those could have easily been hidden as there are options for both of these in settings. I know that’s pretty nitpicky, but it would have made the phone feel a little less bloated overall.

TCL also includes an IR Remote app because the TCL 10L and TCL 10 Pro are some of the few phones with IR blasters included. This is actually super nice to have. It has a bunch of pre-programmed TVs, air conditioners, and more. The IR blaster is underrated for both, controlling appliances in your house and for trolling people. It’s all around good to have and I appreciate this being preinstalled and drawing attention to the fact it has this blaster.

On the TCL 10 Pro, TCL also has an edge bar. This is similar in functionality to Samsung’s edge panel. Unlike edge panel, it doesn’t do much. It has three options: ruler, contacts, and apps. It just makes easy and quick access to those shortcuts. Its uselessness isn’t a huge deal though, as it can be easily disabled. I’m all around ok with it being included since it’s so easy to disable.

Overall, I think the software is fine at best. TCL UI is not a good skin, like Pixel UI, OneUI, or Oxygen OS, or a bad skin, like Funtouch OS. It’s just fine. That’s alright, TCL is new to Android phones and they’ll improve, hopefully. I think these devices would have done much better if they kept it mostly stock and made some improvements here and there, sorta like what OnePlus and Essential did. It would allow them to push updates faster and create a more enjoyable user experience.

It is also worth mentioning software updates. TCL has confirmed they will be releasing Android 11 for both the TCL 10L and TCL 10 Pro and have also confirmed there will be monthly security patches. Unfortunately, there isn’t much in terms of software development for ROM developers. The bootloader isn’t unlockable, so you won’t be able to install any AOSP based ROMs. Luckily, the software is very GCam capable. I was using UltraCVM GCam port from my buddy UltraM8 on my TCL 10L and was able to get some great results. It much improves the main camera. Not all software development is ROMs and luckily this phone is very open to some app level development.


Final Thoughts on the TCL 10L and TCL 10 Pro

So these are some interesting phones. I’m a real fan of the TCL 10L. It’s one of the best values in the US. I did a lot of searching and I honestly couldn’t find a phone with a value as good. It’s seriously one of the best. It’s one of the only phones I’d recommend to people on an extreme budget. From the good specs to a good display to a good camera, it compromises where it needs to and has great specs in the places it does. It’s all-around great.

TCL 10L Forums ||| TCL 10 Pro Forums

It’s available starting on May 19th for $250 on Amazon and will be available on Best Buy and Walmart later this month.

The TCL 10 Pro is a bit harder of a sell. At $450, it’s going against competitors like the iPhone SE and Samsung Galaxy A51 and the upcoming Pixel 4a. It’s a lot harder of a sell against those. While TCL 10 Pro has a multi-camera advantage, it falls short in many other ways. I feel like TCL compromised in the wrong areas with this phone. Don’t get me wrong, it’s still a great device, it’s just a less compelling sell when better options exist.

It will be available starting on May 19th for $450 on Amazon and will be available on Best Buy and Walmart later this month.

Buy the TCL 10L (Product Page) ||| Buy the TCL 10 Pro (Product Page)

The post TCL 10L and 10 Pro Review: Great Value Mid-Range Android Smartphones for the US appeared first on xda-developers.



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