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Motorola Edge 40 Pro images leak, looks just like the Moto X40
3:17 pm | March 8, 2023

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

The Motorola Edge 40 Pro surfaced last month, appearing in Geekbench with the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset and soon after making another appearance on the Google Play Console. Both occasions suggested that this will be the global version of Moto X40 from December. This connection appears even more certain now that Evan Blass has shared renders and short videos of the phone – by the looks of it, these belong on Edge 40 Pro’s page on Motorola.com. Note that the naming scheme in the US is slightly different, so this should appear as the Moto Edge+ (2023). One video mentions the 165Hz...

Motorola Edge 40 Pro images leak, looks just like the Moto X40
3:17 pm |

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

The Motorola Edge 40 Pro surfaced last month, appearing in Geekbench with the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset and soon after making another appearance on the Google Play Console. Both occasions suggested that this will be the global version of Moto X40 from December. This connection appears even more certain now that Evan Blass has shared renders and short videos of the phone – by the looks of it, these belong on Edge 40 Pro’s page on Motorola.com. Note that the naming scheme in the US is slightly different, so this should appear as the Moto Edge+ (2023). One video mentions the 165Hz...

OneOdio Monitor 60 review: comfortable and cheap wired headphones
2:26 pm |

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

OneOdio Monitor 60: Two-minute review

OneOdio might not be a household name, but it’s been around for over 15 years. In that time, it’s slowly but surely expanded its range of headphones from true wireless in-ear buds to studio headphones, such as the OneOdio Monitor 60 wired headphones we're looking at here.

The OneOdio Monitor 60 are intended to be used in a studio environment or hooked up to an amp or vinyl player at home. Crucially, these aren’t among the best over-ear headphones you can buy today, not even close, but they still may be a solid pick for those on a budget. Priced at $79 / £83 (around AU$113), they’re cheaper than much of the competition, and while that does mean you’re not getting excellent sound quality, they still nail other aspects of being good studio headphones, including being comfortable to wear for long periods.

Sure, the OneOdio Monitor 60 do the job for sound, but despite that Hi-Res Audio label on the box, there’s a listlessness here. Should you avoid them? Definitely not. The OneOdio Monitor 60 Wired Headphones have some advantages for DJs starting out or anyone dabbling in their own home recording studio with additional cables bundled in. 

There’s good value for money here. They’re comfy and rival many of the options in our best cheap headphones guide. But you may want to start saving up to upgrade after a few months of use. With that in mind, read on for our full OneOdio Monitor 60 review.

The OneOdio Monitor 60 Wired Headphones pictured on a pale carpet surface

These headphones come with three different cables to suit a range of scenarios.  (Image credit: Future/TechRadar/Jennifer Allen)

OneOdio Monitor 60 review: Price and release date

  • Cost $79 / £83 (around AU$113)
  • Released in October 2021

The OneOdio Monitor 60 Wired Headphones were launched in October 2021 and cost $79 / £83 (around AU$113). However, at the time of writing, they're discounted often if you're buying from from OneOdio directly or through third-party retailers. 

That's cheap compared to a more more high-end option, such as the Beyerdynamic DT 700 Pro X, which costs around $249 / £219. However, it brings it not far off the price of the Sony MDR-7506 or the Sennheiser HD-280 Pro which may be more instantly appealing given the reliable name attached (and great quality overall).

The OneOdio Monitor 60 Wired Headphones pictured on a carpeted surface

These headphones handle single side monitoring well, so if you need flexibility, you've got it. (Image credit: Future/TechRadar/Jennifer Allen)

OneOdio Monitor 60 review: Features

  • They come with three different cables
  • Reasonable sound isolation

The OneOdio Monitor 60 headphones come with three cables, including a 3m cable for hooking up to your TV, a 1.2m cable for general use, such as plugging into your laptop, along with a 3m 3.5mm to 6.35mm coiled cable for hooking up to your amp and other specialist equipment. 

Besides saving you the hassle and expense of buying separate cables, this means that out of the box, you're ready to go. It's a small thing, but we appreciated that one of the cables had an inline microphone with a call or pause button so that these headphones can be used for more everyday purposes other than solely audio production. 

There's no dedicated noise cancellation here, of course, but sound isolation is pretty reasonable. Thanks to many ports, you can also share the output by plugging in more than one cable at a time, which is ideal for letting someone listen in on your work or simply sharing a tune. 

  • Features score: 4/5

The OneOdio Monitor 60 Wired Headphones pictured on a pale carpeted surface.

The OneOdio Monitor 60 Wired Headphones have a simple design and a comfortable headband. (Image credit: Future/TechRadar/Jennifer Allen)

OneOdio Monitor 60 review: Sound quality

  • 50mm neodymium driver
  • Average quality at times
  • Fine for general use

The weakest aspect of the OneOdio Monitor 60 wired headphones is the one that's probably most important to you: sound quality. Things start well with a reasonably wide soundstage. But, as you listen, you'll realize there's not much excitement behind the OneOdio Monitor 60, although the sound is fairly clean at least.

Listen to a much-loved track like David Bowie's Under Pressure, and there's no 'wow' factor. You won't notice the finer nuances, and there's not much crispness here, either. It's solidly average.

A bass-heavy track, like Foo Fighters' All My Life, fares better with a hint of depth in places, but the moment things quieten down, it all feels lackluster. Cranking up the volume helps as the OneOdio Monitor 60s do a solid job of avoiding distortion, but if you're a perfectionist, you'll miss the key moments. We particularly longed for more detailed trebles while listening to classical music. 

  • Sound quality score: 3/5

A side angle of the OneOdio Monitor 60 Wired Headphones pictured on a pale carpeted surface

We like that you can easily adjust the earcups and headband of these headphones. (Image credit: Future/TechRadar/Jennifer Allen)

OneOdio Monitor 60 review: Design

  • Comfortable fit
  • Plasticky edges
  • Easily adjustable earcups

The OneOdio Monitor 60 Wired Headphones feel quite sturdy in your hands. While the edges are a bit plasticky with a hint of cost-cutting, the parts you interact with are more solid and reliable. 

A matt finish suits these headphones, and we have no qualms about them only being available in black. The ear cups are comfortable with faux leather, giving them a professional appearance. On the outside, there are grilles that suggest these are open-back headphones, but they aren't. Overall, they look reasonably elegant. 

It's possible to fold the ear cups around so you can listen out for other things going on around you (like the doorbell) as you work. It's also simple to adjust the headband, with a satisfying click noise as you progress through the levels. 

A bag to carry them around is included, and the headphones easily fold up, making them more portable than you'd expect. We're not sure whether that's truly needed for studio work, but it helps with that 'jack of all trades' vibe. 

  • Design score: 4/5

The OneOdio Monitor 60 Wired Headphones pictured on a pale carpeted surface

The fact the OneOdio Monitor 60 Wired Headphones come with all of the cables you'd need is great for newbies. (Image credit: Future/TechRadar/Jennifer Allen)

OneOdio Monitor 60 review: Value

  • Includes all the cables you might need
  • On the cheaper end of studio headphones
  • Robust build for the price

The OneOdio Monitor 60 are relatively well-priced for what they offer. We like that they come with all the cables you may need, which is helpful for newbies and price-conscious customers. They're robust, too, so we're reasonably confident they'll last you a long time. 

The average sound quality may be an issue, though, if you're looking for great audio, and that's why you may wish to look elsewhere, depending on your priorities and your budget. With better audio, they'd be a slam-dunk on value – as it is, they're still good value.

  • Value score: 3.5/5

Should you buy the OneOdio Monitor 60?

Buy them if...

Don't buy them if...

OneOdio Monitor 60 review: Also consider

Meizu 20’s yellow color model appears in an official render
2:21 pm |

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

Meizu is expected to unveil the Meizu 20 series in Spring 2023, and the company recently dropped a few posters revealing key specs of the Meizu 20 Pro. Now we are looking at the vanilla model's yellow version, whose image was shared by the brand's CFO on Weibo. You can see that the Meizu 20 has flat frames and a flat back panel, which houses three cameras, with the last one encircled with a flash ring. The smartphone also has antenna lines on the frame, confirming the metal build. The right-side frame of the Meizu 20 has the power key and volume rocker, but we don't get to see what's on...

New WhatsApp beta is testing Expiring Groups feature
1:21 pm |

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

WhatsApp introduced disappearing messages back in 2020, but those were only for one on one chats. An Expiring Groups feature is now in the works as it was spotted in the TestFlight app with version WhatsApp beta for iOS 23.5.0.070. As you can see in the screenshot, the feature is available under the group settings and it lets you pick an expiration time frame – a day, a week or a custom date. Expiring Groups feature lands in WhatsApp TestFlight beta An important note: while this is under the group settings, it only applies to your own messages. So, unless the other participants...

Ulefone Power Armor 18T review
1:19 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets | Tags: , , , | Comments: Off

Two-minute review

In recent months we’ve covered the Ulefone Armour 16 Pro, 17 Pro and here now, the 18T.

It would be easy to conclude that the numerical progression was a ladder of performance specifications, but that would be an oversimplification.

There aren’t many similarities between this and the 16 Pro and the 17 Pro, although the 18T does borrow some features from its predecessor.

For those curious, there is a cut-down Power Armor 18 and also a new Power Armor 19 design, but the 18T is still the flagship of this series, in our opinion.

Where the 16 Pro was a relatively inexpensive design with an underpowered SoC, the 18T is a high-powered solution with a premium phone price tag.

With a retail cost of $570, phone buyers expect plenty for their money, and the 18T has the best specification we’ve seen from Ulefone so far. 

Where the 19 uses the less expensive MediaTek G99 SoC, the 18 and 18T use the 5G capable MediaTek Dimensity 900 SoC, delivering more processing power and double the GPU performance of the G99.

The choice to go with the Dimensity 900 is probably more about 5G coms than anything else, but having this power is also helpful for the FLIR thermal imaging sensor.

We’ve seen thermal imaging before on the Cat S63 Pro, and this is the same FLIR 3.5 that is on that phone. Very often, rugged phone makers use the cheaper FLIR 2.5 sensor, which was on the CAT S60, Ulefone Armor 11T 5G and Blackview BV9800 Pro, to mention just a few.

On this phone, the newer FLIR 3.5 sensor offers a better resolution, achieving greater detail and clarity in the images it captures.

The other notable feature of this design is that it has the same accessory port as the 17 Pro, and through that, there are various specialist accessories available, including an endoscope.

When you combine the ability to detect temperature distribution and having an endoscope to look at difficult-to-reach areas, the 18T starts to look like it might be ideal for those in automotive repair or similar businesses.

The downside to having such a powerful SoC and feature set is that this is the most expensive rugged design that Ulefone makes. The 18T is priced as a premium phone, and the customer mostly gets premium parts for their investment.

As this is most likely to be a second phone for most customers, is that just too much to be a practical consideration?.

Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)

Ulefone Armor 18T price and availability

  • How much does it cost? $570/ £620/ $AU $880
  • When is it out? It is available now
  • Where can you get it? You can get it in most regions direct from AliExpress or on Amazon.co.uk

In addition to the phone, Ulefone has a selection of accessories that can be bundled. A case increases the cost by another $25, a Wireless charging base by $25, an Endoscope by $50, and a 1000x Digital Microscope is another $50. The cheapest upgrade is a tempered glass screen protector that costs just $10 when bought with the phone.

Considering that the Power Armor 16 Pro costs just $160, the official $699.99 that Ulefone is asking for the Power Armor 18T does seem a bit shocking.

However, if you don’t get it directly from Ulefone and are willing to wait for delivery from AliExpress, it can be had for around $570.

Not available on Amazon.com currently, but we found it on Amazon.co.uk for UK customers for £619. However, that’s a good £120 more than AliExpress charges for the same phone.

Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
  • Value score: 4/5

Ulefone Armor 18T design

  • Solid construction
  • By-the-numbers buttons
  • Accessory Port

As rugged phone designs go, the 18T is rather stylish, avoiding some of the travel case aesthetics emblazoned on other products.

By bevelling the edge all around, the 18T is easy to pick up, and the angled slots on the underside make it easy to hold even when wet.

To achieve waterproofing sufficient for submersion, two rubber plugs protect the USB-C port on the bottom edge and a 3.5mm audio jack on the top.

You can avoid disturbing the USB-C one if you use wireless charging, and the audio jack one can also be avoided if you have Bluetooth headphones.

The button selection and positions are what we’ve come to expect on rugged Chinese designs, with a combined thumbprint reader/power button and volume rocker on the right and a user-customisable button together with the SIM tray on the left.

The SIM tray can take either two NANO SIMs or a single SIM and a MicroSD card, which isn’t ideal.

Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)

The one special external feature that it shares with the 17 Pro is an accessory pogo-pin style connector, designated as the uSmart connector, on the bottom left. Previously we criticised this aspect because attaching an accessory requires the removal of a screw that can be easily misplaced.

This mechanism is implemented exactly the same on the 18T, and it makes the likelihood that once an accessory is attached, like the endoscope or microscope, it will be left connected permanently. This needs a redesign so accessories can be snapped on and off easily and without needing a screwdriver.

Our only other comment about the design is related to the camera cluster, as it is positioned to the very left on the back. For those used to not having the camera in the middle, this is probably fine, but we did have some issues with fingers straying into the shots.

Overall, the accessory port aside, the design of the 18T is good, and it sells the go-anywhere ethos of this device admirably.

At just over 400g, it’s also one of the lighter designs, especially when compared to some of the big battery designs we’ve seen recently.

Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)

Design score: 4/5

Ulefone Armor 18T hardware

  • High spec platform
  • Decent battery size
  • Endoscope option
Specs

The UleFone Power Armor 18T that was sent to us for review came with the following hardware:

CPU: MediaTek Dimensity 900
GPU: Arm Mali-G68 MC4
RAM: 12GB LPDDR4X
Storage: 256GB
Screen: 6.58-inch IPS LCD
Resolution: 1080 x 2408 FHD+
SIM: Dual Nano SIM, or single SIM and microSDXC
Weight: 409g
Dimensions: 175.2 x 83.4 x 18.8 mm
Rugged Spec: IP68, IP69K and MIL-STD-810H
Rear cameras: 108MP Samsung HM2, 5 MP Samsung S5K5E9 Macro sensor, FLIR Lepton 3.5 Thermal camera, 5MP Auxiliary Imaging Camera
Front camera: 32MP Samsung S5KGD1 Sensor (wide)
Networking: WiFi 6, Bluetooth 5.0
Comms: 2G, 3G, LTE, 4G, 5G
OS: Android 12
Battery: 9600 mAh

There is a schism developing in rugged phone designs, where the lower budget phones are using the Helio G series SoCs, and then devices like the 18T are moving to the next level with the Dimensity chips, all made by MediaTek.

The 18T uses the Dimensity 900, an SoC with a great combination of performance and efficiency cores blended with a capable GPU and 5G comms.

While this is great compared to the Helio G99, for example, it doesn’t quite meet the performance levels of the Qualcomm Snapdragon 778G, but it is substantially better than the 765G.

In short, for most users, the 18T has more than enough power for the majority of applications and provides a smooth user experience. To make moving between apps, the 18T comes with a very healthy 12GB of RAM, and this can be expanded by another 5GB borrowed from storage by enabling ‘memory expansion’ mode in the settings.

The screen is a good quality 6.58-inch IPS panel with a natural resolution of 1080 x 2408, a size that Ulefone decided to market as FHD+, despite that being 2220 x 1080 pixels.

We’ve seen many odd screen resolutions recently aimed at providing extra vertical pixels to accommodate the inclusion of the forward camera or Android interface elements.

It’s enough to show 1080p videos without borders. If the software has been configured to offer that in ‘full screen’ mode, it can also operate at 120Hz.

Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)

With rugged phones, battery life is usually of interest to the customers, and here Ulefone gave the 18T a decent 9600 mAh of capacity. Some phones around have more than twice this amount of battery, but they’re much heavier and less convenient to carry.

Compared with other Ulefone designs, this is more than the 17 Pro offers (5380 mAh) and identical to that in the 16 Pro.

The quoted standby is 524 hours, 39 hours of calling, 22 hours of video and 15 hours of gaming. Those numbers are fractionally down on those of the 16 Pro, but the processing power in the 18T is substantially greater.

This capacity is enough battery for at least four days of use, and with curation, a week is a plausible objective.

But what elevates this design is that Ulefone gave this phone 66W charging, allowing it to recover 52% of its battery capacity in 30 minutes. Wireless charging is four times slower.

Using the OTG technology in the USB-C port, the 18T can supply up to 5W charging to other devices, which is useful for earbuds and other chargeable accessories.

We should also mention that the WiFi 6 support is much better than WiFi 5 if you have a router that supports the newer technology. The dual Band GPS is also very accurate, but the real stand-out technology in the 18T is the cameras that we’ll cover next.

Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
  • Hardware score: 5/5

Ulefone Armor 18T cameras

  • 108MP sensor on the rear
  • Wide-angle, macro and night vision
  • Four cameras in total

Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)

The Ulefone Power Armor 18T has four cameras:

  • Rear cameras: 108MP Main Samsung HM2, 5MP Macro Samsung S5K5E9 sensor, FLIR Lepton 3.5 Thermal camera.
    Front camera: 32MP Samsung S5KGD1 (wide)

The HM2 is a very popular choice for rugged designs now, as it’s a massive 108MP 1/1,52” sensor that includes Samsung’s ISOCELL Plus and Smart-ISO technology.

It is possible to take massive 108MP images if you are prepared to forego any special modes. But where this sensor really shines is when you drop to 12MP mode. In this reduced resolution, the sensor uses 9-in-1 pixel binning technology to effectively enhance the sensor pixels from 0.7μm to 2.1 μm, providing remarkably clear and colour-accurate results.

In this phone, it can also take 4K video, although all video is restricted to 30fps, sadly.

Alongside that sensor is a 5MP microlens camera that has a 60x super magnification mode. Our only reservation about this feature is that it is rather difficult to use if the item you wish to look at in detail isn’t flat, as it can’t autofocus. Our examples include a couple of macro shots, one of a coin and the other of a banknote, and the coin was much more difficult to achieve.

However, the flagship camera feature on this phone is the FLIR Lepton 3.5 sensor, and it has a separate application to grab thermal imaging data as photos or videos.

It can also take thermal time-lapses if you need to see how the temperature of something changes over time. There is even a feature that allows the FLIR sensor to stream a live video over YouTube, which might be useful for remotely monitoring an experiment.

While not the most important part, the front 32MP camera is decent quality and can capture 1080p video

Overall, the camera side of the 18T has some remarkably strong aspects, and the results are usually excellent.

Camera samples

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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Photos taken with the Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Macro images taken with the Ulefone 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
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Macro images taken with the Ulefone 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)
  • Camera score: 4/5

Ulefone Armor 18T performance

  • Game capable SoC
  • Lacks Widevine L1 encryption
  • Power and efficiency
Benchmarks

This is how the Ulefone Armor 18T performed in our suite of benchmark tests:

Geekbench: 688 (single-core); 2090 (multi-core); 2622 (OpenCL)
PCMark (Work 3.0): 11250
Passmark: 10741
Passmark CPU: 5244
3DMark Slingshot: 5135 (OGL)
3DMark Slingshot Extreme: 4041 (OGL); 3791 (Vulkan)
3DMark Wild Life: 2198

We’ve seen these numbers on the Doogee V30 that uses the same SoC, and they looked very good then.

It eclipses the Helio G99-powered phones and is remarkably close to the Qualcomm Snapdragon 695 chips used in the Nokia X30 and Huawei Honor X9a.

Octo-core SoCs are usually strong at multi-thread tests but less impressive at single-task challenges. But in the Dimensity 900, the dual 2.5GHz Cortex-A78 performance cores deliver excellent single-thread performance. And, for power efficiency, it has

six lower-clocked Cortex-A55 cores built to achieve excellent results in multi-threaded scenarios.

Compared to the MediaTek Helio G99 phones like its Power Amor 17 Pro brother, the 18T is around 30% faster at single-thread tests and up to 25-30% better at multi-threaded.

Probably the biggest difference is created by the Mali-G68 MC4 GPU,  as it is at least 40% faster than the Mali-G57 MC2 used in the G99 designs and up to 80% in the 3DMark Wild Life benchmark.

This makes the Dimensity 900 in the 18T much more suitable for gaming and smooth video playback of even 4K files. However, this phone doesn’t support Widevine L1 encryption, and the best resolution you will get from Netflix and Disney+ will be 480p, unfortunately.

  • Performance score: 4/5

Ulefone Armor 18T battery

  • Decent 9600 mAh capacity
  • 66W Fast charging
  • 15W Wireless charging

People expect a rugged phone to have a decent battery capacity since the great outdoors doesn’t usually have power sockets on each tree.

The built-in lithium-ion polymer cell offering 9600mAh is enough for a weeklong trek with some restraint and last at least four days of normal use.

That is the same capacity as the 16 Pro, but given this device's performance and 5G capability, it doesn’t quite go as far when used in the 18T. The 524 hours of standby is just four hours less than the 16 Pro manages, but the talk time drops more dramatically from 52 hours to 39 hours, confusingly.

But conversely, the 16 Pro only had 18W charging (10W on the pogo pin base), whereas the 18T has 66W over USB-C and 15W wireless charging.

That makes it much easier to get the 18T fully charged, and overnight it can happily use wireless charging, something the 16 Pro didn’t offer.

For those wanting a massive battery, like the 22000 mAh on the Doogee V Max or Unihertz Tank, the 9600 mAh in the 18T might seem relatively modest. But it's more than enough for most jobs, and including it didn’t make this phone excessively heavy.

  • Battery score: 4/5

Ulefone Armor 18T

(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)

There is plenty to like in the Ulefone Power Armor 18T, as this is easily the most impressive rugged phone from this brand we’ve seen so far.

It’s well made, able to take the knocks and environment, has enough battery for days away from civilisation and has some remarkably high-quality sensors.

Our only concern is that in adding all the wonderful features that Ulefone included that they’ve elevated the price to a point where it’s beyond the budget of many 2nd phone buyers.

If you can budget this much for a phone specifically for wilderness trips, working on a construction site, or vehicle repair, then the Ulefone Power Armor 18T is worth some proper consideration.

Ulefone Armor 18T score card

Should I buy a Ulefone Armor 18T?

Buy it if...

Don't buy it if...

Also consider 

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

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11:27 am |

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

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11:27 am |

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

The latest budget entry in Samsung’s camp is the brand-new Galaxy M14 5G. The phone was introduced in Ukraine and shares its core specs and design with the Galaxy A14 5G which launched back in January. One of the key additions to the M-series model is an even larger 6,000mAh battery. Galaxy M14 5G brings a 6.6-inch PLS LCD with Full HD+ resolution and a 90Hz refresh rate. The phone sports a 13MP selfie camera housed in a waterdrop notch. The back houses a 50MP main camera with an f/1.8 aperture and autofocus. It can record up to 1080p at 30fps. The auxiliary modules include a 2MP macro...

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11:27 am |

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

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