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samedi 13 août 2022

OnePlus 10T Review: Amazing performance and battery in an otherwise conventional phone

OnePlus has a pretty consistent flagship launch strategy at this point: a flagship launch earlier in the year, followed by another refresh later on in the year. Recently, “T” variants of the company’s phones have downgraded a little bit from their earlier flagship counterparts but bring to the table some interesting improvements, too. The OnePlus 10T follows that pattern, as while it downgrades on some things like the screen and the build, it introduces 150W charging and the Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1.

Is the OnePlus 10T worth your money? In my mind, it’s a great device that I love a whole lot more than I thought I would. A huge amount of that comes down to the chipset, but the rest of the phone is outright good as well. There are downgrades that make it a bit odd in comparison to the OnePlus 10 Pro that launched earlier this year, but given that it’s a bit cheaper, it does make sense.

Fundamentally, the OnePlus 10T is a good phone, and that’s all you need in a phone for it to be usable. Following on from our first impressions, much of our thoughts on this phone have remained the same. It’s good, it’s powerful, but if you want an all-rounder phone from OnePlus, get the OnePlus 10 Pro. This is a phone with performance at the forefront of its design, and it shows given the absence of pretty much everything else. No alert slider, no top-tier cameras, and a full HD display instead of a quad HD display make this a dull smartphone for those who want something a bit more flashy.

    OnePlus 10T
    The OnePlus 10T is the performance flagship in the company's portfolio, and it certainly lives up to the name. Great performance and great battery life sums up the OnePlus 10T, though there are some downgrades that make the OnePlus 10 Pro a lot more appealing.

      Features:

      Pros:

      Cons:

back of the oneplus 10t


OnePlus 10T: Specifications

Specification OnePlus 10T
Dimensions & Weight
  • 163 x 75.37 x 8.75mm
  • 203.5g
Display
  • 6.7-inch FHD+ Fluid AMOLED
  • 120Hz refresh rate with adaptive refresh rate (60Hz/90Hz/120Hz)
  • Corning Gorilla Glass 5
SoC Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1
RAM & Storage
  • Up to 16GB of LPDDR5 RAM
  • Up to 256GB of UFS 3.1 storage
Battery & Charging
  • 4,800mAh
  • 150W wired fast charging support
Security In-display fingerprint scanner
Rear Camera(s)
  • Primary: 50MP f/1.8 Sony IMX766, OIS
  • Ultra-wide: 8MP f/2.2, 119.9-degree FoV
  • Macro: 2MP
Front Camera(s) 16MP f/2.4, EIS
Port(s) USB 2.0 Type-C
Audio Dual stereo speakers
Connectivity
  • 5G
  • 4G LTE
  • NFC
  • Wi-Fi 6
  • Bluetooth 5.3
Software OxygenOS 12.1 based on Android 12
Other Features

About this review: I received the OnePlus 10T in Jade Green from OnePlus U.K. on the 26th of July, 2022. While the company provided us with a review unit, it did not have any input into the contents of this review.


OnePlus 10T: Pricing & Availability

The OnePlus 10T is on sale in the U.S. It is available in three RAM/storage configurations at the following prices:

  • 8GB + 128GB: $649/€699/£629/$849 CAD/₹49,999
  • 12GB + 256GB: ₹54,999
  • 16GB + 256GB: $749/€799/£729/$999 CAD/₹55,999

The device will be available in two colorways — Moonstone Black and Jade Green. All variants will ship with a 160W charging brick in the box, so you won’t have to purchase one separately.


OnePlus 10T: Design

  • Same design as the OnePlus 10 Pro with some “Oppo-fication”
  • No alert slider
  • Punch hole is centered

OnePlus 10T with camera module

The OnePlus 10T features quite a similar design to the OnePlus 10 Pro, though there are some subtle differences. It’s squared off from the edge to house three cameras and it curves outward to the body of the device rather than cutting off abruptly, however, the camera island curves into the back glass of the phone. It’s a bit like the OPPO Find X3 Pro or the Find X5 Pro in that regard, and I’m sure that’s no coincidence, either. You’ll also notice that the Hasselblad camera etching is missing, though I’m told by OnePlus that’s going to be reserved for the camera flagship phones that the company releases, and not “T” mid-cycle refreshes.

The display on the OnePlus 10T looks good

The front of the phone is a little bit different from the last time around, too. It’s a 120Hz AMOLED screen, but the similarities stop there. It’s flat, it’s full HD, and doesn’t have LTPO support. There’s a punch-hole camera just like last time, except this time, it’s centered instead of being off to the left. It still looks good, but the display also noticeably gets nowhere near as bright as the OnePlus 10 Pro. It tops out at 950 nits here, which has been good enough for my usage, generally speaking.

oneplus 10t front display

The top of the phone has a speaker grille to serve as both an earpiece and a second speaker, though it’s not as loud as the bottom-firing speaker. They sound just as good as the OnePlus 10 Pro, too. The phone is thick and somewhat heavy to hold in hand, though OxygenOS 12.1’s one-handed mode helps out when trying to use the phone with one hand. The back is very much a fingerprint magnet, especially on our Jade Green unit, and there is no case in the box with the OnePlus 10T either (in the US and EU), which is a surprising omission from OnePlus. You get a case in the box in India though.

Haptics-wise, I really enjoy the OnePlus 10T and find that it does a good job. Vibrations are noticeable in your pocket, and it’s not too loud when the phone is on a table and vibrates, either. It’s nice to type on and I know when I get a notification, and that’s the most important thing.

It’s not all good though, and I do have a few complaints. For starters, removing the alert slider seems like a weird move, as it’s something that was iconic to OnePlus and helped the company’s phones stand out with their own identity. I don’t really think it’s the death knell for OnePlus that people seem to think it is, but nevertheless, I find it odd. The other complaint I have is that the frame of the phone is plastic. It’s essentially a OnePlus Nord 2T build and feels quite similar to it as well. I like the phone and it’s a functional design, but there are some definitive downgrades here.


OnePlus 10T: Camera

  • Downgrades across the board

OnePlus 10T
Remember how I mentioned that the OnePlus 10 Pro is the company’s “camera flagship” of the year? Yeah, the OnePlus 10T takes a pretty big downgrade in the camera department. It goes from Sony IMX789 primary sensor to an IMX766, from a 50MP Samsung JN1 to an 8MP ultra-wide, and a 2MP macro camera in place of the 3.3x telephoto from last time around.

OnePlus 10T

This camera is a noticeable downgrade from the OnePlus 10 Pro, and excruciatingly so at that. If you care about your phone for the camera and really want a OnePlus phone, then you’ll want to look at the OnePlus 10 Pro instead of this. This isn’t the company’s camera flagship, and that’s pretty evident from my testing of it. From my usage, it’s perfectly fine for the daytime, but the quality drops off hugely when taking photos at night. If this is the only camera on you when you need to take photos, then you would usually be content with what you click — but don’t expect to win if you get into a pixel-peeping fight because there are better camera phones out there.


OnePlus 10T: Performance

  • Great performance
  • Great efficiency
  • Amazing thermals

The OnePlus 10T may not be the camera flagship of the company’s phones, but OnePlus tells me that it’s the performance flagship. It’s got the best chipset, a ton of RAM, and fast storage which makes this the complete package when it comes to anything intensive. Thanks to the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1, that would definitely be the case. There’s still a toggle in the phone’s battery settings that will enable a high-performance mode (which is off by default), so we’ve run tests with it both on and with it off. I ran CPU Throttling Test and Geekbench 5, and the results are below.

No matter which mode you use, the performance feels basically the same in most tasks. I don’t notice any major difference aside from the phone heating up more when high-performance mode is enabled. With the toggle switched off, the throttling test identified a throttle to just 93% of its max performance in a half-hour test, one of the best results I have seen from a flagship chipset in a long time. The difference between when the toggle is on or off is also minimal.

A lot of this is very likely down to the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1, as this phone is very similar to the OnePlus 10 Pro aside from that. Along with those efficiency improvements, we’ve also spotted some clear battery gains in screen on time and overall device usage. The Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 features an improved Qualcomm Kryo CPU, with a Cortex-X2 prime core clocked at 3.2Ghz, three Cortex A710 performance cores clocked at 2.8GHz, and four Cortex A510 efficiency cores clocked at 2.0GHz. Qualcomm claims that the upgraded CPU is 10 percent faster than the one on the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 and offers 30 percent better CPU power efficiency. We made similar findings in our testing of the Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 reference device Asus previously shared with us. And so far, every device we’ve tested with this chip has been consistent with those findings, like the ROG Phone 6 Pro and the Zenfone 9.

UI Stutter/Jank Test

The OnePlus 10T has a 120Hz refresh rate display, but how well does the phone actually maintain 120 FPS? It’s a pretty smooth phone to use in the day-to-day, but it’s not always going to be at 120Hz. For example, the phone will lower the refresh rate to 60Hz when a video starts playing, though I tested scrolling through Facebook or Twitter, and videos in the feed do not drop the refresh rate to 60Hz. This means you can scroll on social media and not have jarring switches between 60Hz and 120Hz all of the time, which some devices will do.

To quantify how well the OnePlus 10T can maintain 120 FPS in real-world scenarios, we ran a modified version of Google’s open-source JankBench benchmark. This benchmark simulates a handful of common tasks you’ll see in everyday apps, including scrolling through a ListView with text, scrolling through a ListView with images, scrolling through a grid view with a shadow effect, scrolling through a low-hitrate text render view, scrolling through a high-hitrate text render view, inputting and editing text with the keyboard, repeating overdraws with cards, and uploading bitmaps. Our script records the draw time for each frame during the test, eventually plotting all the frames and their draw times in a plot along with several horizontal lines representing the target frame draw times for the 4 common display refresh rates (60Hz, 90Hz, 120Hz, and 144Hz.)

What’s interesting is that it appears that OnePlus is being very selective about when it allows the display to reach its true 120Hz potential, which is the same as on the OnePlus 10 Pro. Whether it’s for performance or thermal reasons is unclear, but the above tests show different target refresh rates. Nevertheless, I never notice the phone dropping down to lower refresh rates when using it (and I’m usually quite sensitive to that), and if that’s because OnePlus has nearly perfected when exactly to drop the refresh rate of the display, then that’s perfectly fine by me.

Sustained performance and thermals

The OnePlus 10T has absolutely incredible sustained performance

Sustained performance is incredibly important, especially if you’re a mobile gamer. As phones heat up, they decrease the clock frequency of the chipset to help it cool down, which in turn means your performance will drop off. While the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 would throttle pretty heavily (even with high-performance mode switched off) the OnePlus 10 Pro is the complete opposite. With high-performance mode off, the phone basically just doesn’t throttle when running the CPU Throttling Test. This phone’s sustained performance is absolutely incredible with high-performance mode off.CPU Throttling Test limited CPU Throttling Test full

Just like last time as well, there is a “pro gamer mode” that will enable whenever a game is launched. This is the “Hyperboost” gaming tech that debuted with the OnePlus 10 Pro, and the company has been pretty open about its inclusion in its flagship phones. From what I could gather when I tested it on the OnePlus 10 Pro, it simply raises the thermal limits to reduce thermal throttling, and that’s about it. It doesn’t even enable high-performance mode.

Gaming performance

The OnePlus 10T has the same GPU as the already-excellent OnePlus 10 Pro, and there’s nothing really different to say about it. Performance is excellent in pretty much everything, and like with the chipset, thermals are improved too. You’ll get both great performance and it’ll be sustained, perfect for playing intensive games or resource-hungry emulators like AetherSX2 and Dolphin Emulator.

Note as well that because of the 1080p display (instead of it being 1440p), you’ll get better performance in native Android games as there are less pixels that need to be rendered. That’s another plus to a lower resolution display, though obviously, it won’t look as crisp in normal day-to-day usage.


OnePlus 10T: Battery and Charging

  • Super fast charging
  • Charging brick supports 45W USB PD again
  • Good battery life

OnePlus has always been known for super-fast charging, and the OnePlus 10T is no different. The company this time packs in 150W charging in the box, with promises that it can charge your phone from 1% to 100% in just 19 minutes — and we reached that number in just about that time, so their claims are on point.

OnePlus 10T charging graph

The OnePlus 10T is a battery and charging champ

If you live in the U.S. though, it will “only” be 125W charging, which is still very quick. What’s more, the power brick once again supports USB Power Delivery only up to 45W and not 65W or higher. This is different from the 80W charger that came with the OnePlus 10 Pro, as that did not support USB Power Delivery and could not be used to charge other devices. Thankfully OnePlus is back to its old reliables here, and it’s one charger to rule them all. However, don’t jump too quickly if your “one charger” is a wireless charger. The OnePlus 10T doesn’t support wireless charging, and while it’s not something I care about, maybe you do.

Since our first impressions article, I have had even better battery life, frequently clocking in close to seven hours of screen on time. This is much, much higher than the OnePlus 10 Pro, and almost double in some instances. The Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 is a winner not just in performance, but in efficiency as well. This phone is a battery champ.


OnePlus 10T: OxygenOS 12.1

OxygenOS 12.1 is the same OxygenOS as on the OnePlus 10 Pro: that is, it’s still based on ColorOS. It works well, I don’t have many complaints at all, and I think that the immediate panic response of the tech enthusiast community at the mere thought of ColorOS was overblown. OxygenOS 12.1 takes several cues from ColorOS, and that’s not a bad thing thanks to its stability. I still get notifications too, which I had a lot of trouble with previously. Overall, I see this as a net benefit. I don’t think there are many downsides so far to the switch over.

OnePlus’ own Android outing isn’t all that different from previous versions. Visually, everything looks more or less the same. The same customization options that you know and love are all present, the OnePlus Launcher and the OnePlus Shelf are there too, and it’s a pretty nicely rounded experience, even if I find that OxygenOS now lacks some features versus the competition. Even Google, in my opinion, is beginning to best OnePlus in terms of customization — and Google hasn’t really been known for letting users customize much on Pixel phones

Given that it’s the same as OxygenOS 12.1 on the OnePlus 10 Pro, that also means the company hasn’t really solved any of the weirdness with OxygenOS 12.1. For example, the OnePlus Shelf is still treated as an app, so pulling it down when watching YouTube will actually minimize the video that you’re playing. Swiping out of it will also have the same behavior as if you were swiping away from an app.

In terms of software updates, OnePlus is promising three years of major updates and four years of security updates. In theory, this should bring the OnePlus 10T all the way up to Android 15, and OxygenOS 13 based on Android 13 is coming “later this year”, though a proper timeline hasn’t been given. The company took the time at the launch event to announce OxygenOS 13, and we have an Open Beta build available for the OnePlus 10 Pro. What’s even stranger is the OnePlus 10 Pro will get the stable release first before the OnePlus 10T, despite the 10T being a newer phone.


OnePlus 10T: Miscellaneous

Speakers

The speakers on the OnePlus 10T are more or less on par with the OnePlus 10 Pro. They get loud and are decent for watching videos and listening to music if you don’t have any better. I wouldn’t use it all the time to listen to music, but it gets the job done.

Fingerprint Scanner

The last-gen OnePlus 9 series featured an in-display optical fingerprint scanner that was positioned towards the bottom edge of the phone. This was a little odd and difficult to position your thumb at, though you eventually get used to it. The OnePlus 10 Pro brought the fingerprint scanner back to a conventionally expected height from the bottom, though now we’re back down to the bottom of the screen again. It’s a bit odd, but you get used to it.

Phone calls, signal strength, and 5G

The OnePlus 10T has really good signal strength, just like the OnePlus 10 Pro. Not a lot has actually changed in this regard, and it’s more or less the same. The Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 with its Snapdragon X65 modem is pretty good.

However, keep in mind there are limitations to its 5G capabilities. There’s no mmWave support for one, and you won’t have 5G support at all on AT&T, just like with the OnePlus 9 Pro. The competition in the US has a leg up on these end, so you need to assess if these are dealbreakers for you.

Bootloader unlock and kernel sources

OnePlus has historically been quite good when it comes to bootloader unlocking, and the OnePlus 10T is no different. You can unlock the bootloader in your developer options as you normally would, and the company has also generally and relatively been good at releasing kernel sources on time. They haven’t been published yet, but hopefully, they will be in the coming days before the phone reaches the hands of general consumers. Their sources do get out of date when they make platform jumps, so keep that in mind.

It’s also important to mention though that the OnePlus 10 Pro never had any publicly available recovery tools to fully flash your device like previous devices in the series.

IP ratings are confusing as ever

The IP rating issue with the OnePlus 10T is actually kind of funny because it shows how an IP rating is just a licensing issue, just like the OnePlus 10 Pro did. To recap what we’ve talked about here before: an IP rating does not guarantee that your phone will be fixed under warranty if you water damage it. Instead, what it ensures is that your phone is water-resistant, but if water gets in, then you’re still going to have to pay for an out-of-warranty repair. IP ratings merely give you an idea of what should be okay.

Having said all of that, the OnePlus 10T has an IP54 rating on T-Mobile, only. The phone is structurally the same in other regions (except for the fact that the NA OnePlus 10T also has a barometer in the center of the camera module in accordance with U.S. law), meaning that the IP54 rating it has in the U.S. actually applies globally, too — at least, in terms of the protection offered. OnePlus can’t advertise it on the specification sheet as an IP rating is something that companies pay for a license to advertise with, but rest assured that your phone is water-resistant.

In essence, the OnePlus 10 Pro has an IP54 rating, but it also doesn’t. As an aside, an IP54 rating is lower than what the OnePlus 10 Pro offers. It only means it’s protected against water splashes and limited amounts of dust and other particles. The OnePlus 10 Pro has an IP68 rating, which is 1.5 meters underwater for up to 30 minutes. Bit of a difference, really.


Should you buy the OnePlus 10T?

OnePlus 10T curved camera

The OnePlus 10T is a dull, boring smartphone, but that’s not inherently a bad thing. It’s fast, it’s smooth, and it gets the job done for anyone who wants a pretty decent phone for a little bit less than the top-tier flagships that OnePlus offers. It’s a shame that you can’t get this particular chipset in the OnePlus 10 Pro because that phone with this chipset would be close to perfect.

I think all of that goes to show just how much the OnePlus 10T is missing, though. The best part of it is the chipset, and if you took every other aspect of the phone and replaced it with the OnePlus 10 Pro, you’d have a fundamentally better phone in every single way bar the charging speed. Even that charging speed, while absurd, doesn’t matter all that much in practical life. There’s a massive sense of diminishing returns when “downgrading” from 150W charging to 80W charging, as it only increases the charging time from 19 minutes to about half an hour. It’s hardly a big deal when dealing with such short time differences.

To sum things up, the OnePlus 10T is a good phone that does cost a bit less than the OnePlus 10 Pro, but not by much. The OnePlus 10T starts at $649, and with the OnePlus 10 Pro’s price drop to $799, you get a whole lot more phone for just $150 more. With the OnePlus 10 Pro also receiving OxygenOS 13 first, I think it’s clear that OnePlus has a favorite child here, and it’s not the OnePlus 10T. You can’t go wrong with the OnePlus 10T, but for my money, I’d be choosing the OnePlus 10 Pro any day of the week when it costs only that much more to get a far superior experience in every way but the chipset.

    OnePlus 10T
    The OnePlus 10T is the performance flagship in the company's portfolio, and it certainly lives up to the name. Great performance and great battery life sums up the OnePlus 10T, though there are some downgrades.

The post OnePlus 10T Review: Amazing performance and battery in an otherwise conventional phone appeared first on XDA.



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vendredi 12 août 2022

XDA forums are now open for Samsung’s latest foldables and the Asus Zenfone 9

Since we last added new forum pages for the latest smartphones, Samsung and Asus have launched their latest flagships. While Samsung unveiled its latest foldables, the Galaxy Z Fold 4 and Galaxy Z Flip 4, Asus launched a new compact flagship called the Zenfone 9. We’ve now opened new forum pages for these three devices to give buyers and enthusiasts a place for discussions, third-party development, mods, and more.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 4

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 4 lifestyle product shot.

Samsung’s latest flagship foldable, the Galaxy Z Fold 4, brings iterative improvements over last year’s model. It features an updated design, a lighter and more durable display, Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 chipset, updated cameras, and more. It will likely be the best foldable smartphone this year, and we expect it to sell like hotcakes. If you’ve pre-ordered the Galaxy Z Fold 4 and want to get in touch with other buyers, share some tips and tricks, or build a custom ROM for the phone, head to our forums by clicking the link below.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 4 XDA Forums

Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4

Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4 lifestyle product shot.

Like the Galaxy Z Fold 4, the Galaxy Z Flip 4 also brings minor improvements over the Galaxy Z Flip 3 from last year. While it hasn’t changed much in terms of the design, Samsung has upgraded it with a bigger battery, the Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 SoC, and faster charging capabilities, which should offer users a better experience. Samsung has also introduced a new widget for its cover screen, but if you’re still not satisfied with it, you might find a great mod or two on our forums in the coming weeks.

Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4 XDA Forums

Asus Zenfone 9

asus zenfone 9 renders

The Zenfone 9 is the latest non-gaming flagship from Asus, and while it may not be as feature-rich as flagships from brands like Samsung and OnePlus, it offers something you won’t get on pretty much any flagship out there — a compact form factor. Even though it packs Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 chip, a respectable dual camera system, a high refresh rate display, a substantial battery with 30W fast charging support, and a headphone jack, it measures just 146.5 x 68.1 x 9.1mm. This makes it a great phone for one-handed use. Sadly, its software is pretty barebones. If you want to fix that with a custom ROM, head to our forums by clicking the link below.

Asus Zenfone 9 XDA Forums

The post XDA forums are now open for Samsung’s latest foldables and the Asus Zenfone 9 appeared first on XDA.



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Here are the new static and live wallpapers from the Xiaomi Mix Fold 2

Xiaomi unveiled its latest flagship foldable, the Mix Fold 2, just a day after Samsung unveiled the Galaxy Z Fold 4. The new foldable from the Chinese OEM is a great alternative to Samsung’s offering as it brings flagship hardware at a slightly more affordable price. However, the Mix Fold 2 is only available in China, and Xiaomi has not shared any plans to bring it to other regions. If you’re in the market for a new flagship foldable and the Mix Fold 2 has your heart, you can either import it from China or wait for the company to launch it in your country. In the meantime, you can try out all the new Mix Fold 2 wallpapers on your current device.

The Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 ships with an optimized version of MIUI 13 for foldables with a host of new features to help users make the most of its unique form factor. The software release also includes a few device-specific static and live wallpaper, which we’ve managed to extract from the Mix Fold 2’s firmware.

Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 Wallpapers

The Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 comes with a total of ten static wallpapers and five live wallpapers. Five of these static wallpapers are for the cover screen, while the remaining are for the main folding display. The live wallpapers, however, are only for the main display.

Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 cover screen wallpaper. Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 cover screen wallpaper. Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 cover screen wallpaper. Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 cover screen wallpaper. Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 cover screen wallpaper.

The static wallpapers for the cover screen have a 2520 x 1080p resolution and they should scale well on most devices with an FHD+ display. However, the wallpapers for the main foldable display have a 2160 x 1914p resolution, so you might have to crop them if you’re planning to use them on a regular smartphone.

Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 foldable display wallpaper. Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 foldable display wallpaper. Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 foldable display wallpaper. Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 foldable display wallpaper.

The live wallpapers also have a 2160 x 1914p resolution, so they won’t scale well on most phones. But you can still try them out on your phone by downloading them from the link provided below. The live wallpapers are in MP4 format and if you can’t figure out how to set them up on your phone, you can check out our guide on how to set videos as live wallpapers on Android. The following video previews all five live wallpapers.

Note that the static wallpapers included in the gallery above are compressed. You can download the full-resolution files from the following link.

Download the Mix Fold 2 wallpapers

The post Here are the new static and live wallpapers from the Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 appeared first on XDA.



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Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4 Unboxing: What’s in the box?

Samsung has announced the Galaxy Z Flip 4 and the Galaxy Z Fold 4 as its new foldable offerings for 2022. They’re scheduled to hit the shelves by the end of August with some huge improvements. The Galaxy Z Flip 4 has a slightly different design with flat edges, a new processor for better performance and battery life, and some other tweaks to further refine the user experience. If you’ve already made up your mind about buying the new Galaxy Z Flip 4 and are wondering what you get inside the retail box in the US, then you’ve landed on the right page. We already got our hands on the foldable for testing, so here’s a quick look at the Galaxy Z Flip 4 unboxing to see what you get inside the box.

What do you get inside the retail box of the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4?

Galaxy Z Flip 4 next to its retail box contents on a wooden table

The box of the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4 sold in the US comes with the following contents:

  •  The Galaxy Z Flip 4 in whichever color you choose
  • A USB C-to-C data and charging cable
  • A SIM card ejection tool
  • Region-specific safety documentation

The Galaxy Z Flip 4, as you can see, comes inside a relatively slim box with not a lot of contents inside. Much like the Galaxy S22 series, the Galaxy Z Flip 4 doesn’t come with a charger. It supports up to 25W charging this time, but you’ll have to buy a charger separately. Samsung has a bunch of chargers to choose from, but we’ve rounded up some more options in our best Galaxy Z Flip 4 chargers collection.

    Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4
    The Galaxy Z Flip 4 brings a few welcome improvements that make it a great device while retaining everything that keeps it special.

Samsung’s new foldables are now up for grabs, so be sure to check out our collection of the best Galaxy Z Flip 4 deals when you are ready to buy a unit. While you are here, we also encourage you to check out our collection of the best cases in which we’ve added a lot of good options including the ones from Samsung.

The post Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4 Unboxing: What’s in the box? appeared first on XDA.



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Google is recruiting testers for an upcoming Google Home app redesign

Google rolled out an update for the Google Home app with a redesigned home tab earlier this year. The new home tab layout made it easier for users to control their connected smartphone devices, but it doesn’t seem like Google is done redesigning the app. The company is reportedly working on a “next generation design of the Google Home app,” and it’s currently looking for testers to take it for a spin ahead of the final release.

According to a recent post on Reddit (via 9to5Google), the Google Nest Trusted Tester program is taking Cerntercode’s help to recruit “a group of highly engaged testers that are willing to help Google Nest test an unreleased product.” The recruitment page states that the testing program “will focus on the next generation design of the Google Home App.” Although the page doesn’t reveal any information about this next generation design, it adds that testers who enroll in the program must sign a non-disclosure agreement (NDA).

Google Home app tester recruitment announcement.

The recruitment page further highlights a set of requirements for willing participants. Testers applying for the program are required to have a Google Nest product, including thermostats, networking devices, speakers, displays, cameras, doorbells, locks, Nest Protect (smoke alarms), or Chromecasts. In addition, they must also use “either the Google Home app or the Nest app” to control these products.

Google Home app tester recruitment requirements.

If you fulfill these requirements and would like to try out the next generation design of the Google Home app, you can head over to the recruitment page by following the source link below, create a Centercode account, and sign-up. As mentioned earlier, shortlisted applicants will have to sign an NDA.

At the moment, we don’t have any details about the upcoming Google Home app redesign, but we expect to learn more in the coming weeks. We’ll make sure to let you know as soon as we have more details.


Source: Google Nest Dogfood Community
Via: Reddit, 9to5Google

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jeudi 11 août 2022

The Razer Phone Theme Store is finally shutting down later this month

If you own a Razer Phone or Razer Phone 2, this month will be your last chance to get custom themes from the Razer Theme Store. The theme store will shut down towards the end of the month, finally closing the book on Razer’s smartphone experiment.

Razer updated its support page, indicating that the closure would occur on August 24. The support page also states that users should download whatever theme they want before the shutdown because once the store is taken down, the themes will no longer be available. Razer does state that an applied theme will always stay on a device, but previously applied themes will not be stored on the phone. Razer does hold out an olive branch for crushed consumers, as it shared a link to some Razer wallpapers that can be permanently downloaded. You can find the mobile wallpaper by scrolling to the bottom, where there are 39 total. If that isn’t enough, you can also check out the XDA wallpaper galleries.

If unfamiliar with the Razer Theme Store, it offered various themes that could be applied to any Razer Phone. The themes included customizations for the launcher, system UI, lock screen, and more. It was a complete overhaul in terms of the visuals. Some themes were even attached to video game IPs like Namco’s Tekken, the WB’s Dying Light, and many more. While interesting, it is common to find theming apps on the Google Play Store.

If you’ve completely forgotten about Razer’s smartphone experiment, the development of the first phone started after the company acquired smartphone maker Nextbit. A short ten months later and the Razer Phone was born. The phone didn’t have the most modern design, with huge bezels on the top and bottom of the screen. But what it lacked in style, it made up in performance. The Razer Phone’s most notable feature was its 120Hz display, which was extremely rare then. The phone also had dual front-firing speakers and a large 4,000mAh battery.

The follow-up, the Razer Phone 2, brought more of the same and featured a Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 processor with a vapor chamber cooling system. The second iteration also offered customizable RGB lighting, the return of the 120Hz display, and dual front-facing speakers. While these handsets were gaming optimized, they didn’t catch on. Razer had a third phone up its sleeve but canceled the launch following disappointing sales of the first two phones. Once more, the Razer Theme Store will close on August 24, 2022. Be sure to visit the store one last time and bid it farewell before it closes forever.


Source: Razer
Via: 9to5Google

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Telegram update stalled due to weeks-long Apple “review process”

Apparently, Apple’s App Store is holding an app hostage. The word “hostage” might be a bit much, but it looks like Apple could be preventing a new update from releasing, according to Telegram CEO Pavel Durov. Durov posted to his Telegram, complaining that an update for the app was failing to get pushed to users because it was stuck in a “review process.”

He further expressed that the hiccup was “discouraging” and that it not only happens to big developers but also affects small developers too. Furthermore, he stated that the review process that apps go through are “obscure” and often times there is no explanation. Durov goes on a small tangent and discusses how app developers are already hit hard with the App Store and the Google Play Store’s 30 percent commission. This story and the frustration expressed are, unfortunately, nothing new. As many developers in the past have complained about the business model of online app stores.

Apple and Google traditionally take up to a 30 percent cut from any profits made in the store. Although Apple and Google both reduced their rates to 15 percent for those under the $1 million profit mark. Despite this, many have complained that the commission fee is still too high. Perhaps the most high-profile case regarding these issues occurred in the summer of 2020 when Epic Games intentionally circumvented the App Store’s payment system in favor of its own. While it would take Apple to court on the issue of its app ecosystem system, it would eventually lose. The trial did cause Apple to make some small adjustments to the rules and regulations of the App Store, but ultimately, not much was changed.

While Epics Games did lose the war, it still continues to fight the battle. Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney has suggested that a new ecosystem be created, one that encompasses apps for all platforms. While that may never come to fruition, there must be a better solution for app developers and the platforms they work with. For now, we will have to wait to see what Telegram has in store with its next app update. Durov might be hyping it up but said that the next update would “revolutionize how people express themselves in messaging.”


Source: Pavel Durov (Telegram)

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