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Realme 13 Pro+ specs revealed
12:55 am | July 5, 2024

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

The Realme 13 Pro+ got certified for sale in China by TENAA, and yesterday only a couple of images of the device were available on its server. Today the specs have been added too, so now we have a pretty good idea of what to expect. Intriguingly, the CPU frequency listed by TENAA matches the Snapdragon 7s Gen 2, not the Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 that the device was long rumored to be powered by. Note that there could be differences between the Chinese model, which got certified, and the international version that is due to launch in India soon - so maybe the SoC is one of...

Threads turns 1, grows to 175 million monthly active users
11:12 pm | July 4, 2024

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Threads, the Twitter rival that branched off from Meta’s Instagram, launched on July 5, 2023. In the year since, the budding social network has grown to 175 million monthly active users. This news was posted by Mark Zuckerberg himself (on Threads, of course). Initially, Threads grew at a head-spinning pace, reaching 100 million users just 5 days after launch. Things have calmed down since then, but the network keeps growing – it reported 130 million users in February and 150 million in April. The Threads team is having a quiet celebration of the 175 million milestone with new custom...

Redmi K70 Ultra stops by Geekbench with Dimensity 9300+ chipset
9:49 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

The eagerly anticipated Redmi K70 Ultra will complete the K70 family, as the K70 and K70 Pro are already official, and have been for months. The Ultra is almost here - it's started doing the certifications dance recently, and rumors about it have ben intensifying. Today a prototype has been spotted in the Geekbench database, and as usual that means we get a couple of its specs. Notably, the K70 Ultra's SoC is revealed to be the MediaTek Dimensity 9300+, and the prototype that ran Geekbench has 16GB of RAM, though more options will probably be available upon launch. The K70 Ultra...

Lava Blaze X will sport the Dimensity 7050 SoC, rumor claims
8:37 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Lava is unveiling its next smartphone, the Blaze X, on July 10. The date was revealed earlier today, following a teaser last week. The brand has already confirmed that the device comes with a 64 MP main camera, and will have three RAM options: 4/6/8GB. Now a new leak tells us it will be powered by the Dimensity 7050 SoC, and there will be two storage options: 128/256GB. The Dimensity 7050 isn't a new chipset for the brand, as it's also used it in the Blaze Curve which launched in March. Apparently the Blaze X will initially be available from Amazon, and will then make it to...

Lava Blaze X will sport the Dimensity 7050 SoC, rumor claims
8:37 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Lava is unveiling its next smartphone, the Blaze X, on July 10. The date was revealed earlier today, following a teaser last week. The brand has already confirmed that the device comes with a 64 MP main camera, and will have three RAM options: 4/6/8GB. Now a new leak tells us it will be powered by the Dimensity 7050 SoC, and there will be two storage options: 128/256GB. The Dimensity 7050 isn't a new chipset for the brand, as it's also used it in the Blaze Curve which launched in March. Apparently the Blaze X will initially be available from Amazon, and will then make it to...

OnePlus Nord 4 images leak left and right showing its unique design
7:21 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Just yesterday, OnePlus confirmed that it's launching the Nord 4 at an event in Milan, Italy on July 16. So far, thanks to myriad leaks, we've been operating under the impression that it would be nothing but a rebranded OnePlus Ace 3V, a phone which recently debuted for the Chinese market. Now it turns out that's not the case - while the innards could well be similar, the Nord 4 looks nothing like the Ace 3V. Not one, not two, but three separate leaks over the 20 hours or so have made this point abundantly clear. If you remember OnePlus' metal invite card for the launch event and...

Samsung Galaxy M35 is launching in India on July 17
6:16 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: | Comments: Off

A couple of days ago we found out that Samsung's Galaxy M35 was finally headed to India, following its initial launch in Brazil back in March. The company had at that point started teasing the phone for the Indian market, but didn't reveal its actual launch date. Amazon did advertise that it would have the M35 as part of its Prime Day sales which are taking place on July 20 and July 21, so clearly the phone should either launch before that or on July 20. Today the mystery has finally been solved. The Galaxy M35 is becoming official in India on July 17. This comes straight from Samsung...

Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+ review: beautiful laptop, half-baked AI
5:54 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Computing Gadgets Laptops | Comments: Off

Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+: Two-minute review

The new Copilot+ PC edition of the Asus Vivobook S 15 is an absolutely exceptional piece of kit. The overall aesthetic and design style is extraordinary. It’s clean and crisp, with a beautiful metal finish complete with exceptionally subtle Asus branding. This is a professional device at its core, and it really does show. 

Open up the Vivobook and you’re greeted with an outstanding OLED display, with sharp vibrant colors, and a snappy 2880x1620 resolution, all hurtling along at 120 Hz. That’d be good enough, but Asus has color-calibrated this thing as well, so the contrast and vibrancy are stunning. Combine that with sound developed in conjunction with Harman/Kardon (which is honestly some of the best audio I’ve heard coming out of a laptop ever), and the Vivobook S 15 is lining itself up to be an absolute winner.

The Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+ in silver pictured on a wooden desk.

(Image credit: Future)

For hardware, the most interesting element is the Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite processor. It’s an Arm-based system-on-a-chip (SoC) similar to Apple’s M3 line of chips found in the MacBook Air, and features an incredibly low 45W power draw. That’s been paired with 16GB of 8,440 MHz DDR5 memory (a phenomenally high speed even given current desktop PC standards), and a solid 1TB of PCIe 4.0 storage. Combine all of that with a bevy of connectivity options, plus a relatively affordable price tag, and all of a sudden you’re looking at one of the best laptops out there for general day-to-day work.

It’s not flawless however, it still struggles in games with no dedicated GPU (although AI upscaling does help a ton here), and the general AI features are (right now at least) somewhat limited, with only Microsoft Copilot and Co-creator being the most fleshed out features of the lot. 

Still, AI aside, the Vivobook S 15 is just an utterly almost flawless thing. As traditional laptops go, it’s outstanding, easily competing with the likes of Dell’s XPS line, and far above and beyond the likes of Huawei’s MateBook D16. For the price you’re paying, there’s little not to love.

Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+: Price and availability

The Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+ in silver pictured on a wooden desk.

(Image credit: Future)
  • How much does it cost? $1,299.99 / £1,299.99 / AU$2,699
  • When is it out? Available now
  • Where can you get it? Available now in the US and the UK

When it comes to the price, the Asus Vivobook S 15 is impressively affordable for what you’re getting. Rolling in at $1,299.99 (£1,299.99 / AU$2,699), it packs in some serious hardware for that cash. There's also a variant with the slightly less powerful Snapdragon X Plus chip for $1,099.99 in the US, although the availability of that model in other regions is unclear at the time of writing.

Not only do you get a decent processor for day-to-day work and streaming, plus 16GB of ridiculously high spec memory, and a TB of PCIe 4.0 storage, but it also features one hell of an OLED display, with a 3K resolution, 120 Hz refresh rate, and enough color accuracy (and vibrancy) to keep even the most eagle-eyed of graphic designer happy.

This is one of the first Snapdragon X laptops out there, and as such it is a little unproven mind you. It does lag behind in more traditional PC benchmarks, such as GeekBench and CineBench, but for general office work, web browsing, and daily activities it’s far more than capable. Just don’t expect a super seamless experience all the time.

There are very few laptops out there, that pack in so much hardware for such little outlay. There’s AI capacity here too, of course, being one of the main selling points of the S 15 (more on that in a bit), but even without it, the S 15 is absolutely outstanding.

  • Value: 4.5 / 5

Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+: Specs

The Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+ in silver pictured on a wooden desk.

(Image credit: Future)

The Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+ comes in one main configuration with the 12-core Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite chip, although a model featuring the 10-core Snapdragon X Plus SoC is also available for a slightly lower price in some regions.

Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+: Design and Features

The Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+ in silver pictured on a wooden desk.

(Image credit: Future)
  • Outstanding Screen
  • Material choice is stunning
  • Broad range of ports

As you’ve likely guessed by this point, the Asus Vivobook S 15 is an absolutely beautiful professional laptop or workbook. The satin metallic gray chassis is crisp and sharp, with nice smooth rounded edges. The Asus branding, what little there is, is a simple sans serif typeface, either just below the screen or engraved gracefully into the rear lid. The bezel on the screen is slim and almost nonexistent. Similarly, the keyboard, which is chiclet by design, provides a sublime typing experience, and the trackpad likewise does its job admirably too.

The I/O certainly isn’t lacking either. For your money, you get two USB 4 Type-C ports, two USB 3.2 Type-A ports, a Micro-SD card reader, a 3.5mm combo audio jack, and an HDMI out as well. It also comes with a fairly admirably built-in microphone, along with a decent built-in FHD webcam as well.

In general, it’s actually just a very well-built laptop. There’s no gimmicky folding display, or 2-in-1 design here for you to get used to, no touch-screen capability, or pens, just a simple, clean design. If it isn’t broke, don’t fix it, seems to be the motto.

The Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+ in silver pictured on a wooden desk.

(Image credit: Future)

Under the hood, you of course get that Arm-based Snapdragon processor. This is the X Elite X1E 78 100 chip (catchy), running at 3.4 GHz, and it features 12 cores, no hyperthreading, and a 42 MB cache as standard. Asus touts that this thing has a total AI processing power of around 75 TOPs to help with the on-board AI capabilities the Vivobook S 15 has, that’s paired with a dedicated “Neural Processor” as well (Qualcomm’s Hexagon NPU) which adds an additional 45 TOPs to the equation.

That’s been paired with 16GB of LPDDR5X memory rated at a whopping 8,440 MT/s. That’s ridiculously quick, even by some of the best desktop PC standards, and quite a curious addition, that suggests that both AI tasks and these Snapdragon chips really do benefit from high-frequency memory, perhaps even more so than the likes of AMD and its Ryzen processors (which generally benefit from higher frequency kits thanks to their Infinity Fabric interconnect being tied to the memory speed). The only minor downside here is that the Vivobook S 15 has soldered LPDDR5X, and there are no alternative models either, so 16GB is your lot sadly.

The Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+ in silver pictured on a wooden desk.

(Image credit: Future)

Because at its heart, the Snapdragon is an Arm-based chip, running off a different architecture compared to traditional processors found from AMD and Intel (which typically operate on an x64 architecture design), support is a bit mixed when it comes to general application use. That generally means you are going to find a lot of programs listing the CPU as “emulated”, Windows is effectively forcing the Arm processor to emulate and behave as a traditional x64 chip in certain programs, to ensure they operate correctly. That will have a minor detrimental effect on overall performance, but it shouldn’t be that noticeable if I’m honest. Arm and Asus clearly learned from the troubles Apple encountered with its first M1 processors, and compatibility is far greater now than it was back then for Arm-based processors because of it.

The Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+ in silver pictured on a wooden desk.

(Image credit: Future)

As for the less volatile storage, Asus has popped in a 1TB PCIe 4.0 SSD, and it does a pretty good job when it comes to sequential transfers, although more on that in a bit.

  • Design: 4.5 / 5

Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+: Performance

  • For day-to-day usage, this is flawless
  • Priced just right for what you’re getting
  • Gaming is still nowhere near a dedicated GPU

The Vivobook S 15 might have a bit of an oddity when it comes to its processor, but it still holds its own with some of the best out there to date. In general day-to-day use, the S 15 was cool and quiet, zipping along nicely. A particularly enjoyable experience with that screen. Cooling was handled well, and noise was minimal, one of the big benefits of the super-efficient Arm chips. 

In benchmarks however, it is admittedly a bit of a different story, compared to something like Huawei’s MateBook D 16 (admittedly not available US side) with its Intel Core i9-13900H, the Vivobook did struggle in certain benchmarks, although perhaps not by as much as you’d think. GeekBench 6.2.1 provided the most intriguing results of the bunch, with the Snapdragon X landing a score of 2,444 in single core, and 9,008 in the multi-core test. Compare that to the i9-13900H, which scored 2,605 in single-core and 12,568 and you start to get a picture of just how close Arm is getting in terms of performance, particularly given it's often running an emulated version of the program on top of that.

Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+ benchmarks

Here's how the Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+ performed in our suite of benchmark tests:

Geekbench 6:
Single - 2,444
Multi - 9,088
3DMark:
WildLife Extreme: 6,091
Solar Bay: 9,933
CrossMark:
Overall - 1,181
Productivity - 1,050
Creativity - 1,377
Responsiveness - 1,062
1080p movie playback battery life: 14 hours 18 minutes
CrystalDiskMark 8:
Read: 5,024MB/s
Write: 3,623MB/s

That multi-core difference does give Intel the edge there of course, by a healthy 28%, but you’ve got to bear in mind that it’s scoring that with 20 total threads, compared to the Snapdragon’s 12. All while consuming more power, operating at 5.4 GHz, and running at hotter temps as a result. The gap is starting to close between Arm and x64 and that’s incredibly exciting.

Graphically however Intel still has the edge, with its Iris Xe graphics performing considerably better in our benchmark results. 3D Mark Wildlife Extreme for example scored just 6,091 with the Snapdragon and its Qualcomm Adreno chip, versus a staggering 13,731 with Intel. Similarly, in games at their native resolutions, Total War Warhammer 3 on Low scored 33.9 fps on Intel’s chip, versus just 13.7 on the Adreno.

The Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+ in silver pictured on a wooden desk.

(Image credit: Future)

But there’s a catch here, and that’s the AI upscaling tech that’s built natively into the Vivobook S 15. You can actually drop the resolution scaling to 50% in Total War Warhammer 3, let the notebook do its thing (it’s automatically applied to all titles), set the graphical profile to Ultra, and watch the game run at 20fps instead. Sure, that’s not playable for this kind of title, but that’s a significant improvement particularly given you’re now running the game on Ultra and not the lowest profile. Although admittedly it still doesn’t look the best, and needs significant antialiasing improvements, it’s a start.

Traditional performance aside, this is after all one of the first Copilot+ AI laptops out there, and there’s a lot to report here too. Copilot generally is very similar to any other LLM you may have used, such as Google Bard or Chat GPT. There’s a button on the keyboard to open it up, or you can click next to the Start Menu, and open up a window to chat. It’s limited to a number of queries per 24 hours, unless you sign in, and behaves like pretty much every other LLM. It doesn’t have access to your system directly, so can only suggest what you can do.

Live captioning is also heavily touted on the product page. It’s meant to be able to give you captions on any content (regardless of web browser or media format), and live translate from one language to another. I found it was generally very laggy and slow to use, even in English-to-English. Live translation was also much worse, with Japanese or Norwegian, often missing out entire sentences, or translated sentences appearing five to ten seconds after the content had occurred. It also struggled with accents and regional dialects, particularly with variants of British English. Recall (where Windows can find a file based on a description) is also not currently implemented and is “coming soon” in a Windows side update.

The Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+ in silver pictured on a wooden desk.

(Image credit: Future)

Moving away from the software side, when it came to the Display, and particularly the audio, the experience was outstanding. That screen is absolutely gorgeous, with a 15.6-inch OLED panel at 2880 x 1620, you get a 211.82 PPI density, and the colors are just phenomenal. Combine that with a buttery smooth 120 Hz refresh rate, along with adaptive sync as well as a color-calibrated profile from Asus and it’s just dreamy.

Likewise, the audio experience is exceptional too. Asus has worked with Dolby Atmos and Harman/Kardon on the built-in speakers, and they’re some of the best I’ve heard on a laptop at this price. Trebles are crystal clear, there’s plenty of mid, and a relatively well-rounded bass as well. You’re still going to get better results from some of the best headphones out there of course, or a decent speaker system, mixed with a decent subwoofer - but for a laptop? Nah, this is shockingly good.

  • Performance: 4 / 5

Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+: Battery life

The Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+ in silver pictured on a wooden desk.

(Image credit: Future)
  • Can last for multiple days of work and holds charge well
  • Bundled fast-charger

Asus rates the Vivobook S 15 at 70WHrs for its battery capacity, and it comes with a fast-charging 90W AC USB Type C adapter as well. It reckons you should be able to get around 18 hours of total battery life in general day-to-day use. In my testing, it landed around the 17-hour mark or so, more than enough for several days of office work and presentations without charge.

That figure did dip a bit when I was watching content on YouTube and in video calls, but otherwise, the Vivobook S 15 fell exactly where I expected it to in that regard. There was never a moment where I was particularly concerned r.e. the battery life on this thing that’s for certain.

  • Battery life: 4.5 / 5

Should you buy the Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+?

Buy it if...

Don't buy it if...

Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+: Also Consider

How I tested the Asus Vivobook S 15 Copilot+

As usual with laptop reviews, I replaced my daily driver with the Asus Vivobook S 15 for a week, testing out all my usual work duties including web browsing, word processing, and answering emails. I also used it for a bit of leisure time too - watching Netflix and YouTube, and trying my best to play some games (though it struggled a little in that area).

I've been reviewing computers of all sorts for years, and I've used a wide variety of laptops for my own work throughout that time. To see Qualcomm push ahead with its own Arm-based chips in such a successful way is the real game-changer here - no matter what Microsoft might tell you about AI. Arm is here to stay, folks.

  • First reviewed July 2024
Realme 13 Pro+ early hands-on and camera samples
5:19 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Realme believes that optics – at least packages that fit in smartphone form factors – have reached their ceiling and further improvements in image quality can only be achieved with advanced AI image processing. The company invited us to a showcase of its upcoming Realme 13 Pro+ and even let us take photos with it. The Realme Number series has a long history of bringing camera innovation to the masses. This will continue as Realme announces a strategic partnership with Sony, which is the supplier for the sensors in the main and the periscope cameras. Official demos of the AI...

Realme 13 Pro+ early hands-on and camera samples
5:19 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Realme believes that optics – at least packages that fit in smartphone form factors – have reached their ceiling and further improvements in image quality can only be achieved with advanced AI image processing. The company invited us to a showcase of its upcoming Realme 13 Pro+ and even let us take photos with it. The Realme Number series has a long history of bringing camera innovation to the masses. This will continue as Realme announces a strategic partnership with Sony, which is the supplier for the sensors in the main and the periscope cameras. Official demos of the AI...

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