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Instagram gets new optimized UI on Samsung Galaxy Z Fold series
9:21 pm | August 8, 2023

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

Meta is rolling out a new foldable-optimized Instagram app update for the Galaxy Z Fold devices which fixes the weird aspect ratio and layout seen in previous releases. The updated UI positions the navigation rail with the home, search, new post, Reels, Profile, likes and messages buttons on the left-hand side while your feed is offset to the right. The big deal is that content is now properly scaled for larger form-factor displays with Reels appearing with black bars on the side while Stories, images and the rest of the UI are now much easier to navigate. Instagram's updated UI on...

Infinix GT 10 Pro review
8:33 pm |

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

The OnePlus Ace 2 Pro will fully charge its 5,000mAh battery in just 17 minutes at 150W
8:12 pm |

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

OnePlus will unveil the Ace 2 Pro in China on August 16 and has already started building up hype for the phone by bragging about its super fast 150W SuperVOOC S charging. It’s 99% efficient and can fully charge the 5,000mAh battery in just 17 minutes, according to the company. SuperVOOC S was developed in-house and was designed to be gentle with the battery. The phone advertises 4 years of battery life (presumably, this means that the battery will have at least 80% of its original capacity after 4 years of usage). The phone will be paired with a 150W GaN charger and a USB C-to-C cable....

Samsung Galaxy A05 does Geekbench 6 with a Helio G85 chipset
7:14 pm |

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

Evidence of the Samsung Galaxy A05 has started to appear with several model numbers surfacing – SM-A055F and SM-A055M, plus dual SIM versions of the same. Now the F variant has done several runs of Geekbench 6. Based on the scorecard, the phone is powered by the MediaTek Helio G85 chipset (MT6769V/CZ). This is a decent upgrade over the Galaxy A04, which used the Helio P35. Both are 12nm chips, but the G85 has two Cortex-A75 cores (2.0GHz) and six A55 cores (1.8GHz), compared to eight Cortex-A53 cores on the P35. That doubles the single-threaded performance and boosts multi-threaded...

TSMC will build a fab in Europe for 28/22nm and 16/12nm chips
6:21 pm |

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

Several key partners just announced plans to build the European Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (ESMC) GmbH – a joined venture between TSMC, Robert Bosch, Infineon Technologies and NXP Semiconductors. TSMC will hold a 70% stake, the other three will have 10% each. ESMC will begin construction of a fab in the second half of next year and plans to begin mass production of chips in 2027. Before you get too excited, note that this fab will focus on older nodes. The target is to produce 40,000 300mm (12”) wafers per month using TSMC’s 28/22nm planar CMOS process and the 16/12nm FinFET...

TSMC will build a fab in Europe for 28/22nm and 16/12nm chips
6:21 pm |

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

Several key partners just announced plans to build the European Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (ESMC) GmbH – a joined venture between TSMC, Robert Bosch, Infineon Technologies and NXP Semiconductors. TSMC will hold a 70% stake, the other three will have 10% each. ESMC will begin construction of a fab in the second half of next year and plans to begin mass production of chips in 2027. Before you get too excited, note that this fab will focus on older nodes. The target is to produce 40,000 300mm (12”) wafers per month using TSMC’s 28/22nm planar CMOS process and the 16/12nm FinFET...

Qualcomm’s new Oryon-based chipsets will have 8 and 10 core variants too, not just 12 core CPUs
5:29 pm |

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

We’ve been hearing about Qualcomm’s new Oryon cores for a while now – the first custom high-performance ARM cores developed by the company since the original Kryo. It will be featured in chipsets aimed at Windows devices that are code named “Hamoa”. Previously, we only knew of a 12-core design, but new information suggests that Qualcomm will come out of the gate with a larger roster. The following numbers have been seen in internal documents by WinFuture: SC8350, SC8350X, SC8370, SC8370XP, along with the SC8380 and SC8380XP. The last two are the original 12-core variants and will feature...

Garmin Epix Pro review: One of Garmin’s best watches just got even better
5:04 pm |

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

Garmin Epix Pro: One minute review

I’ve been wearing the Garmin Epix Pro for about three weeks now, and it’s a phenomenal, premium-feeling Garmin watch. It’s essentially an AMOLED-screened version of the Fenix 7 Pro, which is the Fenix 7 with the 7X Solar’s LED torch and a few new exercise widgets. 

It’s a good watch by any measure, and experienced runners, riders, explorers and triathletes are sure to get their money’s worth. The new Up Ahead feature is a good idea for serious trail runners, and the extremely accurate optical heart rate monitors are a nice plus, but the highlights on the software front are the new Hill and Endurance scores, great new metrics that get you thinking about exercise in new ways. 

The AMOLED screen is virtually unchanged from the existing Epix line and still looks the business, a far cry from the battery-conserving MIP screen on the Fenix. Regardless, the battery serves well, even with the torch’s red mode on for an hour with GPS, which was nice for street running at night. The Garmin Epix Pro is certainly worth considering if you’re serious about outdoor fitness, and it’ll happily go toe-to-toe with anything the Apple Watch Ultra can throw at it. 

So why haven’t I given it five stars? Well, maybe I’ve seen too many of the best Garmin watches at this point, but nothing here feels truly transformative. Those looking to upgrade from their old tired Forerunner 945 or their best Apple Watch to something top-of-the-line will love it, but it’s unlikely to tempt existing Fenix or Epix users to trade in their old watch in favor of this one. 

Garmin Epix Pro: Specifications

Garmin Epix Pro: Price and availability

Garmin Fenix 7S Pro and Garmin Epix Pro side-by-side

(Image credit: Future)
  • 42mm and 47mm: $899.99 / £829.99 / AU$$1,529
  • 51mm: $999.99 / £929.99 / $1,699
  • More expensive Sapphire glass versions also available

The Garmin Epix Pro is available in the US, UK and Australia in a variety of different materials and sizes. The Epix Pro comes in 42mm, 47mm and 51mm widths (we tested the middle-of-the-pack 47mm version). While the 47mm and 42mm models both cost $899.99 / £829.99 / AU$$1,529, the 51mm is more expensive at $999.99 / £929.99 / $1,699, as you’re paying for not only a larger screen, but a beefier battery too.

All versions of the Epix Pro are available with both tough Corning Gorilla Glass and even tougher Sapphire crystal options. Naturally, the Sapphire crystal options are available at an additional premium: $100 / £100 / AU$150. 

All this means you’ve got plenty of options to choose from even after you’ve settled on the Epix Pro over the Garmin Epix (Gen 2) or the Garmin Fenix 7. All are premium-priced offerings with premium price tags to match, pricing out those looking for a common-or-garden smartwatch. 

And to be honest, that’s fine: at this end of the spectrum, the Garmin Epix Pro is an advanced, professional-grade training tool. It’s not badly priced by any means, but neither does it represent outstanding value. 

  • Value score: 3.5/5 

Garmin Epix Pro: Design and display

Garmin Epix Pro

(Image credit: Future / Matt Evans)
  • AMOLED screen is great
  • Satisfyingly premium-feeling
  • New information and torch well-integrated

The Garmin Epix Pro, like the Epix Gen 2 before it, is designed to be extremely robust while remaining attractive, even if it is very much a ‘rugged’ watch, and conforms to Garmin’s typical five-button conventions. A ‘light’ button at the top, when pressed and held down, activates a circular menu, at the top of which is the new torch functionality. ‘Up’ and ‘Down’ buttons allow you to call up and navigate your stack of widgets, providing a quick way to access your health information, and access other widgets such as your daily calendar, weather, and stock ticket.  On the other side of the watch is the ‘start/stop’ button, which provides quick access to your favorite workouts, and a ‘back’ button which can also be pressed to trigger a lap during an endurance exercise. You can also use the touchscreen to navigate the watch instead, if you feel so inclined.

If you’re familiar with Garmin watches, you’ll be able to jump in and get started straight away; and even if this is your first Garmin watch, the tried-and-tested design is pretty intuitive, and it won’t be long before using it becomes second nature. I’m glad, even all this time after Garmin incorporated touchscreen tech, that the buttons haven’t gone anywhere, as they’re infinitely easier to use mid-workout than fiddling around with the touchscreen. Gloved and wet workouts in particular, such as skiing, winter cycling and swimming, really benefit from button activations, and they’re essential on premium fitness tools – even Apple figured this one out, and implemented the Action Button on the Apple Watch Ultra. You can adjust the intensity and modes of the aforementioned new flashlight using either control method.

Moving on to the construction, the fiber-reinforced polymer shell and stainless steel back and bezel feel satisfyingly hefty without being a drag on my wrist. I like the 47mm Epix Pro as a size; I could really feel the huge Garmin Enduro 2 with its 51mm case during hour-long runs, never mind the endurance events it’s made for, so it’s nice to have a premium running watch from Garmin with the option of smaller sizes. The AMOLED screen operates really well in practice, although it’s virtually identical to the screen on the Epix Gen 2. It looks good, but still doesn’t have that butter-smooth refresh rate you get on Apple and Samsung wearables, as the emphasis is still on battery life and function rather than screen aesthetics.

This is only an iterative update in many ways, with the notable exception of the new flashlight. As on the Fenix 7X, this is incorporated at the top of the casing, facing outwards at 90 degrees from your hand. It’s a good design choice: when you raise your watch in the normal way, your flashlight is pointing forwards. Some brands use the watch face as a flashlight, which necessitates twisting your wrist at an awkward angle, or removing the watch entirely, to make use of it. 

The other new features, the Hill and Endurance scores, are integrated as you’d expect on the menu of widgets available on-watch, with the options now appearing on Garmin Connect, too. I love Garmin Connect – it could be designed to be a little more beginner-friendly in nature, but it’s by far the most comprehensive companion app around, is totally free, and comes with stacks of features, including pre-designed event training plans, advanced GPS tools, and helpful tips based on your watch’s readings. It’s half the reason I use Garmin watches day-to-day and blows competitors’ apps out of the water. 

  • Design score: 4.5/5 

Garmin Epix Pro: Features

Garmin Epix Pro

(Image credit: Future / Matt Evans)
  • All of Garmin’s usual smarts
  • New Hill and Endurance scores
  • Multiple flashlight options

I won’t be listing every feature the Garmin Epix Pro offers here due to the fact we covered so much of it in our original Garmin Epix (Gen 2) review, but suffice to say there’s some new stuff on offer. Topographical maps features now offer real-time weather information, and updated heart rate sensors are said to increase accuracy thanks to a new set of “spacially diverse optical sensors”, meaning they can cover more of what’s happening beneath your skin to provide a more accurate picture of your heart rate. 

The other new headline features are the flashlight and the two new software features: your Endurance score and Hill score. The Endurance score uses a variety of existing Garmin metrics, such as VO2 Max and training history, rolled into a single number to communicate how effective you’re likely to be at endurance exercises such as steady-state running or cycling. 

This is really useful for those training for distance events, as the individual metrics don’t quite communicate how ready you are to go the distance. I enjoyed getting to grips with mine, although I was disappointed by just how low my Endurance score actually was once generated – serves me right for taking a month off running!

Hill score is a little different, calculating how effective you are at running on inclines. Garmin says the Hill score is “calculated by using a combination of fitness and performance data. Higher scores indicate more skillful ascent running. Your score is also classified from recreational to elite, relative to others of the same age and gender, ensuring the progress you see is personally meaningful.” I love it as a feature; it’s eminently usable, and it’s even split into multiple sections – hill endurance, hill strength, and VO2 max – to help you understand how the hill score is calculated. 

The flashlight works in the same way as on the Garmin Fenix 7X Solar, with four intensities of white light, multiple flashing patterns for signaling, and an infrared red light that won’t dazzle, and which can be left on while you jog at night to keep you visible. I’m glad to see that it’s not just a single, solid LED light that’s been tacked on: real thought has been put into the use cases for this feature, and it works nicely as part of the overall package. 

Elsewhere, there are a load of features we’ve not yet talked about that come as standard on the Fenix and Epix chassis. To start with there are Garmin’s impressive GPS credentials, perhaps the best on any running watch, with the ability to create and run your own courses and view your route on the watch. PacePro, meanwhile, allows you to race against your previous times on these courses, charting your improvement in tangible ways. 

Then you have sleep scores, VO2 max, notification functionalities, music control, onboard music storage, estimated race prediction times, maps for thousands of golf courses and ski resorts… everything you’d expect from a premium multisport outdoors watch. Expedition mode allows you to use maps and set waypoints, leaving GPS on across multiple days and turning other sensors off to divert power to the features you need. It’s an all-in-one package that’s perfect for runners, riders, orienteers and every outdoors enthusiast who can afford it. 

  • Features score: 5/5 

Garmin Epix Pro: Performance

Garmin Epix Pro

(Image credit: Future / Matt Evans)
  • Battery performs as claimed
  • Hill score encouraged me to train in new ways
  • Maps a treat on AMOLED full-color screen

During my 30 days or so with the Garmin Epix Pro, I allowed the battery to drain all the way down twice. During that time I was wearing it near-constantly, training most nights of sleep and several runs a week. Each time, the battery lasted for around 11 days, which tracks quite well with Garmin’s claims. The 47mm Epix Pro I tested is said to last for 16 days, or 42 hours life in GPS mode; so with GPS running workouts draining the battery, 11 days means the Garmin Epix Pro lives up to expectations. 

The Epix Pro is a beast of a watch. Maps look great on the full-color AMOLED screen as you can see above, and I was able to create a simple 10K course on Garmin Connect and download it onto the watch, while TrackBack allows you to retrace your steps nicely. The GPS was highly accurate, comparable to within 0.2km of my Apple Watch Ultra, which I used as a baseline.

Most of my serious testing involved running, and just as expected, Garmin's metrics are best-in-class. Advanced running metrics include heart rate zones, running power (which used to require one of the best heart rate monitors to achieve), cadence in 'steps per minute', vertical oscillation, which tells you how much you bounce up and down while you run... I can't list them all here. But if you're a runner, this watch will tell you everything you could ever want to know. 

The new Hill and Endurance scores helped me change my training and challenge myself in new ways. As I hadn't been running long distances as much as I was during marathon prep (obviously), it was quite a shock at first to see how low my Endurance score had become, and it encouraged me to take the time to do less 5K runs and more long-distance work. As the evening wore on during my long run, I switched the flashlight to the duller 'red' mode to ensure I was clearly visible, while in no danger of dazzling cars.

Likewise, Hill score encouraged me to try hill-sprinting for the first time in a very long time, to try and build up my uphill power. Two very different kinds of training there, pairing together to help you achieve all-round improvement. 

The AMOLED screen was also a significant day-to-day improvement over the Fenix 7's dull MIP screen, especially when training at night. Even though it sacrifices battery life, the AMOLED screens on the Epix and Garmin Forerunner 265 offers far more visibility in dim light and darkness than the old MIP screens, even though they're easier on the eye and less 'screen-like' than the AMOLED option. 

  • Performance score: 5/5

Garmin Epix Pro: Scorecard

Garmin Epix Pro: Should I buy?

Buy it if...

Don't buy it if...

Garmin Epix Pro: Also consider

First reviewed: July 2023

Leakster: the iQOO 12 will use the OmniVision OV50H, a 1/1.28″ sensor
4:39 pm |

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

OmniVision announced the OV50H sensor at the beginning of this year, which is larger than the OV50A from a couple of years prior. And while there are plenty of phones with the OV50A, there are none with the OV50H – not yet. Leakster Digital Chat Station reports that the sensor will be featured on the iQOO 12 that is coming later this year. The OmniVision OV50H is a 1/1.28” sensor with 1.2µm pixels (compared to 1/1.55”, 1.0µm for the A version). This is the company’s first sensor with what it calls H/V QPD autofocus – unlike typical phase-detection AF systems, this one can detect changes in...

Leakster: the iQOO 12 will use the OmniVision OV50H, a 1/1.28″ sensor
4:39 pm |

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

OmniVision announced the OV50H sensor at the beginning of this year, which is larger than the OV50A from a couple of years prior. And while there are plenty of phones with the OV50A, there are none with the OV50H – not yet. Leakster Digital Chat Station reports that the sensor will be featured on the iQOO 12 that is coming later this year. The OmniVision OV50H is a 1/1.28” sensor with 1.2µm pixels (compared to 1/1.55”, 1.0µm for the A version). This is the company’s first sensor with what it calls H/V QPD autofocus – unlike typical phase-detection AF systems, this one can detect changes in...

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