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Global Galaxy S23 FE to feature Exynos 2200, US version will get the Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1
8:33 pm | July 14, 2023

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

The Samsung Galaxy S23 FE is coming in the third quarter of this year as the no-nonsene member of the Galaxy S23 series, but it looks like it won't be united around the same chipset globally. Geekbench runs and official support pages reveal the Galaxy S23 FE will run different chipsets, depending on the market. The global variant will carry the 4nm Exynos 2200 with 8GB of RAM. This is the same chipset as the Galaxy S22 Ultra and one that is criticized for being less energy efficient than its Qualcomm-made peer. The main reason behind the disparity in efficiency was reportedly Samsung's 4nm...

Nothing Phone 2 review: exactly what it looks like, flashy and new
7:35 pm |

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

Nothing Phone 2: Two-minute review

Nothing Phone 2 home screen showing weather and large app icons

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

The Nothing Phone 2 is such a rarity in today’s phone world, it’s hard to believe it even exists. It’s an affordable phone made by an independent company with some simple, effective, and unique ideas. It’s also a good phone. If you’re bored with the same old flat slabs and colorful icons, the Nothing Phone 2 may be exactly what you want. 

That doesn’t mean the phone isn’t a bit overhyped. The glyph interface looks cool, but in my weeks reviewing the phone before launch, I hardly used it. I wanted to use it more, but it just doesn’t do much and it doesn’t work with every aspect of the phone, not even close. When a feature looks cool and adds bulk but doesn’t actually make the phone better, we have a word for that: gimmick. 

There are great ideas hidden inside the Nothing Phone (2). Samsung and Apple would be wise to pay attention, though it wouldn’t be hard to copy things like larger app icons and a monochrome interface option to remove distractions. In other ways, though, the software felt buggy and a bit half-baked. Some app icons looked great when I got my review unit, but a later update broke things and made them incomprehensible.

Nothing Phone 2 home screen in monochrome with large and small app icons

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

Nothing has been working hard on software since the first Nothing Phone launched, but it still has a ways to go, and the Phone 2 leaves me questioning if Nothing, or any small phone company, can really compete against monstrously large development houses like Google and Samsung and Apple. 

The biggest weakness is the camera. Nothing claims the camera has been greatly improved, but compared to other smartphones in this price range the cameras are way behind. If you want a phone that looks good, get the Nothing. If you want a phone that makes you look good, get something else.

I think potential Nothing Phone 2 fans will see the device and something will click. If you find the glyph lights hypnotic, and you like where CEO Carl Pei is coming from with his minimalist and thoughtful interface, the Nothing Phone 2 won’t disappoint. It delivers much better performance all around than the first model while remaining affordable compared to big, boring flagships from Samsung and Apple.

Nothing Phone 2 review: price & availability

Nothing Phone 2 from an angle showing punch hole camera on front screen

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
  • Starts at $599 / £579 / AU$1,049
  • Available directly from Nothing and in pop-up stores
  • Not sold in carrier stores, no trade in offers

Nothing didn’t sell its first Nothing Phone 1 in the US, not officially at least, and the first phone was much less expensive at £399 / AU$749 in the UK and AUS. This time around, Nothing opted for more powerful components inside, a more premium design, and higher specs all around. The phone is more expensive, starting at $599 / £579 / AU$1,049, but it feels much more premium. 

To compare, the Nothing Phone 2 costs about the same as a fully loaded Google Pixel 7 (with 256GB of storage) or a OnePlus 11. There is no Samsung Galaxy S phone offered this cheap, not even the Galaxy S22 from 2022 that Samsung still sells. If you want an iPhone at this price you can buy a new iPhone 12 from Apple. 

This is an unusual price point, and the divide is because those more expensive phones are all available in carrier stores, which means you can get a discount if you trade in your old phone for a new one, and you can get a deal if you sign up for a payment plan or a carrier contract. The Nothing Phone 2 offers none of that. No trade, no deals. You give them the cash, they give you the phone.

Nothing Phone 2 showing lit glyph LED lights

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

Is the Nothing Phone 2 worth the price? It comes with a premium Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 mobile platform, but the OnePlus 11 is already on Gen 2. The Nothing Phone 2 isn’t beating any competitors on specs, so you’re really paying for the design. 

There’s nothing wrong with that. The design is truly unique and stands apart from the rest of the phone world. You can’t put a price on design, and if you’re happier every time you use the Nothing Phone 2 than you would be every time you use a boring, featureless black slab, then it’s worth the premium.

The big question is service and support, for which Nothing has an unproven track record. When a phone is sold in a US carrier store, it has been thoroughly tested and vetted by the wireless carrier to make sure it works exactly as well as customers expect. When no carrier will offer a new phone, it makes us question the phone’s reliability and support.

  • Value score: 3 / 5

Nothing Phone 2 review: specs

Nothing Phone 2 showing screen and lit glyph LED lights

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

The Nothing Phone 2 uses the Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 mobile platform from Qualcomm. That was the best chipset Qualcomm offered in late 2022, but at the beginning of 2023 the Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 2 chipset showed up in phones like the OnePlus 11 and the Samsung Galaxy S23. 

The Nothing Phone 2 display is top-notch with LTPO technology that lets the phone adjust the refresh rate to save power. It's also plenty bright; brighter than competitor phones at this price. 

Some Android phones are available with more than 12GB of RAM, but this phone should perform well with either memory configuration. For storage, 128GB will be enough for most people, but if you plan on recording a lot of movies or downloading seasons of shows from your favorite streamers, you'll want more space.

Nothing Phone 2 review: design

Nothing Phone 2 review back detail

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker Todd)
  • More rounded and textured than Phone 1
  • Very unique look and feel
  • Glyphs are cool, wish they were used more

There is no mistaking the Nothing Phone 2, whether you’re inspecting it up close or caught off guard by its flashing glyph lights from far away. The phone feels bigger and heftier than competitors, even though it’s the same thickness as the Pixel 7 and the OnePlus 11. The dramatically rounded glass back makes it feel more substantial somehow. Perhaps it's the depth of seeing through the glass and into the phone. It’s not uncomfortably large, just bigger than expected. 

The rounded back has a bit of a death wish, unfortunately. The curved glass seemed to slip from every surface on which I placed it. It became a running joke during my review. I’d hear something clatter to the floor from the side table or desk. My kid or girlfriend would ask “What was that?” Then we’d both remember and nod and say “Oh right, Nothing” at the same time. 

If there were four phones on my desk, the Nothing Phone 2 would be the one to fall. Its smooth and shiny surface, married to a gently curved back, makes it more susceptible to falls, especially if there is any incline for gravity to do its work. Be careful with this phone, it isn't grippy and inertia won't help you. 

This wasn’t as much of a problem when I left the phone with its flat face down and used it the way I was supposed to: flashing glyph lights face up. The entire design of the Nothing phone, inside and out, is aimed towards not using it. Or making the phone harder to use so you use it less. Okay, I still don’t quite understand the ethos behind Nothing design, except that it promotes familiar tropes of mindfulness and reducing distraction that are in vogue right now.

Nothing Phone 2 showing screen and lit glyph LED lights

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

To get there, the LED light pattern on the back, the so-called glyph, can also act as a timer. Right now it only works with Uber, but eventually, it could work with any app that has a countdown or a wait. As your Uber ride gets closer, one of the glyph bars lights up and then gets smaller and smaller. There is also a glyph timer that works the same way, shrinking as your time elapses. 

The idea is that you’ll use your phone less if you can use the glyph on the back instead of lighting up the screen to check on your Uber. You’ll be less distracted by your games and social network feeds and messages if you can glance at your pizza timer on the back of your phone, instead of swiping through your home screen. 

Does it work? Not really. Don’t get me wrong, the glyph looks very cool and seems capable of some neat tricks. It’s just that the phone doesn’t seem capable of taking full advantage of the glyph. 

There are supposedly hundreds of LED lights divided into multiple strips on the back of the phone, yet the best it can manage is some syncopated flashes and a single shrinking countdown strip? Where’s the rest? So much complexity is hardly being put to use, and it feels like a missed opportunity. Tragic, considering this is the key selling point for Nothing Phone 2.

Nothing Phone 2 review back angled handheld

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker Todd)

Durability is going to be an issue with the Nothing Phone 2. This sequel is more water resistant than the original Nothing Phone, but not by much. It can take a splash, but you can’t dunk it. Heavy rain could probably destroy this phone. 

What concerns me more is that big, curved glass back. My phone fell frequently during testing and I developed a hairline crack in the screen. It’s not noticeable unless I tilt the phone just so. The back is so far unblemished, but I’m worried. While Nothing did spring for one of the best mobile processors it could put inside a smartphone, it did not opt for the strongest Gorilla Glass on the outside. 

Once your phone breaks, what do you do? You need to work with Nothing directly. There is no third-party repair service for Nothing Phones. Unlike Samsung and Apple, which license third-party shops to repair the best iPhones and best Galaxy phones, with a Nothing phone you’ll need to rely on the company’s responsiveness, and such a new company has no track record to recommend them.

  • Design score: 3 / 5

Nothing Phone 2 review: display

Nothing Phone 2 showing wallpapers from Nothing

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
  • Very nice display for the interface
  • LTPO technology for power savings
  • Brighter than competitors at this price

The Nothing Phone 2 uses a very nice display, just like the first device, but this time it gets a boost from newer technology to help with battery savings. Nothing relies on a monochromatic interface, so unless you are running an app, you’ll probably see mostly black and white. The OLED screen on the Nothing Phone 2 looks great with this design – dark and contrasty where needed – and it makes the skin feel very dramatic. 

With LTPO technology, the screen can slow down to one refresh per second or ramp up to 120Hz, as needed. That makes for an always-on display that won’t drain your battery significantly, and Nothing does a nice job designing the always-on screen and making it very useful. 

While the Nothing Phone 2 isn’t technically as sharp as its rivals, like the Pixel 7, it can get much brighter than other phones in this price range, and that’s a perfect trade-off. I had no trouble shooting photos on the Nothing Phone 2 display in bright sunlight or reading directions on a hiking map. 

Durability is a concern, as I’ve mentioned in the Design section. During my testing, my Nothing Phone 2 developed a small hairline crack in the display. It’s unnoticeable even if I rub my fingernail across it, but I don’t usually crack phone screens. This phone just has a very slippery, curved back that makes it easy to fall off a surface with any incline or slipperiness.

  • Display score: 4 / 5

Nothing Phone 2 review: cameras

Nothing Phone 2 review camera

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker Todd)
  • Cameras are not very good overall
  • Dynamic range and HDR are a serious problem
  • In this price range the competition is fierce

Let’s be frank, if you really want a great camera on your smartphone and you only have $599 / £579 / AU$1,049 to spend, there are some surprisingly good options to choose from, and the Nothing Phone 2 isn’t one of them. The photos are improved over the last generation, but the last generation was a seriously inexpensive bargain phone. This is a premium model, albeit an affordable premium phone. The photos just aren’t very good.

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Nothing Phone 2 camera samples

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
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Nothing Phone 2 camera samples

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
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Nothing Phone 2 camera samples

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
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Nothing Phone 2 camera samples

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
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Nothing Phone 2 camera samples

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

The Nothing Phone (2) especially struggles with dynamic range and producing shots with a good HDR effect. That means that the dark spots in your photos are going to be very dark and you’ll lose detail to shadows. Most smartphones these days focus on improving dynamic range, so this is the most noticeable difference between Nothing and the competition, like the Pixel 7 and the OnePlus 11.

In fact, the Nothing Phone (2) was simply terrible at HDR shots. When I tried a selfie with the Chrysler building behind me, I could choose to properly expose the building or my face, but not both. Either the building was washed out, or my face was hidden in darkness.

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Nothing Phone 2 camera sample selfie with Chrysler building behind

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
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Nothing Phone 2 camera sample selfie with Chrysler building behind

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

I found the camera app to be a bit unresponsive and hard to use. When I tried to tap on an area to focus, the camera would often ignore my taps, especially if I was tapping just a bit off-center. Sometimes I would press the shutter button and it would not snap a photo. The volume key as the shutter button always worked fine, at least.

Nothing Phone 2 showing screen and lit glyph LED lights

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

There are only two lenses on the Nothing Phone 2, unlike the Pixel 7, which gives you an ultrawide as well as a zoom lens. On the Phone 2, you only get wide and ultrawide. Don’t bother with the digital zoom, it leaves photos looking blocky and unusable. 

Even under the best conditions, I lost too much detail to blown-out highlights, which is just a further effect of bad HDR processing on this phone. Some photos looked nice, and the extra warmth that the Nothing Phone 2 adds to most shots actually makes food look more appealing. Still, I’d like to see serious improvements if Nothing is going to compete in this premium space.

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Nothing Phone 2 image samples

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
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Nothing Phone 2 image samples

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
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Nothing Phone 2 image samples

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
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Nothing Phone 2 image samples

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
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Nothing Phone 2 image samples

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
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Nothing Phone 2 image samples

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
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Nothing Phone 2 image samples

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
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Nothing Phone 2 image samples

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
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Nothing Phone 2 image samples

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

I’m not going to beat up on Nothing more than this. There are distinct advantages to the Nothing Phone (2) and the camera isn’t among them, but there are other great camera phones at this price range. If the camera matters a lot, look elsewhere.

  • Camera score: 2 / 5

Nothing Phone 2 review: software

Nothing Phone 2 showing screen and lit glyph LED lights

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
  • Unique and simple interface design
  • Key improvements, like larger icons, have an impact
  • Not enough integration of the glyph lights

When Nothing handed off this review unit, it talked about how many more software engineers it added to the team, and I can’t help comparing Nothing’s hundred or so developers to the thousands of software engineers working at Google and Samsung. The difference shows. With the Nothing Phone 2 you get a few good ideas implemented nicely, but the Nothing Phone 2 hardware is not well-integrated with the software. I wonder if the task is too great. 

First of all, my glyph lights kept turning off. There is a setting that lets you completely deactivate the glyph lights. I never touched that setting, but once a day I had to dive into the menu and reactivate the glyph. This was because I had a bedtime focus mode enabled, which turned off the lights. The system should be smart enough to turn them on again. 

Nothing Phone 2 showing screen and lit glyph LED lights

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

I expected the glyph lights to be available and useful throughout the phone. Nothing offers a glyph timer, for instance, but it isn’t part of the normal Android Clock app. In other words, when I say “Google set a 6-minute timer,” I don’t get glyph lights. I just get the normal Google app. 

If I want the glyph timer, I need to find it, and it’s very hard to find because it’s buried in the Settings menu. You can’t even change the countdown time, not easily. You can set a six-minute timer and then have the same six minutes every time, but if you want five or ten, or a hundred minutes, it’s back to the Settings menu. 

If the basic glyph timer is so hard to use, you can imagine that the glyph lights are not easily integrated into the system. When you set an alarm, you don’t get glyph lights. If you play music, there is no dancing glyph music visualizer. I was continually searching for ways to use the glyph lights, ways to experience the phone through the lights and not the screen. I had a hard time finding anything.

Nothing Phone 2 showing screen and lit glyph LED lights

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

You can customize ringtones with the glyph lights, and you can set different lights for different people, or different types of notifications. That’s kind of useful, but I could have a simple sound effect do the same thing. You can use the lights as a fill lamp for the camera, but it isn’t powerful enough to light up your subject unless you’re fairly close. 

If the lights are a disappointment, the interface was a pleasant surprise. The NothingOS 2 is a fairly basic Android implementation. Nothing isn’t adding a ton of features like you’ll find on Samsung Galaxy phones. Instead, Nothing tries to eliminate distractions by eliminating color and text. 

Your apps will be black and white. They won’t be labeled. That means they’ll be harder to find, at least at first. Once you figure out what icons look like, it’s actually a very clean and pleasing look for a home screen. I had no trouble getting used to the Nothing interface, and I liked some of the simple tweaks.

Nothing Phone interface showing enlarged app icons

Check out those big app icons (Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

My favorite is the ability to blow up an app icon to four times its normal size. Instead of taking up one square on the home screen grid, it takes up four. For my favorite, most-used apps like Waze maps and my TV’s Roku remote control app, that was an invaluable shortcut. Much nicer, even, than finding a widget to act as a remote or start a mapping session. It turns out I didn’t need a widget, I just needed a bigger button. 

Nothing even does a nice job with the always-on display, and I found Nothing’s off-screen to be more useful than on my Samsung or iPhone. Of course, those phones have many times the features and customization options that Nothing offers, but simplicity is the point here, and I think Nothing creates an effectively simple home screen that makes the phone a pleasure to use.

  • Software score: 4 / 5

Nothing Phone 2 review: performance

Nothing Phone 2 review front angled table alt

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker Todd)
  • Probably faster than it needs to be
  • Camera app could be unresponsive
  • Faster than a Pixel, slower than OnePlus

With the second generation Nothing Phone 2, Nothing gave the phone a big upgrade in processing power, jumping from a bargain, mid-range chipset to a flagship-level Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 platform. That’s the same chipset used on the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 4 and the Motorola Razr Plus (Razr 40 Ultra). There is a newer Snapdragon, the Gen 2 chipset found in the OnePlus 11, but the differences are marginal. 

The Nothing Phone 2 performed very well and had no trouble throughout my tests, at least when it came to running the fastest apps and newest games. Everything ran smoothly and looked sweet on the Nothing Phone’s fast display.

Nothing Phone 2 showing screen and lit glyph LED lights

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

I had some response issues with the camera, and I’m not sure if that’s a performance problem or a software problem, since Nothing writes its own camera app instead of using the stock Google Android Camera. Sometimes I’d press the button or navigate between modes and the camera would freeze and stall for a second or two. 

If you want a faster phone than this for the same price, the OnePlus is a bit faster, but you’ll only be able to tell in benchmark tests. The Nothing Phone 2 has plenty of power to run games at high graphics levels, and the visual flourishes Nothing adds to the interface look very smooth running on this phone. 

It may help that I am using the highest-tier model of the Nothing Phone 2 for my review. There are 8GB and 12GB models available, and that much RAM can make a difference in an Android phone. I’m sure apps will still run smoothly on both models, but if you switch between apps often or work with large games, you might want to spring for the extra memory.

  • Performance score: 5 / 5

Nothing Phone 2 review: battery

Nothing Phone 2 review USB-C

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker Todd)
  • More than a day of battery life
  • Great improvement over the original Nothing Phone
  • Charging glyph is nice … where'd it go?

The Nothing Phone 2 gets a slightly bigger battery than the original phone, perhaps owing to being a slightly larger phone all around. I had no trouble making it through a full day on a single charge with the Nothing Phone 2, and there are probably many aspects of the phone that help. 

First, having a black and white interface may save some power, but probably not much. Nothing’s concept of having you rely on the glyph system rather than using the phone display would also save power, except that it isn’t very effective. Perhaps when more app makers start using the glyph system, I would turn on the phone less, but right now it is hardly useful, so I can’t give it credit for saving power. 

Not using the camera helps a lot, as the camera drains more power than most other features. I don’t mean to snark, but when I have a phone with an amazing camera, I drain the battery faster.

Nothing Phone 2 review USB-C cable

Nothing includes a USB-C cable but not a charger (Image credit: Future | Alex Walker Todd)

For charging, I used an Anker charger capable of up to 65W, much more than the 45W charging that Nothing Phone 2 offers. Nothing says this phone can charge to 100% in 55 minutes and I can verify that claim. I got to a full battery in under an hour. 

There is a charging glyph when the phone is plugged in, and it’s sort of emblematic of the whole problem with the glyph system. There are myriad ways Nothing could use the glyphs to show me that my phone is charging, and how much longer it will take. It could light the glyphs slowly, or fill them all individually. I’m not a designer, but anyone could come up with something better than what Nothing offers. 

When you charge the phone, you get a little bar of light at the bottom of the phone near the charger, but only for a moment. You can’t opt to keep that light lit, even though it’s a low-power LED and the phone is plugged in. If you want to see the light again, you need to wiggle the phone. Wiggle it, just a little bit. 

I’d like a persistent light, and something larger than just the smallest bar at the bottom of the glyph. Why not embrace the glyph with everything we’ve got? Like other aspects of the phone, the battery and charging treat the glyph as less than a feature, and more like an annoyance. 

  • Battery score: 4 / 5

Should you buy the Nothing Phone 2?

Buy it if...

You’re tired of boring phones
Most phones are a slab of glass on the front, a slab of glass or metal on the back, and an aluminum band all around. This one flashes, lights up, and you can see into it.

You find the design appealing
The Nothing Phone 2 design is unique inside and out. If you want a cleaner, minimalist interface, you won’t be disappointed by Nothing’s simplicity.

You want great performance that stands out
For the price, the Nothing Phone 2 offers more than a cool design, you also get snappy performance all around, from the processor and the battery.

Don't buy it if...

You need a great camera phone
If you want great photos from your smartphone, competitors at the same price point give you much more camera capability.

You expect to do everything with glyphs
The glyphs, disappointingly, don’t do much yet. If you were hoping to ignore your screen entirely, you’ll be disappointed by the flashy gimmick.

You want to support an independent phone maker
Nothing CEO Carl Pei is cool and successful but don’t buy his phone just because you like the guy or you hate some other phone maker. It’s not that great.

Nothing Phone 2 review: also consider

If the Nothing Phone (2) isn’t checking all the right boxes for your smartphone needs, there are plenty of great options for the same price, or even a bit less. 

Google Pixel 7
The Pixel 7 can’t perform quite as well as the Nothing Phone 2, but it takes better photos and you can get it with twice the storage for the same price.

Read our full Google Pixel 7 review

OnePlus 11
The OnePlus 11 takes interesting portrait photos that have a unique, artistic look. What Nothing does for stylish design, OnePlus does for stylish photography.

Read our full OnePlus 11 review

How I tested the Nothing Phone 2

I have been using the Nothing Phone 2 as my exclusive smartphone for both personal and work purposes for the last couple of weeks before this review was published. I use it for everything I do with my smartphone, from messaging to gaming to photography to getting work done. 

The Nothing Phone 2 is used in my car as my Android Auto device, and I use it with a variety of accessories, including smartwatches, bluetooth headsets, and an Xbox gaming controller for games. I charge the Nothing Phone 2 with my Anker 733 charger, since Nothing does not include a charger in the box. 

I used a variety of apps with the Nothing Phone 2, including the latest games and all of the latest benchmarking software. While we benchmark every phone we test extensively, we do not rely on benchmarks to form our opinions, only for reference. Benchmarks do not always reflect real world performance. 

I will continue to test the Nothing Phone 2 and update this review as it receives software updates. After the phone went on sale, Nothing offered a major software update, and every feature, especially the camera, was retested to account for any changes and improvements. 

Read more about how we test

First reviewed July 2023

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 FE and S9 FE Plus renders and specs surface
7:21 pm |

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

The rumors and leaks for Samsung's Galaxy Tab S9 FE series of tablets are starting to intensify. They likely won't appear alongside the Galaxy Tab S9, S9+, and S9 Ultra when they become official on July 26, but today we can fill in some more of the blanks. Press images of the Galaxy Tab S9 FE Plus and S9 FE appeared, courtesy of OnLeaks, Wolfoftablet, and Mediapeanut. Kicking things off with the Galaxy Tab S9 FE Plus. It's going to be powered by the Exynos 1380 with 8GB of RAM, and pack a 12.4-inch display. The slate will measure 285.4 x 185.4 x 6.54 mm and feature dual speakers, a...

OnePlus Open announcement set for August 29, rumor claims
6:17 pm |

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

The OnePlus Open is coming, and we know it's going on sale in Q3. Per a report by insider Max Jambor and SmartPrix, OnePlus will unveil its first foldable on August 29. The company will likely hold a big event centered in New York and broadcast online. The phone will then go on to be globally available. Specs-wise, the OnePlus Open will have a 6.3-inch 120Hz AMOLED cover screen, a 7.8-inch 120Hz folding screen, a Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset with 16GB of RAM, and 512GB of storage. Camera-wise, there will be a 50MP IMX890 main sensor, a 48MP IMX581 ultrawide, and a 64MP telephoto...

Lenovo Tab M10 5G arrives with 10.6” 2K LCD and Snapdragon 695
5:19 pm |

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

Lenovo just announced its latest tablet in India with the Lenovo Tab M10 5G. The slate features a 10.61-inch LCD with a 1,200 x 2,000px resolution and a 60Hz refresh rate. The panel supports up to 400 nits peak brightness and features TUV eye care certification. Tab M10 5G is equipped with a Qualcomm Snapdragon 695 chipset, 4/6GB RAM and 128GB storage which is expandable via the microSD slot. The device comes with dual speakers with Dolby Atmos and it also boasts a 3.5mm headphone jack. Lenovo Tab M10 5G There’s an 8MP front-facing camera and a single 13MP shooter alongside an...

Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+ review: pro time-lapse camera like no other
5:00 pm |

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

Two-minute review

Dedicated time-lapse cameras are specialist devices in their own right, but taking this one step further is the Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+ which is one of the most sophisticated and feature-packed cameras of its type. This is a high-spec time-lapse camera designed to capture long and short time-lapses in even remote locations with WiFi or 4G connectivity for remote set-up and image uploads to the Enlaps website where time-lapse videos can be created, downloaded and shared.

As a result of the features available, which we’ll expand on later, the Tikee 3 Pro+ is one of the more expensive time-lapse cameras available. The Tikee 3 Pro+ is sold in Euros but can be shipped worldwide. The camera itself costs €1500, which comes with a softshell carry case.

There's also a kit available which includes a hard case, a fixing mount kit, a 256GB microSD card and other useful accessories for €2098. The Tikee has a built-in battery and solar panel for extended use, but a larger solar panel that plugs into the back of the camera is available for €459 and is ideal when the camera is set up in more remote locations.

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Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+ time-lapse camera

(Image credit: James Abbott)
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Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+ time-lapse camera

(Image credit: James Abbott)

Most time-lapse cameras produce the time-lapse video in-camera, which is then output as a video file rather than photos, but the Tikee only produces pairs of images from the two cameras that are then combined in users’ my tikee account. You could merge them in photo editing software and create a time-lapse using time-lapse or video editing software, but that would take quite a lot of work.

my tikee is available with a free account, but functionality is reduced and a watermark is placed onto videos that are created. Several subscription options are available with a sliding scale of cost and functionality, and the least expensive – Storytelling – offers all the features you will need if you only wish to create time-lapse videos without the AI dashboard and other specific backend features. This costs €59 per month or €420 per year.

The Tikee 3 Pro+ doesn’t look like a camera most people will have seen before; it features a square design with cameras positioned on the two front corners, and a solar panel on the top that can be kept flat or tilted up. On the back, there are just two buttons, and slots for a microSD card, a SIM card (for 4G connection) and a socket to plug in an external solar panel. All slots and connectors have waterproof covers, and the camera itself is weatherproof. The camera is 8.2 x 7 x 2.7in / 210 x 180 x 70mm and weighs 3.68lbs / 1,664g, with a standard tripod thread on the bottom alongside a rubber grip to stop the camera from sliding on flat surfaces.

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Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+ time-lapse camera

(Image credit: James Abbott)
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Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+ time-lapse camera

(Image credit: James Abbott)
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Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+ time-lapse camera

(Image credit: James Abbott)
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Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+ time-lapse camera

(Image credit: James Abbott)
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Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+ time-lapse camera

(Image credit: James Abbott)
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Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+ time-lapse camera

(Image credit: James Abbott)

The Tikee 3 Pro+ can only be controlled using the Tikee Remote smartphone and tablet app, or through my tikee on the Enlaps website when connected to a Wi-Fi network or when loaded with a 4G SIM card. My testing was conducted using the app connected via Bluetooth, and by connecting the Tikee 3 Pro+ to my phone’s Wi-Fi Hotspot I was able to preview the image to check the composition of the two cameras. Without the Hotspot, a preview couldn’t be viewed.

Tikee Remote app image preview

Tikee Remote app image preview (Image credit: James Abbott)

In this configuration, time-lapses had to be saved to the microSD card and uploaded to my tikee from my computer. But with a Wi-Fi or 4G connection, the camera can be set up to shoot with images uploaded directly to the cloud. And it’s this functionality that makes the camera incredibly versatile for a range of applications including monitoring weather, climate, traffic, and construction sites, alongside simply creating high-quality time-lapse videos.

Creating time-lapse videos in my tikee is fairly simple and intuitive, with options to pan and zoom with a Full HD 1080p video output, or maintain the full panoramic time-lapse in any resolution up to 6K, which is 7,360x2,650 pixels. Interval times vary between different modes, and as well as capturing stills the Tikee can also provide monitoring using a snapshot feature to take photos or 20-second videos.

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my tikee inface for creating time-lapse videos captured with the Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+

my tikee interface (Image credit: James Abbott )
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my tikee inface for creating time-lapse videos captured with the Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+

my tikee creating a time-lapse (Image credit: James Abbott )
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my tikee inface for creating time-lapse videos captured with the Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+

my tikee project preview (Image credit: James Abbott )
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my tikee inface for creating time-lapse videos captured with the Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+

my tikee AI analysis (Image credit: James Abbott )

One incredibly useful feature of my tikee, with the three more expensive subscriptions, is access to the AI dashboard. With this, users can monitor many variables which makes safety and environmental analysis of a scene incredibly easy. For example, with a time-lapse of a construction site, truck deliveries can be monitored to check the time of day and truck position. An alternative might be to set the AI to detect people so that safety clothing such as hard hats and high-vis vests can be checked to ensure compliance with safety laws.

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Panoramic images captured with the Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+

Left image (Image credit: James Abbott)
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Panoramic images captured with the Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+

Right image (Image credit: James Abbott)
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Enlaps Tikee3 Pro+ images - Photomerge in Photoshop with Geometric Distortion Correction

Photomerge in Photoshop with Geometric Distortion Correction (Image credit: James Abbott)

With two cameras both offering an overlapping 149-degree field-of-view, the Tikee produces panoramic images at 6K resolution. Each sensor is a 16MP Sony Exmor R, which produces a 4,608x4,356 pixel image. Images can be captured in JPEG, DNG or JPEG+DNG, and image quality is excellent. The cameras are completely automatic so no settings can be adjusted, but during testing I never found this to be an issue.

With dual cameras, it’s best not to shoot with subjects that are close to the cameras in the centre of the dual image preview because this can cause stitching issues. This wasn’t a problem during testing because I was advised to avoid this, although one of my time-lapse shot sequences exhibited some strange distortion that’s likely a result of the slight barrel distortion the cameras create, alongside the visible curvature of the earth with a panoramic time-lapse I captured at the coast.

Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+ time-lapse videos

 Should I buy the Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+? 

Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+ time-lapse camera with solar panel extended

(Image credit: James Abbott)

Buy it if...

Don't buy it if...

How I tested the Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+ 

The Enlaps Tikee 3 Pro+ was tested over several days in different locations to see how it copes with different weather conditions and environments. The focus of the testing was the time-lapse functionality rather than any other features that may be available, although additional features have been covered in the review.

The time-lapses captured ranged from 30 minutes to several hours depending on the interval frequency. It was, however, impossible to test capture over extended periods, so long-term scheduling functionality was set up and started to test ease of use and reliability.

With nearly 30 years of photographic experience and 15 years working as a photography journalist, I’ve shot many time-lapses using mirrorless cameras and DSLRs, so shooting with a dedicated time-lapse camera was much easier and provided straight out-of-camera videos without the need to process photos and convert them into a time-lapse.

First reviewed July 2023

Samsung accidentally leaks Galaxy Z Flip5 price, pointing to a hefty price hike
3:33 pm |

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

Samsung Romania is running a promotion that will give away 10 Galaxy Z Flip5 phones to folks who pre-register between July 26 and August 2. Naturally, they posted a PDF with the terms and conditions for this promo, which happens to include the price of the items being given out. Oops. According to that document, the Z Flip5 256GB is priced at RON 6,599, which converts to €1,335. For comparison, a Z Flip4 256GB was RON 5,700 at launch last year (so the new model is 16% more). The price of 10 Samsung Galaxy Z Flip5 phones in Romania There have been a couple of leaks before - one...

Samsung accidentally leaks Galaxy Z Flip5 price, pointing to a hefty price hike
3:33 pm |

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

Samsung Romania is running a promotion that will give away 10 Galaxy Z Flip5 phones to folks who pre-register between July 26 and August 2. Naturally, they posted a PDF with the terms and conditions for this promo, which happens to include the price of the items being given out. Oops. According to that document, the Z Flip5 256GB is priced at RON 6,599, which converts to €1,335. For comparison, a Z Flip4 256GB was RON 5,700 at launch last year (so the new model is 16% more). The price of 10 Samsung Galaxy Z Flip5 phones in Romania There have been a couple of leaks before - one...

Infinix Hot 30 5G announced with Dimensity 6020 and 120Hz LCD
2:42 pm |

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

Infinix announced its Hot 30 5G today in India. The device features a 120Hz display, MediaTek Dimensity 6020 chipset and up to 8GB RAM. Hot 30 5G is built around a 6.78-inch LCD with FHD+ resolution and an 8MP front-facing camera housed inside a punch hole cutout. The back houses a 50MP main cam alongside an unspecified AI lens and the LED flash. Infinix Hot 30 5G in Aurora Blue and Knight Black The software side is covered by XOS 13 based on Android 13 while the battery comes in at 6,000 mAh and supports up to 18W charging. Other features include a side-mounted fingerprint...

Wasserstein Bird Feeder Camera Case review
1:59 pm |

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

Two-minute review

The first thing I need to make clear is that the Wasserstein Bird Feeder Camera Case is just a case; no camera is included. Instead, the idea is that you can install your own home Wi-Fi security camera in the case. It comes with the necessary fittings to install one of the best outdoor home security cameras like a Blink Outdoor Camera, Wyze Cam V3, Wyze Cam V3 Pro, Wyze Cam Outdoor and Ring Stick Up Cam. Even including the $99 / £89.99 / AU$179 cost of a Ring Stick-Up camera, or $99.99 / £85.99 for a Blink Outdoor camera kit (not available in Australia), the Wasserstein is still very cheaply priced when compared to a dedicated bird feeder camera like the Netvue Birdfy

Everything is easy to put together, with no tools required. The only negative on the build is the lack of a hinge for the roof, which has to be removed to refill the feeder. It isn’t a deal breaker, but it would have been a nice touch. 

Holes in the back of the Wasserstein case allow you to add a cable for an optional solar panel, which in use exponentially increases the run time of the camera before it needs a charge. Wasserstein also sells a range of solar panels at reasonable prices, directly compatible with various security cameras including the Ring and Blink Outdoor models already mentioned here. Prices start from around $30 / £35 / AU$55 (Amazon).

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Wasserstein Bird Feeder Camera Case on a table with rear door open showing camera installation

(Image credit: Future)
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Wasserstein Bird Feeder Camera Case on a table, rear

(Image credit: Future)
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Wasserstein Bird Feeder Camera Case  on a table, front of the case

(Image credit: Future)

Installing first the Blink Outdoor camera and then the Ring Stick-Up Cam in the case was straightforward, and took less than a minute to install – you simply need to insert the camera into the rear of the feeder. Swapping the cameras over involved taking the feeder down, opening the back, removing the Ring camera and its front support, which slides out, then sliding the Blink camera in along with a back support which stops the camera from slipping. It’s seamless, and you could work it out without referring to the instructions if you were inclined.

I mounted the camera to a tree using the included strap, and it was, again, very straightforward – thread the strap through some loops, wrap it around the tree, and put the belt through a buckle to tighten, and you’re done. A wall mounting bracket is also included, and there’s also a 1/4-inch screw thread on the bottom, which offers the potential of using a standard camera tripod mount and some camera arms and clamps to mount the feeder in some less conventional (read as ‘inaccessible to squirrels’) locations. 

Filling the feeder was straightforward, although you must remove the roof. It would be nice if the roof were hinged like on other feeders, making it more accessible, especially when standing on a ladder leaning against a tree. A little water and syrup reservoir can also be fitted to the front of the feeder to feed hummingbirds. I attached it to my feeder, but I wasn’t expecting much hummingbird action in South London, UK. 

Wasserstein Bird Feeder Camera Case Price and availability

The Wasserstein Bird Feeder Camera Case has a list price of US$54.99 / £65.99 / AU$154.94. 

US pricing is from the Wasserstein website, while UK and Australia pricing is from Amazon, although at the time of writing the case is marked as unavailable in Australia. 

As for how good the camera is, it depends on which one you are using and the app you use. I have used Ring devices for many years, so I could pop my Ring Stick Up Camera in and have it ready to record. As I have a Ring subscription, the footage is automatically saved. I set it up with the Blink Outdoor camera, and it was as straightforward as any similar product. The Blink camera comes with a Blink Sync Module that needs to be plugged in and connected to wifi, but it also has a USB socket that can be used with a USB flash drive to save the footage locally. If you want Blink to keep it all to the cloud, that will cost £80/$100 a year or £8/$10 a month. However, it is worth noting again that if you already subscribe to Blink or Ring, you won't have to worry about this additional cost. 

Both cameras work as you would expect. You get an alert when the camera detects motion, so you have to fine-tune this to correct the sensitivity so that every tree blowing in the wind isn't setting off the camera every few minutes, inundating you with notifications. 

Wasserstein Bird Feeder Camera Case strapped to a tree

(Image credit: Future)

One thing that is worth noting is that all of these security cameras are set up to record people standing back from the camera. Whilst they have a wide angle of view and relatively close focus, the birds are very close to the camera compared to the humans they are designed to film, who will be standing a few meters away. I found that the birds perched too close to the Ring camera, causing them to be slightly out of focus, whereas the Blink camera was a little better but not perfect. This isn't a huge issue. Bird feeder cameras are designed for monitoring and casual sharing, not for creating the best possible cinematic footage. However, if you want to maximize quality, I recommend the Blink camera. 

All cameras compatible with the Wasserstein Bird Feeder Camera case are designed to be used outdoors and are weatherproof. The Bird Feeder Camera case protects it further still. 

Compared to the dedicated bird feeders with pre-installed cameras, the big downside is that you don’t get any of the fancy AI bird recognition. You won’t receive notifications that a robin has just landed on your feeder. Instead, you will be told that motion has been detected - so it is worth making sure you name your camera appropriately so as not to cause mild panic that your house is being robbed.

Paradoxically, one thing that stood out with the Wasserstein Bird Feeder Camera case was the discrete choice of transparent and brown plastics. It blends in with a natural background much more pleasantly than other bird feeders' bright whites, yellows and blues. It may not look as modern or fancy when mounted on the white wall of a house but strapped to a tree, it looks great. 

Overall, the Wasserstein Bird Feeder Camera Case is a cost-effective option that doubles as an everyday outdoor security camera holder. It provides easy installation and a visually pleasing design. While it lacks advanced AI bird recognition, it serves its purpose well for monitoring and casual sharing of bird activity.

 Should I buy the Wasserstein Bird Feeder Camera Case?

Buy it if...

Don't buy it if...

How I tested the Netvue Birdfy

  • A few days, mounted to a tree
  • Two different home security cameras 
  • Using the various features of the camera apps

Having tested other bird feeder cameras recently, I was lucky that the birds and squirrels in my garden already knew exactly where to head for food. Within minutes of installing the feeder, the birds and squirrels headed straight to the feeder, and I was recording them using the Ring Stick Up cam and the Blink Outdoor camera. 

Over this time, I had the chance to test the battery life and see if the cameras were suitable for bird feeder cameras. A small step ladder accessed the feeder, so I could see how easy it was to access the feeder to refill it with bird seed. The duration of the test also allowed me to see how the camera fared in the rain.

Overall, it was a thorough test combining the physical properties of the feeder and how it worked in tandem with the various cameras and apps.

First reviewed July 2023

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