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Apple announces new yellow color for the iPhone 14 and the iPhone 14 Plus
5:49 pm | March 7, 2023

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

It's that time of the year again when Apple announces a new color for its iPhone. This year, we have a vivid new yellow color, following the muted green of last year and the purple from the year before that. The new model features an intensely bright yellow for the glass back panel, which looks somewhere between the pale yellow of the iPhone 11 and the deep yellow of the iPhone XR. The aluminum frame has the same bright yellow gold color as the iPhone 11 variant unlike the pale gold of the iPhone XR. Unlike last year, the new color will not be offered on the Pro models. Instead,...

Apple announces new yellow color for the iPhone 14 and the iPhone 14 Plus
5:49 pm |

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

It's that time of the year again when Apple announces a new color for its iPhone. This year, we have a vivid new yellow color, following the muted green of last year and the purple from the year before that. The new model features an intensely bright yellow for the glass back panel, which looks somewhere between the pale yellow of the iPhone 11 and the deep yellow of the iPhone XR. The aluminum frame has the same bright yellow gold color as the iPhone 11 variant unlike the pale gold of the iPhone XR. Unlike last year, the new color will not be offered on the Pro models. Instead,...

One by Wacom review: the perfect companion for junior creatives
5:11 pm |

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

Wacom One: One-minute review

Wacom is known for producing premium, professional tools that set the standard, with some of the best drawing tablets currently available. So how well does the company fare when challenged to create a more affordable, entry-level device?

In short, pretty well, judging by the resulting One by Wacom. This pen tablet is lightweight, uncomplicated and stylish, making it an excellent choice for those early in their creative career. It’s worth noting that this is not the same as the Wacom One, which is a pen display, meaning it has a built-in screen.

Instead, the One by Wacom is a small yet mighty screenless slate, packing some great specs in its pocket-sized frame. With 2048 levels of pressure sensitivity in its powerful stylus and a wonderful 2540 LPI drawing surface, it’s about as good as you can get from an entry-level drawing tablet without adding on any of the price-inflating frills. It was created to be the next evolution of one of Wacom’s most successful and well-loved entry-level slates – the Wacom Bamboo.

Since students are one of the target audiences for this pen tablet, the One by Wacom is the first graphics tablet officially optimized to work with Chrome OS (alongside its more professionally geared sibling, the Wacom Intuos), and while a few other drawing tablet providers have since updated their products to work better with the system, very few have the level of ease and compatibility that Wacom does with Google’s Chromebooks. 

If you’re looking for the full complement of features to support more advanced, professional workflows, you might find the One by Wacom somewhat limiting. It’s by no means the most detail-oriented tablet, and the lack of shortcut buttons means you’ll either need to invest in a separate shortcut remote, or work with a keyboard close to hand. 

However, in its two travel-friendly sizes, small and medium, the One by Wacom allows you to use some of the best digital art software and photo editing software to draw or tweak your creative projects. These smaller sizes do mean you’re more likely to feel a bit cramped while working, experiencing greater discomfort, so it’s worth thinking about how long you’ll need to use the tablet in any given setting.

Overall, though, I found the One by Wacom the perfect companion as a digital art hobbyist, especially as a means to help me complete smaller tasks throughout the week – quickly touching up images in Photoshop, or adding them into a template, as well as mapping out rough sketches for larger projects, for example. As someone who regularly works away from home and the office, it’s rapidly becoming my go-to companion. 

One by Wacom on a black surface, with focus on the Wacom-branded pen loop

(Image credit: Future)

One by Wacom: Price and availability

  • List price (small): $49.95 / £35.99 / AU$99.00
  • List price (medium): $99.95 / £49.99 / AU$189.00

The One by Wacom is minimal in almost every sense of the word, including price. Despite being well made and pretty powerful, this petite pen tablet offers fantastic value for money, priced at just $49.95 / £35.99 / AU$99.00 in its smaller size and $99.95 / £49.99 / AU$189.00 in medium. 

For our review, we tested the medium One by Wacom. Along with the tablet itself, the One by Wacom comes with its Wacom stylus, a pen nib remover, three replacement nibs and a USB cable. There’s no USB-C adapter, meaning creatives with newer MacBooks will need to employ the use of a converter. 

At its price point, the One by Wacom offers fantastic value for money, and will deliver almost everything you need as a baseline pen tablet. 

  • Value: 5 / 5

One by Wacom: Specs

  • Price: $49.95 / £35.99 / AU$99.00 (S), $99.95 / £49.99 / AU$189.00 (M)
  • Dimensions: 210 x 146 x 8.7 mm (S), 277 x 189 x 8.7 mm (M)
  • Active drawing area: 152 x 95 mm (S), 216 x 135 mm (M)
  • Thickness: 8.7mm
  • Weight: 250g (S), 432g (M)
  • Resolution: 2540 LPI
  • Connections: USB
  • Compatibility: Windows 7 or later, Mac OS X 10.10 or later, Chromebook Chrome OS 87 or later (Kernel 4.4 + required)
  • Pressure levels: 2,048

The back of the One by Wacom, striking in red

(Image credit: Future)

One by Wacom: Design

  • Portable and lightweight
  • No shortcut keys
  • Robust, premium materials

By design, the One by Wacom is supremely portable, yet still very effective. In its smaller size, the slate is 210 x 146 x 8.7mm, and in medium it measures 277 x 189 x 8.7mm, weighing 250g and 432g respectively.

Unlike its predecessor, the Wacom Bamboo, the One by Wacom does away with oversized wasted space around the drawing surface, offering a respectable active drawing area of 152.0 x 95.0 mm (S) / 216.0 x 135.0 mm (M). However, this does mean there’s less space on which to rest your hand while drawing.

The tablet is encased in durable, well-made plastic that feels neither tacky nor cheap, and I felt comfortable stashing the device in my bag without worrying about damage. It’s black on the front, with the rear of the slate a bold, yet sophisticated, matte red. Four rubber pads on its base stop the tablet from skating across whatever surface you might be drawing onto, and on the side is a fabric pen loop to hold the stylus – which is useful seeing as the rounded pen is prone to rolling off of surfaces.

The surface itself seems to be the same as used in the Wacom Intuos, with a lightly textured finish that doesn’t appear prone to scratching, judging from my testing experience. On the surface are dots to help create a sense of scale, which I found useful as a reference point when looking between the screen and the tablet.

Its stylus is all-black and plastic, and super-light at just 9g. Compared to some of Wacom’s more premium pens, this one definitely feels more basic. There’s no grip, and it doesn’t have quite enough weight to it. Still, it’s by no means poorly designed and is very comfortable to use.

  • Design: 4.5 / 5

The stylus for the One by Wacom held in hand, in use on the tablet

(Image credit: Future)

One by Wacom: Performance

  • No line jitter, minimal lag
  • Virtually plug and play
  • Wonderful drawing experience

I loved drawing with the One by Wacom, especially when it came to completing quick tasks throughout my day. Once you’ve downloaded the drivers, the device is plug and play, so it’s very easy to quickly whip out if you’re in a bind.

Wacom’s drivers are, as I’ve come to expect, simple and effective – and, for a model as simple as the One by Wacom, scarcely needed to be used. Perhaps only for fine-tuning or to flip its orientation.

Thanks to its surface, the One by Wacom offers an excellent, true-to-life paper feel, although the stylus quality does detract from this somewhat. The level of resistance otherwise is perfect, and after using the slate for several weeks I can’t see any scratches or other imperfections anywhere – even having taken it out on the road a few times. 

There was no line jitter at all, and there was minimal lag, especially considering its low price point. It worked flawlessly in Creative Cloud programs such as Photoshop and Illustrator, as well as various other software I tried it on with my Windows PC and MacBook Pro.

Since there are no shortcut keys, and only two hotkeys on the stylus, the One by Wacom becomes a little more problematic in use if you’re working to a deadline or have more in-depth, detailed work to complete. Students and other entry-level users are unlikely to miss these, but if you’re generally accustomed to speeding through projects, then having to resort to using your keyboard and mouse might be a little irritating. Of course, you can opt to invest in a shortcut key, but this does somewhat negate the affordable price tag of the One by Wacom. 

Overall, the tablet’s size is both a blessing and a curse. Where other pen tablets such as the XP Pen Deco Pro feature larger borders surrounding the active drawing area to give your hand somewhere to rest, the edge on the One by Wacom isn’t as deep, so I ended up feeling quite cramped after some time using it, and especially when working on finer details. 

  • Performance: 3.5 / 5

The stylus for the One by Wacom held in hand

(Image credit: Future)

One by Wacom: Stylus

  • Feels a little cheap
  • Battery free
  • 2,048 pressure levels

The stylus, for me, was the biggest giveaway of the affordable price point of the One by Wacom. Where the tablet itself feels just premium enough, the stylus is pretty light and minimally designed. 

First, the positives. The stylus is battery-free, which makes it a better companion to a hyper-portable tablet, and it comes with two spare nibs and a nib remover – which is more than I got with the Wacom One I reviewed recently. The nibs are of the typical high quality I’ve come to expect from Wacom, and overall the stylus is comfortable to hold and enjoyable to draw with.

However, there are some drawbacks. While the One by Wacom stylus offers double the pressure sensitivity of the Wacom Bamboo at 2,048 pressure levels, compared to more affordable mid-range options from the likes of XP Pen and Huion that offer 8,192 pressure levels, it’s a little underwhelming, even given its low price point. 

The pen is made of the same plastic material as the black lining of the tablet, but feels cheaper. I think this is down to its weight – it’s just 9g, versus the 15g Wacom Pro Pen 2 or even the 20g 2nd-generation Apple Pencil. Personally, I prefer a weightier stylus.

The pen has no grip, either, plus its tactile buttons feel a bit tacky, and are a little too easy to nudge accidentally. Overall, it feels as though the stylus has taken the biggest hit with regards to Wacom streamlining its typically premium features – which is a shame. 

It’s by no means a bad stylus; it performs wonderfully. It just feels like a huge departure from the quality I’ve come to expect from Wacom, even considering the lower price. 

  • Stylus: 3.5 / 5

Should I buy the One by Wacom?

Buy it if...

Don't buy it if...

Wacom One: Report card

Also consider...

XPPen Deco Pro

XP Pen has established itself well in the drawing tablet space for its more affordable alternatives to the likes of Wacom – but you get what you pay for. The build quality is lesser, and it isn’t quite as enjoyable to draw on. However, it does grant smoother workflows with its shortcuts. 

Read our full XPPen Deco Pro review

Wacom One

If you've got a budget to stretch, it's well worth investing in the Wacom One as your alternative entry-level Wacom product - only this one has a built-in display. It's a considerable jump in list price, and the Wacom One still lacks some of the features we like to see for more mid to pro level creatives, but it's a step in the right direction. 

Read our full Wacom One review

  • First reviewed March 2023

How I tested the One by Wacom

First, I stress-tested the tablet for at least an hour in a variety of drawing and editing software to test the One by Wacom, including Adobe Creative Cloud programs such as Photoshop and Illustrator, as well as Clip Studio Paint and free software such as Krita. 

Then, I moved on to work in longer periods on specific projects - for this tablet, I started working on a new project. As it's not the best for detail work, I spent a lot of the time sketching and playing with different paintbrushes to get a feel for how the tablet handles. I took the tablet on the road with me to see how well it travels, too.

I’ve recently been testing other tablets including the XPPen Deco Pro and the Wacom One, so I spent some time comparing these, while also comparing to my go-to creative platform, the iPad Pro. 

Read more about how we test

One by Wacom review: the perfect companion for junior creatives
5:11 pm |

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

Wacom One: One-minute review

Wacom is known for producing premium, professional tools that set the standard, with some of the best drawing tablets currently available. So how well does the company fare when challenged to create a more affordable, entry-level device?

In short, pretty well, judging by the resulting One by Wacom. This pen tablet is lightweight, uncomplicated and stylish, making it an excellent choice for those early in their creative career. It’s worth noting that this is not the same as the Wacom One, which is a pen display, meaning it has a built-in screen.

Instead, the One by Wacom is a small yet mighty screenless slate, packing some great specs in its pocket-sized frame. With 2048 levels of pressure sensitivity in its powerful stylus and a wonderful 2540 LPI drawing surface, it’s about as good as you can get from an entry-level drawing tablet without adding on any of the price-inflating frills. It was created to be the next evolution of one of Wacom’s most successful and well-loved entry-level slates – the Wacom Bamboo.

Since students are one of the target audiences for this pen tablet, the One by Wacom is the first graphics tablet officially optimized to work with Chrome OS (alongside its more professionally geared sibling, the Wacom Intuos), and while a few other drawing tablet providers have since updated their products to work better with the system, very few have the level of ease and compatibility that Wacom does with Google’s Chromebooks. 

If you’re looking for the full complement of features to support more advanced, professional workflows, you might find the One by Wacom somewhat limiting. It’s by no means the most detail-oriented tablet, and the lack of shortcut buttons means you’ll either need to invest in a separate shortcut remote, or work with a keyboard close to hand. 

However, in its two travel-friendly sizes, small and medium, the One by Wacom allows you to use some of the best digital art software and photo editing software to draw or tweak your creative projects. These smaller sizes do mean you’re more likely to feel a bit cramped while working, experiencing greater discomfort, so it’s worth thinking about how long you’ll need to use the tablet in any given setting.

Overall, though, I found the One by Wacom the perfect companion as a digital art hobbyist, especially as a means to help me complete smaller tasks throughout the week – quickly touching up images in Photoshop, or adding them into a template, as well as mapping out rough sketches for larger projects, for example. As someone who regularly works away from home and the office, it’s rapidly becoming my go-to companion. 

One by Wacom on a black surface, with focus on the Wacom-branded pen loop

(Image credit: Future)

One by Wacom: Price and availability

  • List price (small): $49.95 / £35.99 / AU$99.00
  • List price (medium): $99.95 / £49.99 / AU$189.00

The One by Wacom is minimal in almost every sense of the word, including price. Despite being well made and pretty powerful, this petite pen tablet offers fantastic value for money, priced at just $49.95 / £35.99 / AU$99.00 in its smaller size and $99.95 / £49.99 / AU$189.00 in medium. 

For our review, we tested the medium One by Wacom. Along with the tablet itself, the One by Wacom comes with its Wacom stylus, a pen nib remover, three replacement nibs and a USB cable. There’s no USB-C adapter, meaning creatives with newer MacBooks will need to employ the use of a converter. 

At its price point, the One by Wacom offers fantastic value for money, and will deliver almost everything you need as a baseline pen tablet. 

  • Value: 5 / 5

One by Wacom: Specs

  • Price: $49.95 / £35.99 / AU$99.00 (S), $99.95 / £49.99 / AU$189.00 (M)
  • Dimensions: 210 x 146 x 8.7 mm (S), 277 x 189 x 8.7 mm (M)
  • Active drawing area: 152 x 95 mm (S), 216 x 135 mm (M)
  • Thickness: 8.7mm
  • Weight: 250g (S), 432g (M)
  • Resolution: 2540 LPI
  • Connections: USB
  • Compatibility: Windows 7 or later, Mac OS X 10.10 or later, Chromebook Chrome OS 87 or later (Kernel 4.4 + required)
  • Pressure levels: 2,048

The back of the One by Wacom, striking in red

(Image credit: Future)

One by Wacom: Design

  • Portable and lightweight
  • No shortcut keys
  • Robust, premium materials

By design, the One by Wacom is supremely portable, yet still very effective. In its smaller size, the slate is 210 x 146 x 8.7mm, and in medium it measures 277 x 189 x 8.7mm, weighing 250g and 432g respectively.

Unlike its predecessor, the Wacom Bamboo, the One by Wacom does away with oversized wasted space around the drawing surface, offering a respectable active drawing area of 152.0 x 95.0 mm (S) / 216.0 x 135.0 mm (M). However, this does mean there’s less space on which to rest your hand while drawing.

The tablet is encased in durable, well-made plastic that feels neither tacky nor cheap, and I felt comfortable stashing the device in my bag without worrying about damage. It’s black on the front, with the rear of the slate a bold, yet sophisticated, matte red. Four rubber pads on its base stop the tablet from skating across whatever surface you might be drawing onto, and on the side is a fabric pen loop to hold the stylus – which is useful seeing as the rounded pen is prone to rolling off of surfaces.

The surface itself seems to be the same as used in the Wacom Intuos, with a lightly textured finish that doesn’t appear prone to scratching, judging from my testing experience. On the surface are dots to help create a sense of scale, which I found useful as a reference point when looking between the screen and the tablet.

Its stylus is all-black and plastic, and super-light at just 9g. Compared to some of Wacom’s more premium pens, this one definitely feels more basic. There’s no grip, and it doesn’t have quite enough weight to it. Still, it’s by no means poorly designed and is very comfortable to use.

  • Design: 4.5 / 5

The stylus for the One by Wacom held in hand, in use on the tablet

(Image credit: Future)

One by Wacom: Performance

  • No line jitter, minimal lag
  • Virtually plug and play
  • Wonderful drawing experience

I loved drawing with the One by Wacom, especially when it came to completing quick tasks throughout my day. Once you’ve downloaded the drivers, the device is plug and play, so it’s very easy to quickly whip out if you’re in a bind.

Wacom’s drivers are, as I’ve come to expect, simple and effective – and, for a model as simple as the One by Wacom, scarcely needed to be used. Perhaps only for fine-tuning or to flip its orientation.

Thanks to its surface, the One by Wacom offers an excellent, true-to-life paper feel, although the stylus quality does detract from this somewhat. The level of resistance otherwise is perfect, and after using the slate for several weeks I can’t see any scratches or other imperfections anywhere – even having taken it out on the road a few times. 

There was no line jitter at all, and there was minimal lag, especially considering its low price point. It worked flawlessly in Creative Cloud programs such as Photoshop and Illustrator, as well as various other software I tried it on with my Windows PC and MacBook Pro.

Since there are no shortcut keys, and only two hotkeys on the stylus, the One by Wacom becomes a little more problematic in use if you’re working to a deadline or have more in-depth, detailed work to complete. Students and other entry-level users are unlikely to miss these, but if you’re generally accustomed to speeding through projects, then having to resort to using your keyboard and mouse might be a little irritating. Of course, you can opt to invest in a shortcut key, but this does somewhat negate the affordable price tag of the One by Wacom. 

Overall, the tablet’s size is both a blessing and a curse. Where other pen tablets such as the XP Pen Deco Pro feature larger borders surrounding the active drawing area to give your hand somewhere to rest, the edge on the One by Wacom isn’t as deep, so I ended up feeling quite cramped after some time using it, and especially when working on finer details. 

  • Performance: 3.5 / 5

The stylus for the One by Wacom held in hand

(Image credit: Future)

One by Wacom: Stylus

  • Feels a little cheap
  • Battery free
  • 2,048 pressure levels

The stylus, for me, was the biggest giveaway of the affordable price point of the One by Wacom. Where the tablet itself feels just premium enough, the stylus is pretty light and minimally designed. 

First, the positives. The stylus is battery-free, which makes it a better companion to a hyper-portable tablet, and it comes with two spare nibs and a nib remover – which is more than I got with the Wacom One I reviewed recently. The nibs are of the typical high quality I’ve come to expect from Wacom, and overall the stylus is comfortable to hold and enjoyable to draw with.

However, there are some drawbacks. While the One by Wacom stylus offers double the pressure sensitivity of the Wacom Bamboo at 2,048 pressure levels, compared to more affordable mid-range options from the likes of XP Pen and Huion that offer 8,192 pressure levels, it’s a little underwhelming, even given its low price point. 

The pen is made of the same plastic material as the black lining of the tablet, but feels cheaper. I think this is down to its weight – it’s just 9g, versus the 15g Wacom Pro Pen 2 or even the 20g 2nd-generation Apple Pencil. Personally, I prefer a weightier stylus.

The pen has no grip, either, plus its tactile buttons feel a bit tacky, and are a little too easy to nudge accidentally. Overall, it feels as though the stylus has taken the biggest hit with regards to Wacom streamlining its typically premium features – which is a shame. 

It’s by no means a bad stylus; it performs wonderfully. It just feels like a huge departure from the quality I’ve come to expect from Wacom, even considering the lower price. 

  • Stylus: 3.5 / 5

Should I buy the One by Wacom?

Buy it if...

Don't buy it if...

Wacom One: Report card

Also consider...

XPPen Deco Pro

XP Pen has established itself well in the drawing tablet space for its more affordable alternatives to the likes of Wacom – but you get what you pay for. The build quality is lesser, and it isn’t quite as enjoyable to draw on. However, it does grant smoother workflows with its shortcuts. 

Read our full XPPen Deco Pro review

Wacom One

If you've got a budget to stretch, it's well worth investing in the Wacom One as your alternative entry-level Wacom product - only this one has a built-in display. It's a considerable jump in list price, and the Wacom One still lacks some of the features we like to see for more mid to pro level creatives, but it's a step in the right direction. 

Read our full Wacom One review

  • First reviewed March 2023

How I tested the One by Wacom

First, I stress-tested the tablet for at least an hour in a variety of drawing and editing software to test the One by Wacom, including Adobe Creative Cloud programs such as Photoshop and Illustrator, as well as Clip Studio Paint and free software such as Krita. 

Then, I moved on to work in longer periods on specific projects - for this tablet, I started working on a new project. As it's not the best for detail work, I spent a lot of the time sketching and playing with different paintbrushes to get a feel for how the tablet handles. I took the tablet on the road with me to see how well it travels, too.

I’ve recently been testing other tablets including the XPPen Deco Pro and the Wacom One, so I spent some time comparing these, while also comparing to my go-to creative platform, the iPad Pro. 

Read more about how we test

The Sonos Era 100 is exactly the Sonos One upgrade I wanted, with one catch
5:00 pm |

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

The Sonos Era 100 is a new speaker from Sonos to replace the Sonos One, launching on March 28, and I've had the chance to hear it in action during a demo. We'll bring you a full Sonos Era 100 review later when we've been able to test it for longer under our own terms, but I can tell you right now that it looks like a great upgrade – though with a price of $249 / £249 / AU$399, it's also higher-priced than the Sonos One, which costs $219 / £199 / AU$319. And it's much higher priced than the Sonos One SL, which costs $199 / £179 / AU$289. 

However, the Sonos Era 100 includes some long-awaited features compared to its predecessor. (The Sonos One will remain on sale while stocks last, but Sonos isn't making more, the company told me). In particular, the Era 100 brings a 3.5mm line-in option (via and adapter) as well as standard Bluetooth audio support to a mid-size Sonos speaker for the first time, making it the most flexible smaller speaker the company has made so far.

It's all different when it comes to sound too, of course. Sonos' goal with the Era 100 was to deliver stereo sound from a single unit while eliminating the idea of there being a 'sweet spot' to listen to it from, and to add more bass – the last of these is something I've always bemoaned as missing from the Sonos One, despite it being the best wireless speaker for most people. Even in acoustic music, you're not getting the full effect without rich bass.

So the Sonos Era 100 features a new oval woofer for bass and mid-range, and two angled tweeters above it, one facing left, and one facing right. The tweeters have a 100-degree angle between them, and each has a waveguide frame in front of it that disperses sound across 180 degrees per tweeter. That means the tweeters have a total sound spread of 270 degrees between them, according to Sonos.

And that's in a small unit that measures 4.72 x 7.18 x 5.14 in (120 x 182.5 x 130.5 mm - W x H x D), which is a little shorter than the Sonos One, but a little thicker in both directions, too. Design-wise, it feels very much from the same family as the Sonos Move and Sonos Arc.

Hands-on Sonos Era 100 review: Audio impressions

Sonos Era 100 and Era 300 speakers on a wood shelf

Here's the Sonos Era 100 (right) with the new Era 300 Dolby Atmos speaker. (Image credit: Future)

Despite the small size, the sound is impressively big, but Sonos has always been good with that. From the tracks I listened to, I can tell you that Sonos absolutely nailed its goal to add more bass to the Era 100. It's a major change from the Sonos One, and having a much richer bass foundation adds a lot of energy to tracks that benefit from it. But this kind of bass also makes instruments such as pianos and cellos sound more true to life.

It's still a small device, so the bass is not exactly going to shake the room – hardcore dubstep fans will be pleased to hear that you can still pair the Era 100 with the Sonos Sub or Sonos Sub Mini for more bass – but it came across as strong yet refined in my time with it, which is exactly what I want.

The rest of the Era 100's sound is lovely too, and it seems especially sharp with details – nothing I heard came across as soft unless it was supposed to. I do have a slight concern about upper-mid tones standing out well enough when a fair amount of bass is also present – I got a sense that voices may have been getting a little bit swamped in the mix. However, I wasn't choosing the tracks and it wasn't an exhaustive demo, so I'll reserve judgment until I can test it myself.

When it comes to the spreading of sound and the aim of stereo from one box, I'll say the expansiveness of the audio was really impressive, and it certainly came across as bigger than one speaker. But it's more like it's giving the instruments extra space to breathe than really delivering stereo separation, even sitting pretty much central to it. And that's fine – it's not like other speakers have cracked this either.

One interesting note is that it will now be easier for everyone to get the best possible sound from the Sonos Era 100, because there's a new type of TruePlay tuning coming for it. Sonos is calling this 'Quick Tuning', and it's still done from the Sonos app, but unlike regular TruePlay tuning, it can be done from Android as well as iOS. In this new tuning mode, a sound is played, and the mics in the Era 100 listen to the sound, and tune for the room accordingly.

Sonos says that this is more effective than the 'Auto TruePlay' tuning in the Sonos Move, but not quite as effective than the classic TruePlay tuning where you wave an iPhone around the room.

I didn't get the chance to hear the Sonos Era 100 play sound over the line-in or Bluetooth, but Sonos did clarify that as long as the Era 100 speaker is playing, anything that's plugged into it can be shared across other Sonos speakers, so you could take sound from one of the best turntables into the kitchen.

Sonos also said that the Bluetooth version is 5.0 at launch, but that it will be upgraded to 5.2 in the future, which opens up the possibility of high-quality Bluetooth LE Audio support, but the company didn't confirm that.

You can also connect an adapter to the Era 100 that adds an Ethernet connection, as well as a USB-C connection that can be used as a digital line-in – but the adapter comes separately.

Hands-on Sonos Era 100 review: Home theater specs

Sonos Era 100 speaker with the body removed, exposing the speaker components

The Sonos Era 100 with its shell removed on the left – you can see the space for angle tweeters at the top. (Image credit: Future)

The main market for the Era 100 is people wanting small footprint wireless speakers. But just like the Sonos One, the Era 100 can be used in a home theater configuration, adding surround sound for the Sonos Ray, Sonos Beam or Sonos Arc, though I didn't get to try this.

With two angled drivers, I hoped that the Sonos Era 100 would be able to add more surround-sound channels to a Sonos home theater setup, pushing things to 7.1.2, instead of the 5.1.2 you get currently from a Sonos soundbar with rear speakers. But that's not the case – Sonos says that Era 100 speakers act as mono units when in home theater mode, so you're still getting 5.1.2. (Adding two Sonos Era 300 units in home theater mode does upgrade the setup to 7.1.4 when used with Sonos Arc.)

I have hope that Sonos is being a little shy here, and there will still be a better steering effect for side and rear sounds from the Era 100 – when I tried the Era 300 in home theater mode, I found that you could easily think it added more than two extra channels. But only a full test will reveal that.

Other tweaks to know in the Sonos Era 100's construction are that it's now made from 40%-50% recycled plastic on average, that it draws much less power when idle than the Sonos One, and that it's also been designed to be easily disassembled and repaired.

Hands-on Sonos Era 100 review: Early conclusion

I'm really excited about the Sonos Era 100 overall – a lot of the features look like my personal checklist for what I wanted to see from it. But I'm disappointed that it's become less affordable, especially since the cheaper Sonos One SL isn't sticking around, but the more expensive Sonos Five is. Hopefully there will be a Sonos Era 100 SL in the future to bring the price down a little.

Perhaps Sonos thinks that most people would be satisfied with the Sonos Roam if they want a Sonos speaker under $200 / £200, and it may well be right – but that wouldn't have been the case for me.

Which is not to say that the Era 100 doesn't seem like it'll be worth its price, especially since it's more flexible – it's clearly going to be one of the best Sonos speakers yet. It's just a shame for it to move out of more people's reach.

I tried the Sonos Era 300 Dolby Atmos speaker, and it’s a spatial audio beast
5:00 pm |

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

The Sonos Era 300 is the company's first Dolby Atmos-enabled speaker, and I got to try it with both Dolby Atmos streaming music and movies in a home theater configuration. Sonos has made soundbars with Dolby Atmos before, of course, but this is its first separate speaker unit to be designed around positional audio – and I've got to say, it blew me away.

We'll obviously reserve final judgment for a full Sonos Era 300 review, but even after a demo I can say that it's one of the most impressive speakers I've heard for its $449 / £449 / AU$749 price, and that it's a genuinely transformative upgrade for the Sonos Arc soundbar, finally bringing the true 'dome' of Dolby Atmos sound to a Sonos home theater setup.

And like the smaller Sonos Era 100, it's easier to get audio to it than almost any other Sonos speaker, thanks to featuring Bluetooth audio support as well as optional 3.5mm line-in via an adapter, and I think that even you don't put Dolby Atmos sound through it, it could still line up as one of the best wireless speakers around today based on my early impressions. So let's get into all the details.

Sonos Era 300 on a shelf

(Image credit: Future)

Hands-on Sonos Era 300 review: Price & release date

  • Released on March 28th, 2023
  • Priced at $449 / £449 / AU$749
  • Cheaper than the Sonos Five

The Sonos Era 300's $449 / £449 / AU$749 price is far from cheap – it's beyond even the Apple HomePod 2, which is similarly designed for Dolby Atmos thrills. But it's actually cheaper than the Sonos Five (which is sticking around in Sonos' line-up as the more hi-fi-focused option), and is much less expensive than the likes of the Naim Mu-so Qb 2nd Gen.

And I gotta tell you, compared to what I described in my hands-on Sonos Era 100 review, the Era 300 is really on a whole new level in terms of dispersing the sound, clarity and positioning of instruments, and rich bass.

Sonos Era 300 on a shelf

(Image credit: Future)

Hands-on Sonos Era 300 review: Features

  • Upfiring and side-firing drivers for Dolby Atmos
  • Bluetooth and 3.5mm line-in support
  • Creates 7.1.4 system with Sonos Arc

Let's start with the speakers in the Sonos Era 300. Interestingly, Sonos has gone for compression drivers for the most part, which are much harder to integrate well into small home-friendly speakers than standard dynamic drivers (because they require an extra structure to shape and amplify their sound) – but they can be more efficient, easier to steer for directional sound, and lower-distortion when done right.

Here, there's a forward-firing compression driver, then one upfiring driver at roughly a 10-degree angle, and two side-firing drivers (one left, one right) also at around 10 degrees.

And then there are two side-firing woofers, facing left and right, in a force-opposing configuration. This means they play the same audio, and can be driven hard for rich bass without vibrating such a small speaker right off the shelf – the vibrations of the two drivers cancel each other out.

A processing platform with 4GB of RAM powers the thing, helping to get the Dolby Atmos positional effects from the drivers.

You've also got Bluetooth 5.0 and a USB-C port, and you can connect an adapter to the latter than enables 3.5mm line-in or Ethernet. Wi-Fi 6E is here too.

Sonos says that an upgrade to Bluetooth 5.2 will come in the future.

Sonos Era 300 on a shelf

(Image credit: Future)

Hands-on Sonos Era 300 review: Sound quality

I truly cannot wait to get my hands on the Era 300 for more testing, because I loved what I heard in my time with it.

First: music. It's absolutely crammed with detail, yet seems to also be able to punch deep for bass notes without overriding the finer points elsewhere in the mix. Treble floats sweetly, and voices in the mid-range came through the soundstage clearly and naturally.

But more importantly, this is all happening in what may be the most well-dispersed soundstage I've heard from a single speaker. Stuff that should be central comes from the speaker unit, yes, but everything else has space to swarm around, including nearly feeling like they're coming from your sides at times.

Even when it doesn't get that far, the sound is so wide and so tall – I can't think of another speaker this size that's filled the whole space in front of me quite as well.

Sound positioning isn't just limited to steering things far left and right, to be clear. Instruments can be placed just around the Era 300 speaker too – I heard a song where different parts of a drum kit sounded like they're coming from around the speaker as it faced me.

This was music playing from Amazon Music via the Sonos app – sadly, right now that's the only way to get Dolby Atmos music to play on it. Sonos says that support for Dolby Atmos in Apple Music is coming, but couldn't say when.

For all my gushing above, I was even more impressed when trying it in a home theater setup with the Sonos Arc and Sonos Sub. Sonos describes that as a 7.1.4 system, whereas every previous Sonos surround system has been 5.1.2 at most.

But I think that undersells it. I use a Sonos Arc with Sonos One rear speakers at home, and the transformation here compared to that is just astounding.

The biggest issue with the Sonos Arc compared to the very best Dolby Atmos soundbars is that its height effect isn't that impressive, but when you add the two extra upfiring speakers from the Era 300, that changes. During my demo, the height effect was clear and dynamic, shifting forward and back, or side to side as the film needed.

And the movement of sounds around the rear channels is a dramatic change too. Individual parts of the audio steer so much more neatly and precisely between the two rear speakers, but the rears also hand sounds back and forth with the Arc soundbar more seamlessly, creating something much closer to the feeling of being surrounded by speakers on all sides, rather than having one in front and two behind.

Sonos Era 300 on a shelf

(Image credit: Future)

Hands-on Sonos Era 300 review: Early conclusion

My opinion walking out of my Sonos Era 300 demo is that I needed to get a pair of these in my house ASAP. I was most excited by their home theater performance, no question, but I'm desperate to see how one does on its own with a broader selection of music too, especially non Dolby Atmos tracks. 

Assuming that the Era 300 still disperses stereo tracks as convincingly left and right as it does with Dolby Atmos, I could see this being one of the best-value speakers for music lovers with little space to spare – you could put one of these on a single set of shelves with one of the best turntables connected over its line-in adapter, and I think you'd have a hell of a setup that fits in a corner of a room.

The angular design, while clearly necessary, may put some people off – it comes across as more 'techy' than the simple cylinder of the Sonos Era 100 – but it doesn't matter to me. After that demo, the Sonos Era 300 is my most anticipated launch of the year.

Leak: the vivo X Flip will have a 6.8″ 120Hz display and 50+12MP dual camera
4:53 pm |

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

The vivo X Fold+ has one of the more impressive camera setups on a horizontal foldable and now the company is working on a flip model. What will its cameras be like? Leakster Digital Chat Station has been digging up details on the new phone and the latest report covers all the key components. The so-called vivo X Flip will be powered by a Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 (same as the X Fold+) and will be configured with 12GB of RAM and 128GB storage. As illustrations have showed, the phone will have a large cover display and a dual camera island above it. Those cameras will feature a 50MP Sony...

Samsung refutes rumors about in-house development of CPU cores
3:51 pm |

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

Yesterday a report from South Korea claimed Samsung is restarting its own high-end CPU core development unit and will have custom processor cores by 2027. However, now company representatives reached out to us to refute that report. Here is the full quote: A recent media report that Samsung has established an internal team dedicated to CPU core development is not true. Contrary to the news, we have long had multiple internal teams responsible for CPU development and optimization while constantly recruiting global talents from relevant fields. The statement also indicated that Samsung...

OnePlus Ace 2V with Dimensity 9000 is now official
2:56 pm |

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

OnePlus introduced the Ace 2V premium smartphone in China today. It comes with a triple camera, fast memory and a Dimensity 9000 chipset. The device has an aggressively low price for what it offers - 80W charging for the 5,000mAh battery, a big AMOLED screen and a 64MP camera. The front of the OnePlus Ace 2V is a 6.74” AMOLED display with 2.5D curved sides and a 2772 x 1240 pixel resolution. The 10-bit panel refreshes at up to 120Hz and covers 100% DCI-P3 and 100% sRGB color gamuts. It has an Asahi Glass protection on top. The selfie camera has a 16MP sensor. The back is also...

MedicsCloud EHR Review: Pros & Cons, Features, Ratings, Pricing and more
2:28 pm |

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

The MedicsCloud EHR came to us from the Advanced Data Systems Corporation (ADSC). This company has been around since 1977, as a privately owned company. Founded by an electrical engineer, David Barzillai, he immigrated to the US, and was asked to create a demographics database for a radiology practice, which he successfully did. Out of this request, David created the ADSC from an apartment in New York City.

Over the years, ADSC has grown, and now occupies a 15,000 square foot building in Paramus, NJ, with over 250 employees, in excess of 55 million EDI transactions annually. The EHR from ADSC, MedicsCloud takes a database approach to analytics. It is used by clients including the Hispanic Counseling Center, New Bridge Medical Center, and Park Avenue Professionals.

Let's find out if we consider it to be one of the best Electronic Health Records software platforms...

MedicsCloud EHR: Features

MedicsCloud has a number of innovative features to enhance workflow and productivity with the goal of making quality patient care flow easier. The first that jumps out right away is that dictation is integrated directly into the clinical notes area, with Medics FlowText. Anyone who has tried to use a dictation system in the medical record is aware that more time gets navigating around rather than getting the words onto the page. MedicsCloud addresses this issue with its FlowText feature to not only make the page voice navigable, but also with a DragonOne Medical System, it can intelligently enter the words so that the document gets created with a single pass.

We also round out the features with specialty specific templates and content. It is also 2015 certified for incentives, can track MIPS, and also is designed to be compliant with the Cures Act. There is also support for e-prescribing, and there is automation of lab ordering, with results that feedback into this EHR.

Patient Portal

A patient portal, with a great experience no less, has become a ‘Must have’ when shopping for an EHR, and thankfully ADSC delivers in this area. It is dubbed MedicsPortal, and designed to be used via smartphone apps, which are available for both the iOS and Android platform. This can be either an advantage considering most younger patients prefer this method, or a disadvantage as some might prefer to just access via a browser, and why install an app for a medical provider that you only plan to see for a consult once or twice.

Still, via the app, patients are covered for most activities that they would do with a medical practice. These include making an appointment, putting through an online payment, requesting prescription refills and communicating via secure messaging, including getting a notification that a message has arrived.

Mobile

About the best we can say about the Android version of the MedicsCloud EHR is that we have one. This mobile version of this EHR has a mere 100+ downloads without a single review, so it is a bit of a black box. 

We would have hypothesized that things are stronger on the iOS side, but unfortunately, not so much. We could not find the app on the Apple Play store, nor find a link to it on the ADSC site. While we see images of a mobile phone on the site, we even looked at the Learning Center, but came up empty.

In summary, the apps for both Android and iOS appear to be a miss.

MedicsCloud EHR: Support

MedicsCloud certainly won’t be criticized for not having enough support options- both direct and self help. On the direct side, we easily find a toll-free phone number, a support portal, a fax number, a chat box, and even a snail mail address. The only options we did not find are chat, and a direct email if we want to nitpick. We also would have liked to see the hours of operation for support listed as well while we are on the topic. 

Indirect options for support are plentiful as well by surfing over to the ADS Learning Center. Here, the self help options abound, with articles, webinars, newsletters and video content plentiful. We also like that searches for info can be filtered to locate a specific content type, information pertinent to a particular medical specialty, or even by a topic, such as “Practice Management.” 

MedicsCloud EHR: Pricing

As is not particularly out of the ordinary, MedicsCloud is not forthcoming with the pricing, and prefers to keep it opaque. We are not fans of this practice, as busy practice managers and clinicians may not want to invest the time needed for a phone quote.

We searched around, and about the most we can find is that it is sold via a monthly subscription, but could not find a monthly price, nor if there were tiers, and how many. Further making it difficult, we did not find a free tier, nor was there even a free trial. These types of practices do make it more difficult to choose.

MedicsCloud EHR: Final verdict

Overall, the MedicsCloud EHR from ADSC is a bit of a mixed bag. We can certainly appreciate the FlowText integrated dictation, the large number of direct support options including a toll free phone number and self help options, and the patient portal, called MedicsPortal. 

However, we need to point out the multiple misses starting with the opaque pricing including what tiers are available, the lack of a free trial that we could find, and the frustration with the phone apps on both iOS and Android. 

For the right user, MedicsCloud could get the job done, but it is hard to know this given the lack of reviews for the smartphone apps, and that this offering is sans a free trial, making us look at other solutions first. 

We've rated the best medical practice management software.

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