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Poco M6 Plus 5G and Poco Buds X1 leak
2:01 am | July 30, 2024

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

Poco has already confirmed that it's launching the M6 Plus 5G on August 1, and today a new leak shows us its back design in all its glory, with the phone set atop its retail box, which is adorned in Poco's trademark yellow hue. According to this leak, the Poco M6 Plus 5G will have a 6.8-inch LCD screen, the Snapdragon 4 Gen 2 AE chipset, a 108 MP main camera (which has already been confirmed by Poco itself), and a 5,030 mAh battery. Poco M6 Plus 5G and Poco Buds X1 leaked images We have been suspecting that the Poco M6 Plus 5G is a rebranded Redmi 13 5G, which launched earlier...

The Google Pixel 9 series is coming to India on August 14 with help from Flipkart
12:09 am |

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

Google will unveil the next generation of Pixel phones on August 13 with a keynote at 10am PDT. However, that is quite late in the evening in India, so the local launch will be on the following day, August 14. Google Pixel 9 series coming to India on August 14 in partnership with Flipkart As with the previous generation, Google has tapped Flipkart as the exclusive retail partner for the launch of the Pixel 9 series. You can check out the landing page for the Pixel 9 series, which shows off the Pixel 9 Pro and the Pixel 9 Pro Fold. There’s also a landing page on the Google store...

Samsung Galaxy Z Flip6 prominently featured in awards ceremonies at Paris Olympics
10:31 pm | July 29, 2024

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

Samsung highlighted the Galaxy Z Flip6's participation in the official medal ceremonies at the Paris 2024 Olympics. The event, traditionally photographed only by accredited media from a distance, is now getting more personal, as all medal-winning athletes are taking a Victory Selfie with the foldable. Select moments of Victory Selfie at Paris 2024 All athletes at the Olympic and Paralympic Games in the French capital received a brand-new Galaxy Z Flip6 smartphone as part of their welcome package to Paris 2024. The selfies taken at the podium are updated automatically to the...

Xiaomi Mix Flip in for review
9:02 pm |

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

Xiaomi has several generations of foldable phones under its belt, but the Mix Flip is its first clamshell foldable. And this just might be the most impressive of its kind, at least of the ones that will be available in Europe (it will cost around €1,300). First things first, the retail package includes not just a USB cable, but also a 67W fast charger. Yes, the Xiaomi Mix Flip battery goes up to 67W, which is well above what Samsung’s Galaxy Z phones can do (both the Fold and Flip top out at just 25W) and it beats the Moto Razr 50 Ultra too (45W). One downside here is that wireless...

Google starts rolling out Android 15 beta 4 to eligible Pixel devices
7:41 pm |

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

Owners of Pixel phones (going back to the 6-series), a Pixel Fold or a Pixel Tablet can experience the fourth (and final) beta of Android 15 starting today. The release of the stable version is set for August 13, aka the day of the Pixel 9 series announcement (there’s a new Fold too). Android 15 beta 2 added new features like Private Spaces, a more efficient AV1 video decoder and more. Then beta 3 finalized the APIs, so that app developers can start testing against the new additions and the deprecated features. This doesn’t leave much for beta 4. The only notable change is that...

Snapdragon 4s Gen 2 details leak: lower clock speeds, slower 5G modem
6:43 pm |

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

Qualcomm will announce a budget 5G chipset at tomorrow’s ‘Snapdragon for India’ event and Evan Blass may have just spoiled the surprise – here are the details for the Snapdragon 4s Gen 2. This is a lower power, cheaper version of the Snapdragon 4 Gen 2 from last year. This is still a 4nm chip with an octa-core CPU (two Cortex-A78 plus six A55), but with the clock speeds dialed back by 200MHz. The GPU presumably took a step back as well. Also, only 2,133MHz LPDDR4X RAM is supported (the non-s model can also use 5X at 3,200MHz). In terms of performance, this should slot in somewhere...

Bluehost email review
6:17 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets Pro | Comments: Off

Bluehost is one of those hosting providers that doesn’t only offer email hosting services. As such, there’s a plethora of other hosting services on other, from shared hosting to dedicated and VPS hosting.

Looking at its email hosting specifically, however, the simplicity of its two pricing tiers makes a nice change from some providers that make your head spin with a raft of different numbers. Either tier provides a reliable, secure service - even if you might find more affordable options out there.

Bluehost: Plans and pricing

Bluehost plans

(Image credit: Bluehost)

Bluehost’s email hosting is available across two pricing plans: Professional Email and Professional Email Plus. The Professional Email plan costs $14.99 for the first year, rising to $24.99 a year per account upon renewal. The Professional Email Plus plan, meanwhile, is nearly twice as expensive, costing $24.99 for the first year and $44.99 per account per year following renewal. 

You’ll notice that Bluehost’s email hosting isn’t the cheapest and there’s no option for paying monthly, so you do have to commit yourself financially somewhat. If budget is a major concern for your email hosting needs, you might be better off going with Hostinger or Neo.

You should also keep in mind that Bluehost offers many other hosting services besides email hosting. As such, we’d advise that you take your time during the checkout process. We’ve found that when purchasing a service from the company, many other solutions are automatically added to your basket. You might not notice these at first, because often they are added as an initial free trial. However, when they automatically renew, you could find yourself facing an unexpected bill for a feature that you never use. 

Of course, you may find the added level of professionalism that comes with a Bluehost email account is worth the cost. The advance features may also make it worth the expenditure for your business, especially when you examine the functionality on offer with Professional Email Plus. It remains true, however, that if your budget is tight, then there are probably other email hosting providers that are better suited to your needs. 

Features

The main difference you see with the features that Bluehost provides across its pricing tiers is in terms of storage and the number of email aliases you are allowed. With the Professional Email plan, for example, you receive 25GB of cloud storage and can create up to 25 email aliases. If you’re a subscriber to the Professional Email Plus plan, on the other hand, you’ll see your storage limit increase to 80GB and you are then able to create up to 50 email aliases. 

Features that come with both plans include unlimited mail filters, email forwarding, the ability to sync across devices, and the ability to share your calendar, contacts, and tasks for easier collaboration. For businesses that want their email hosting to come with productivity tools, Bluehost also fits the bill and comes with an integrated suite of tools like text-creation solutions, spreadsheets and presentation functionality. Overall, Bluehost comes with a good range of features across its two pricing tiers, with most functionality given to both sets of customers.

Support

Interestingly, Bluehost’s email hosting represents an example of a provider that doesn’t give customers a support ticket option. Instead, the provider offers 24/7 support via its website, live chat, and telephone channels. This is a lot more support channels that you receive with some email hosting providers, but the absence of a support ticket can be frustrating - especially if you have a recurring issue that can’t be completely resolved in one go. For instance, we spent approximately six hours trying to fix an issue across seven support sessions and some of that time was wasted simply explaining our problem over and over again. 

Admittedly, Bluehost does have a pretty extensive knowledgebase, which includes resources about its email features, as well as its many other hosting services, such as shared hosting, WordPress hosting, as well as its website builder service. We also found that when telephone or live chat support was needed, agents were responsive, helpful and knowledgeable. 

Security

Both Bluehost’s email hosting plans - Professional and Professional Plus - come with essential spam filter and antivirus functionality. Research has shown that companies waste more than $20.5 billion annually on spam emails, so the inclusion of this functionality as standard with all Bluehost email hosting plans is a welcome addition. Similarly, the antivirus functionality should also help CISOs sleep a little easier regarding this email provider.

If businesses want enhanced security, however, they’ll probably want to plump for the Professional Plus plan, as this is the only one that comes with one-click email and file encryption. This is likely to prove essential for larger teams or enterprises handling sensitive information.

The competition

Bluehost and Hostinger logo on a laptop screen on a desk

(Image credit: Shutterstock/guteksk7/Bluehost/Hostinger)

Although you could decide to go with Bluehost’s email hosting and none of the other services the company offers, it’s easier to compare Bluehost against other hosting providers that deliver a multitude of services. The likes of Hostinger, Dreamhost, and Neo, for instance, all offer email hosting alongside other services. Bluehost stands up well against these rivals, with faster, more reliable and better quality hosting than you can find with many other providers.

Drilling down into its email hosting, however, you may start to find a couple of disappointments. As we mentioned, Bluehost’s pricing isn’t the cheapest and works a little differently from its competitors in that it doesn’t let you pay monthly. For smaller businesses then, this may not prove to be the most attractive provider on the market as they may not be able to commit themselves financially for an entire year. For larger businesses where this is less likely to be an issue, the increased price tag you’re offered after renewal still might sting a little though.

Bluehost: Final verdict

Bluehost’s email hosting represents a good option if you want to increase the professionalism of your brand. Smaller businesses may find the pricing tiers a little on the steep side but if you have the budget, this is a secure, reliable, feature-rich hosting provider with good support.

We've also featured the best email hosting services.

vivo V40 and V40 Pro launch on August 7
5:47 pm |

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

vivo's V40 has been official in some parts of the world for around a month, and it's now getting ready to land in India, where it's officially launching on August 7. But it won't be alone - it will be joined by the V40 Pro, which will be making its world debut in India. The V40 Pro recently visited Geekbench with the MediaTek Dimensity 9200+ chipset at the helm. The non-Pro V40 goes with the Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 instead. Mark your calendars! Capture perfect portraits and enjoy so pro quality with every click. The vivo V40 series arrives on August 7, 2024.Know more...

Servers.com review
5:09 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets Pro Website Hosting | Comments: Off

Servers.com is a relatively new hosting provider, having only been founded in 2014 by a group of hosting industry veterans. However, with over 1,000 customers (most of whom are businesses of good standing) and 18 data centers worldwide, it has risen in popularity over the years.

The provider might not have a long list of products, unlike the competition, but it's a top choice if you're looking for dedicated servers with cloud benefits. It offers hybrid cloud-ready hosting solutions as well as computing, storage, and networking services to businesses of all sizes.

In this Servers.com review, I'll take a deeper look into the service's products, ease of use, performance, and customer support, as well as how it stacks up against the top dogs in the industry.

Plans and pricing

Dedicated server hosting, unlike shared hosting, is a single-user environment where the user does not need to share the server's resources. You can add as many websites as you want to your server and you will have root access to the physical server's resources, including CPU, RAM, storage, operating system, and bandwidth.

Servers.com offers high-performance dedicated servers with the flexibility of the cloud. There's a nifty Filter section where you can select from the many locations on offer (North America, Asia Pacific, and Europe), up to 24 drives and 1536 GB of RAM, and the currency of your choice.

The cheapest server "Dell R220" with Intel Xeon E3-1231v3, 2 drives, 32 GB of RAM, and 4 network adaptors is priced at a reasonable $104.90 a month. You also get disk management capabilities, various server management interfaces, 24/7 dedicated customer support, and direct access to your server via an out-of-band (OOB) management system.

Next up are Servers.com's dedicated cloud servers, which start at $4.97 per month for 1 GB of RAM, 1 vCPU, and 30 GB of SSD storage. You can go up to 64 GB of RAM, 16 vCPU, and 640 GB of SSD storage, which will then cost you $639.95 per month. With these cloud servers, you get 100% SSD storage, automatic backup for added redundancy, 40 GB of bandwidth, and OpenStack API support. 

In addition to load balancing services and two types of private cloud, Servers.com also offers reliable cloud storage with support for backup tools such as Veeam, Duplicity, and Cloudberry. Plans start at $71.68 per month for 1 TB of storage and 1 TB of traffic usage. There's also a firewall service, starting at $49.70 per month for 1 instance and 1 TB of traffic usage, that will block all unwanted traffic and prevent data leaks. It's well worth noting that prices differ slightly depending on the location you choose.

Ease of use

Creating an account with Servers.com is a pretty straightforward process. Go to its Customer Portal and hit Join. Next, enter your email address, carefully read and agree to its Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, and then press Join again.

Servers.com create an account

(Image credit: Servers.com)

Once you verify your email address—which you will have to do within 24 hours—create a strong password and press Proceed. The last step is to enter the necessary information regarding your account, such as account type, currency, full name, billing address, etc. Once done, click Save to create your account.

Servers.com's main dashboard, or the control panel, has a clean design, and all of the options (servers, firewalls, SSL certificates, account settings, etc.) are neatly arranged on the left-hand side menu. You can also configure anything you like from the control panel, including VMs, dedicated servers, and firewall, as well as perform DNS health checks in real time.

Servers.com account settings

(Image credit: Servers.com)

In addition to automated daily backups, which you don't have to worry about first-hand, you also get a handful of nifty add-ons, such as servers troubleshooting tools and server health checks. 

Plus, as a cloud provider, auto-scaling is one of the key benefits of Servers.com, and it doesn't disappoint when it comes to that. Scaling up or down happens on the fly, and you can automate the deployment and management of your VMS. 

Speed and experience

Servers.com has a redundant network, i.e., all its servers (which are nicely spread across the USA, Netherlands, Luxembourg, United Kingdom, Singapore, and Hong Kong) are connected to three different networks: the Internet, Servers.com's free GPN (Global Private Network), and an out-of-band management network. 

Furthermore, its free global private network is protected on both logical and physical levels, so you can rest assured that you will enjoy fast and safe data transfers. What's more, GPN gives you the option to organize the interaction of your servers without having to use VPNs or any additional tunneling. 

Although we don't have exact uptime numbers, Servers.com posts and continually updates the round-trip times to and from every single one of its servers.

Support

Servers.com has a comprehensive knowledge base with detailed and easy-to-understand guides on just about everything from how to set up an account to managing the service on Linux (or Windows) to details about its various products and services, including how they work.

Servers.com knowledge base

(Image credit: Servers.com)

For instance, under "Windows administration," there are quick guides on how you can protect your account from brute-force lockout, connect to a Windows server, and provide Servers.com's tech support team with network diagnostic results. Even better, there's also a nifty search bar on the first page of the knowledge base, so you can quickly find what you need help with.

If the knowledge base isn't able to provide you with what you're looking for, you also have the option to reach out to Servers.com's agents via online chat, email (support@servers.com), or by creating a ticket. In my limited experience with the platform, I found the agents to be super helpful and quick with their responses—so much so that the absence of telephone support is barely an inconvenience.

The competition

InMotion Hosting currently sits at the top of our best dedicated server hosting guide, thanks to class-leading security—free SSL certificates, a custom firewall, DDoS protection, auto-updates, and heavily guarded data centers. Plus, all of these come included with the plan you choose, unlike with Servers.com, where services like firewall and load balancing cost extra. 

However, InMotion dedicated hosting plans are only available for Linux, meaning Windows users will be better off with Servers.com. Very large-scale businesses will also like Servers.com better; where InMotion Hosting caps out at 512 GB of RAM (nothing to sniff at, by the way), Servers.com can go as high as 1.5 TB of RAM.

ScalaHosting, the best cloud hosting provider right now, is also a noteworthy Servers.com alternative. It offers a geo-redundant network, lots of customization options, a custom control panel, and anytime unconditional money-back guarantee. However, Servers.com is slightly better since it offers true auto-scaling, which ScalaHosting does not.

Final verdict

To conclude, Servers.com is a well-rounded option for medium- to large-scale businesses looking for dedicated or cloud servers with auto-scaling and geo-redundancy. The provider has a global private network that spans across three continents, ensuring reliability and good performance.

Servers.com is also easy to use and fairly priced, and its 24/7 customer support (as well as an in-depth knowledge base) will help you out on the fly and ensure a smooth experience. There are lots of plans to choose from, which can be confusing, but a 10-day money-back guarantee means that you can try Servers.com out without risking a single penny.

Redmi Note 14 Pro+ might use the Dimensity 7350 SoC
4:53 pm |

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

The Redmi Note 13 Pro+ launched last September, and so its successor is now most likely only a few weeks away from arriving. The Redmi Note 14 Pro+ might use the MediaTek Dimensity 7350 SoC, according to a new rumor from China. That's the same chip that's in the upcoming Nothing Phone (2a) Plus. For reference, note that the Redmi Note 13 Pro+ also went with a MediaTek chipset, the Dimensity 7200 Ultra. The Redmi Note 14 Pro+ is also said to come with a 50 MP rear camera, which is interesting because its predecessor's setup was 200 MP (main) + 8 MP (ultrawide) + 2 MP (macro). Redmi...

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