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NordVPN introduces its own eSIM service called Saily
10:10 am | January 12, 2024

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

The people behind NordVPN are launching an eSIM service, called Saily. It will provide digital eSIM cards to all users without the limitation of their own carrier, provided the smartphone does support the virtual SIM card feature. The service is still in beta; users can sign up for early access. The app will be officially launched later this year. According to Vykintas Maknickas, Head of product strategy at Nord Security, Saily will ensure users don't need to use public Wi-Fi networks that they are not comfortable with. Customers will be able to choose from “hundreds of countries...

Samsung Galaxy A14 5G’s Android 14-based One UI 6 update reaches Europe
8:45 am |

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

The Samsung Galaxy A14 5G received the Android 14-based One UI 6 update in India last November and the US a few days ago. Now, the update's rollout for the Galaxy A14 5G has expanded to Europe. The One UI 6 update for the Samsung Galaxy A14 5G has firmware version A146PXXU5CWL7 and requires a download of about 1.7GB. It likely comes with the December 2023 Android security patch instead of January 2024. Moreover, not all features Samsung mentioned in the changelog are available. Auto Blocker is one of the features not included. That said, if you live in Europe and are yet to receive...

Nothing Phone (2) will get much cheaper in India on January 14
5:41 am |

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

If you're in India and have been craving a Nothing Phone (2) but found its usual price too high, this will definitely be of interest to you. On January 14, as part of its Republic Day 2024 sale on Flipkart, Nothing will make its flagship device cheaper. The version with 8GB of RAM and 128GB of storage will be available for INR 34,999 during the sale period. This includes a INR 3,000 additional discount on exchange of eligible devices during the limited-time offer, and also includes a special INR 2,000 discount for customers using ICICI Bank cards. The phone went for INR 35,999 in...

Samsung Galaxy M14, F14, M04, and F04 get cheaper in India
2:58 am |

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

Samsung has made four budget devices cheaper in India. We're talking about the Galaxy M14, Galaxy F14, Galaxy M04, and Galaxy F04. We're assuming this means their successors might be launching soon, but if you don't care about that, you can now grab these for better prices than before. [#InlinePriceWidget, 12160, 1#] Let's start with the M14. It launched last March for INR 13,490 in its iteration with 4GB of RAM and 128GB of storage. This is now INR 12,490. A similar INR 1,000 price cut applies to the version with 6GB of RAM, which is down to INR 13,990 from INR...

Acer Helios Neo 16: a gaming laptop with style and substance at an affordable price
12:12 am |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Computing Gadgets Gaming Computers Gaming Laptops | Comments: Off

The Acer Helios Neo 16 is one of several gaming laptop offerings from Acer in 2024, and it's really worth paying attention to, from what I've experienced in my limited time. Though the chassis is mostly unchanged from last year's version, the specs and display have been upgraded in a way that makes a big difference.

From what I've seen of it so far, it's an impressive machine that features excellent components and port selection as well as a distinct design that instantly sets it apart from other affordable products in the gaming laptop market. It could easily be one of the best cheap gaming laptops or even the best gaming laptops in general.

Acer Helios Neo 16: Price and availability

The Acer Helios Neo 16 will be launching in the US in March 2024, with its price starting at $1,499.99 (around £1,180 / AU$2,250). While not completely a budget gaming laptop, it's a much more affordable option compared to most of its competition, as many gaming rigs tend to be priced in the thousands at least.

There hasn't been confirmation of availability in the UK or Australia as of yet, though it will almost be certainly released in other regions at some point. As we get closer to the release date, that information will be made available.

Acer Helios Neo 16: Design

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The Acer Helios Neo 16's design is similar to the 2023 Acer Predator Helios Neo 16, down to the text and decoration engraved on the back and the top of the chassis. The back of the laptop looks particularly striking with this clear plating over the metal engraved with Neo and other decorations around it.

There is one difference between the US version of the Helios Neo 16 and the models that will launch in other regions: the former won't have the cool lid design with engraved 'code'. However, the Helios Neo 18 model will have that in all regions it launches in. A bit disappointing, since it's such a unique feature, but the rest of the laptop is more than cool enough to compensate.

Though the Helios Neo 16 is a bit on the thicker and heavier side, thanks to its distinctive design it maintains an air of style and sleekness that few other cheaper options hit.

It has a great port selection that covers nearly any need and use you could have for this laptop. There's the USB Type-C and Type-A ports, an Ethernet port, HDMI, microSD, a combo jack, and more. The best part is that there are two USB ports for each type, a small but helpful feature that many other budget laptops lack.

The 16-inch QHD+ (2560 x 1600) display boasts an incredible 240Hz refresh rate and DCI-P3 100% color gamut, giving users options to expand the use of this gaming laptop to creative and editing work as well. OLED would have been a great addition, but it makes sense to omit it to keep costs down.

As a nice bonus, its RGB-lit keyboard is full-size, which is a boon for those like myself who prefer one with a number pad. The touchpad is solid and responsive, which is all I ask from it.

Acer Helios Neo 16: Performance

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Despite its affordable pricing, the Acer Helios Neo 16 sports some impressive specs. It features 14th-Gen CPUs and Nvidia RTX 4000-series GPUs, up to an Intel Core 9 14900HX and Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070. There's also the choice to configure this laptop with up to 32GB LPDDR5 RAM and 2TB PCIe 4 SSD in RAID 0 storage.

While we haven't had the chance to benchmark this machine yet to find out the true scale of its gaming performance, its specs should translate into some serious power. Meanwhile, the ventilation system sounds impressive on paper, with a cooling fan system, liquid metal thermal grease, and vector heat pipes. But we have to see it in action to determine how effective it is in keeping the Helios Neo 16 properly cool.

Acer Helios Neo 16: Early verdict

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The Acer Helios Neo 16 is one of my favorite gaming laptops to come out of CES 2024, because it sports excellent specs, a robust port selection, fantastic display, all packaged in one of the most eye-catching chassis designs around. The fact that it's a refresh of an existing product instead of a brand-new gaming laptop makes it even more surprising.

The price is easily the sweetest part of the Helios Neo 16, as affordably priced products in the gaming laptop market are unfortunately rare to come across, especially ones with current-gen specs.

Hopefully, its gaming and general performance will speak for itself once it comes time for more in-depth reviews.

Leaked Sony DualSense V2 controller has more than twice the battery life
11:39 pm | January 11, 2024

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

A DualSense V2 controller from Sony just popped up on Best Buy's official Canadian branch with product images and specs. And although the images reveal zero change in the design, the specs show a massive improvement in battery life. Sony DualSense V2 controller As per the specs listed, the DualSense V2 has 12 hours of autonomy, compared to the 5-hour battery life on the current generation DualSense controllers. The rest of the feature set remains unchanged - built-in mic, haptic triggers, headphone jack, touchpad, the whole lot. The controller's price is listed as CAD 90,...

Honor Magic V2 RSR Porsche Design is official with sporty look
10:02 pm |

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

Honor announced its partnership with Porsche Design last month and today we see the first product to come out of it. The special Honor Magic V2 RSR Porsche Design is a sportier take on the feather-light high-end foldable. The Honor Magic V2 RSR Porsche Design shares the hardware of the Magic V2 but it only comes in the top trim with 16GB of RAM and 1TB of storage. The exterior is vastly different, though. The Porsche Design V2 comes in the iconic Porsche Agate Grey and the body incorporates Porsche's signature "Flyline" - the way the company cars' roofline is sloping downward to the...

BMW i5’s AirConsole gaming review
8:52 pm |

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

Cars are getting smarter and smarter these days - large touchscreens, capable chipsets, more and more cameras - they even have batteries now. See where we're going? Cars, electric ones in particular, are becoming more and more like smartphones. And as that's happening, they've also become better and better integrated with our smartphones than ever before. Apple CarPlay and Android Auto have gone wireless and expand your phone of choice to your car's main screen. BMW is going even further with AirConsole. AirConsole is an integrated gaming platform that lives on the BMW i5 M60's...

Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown review – the refreshed prince
8:01 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Consoles & PC Gadgets Gaming | Comments: Off
Review info

Platform reviewed: PS5
Available on: Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, Xbox Series X|S, and PC
Release date: January 18, 2024

As soon as you wrap up Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown’s tutorial and get into the magical mountain where the meat of the game takes place, you’ll be hooked. This first hour or so is all movement, bouncing around to take the fight to the scores of undead that uneasily stride into your path in each room, and it’s hard not to fall in love with it. 

This is the new Prince of Persia, the same as the old Prince of Persia. The Lost Crown is a two-dimensional side-scrolling action game that takes that 1989 idea of the original Prince of Persia and infuses it with metroidvania sensibilities. The end result has the same intensity as its genre stablemates Dead Cells and Metroid Dread, but The Lost Crown is its own beast, with a kineticism that outstrips any other metroidvania I’ve ever played.

New hero Sargon pinballs around The Lost Crown’s open world as equal parts acrobat and dancer. Fights will often involve springing into a diving attack from a wall jump, knocking enemies up from the flagstones below, or parrying attacks with ease. 

Honestly, though, The Lost Crown is better in movement but flails a bit when it asks you to get stuck in with the combat. Luckily, you spend most of the time holding down the right trigger to sprint around, barely stopping to brutalize the infinitely respawning enemies dotted around the map. 

While there is some awkward friction, it’s hard not to see Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown as a bold and thoughtful blueprint for reinventing a franchise. While it’s not for this review to talk about the state of AAA game development, and I can’t claim to know how much Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown cost to make, it feels like it’s blazing a trail for a world where more experimental visions of your favorite games can be tried out, instead of rote retreading of games everyone is, secretly, a little bit bored of. 

Hail to the prince

Character fighting enemies in a forest

(Image credit: Ubisoft)

If you haven’t noticed yet, movement is the most satisfying part of Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown. Sargon is lithe and immediately has access to a full suite of movement-based abilities. From the very start of the game, he can wall jump, sprint, slide across cobbles, and sling himself through the sky, gripping metal rings and flag poles right out of the Super Nintendo classic Aladdin

You’ll unlock more abilities throughout the game; this is a metroidvania after all. But you never feel like you’re missing out in the way you do in games like Dying Light 2 or Mirror’s Edge Catalyst, where your movement is initially hampered. When you do get extra objects to help you get around, like a bow and arrow (mostly used for traversal and puzzle solving) or even air dashes, they feel like they’re adding layers to a fleshed-out set of skills rather than papering over glaringly obvious gaps that have been there since the start of the game.

Best bit:

Character traversing buildings while being shot at

(Image credit: Ubisoft)

Coming back to the openly derisive blacksmith god Kaheva after besting a particularly tough challenge they set for you, they go to call you a mortal again - as they have many times before - but then correct themselves, addressing you instead as warrior. It felt well earnt. 

Combat is similar in that you’re given access to a variety of different moves. Your repertoire of abilities will let you knock enemies into the air or off ledges, and while the base attack is that same dull three-hit combo (that can be expanded into four later in the game), you’ll often be moving around instead of fighting from a stationary position, so you’ll rarely notice.

The problem with fighting in The Lost Crown is more about impact. Even the lowliest minion can take a real beating, which feels at odds with how nimble you are. When it takes 10 hits to send even the most mediocre of enemies to the shadow realm, the rhythm of combat feels a little off. This isn’t as noticeable in the boss fights: those are supposed to be hard to fight. But when the game throws a handful of enemies at you in one of several scripted fights, it’s a real chore when even ostensibly human assassins are shrugging off repeated sword strikes.

Combat is brutal, too. Enemies hit hard, so dodging and parrying are essential if you don’t want to get turned into a meaty paste. I’m bad at melee combat games, so it’s potentially a skill issue, but I found parrying to have a brutally short window and pulling one off successfully can be incredibly frustrating. 

Upgrades - doled out by the titanic god Kaheva at her blacksmith or an old woman squatting in a tent - do little to make the combat feel punchier, and so I found the best option was just to avoid the fights as I explored. 

Time to kill

Character fighting giant lion-like enemy

(Image credit: Ubisoft)

Obviously, it’s a Prince of Persia game post 2003’s Sands of Time, so there’s a heavy time element. The story involves Sargon and his gang of ancient heroes wandering into a cursed mountain. There are no real surprises here, but the narrative is well-handled, and there are a few different side quests that encourage you to explore.

The aforementioned upgrade system is fairly by the numbers, with the addition of an amulet system that lets you pick up extra perks and slot them into empty sockets. More powerful amulets take up more sockets, and it can add a bit more customization to vary your playstyle. Personally, I was a big fan of an amulet that made every parry generate a little time bubble that slowed down enemies within it. I sucked at parrying, but it made parrying so valuable in encounters where you were getting swarmed that it made it worth trying to pull them off again and again. 

Accessibility Features

Accessibility features for Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown

(Image credit: Ubisoft)

There's a wealth of accessibility options here. The option of a high contrast mode or subtitles (with several settings for font size and opaque backgrounds) feel well implemented and will greet you on first start up.

However, there's a host of toggles to change play, too.  Options to make tough platform sections skippable and combat easier will allow people to customise their play experience. Auto-aim can be adjusted, and assistance for targetting enemies in melee is also available.

My most memorable moments with Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown aren’t the story or the combat but the platforming puzzles of jumping through spinning buzzsaws and skipping like a stone through chambers filled with puddles of poison, whirling blades, and hordes of enemies. That dizzying sense of speed is the unique thing that The Lost Crown brings to the metroidvania genre though, and it’s something that will keep me coming back to it again and again.  

For more thrilling titles just like this one, check out the best single-player games and the best story games that are all available to play right now.

Honor Magic6 series debut with Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, up to 1TB storage and 180MP periscope
7:56 pm |

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

Honor’s flagship smartphones for 2024 are all about pushing the envelope in terms of hardware. Honor Magic6 and Magic6 Pro feature Qualcomm’s flagship Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chip, vivid LTPO OLED displays and impressive triple cameras headlined by a 180MP periscope on the Pro variant. Magic6 and 6 Pro are equipped with 6.8-inch curved LTPO AMOLEDs with 1,264 x 2,800px resolution and a variable 1-120Hz refresh rate. Honor is touting 1,800 nits of peak brightness in auto mode and up to a whopping 5,000 (five-thousand!) nits of local peak brightness for HDR content. Honor Magic6 and...

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