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Xiaomi Pad 6 and Band 8’s launch date revealed
8:15 am | April 13, 2023

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

Yesterday Xiaomi announced it would unveil the Xiaomi 13 Ultra on April 18, and today the company announced this camera beast would be joined by two more products - Xiaomi Pad 6 and Xiaomi Band 8. Xiaomi also shared a couple of images revealing the Pad 6 and Band 8's designs and color options for the tablet. The Pad 6 will come in three colors, while the Band 8 will have five strap options. The Xiaomi Pad 6's display is surrounded by uniform bezels, with one of them sporting a camera for selfies and video calls. Around the back, we have a dual camera setup headlined by a 50MP...

Android 14 Beta 1 is now available
5:43 am |

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

Today Google released the first beta of Android 14, following two developer previews in February and March. This means you can now test drive the upcoming software easily even if you're not a developer, by simply enrolling your compatible Pixel device at the Android Beta website. Once you've done that, Android 14 Beta 1 will arrive as an over-the-air update. Note that if you're already enrolled in the Android 13 QPR Beta program with a device that's supported in Android 14 too, you will automatically get the update to Android 14 Beta 1 with no action required. Also keep in mind that this...

Android 14 Beta 1 is now available
5:43 am |

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

Today Google released the first beta of Android 14, following two developer previews in February and March. This means you can now test drive the upcoming software easily even if you're not a developer, by simply enrolling your compatible Pixel device at the Android Beta website. Once you've done that, Android 14 Beta 1 will arrive as an over-the-air update. Note that if you're already enrolled in the Android 13 QPR Beta program with a device that's supported in Android 14 too, you will automatically get the update to Android 14 Beta 1 with no action required. Also keep in mind that this...

Asus Zenfone 10 visits Geekbench with Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 and 16GB of RAM
2:59 am |

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

The Asus Zenfone 9 was unveiled last July, and the Taiwanese company is definitely working on its successor as you read this. In fact, the Zenfone 10 was spotted in the online database of Geekbench, which as usual has revealed a couple of important specs. First off, unsurprisingly since the Zenfone line is now a high-end one, the Zenfone 10 will be using Qualcomm's Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset. This was paired with 16GB of RAM in the specific prototype that ran the benchmark, but we're sure other options will be available too - the Zenfone 9 had iterations with 6GB and 8GB alongside the 16GB...

Nvidia announces GeForce RTX 4070 for $599
11:52 pm | April 12, 2023

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

Nvidia today announced the GeForce RTX 4070, the newest model in the 40-series of desktop graphics card and also the cheapest so far. The graphics card will go on sale starting April 13. The RTX 4070 runs on a cut down version of the AD104 GPU based on the company's latest Ada Lovelace architecture. Compared to the RTX 4070 Ti that uses the same GPU, the RTX 4070 has 5888 CUDA cores versus 7680 and can boost up to 2475MHz versus 2610MHz. Memory is the same on both; 12GB GDDR6X with a 192-bit bus, 21Gbps speed, and 504GBps bandwidth. Like the other 40-series cards, the...

Acer Chromebook 514 (2022) review
8:48 pm |

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

Acer Chromebook 514 (2022): Two-minute review

If we weren’t reviewing the Acer Chromebook 514 (2022), the words ‘perfectly adequate’ would probably feel like we were doing our target laptop down. But this isn’t a normal laptop. It’s a Chromebook, for a start, which means it gets graded on a very generous curve. And it is, well, perfectly adequate, and it turns out that’s probably just what you need.

Context is everything. Inside you’ll find a relatively pedestrian combination of 11th-gen Core chip - ours being the Core i5 spin, though a Core i3 model is more readily available - along with 8GB RAM and 128GB of proper SSD storage. Not much to write home about in, say, a Windows laptop, but put to work grinding out ChromeOS it’s a package which chugs away without missing a step.

The shell, in terms of its looks, is as adequate as they come. The Acer Chromebook 514 clearly isn’t built to be flashy, it’s built for functionality and for grinding out documents. This is ostensibly part of Acer’s enterprise-focused line, so it’s made for work. It’s a sleepy grey, the bezels are thin but not spectacular, and the ports are laid out in such a way that they’ll very rarely become annoying. And yet there’s enough expansion, thanks to a pair of Thunderbolt 4 compatible Type-C ports, that you can feasibly use it any way you need to. The chassis doesn’t distract, it doesn’t get in the way, and it’s built specifically to take a knock or three - making this the ideal everyday machine to bash about in your bag.

The Chromebook 514’s keyboard is fine - not offensively mushy, not a joyous experience for your fingers, just fine. The trackpad is large and reliable. The screen is decent and bright enough, but it’s not the sharpest we’ve seen and the colour reproduction feels more like a vague approximation than anything you could feasibly use for graphics work. For the everyday grind, though, we found the Chromebook 514 entirely comfortable. Its battery life pales in comparison to ARM Chromebooks or those that have been slightly more generous with their lithium cells, but it’s enough to easily see you through a day.

And the price is just about right. While an MSRP of $780 (£480/around AU$1,130)  makes this a chunk of change more expensive than many Chromebooks, it also places this exactly where it should be in the mid-range. For a machine that performs fine and should last a while, its price tag isn’t an unreasonable ask - particularly with enterprise budgets in mind.

The point is that the Acer Chromebook 514 review model we tested had an answer to every single one of our questions. It's not one of the best Chromebooks, but it's perfectly adequate, and it makes the case for adequacy perfectly well.

Acer Chromebook 514 (2022): Price and availability

  • How much does it cost?  Reasonably priced in the UK, more expensive in the US
  • When is it available? Available now
  • Where can you get it? Available in the US and the UK,  tricky to find in Australia 

The Acer Chromebook 514 (2022) is not spectacularly expensive, but neither is it quite in the crowded domain of budget Chromebooks. Our particular review model, the Core i5-1135G7, touchscreen, CB514-1WT version, comes in at £480 in the UK and that’s the price we’ve based our assessment on. 

If you’re in the US you may need to slightly alter your value judgement given that Acer lists it for a heftier $780. And in Australia, it doesn’t currently seem to be available - though expect to pay a premium. 

Bear in mind that if you shop around you may be able to save a little by opting for a Pentium Gold version - check enterprise suppliers for the best price.

  • Price: 4 / 5

Acer Chromebook 514 on a table

(Image credit: Future / Alex Cox)

Acer Chromebook 514 (2022): Design

  • Solid, functional chassis
  • Decent IPS screen
  • Nothing exciting - but it doesn’t need it

How, exactly, do you judge a Chromebook’s looks? The Acer Chromebook 514 (2022) is not supposed to be a flashy desk dazzler. It is built for functionality, for flinging in a bag and bringing to meetings, for getting out of the way and letting the work do the talking. 

We could harp on about the things we don’t like. We could complain about the beefy chin beneath its screen, the slightly-too-thick case, and the fact that there are far lighter laptops out there. But what would be the point? None of those things actually matter. And when you’re grading on the Chromebook scale, when you’re judging this based on other laptops which are around the same price - let alone other Chromebooks - it’s clear that Acer has hit the mark.

The go-away grey of its upper chassis and screen lid gets just the slightest hint of sparkle; the black bezels around the screen are unspectacular and not distracting in the slightest. 

Image 1 of 3

Acer Chromebook 514 on a table

(Image credit: Future / Alex Cox)
Image 2 of 3

Acer Chromebook 514 on a table

(Image credit: Future / Alex Cox)
Image 3 of 3

Acer Chromebook 514 on a table

(Image credit: Future / Alex Cox)

While we are, again, grading on a scale, the touchscreen IPS panel is as good as you’ll get in this price bracket. Yes, it’s a little fizzy - we had a similar complaint about the larger screen of the Chromebook 515 - and its colour reproduction could be slightly better, but this isn’t really made for ultra-accurate graphics manipulation or even for media: it’s made for work.

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Acer Chromebook 514 on a table

(Image credit: Future / Alex Cox)
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Acer Chromebook 514 on a table

(Image credit: Future / Alex Cox)

In that context, we don’t think Acer has put a foot wrong. You can work on the Chromebook 514. It has a generous selection of ports - a pair of Type-C ports on its left edge joined by an HDMI output and audio jack, a Type-A USB 3.1 port on the right along with a microSD connector. Only the addition of Ethernet (and perhaps a little desk-friendly rearrangement, putting one Type-C port on either side) would have made it better.

Acer also boasts of the Chromebook 514’s military-grade drop testing; while we wouldn’t take it into a warzone, it feels entirely sturdy and we‘d have no problem slinging it in a bag.

  • Design: 4 / 5

Acer Chromebook 514 (2022): Performance

  • Smooth and snappy performance
  • Great storage speed
Acer Chromebook 514: Benchmarks

Here's how the Acer Chromebook 514 (2022) performed in our suite of benchmark tests:

Mozilla Kraken (fewer is better): 688.1ms
Speedometer: 293
JetStream 2 (higher is better): 194.4 points

Chrome OS doesn’t pose the biggest technical challenge. That’s basically why it exists at all. So it’s not a huge surprise that the Chromebook 514 can pull a fair lick of speed out of its 11th-gen Core i5 processor. Sure, Rocket Lake isn’t the very latest platform and doesn’t quite touch on the extra efficiencies ushered in by Intel’s newer chips, but it’s sharp enough to give Chrome OS everything it needs. This loads fast copes with large numbers of tricky tabs and behaves like a laptop that could potentially cost a lot more.

Being backed up by a proper SSD, although small in our review unit at 128GB, gives the Acer Chromebook 514 (2022) an extra boost. Manual file manipulation feels far quicker than the equivalent action on eMMC storage - a cheeky Chromebook cost-saving staple - and we’re sure that the snappiness of the OS owes just as much to the storage as it does to the CPU.

The keyboard and trackpad layout is perfectly functional, with a pleasing legend on the keys and smooth Gorilla Glass topping the generous trackpad. All very useable and inoffensive, and the Chromebook 514’s typing action is, frankly, pretty excellent. Budget-friendly laptops have a tendency to skimp on their keys, but this is far from the mushy, unpleasant experience of some of its rivals: it’s tight, consistent, and comfortable. 

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Acer Chromebook 514 on a table

(Image credit: Future / Alex Cox)
Image 2 of 2

Acer Chromebook 514 on a table

(Image credit: Future / Alex Cox)

It does, naturally, have its limits. Attaching more than one additional screen is slightly more than the Chromebook 514’s integrated graphics can manage. Running Android apps is perfectly feasible but, at least for those with heavy graphical demands, ends up somewhat stuttery. And, yes, this is a Chromebook - one with the requisite hardware to competently run a Linux install if you’re feeling fruity, but most won’t. Chrome OS is its own limitation, however small that limitation might be becoming.

All-in-all, though, the Chromebook 514 comes up very much on the correct side of any cost/benefit analysis there is. As a work machine, or just a reasonably-sized sit-on-the-couch browsing the web machine, it does its job without missing a beat. It may not be the luxury experience of high-end Chromebooks, but it’s certainly more muscular than those costing very little less. 

  • Performance: 4 / 5

Acer Chromebook 514 (2022): Battery life

  • Lasts a decent amount of time…
  • …though ChromeOS seems to have no idea how long that’ll be

If you want maximum battery from a Chromebook, Intel simply isn’t the best choice. There are stacks of ARM-based options out there that’ll go for age if you’re happy to take the performance hit. But for an Intel-based machine, this isn’t nearly as bad as you’d expect. Fully charged it’ll take you from one end of a work day to the next, particularly if you’re not testing it too much.

Our tests didn’t quite see it reaching the ten hours Acer quotes; eight and a half hours was the limit, with closer to seven when streaming a lot of videos. You’re within your rights to argue, but we feel like that’s entirely reasonable for a machine of this price and relative performance.

  • Battery life: 3 / 5

Should you buy the Acer Chromebook 514 (2022)?

Buy it if...

You’re not looking for pizazz
Acer keeps it simple here: this is a plain, grey laptop which isn’t out to blow you away with features or flashy gimmicks. It’s just there to knuckle down and do its job.

You’re OK with Chrome OS
A mid-range machine of a similar price might be a better choice if you really need all the features of Windows. Online-only work is becoming a more than plausible option, but it’s your only option here.

You’re often on the move
There are lighter machines and smaller machines, but for a 14” laptop this is tough (and cheap) enough to happily withstand the rigours of a rucksack.

Don't buy it if...

You need real power
Let’s use the word ‘adequate’ once more, for old time’s sake. The package here is slick and speedy, particularly running under Chrome OS, but it’s no world beater.

You need to work with colour
It’s not awful, but we didn’t find ourselves particularly impressed with the colour reproduction of the Acer Chromebook 514’s otherwise-decent screen. For graphics work it’s a dud.

You work long, long hours
The battery is fine, but it’s not going to allow you to burn the midnight oil without plugging in. Type-C charging does at least mean the task of finding juice is made a little easier.

Acer Chromebook 514 (2022): Also consider

If our Acer Chromebook 514 (2022) review has you considering other options, here are two more laptops to consider...  

How I tested the Acer Chromebook 514 (2022)

  • Several hours a day over the course of a week
  • Office work, general web use, Android games and apps, media playback
  • Techradar benchmark suite, real-world tests, using the laptop for work

I committed to using the Chromebook 514 as my main laptop for a week. That meant using it for writing work and research during the day, and for general media consumption and web browsing in the evening. 

During the course of testing the Chromebook 514 was also subjected to a battery of tests; the three main Techradar Chromebook benchmarks, as well as tests of Android game performance, heavier productivity apps, and a specific looping video battery life test.

I'm a long-tenured tech writer, and have been testing laptops in various forms since the late 20th century. Whether it's a full-on gaming beast or the lowliest of cut-price chuggers, I know the things to look for and the buttons to push. 

Read more about how we test

First reviewed February 2023

Vivo Y78+ runs Geekbench, S17 series chipsets tipped
7:19 pm |

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

vivo's Y78+ 5G has appeared on Geekbench, sporting the model number V2271A. It has 12GB of RAM, runs Android 13, and sports a chipset with the codename 'holi'. That codename could refer both to the Snapdragon 480+ and the Snapdragon 695, but we'd guess the Y78+ will have the latter given the slightly result achieved. The vivo Y78+ has already been certified with the Chinese TENAA and 3C, and the Google Play Supported Devices list, which should indicate its impending announcement. It has a 4,900mAh battery with 44W charging. Meanwhile, the vivo S17 series is also on the way and a...

Xiaomi Redmi Note 12 5G review
7:13 pm |

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

Huawei nova 11 series key specs leak ahead of April 17 launch
6:11 pm |

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

The Huawei nova 11 series is confirmed to launch on April 17 and we now have a detailed spec list for the upcoming models. Huawei is expected to introduce three phones in the nova 11 series - a vanilla nova 11, nova 11 Pro and nova 11 Ultra. Huawei nova 11 official teasers Huawei nova 11 will bring a flat 6.7-inch OLED screen with Kunlun glass protection and a 60MP front facing camera housed inside a punch hole cutout. The nova 11 Pro and Ultra models will get a 6.78-inch curved OLED screens and a secondary 8MP front facing camera next to the 60MP primary shooter. The Ultra...

ZTE Axon 50 Ultra announced with and two-way satellite messaging, Axon Pad tags along
5:09 pm |

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

ZTE held a big launch event earlier today in China where it announced its latest Axon flagship smartphone and tablet – the Axon 50 Ultra and Axon Tab. Both devices are equipped with the Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 chipset, 80W charging and boot ZTE's MyOS 13. ZTE Axon 50 Ultra Axon 50 Ultra brings two-way satellite messaging over the BeiDou satellite (BDS) infrastructure with the ability to send and receive SMS messages in areas without a proper network connection. The phone is equipped with Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 chipset with LPDDR5X RAM and UFS 3.1 storage and a ZTE-developed...

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