Organizer
Gadget news
AMD announces new processors for desktops, laptops, and handheld gaming PCs
7:16 am | January 7, 2025

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

AMD today announced a variety of new CPU models during its CES 2025 presentation. The company also gave a brief glimpse of its upcoming desktop graphics as well as the next generation of FSR image upscaling. Starting with the CPUs, AMD announced two new Ryzen 9000 series desktop processors. The Ryzen 9 9950X3D and the Ryzen 9 9900X3D are variants of the 9950X and the 9900X but with the company’s 3D V-cache technology that provides higher gaming performance through a significantly larger cache size. Compared to the previous generation 7950X3D, AMD claims the 9950X3D provides on...

Samsung Galaxy S25: what to expect
4:02 am |

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

Samsung is coming off a strong year and will begin the new one with the launch of the new generation of Galaxy S phones – the S-series is a pillar for the company and its members rank among the best-selling Galaxy phones. The Galaxy S24 series outsold the S23 series by 28% in early 2024. The vanilla model accounted for 27% of S24 units sold, moving ahead of the S24+. The S24 outsold its predecessor, the Galaxy S23, by around 8%. Will the upcoming Samsung Galaxy S25 keep that momentum and become even more popular? There are some key improvements that will give it a boost. However, lack...

iPhone 17 to change an important design element
1:57 am |

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

The iPhone 17 family is now rumored to bring an interesting design change. According to a leaker over on Weibo, Apple has changed the way the frame connects to the back, and it's now "a slope rather than a step" - machine translation from Chinese says. This makes us think that the frame and glass will curve into each other on the back side, so the straight edges will be gone. That's undoubtedly a boon for in-hand feel. iPhone 16 Pro Unfortunately, the leaker who surfaced this information hasn't shared any more details so it's unclear if the design change will apply to all four...

Samsung Galaxy F16 5G runs Geekbench, reveals its chipset
12:01 am |

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

Samsung is working on the Galaxy F16 5G, as evidenced by a recent certification for sale in India by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS). Today the upcoming phone has been spotted in the Geekbench database since a prototype ran the benchmark. As usual, this reveals some specs. The Galaxy F16 5G is powered by the MediaTek Dimensity 6300 SoC, just like some versions of the Galaxy A16 5G which the F16 5G is very likely to be based upon, if we go by what happened in the past. The chipset was paired with 8GB of RAM in the prototype that ran the benchmark, but do note that the A16 5G is...

Two Oppo Reno13 F models announced, one 4G (Helio G100) and one 5G (Snapdragon 6 Gen 1)
10:31 pm | January 6, 2025

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

Days after the Reno13 and Reno13 Pro launched in India, Oppo is introducing two new models in the series – one 5G phone, one 4G, both marked with the letter F. They are nearly the same device, except for the different chipsets inside them. Oppo Reno13 F • Oppo Reno13 F 5G The Oppo Reno13 F 5G is powered by the Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 chipset, while its 4G sibling uses the Helio G100. Both are paired with LPDDR4X RAM (2,133MHz), 8/12GB in the case of the 5G phone, just 8GB for the 4G one. There is a more pronounced difference in storage, the 5G uses faster UFS 3.1 (128/256/512GB), while...

Samsung Galaxy S24 family receives third One UI 7 beta
9:14 pm |

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

Samsung has today started rolling out the third public beta build of One UI 7 based on Android 15 to the Galaxy S24, S24+, and S24 Ultra in Germany. Naturally, the rollout should extend to the other places where the beta program is available within the next few days. The new build brings with it the January 2025 security patch level, and also fixes a bunch of issues, like making vertical scrolling in the app drawer smoother. It fixes the MMS image saving issue in the Messages app, improves the closing of the Quick Panel to make it more responsive, makes the placement of the Now Bar better,...

Red Magic 10 Pro will soon be available in a new color called Lightspeed
8:01 pm |

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

The Red Magic 10 Pro launched back in November and today the brand has unveiled a new colorway for the device. It's called Lightspeed and as you can see from the images below, it's very white. Red Magic says this is a "striking" colorway, which "enhances the Red Magic 10 Pro's tradition of excellence bringing a bold new look with its dynamic, eye-catching design, adding a touch of flair to the powerful features that gamers love". Red Magic 10 Pro in Lightspeed You can get the Red Magic 10 Pro in Lightspeed with 12GB of RAM and 256GB of storage for $649 / €649 / £579. It will...

Red Magic 10 Pro will soon be available in a new color called Lightspeed
8:01 pm |

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

The Red Magic 10 Pro launched back in November and today the brand has unveiled a new colorway for the device. It's called Lightspeed and as you can see from the images below, it's very white. Red Magic says this is a "striking" colorway, which "enhances the Red Magic 10 Pro's tradition of excellence bringing a bold new look with its dynamic, eye-catching design, adding a touch of flair to the powerful features that gamers love". Red Magic 10 Pro in Lightspeed You can get the Red Magic 10 Pro in Lightspeed with 12GB of RAM and 256GB of storage for $649 / €649 / £579. It will...

Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active review: Too many corners cut
7:15 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Fitness Trackers Gadgets Health & Fitness | Tags: | Comments: Off

Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active: One-minute review

Writing this Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active review, I wasn’t exactly expecting it to hit our list of the best fitness trackers on the market — it’s startlingly cheap, designed for people who just need the fundamentals of health tracking. However I wasn’t expecting it to miss the mark so much.

Released as an even-more-affordable alternative to the already-affordable Xiaomi Smart Band 9, the Active model cuts the cost, as well as some corners, from that predecessor. However, it cuts so many corners that, like a really bad lapidarist, it leaves nothing left to appreciate.

Testing a cheap fitness tracker like this, you have to expect some compromises, but the Band 9 Active takes it too far. Many different health tracking metrics were easily proven wrong, with GPS reading poorly compared to data from our smartphone and heart rate information being laughably inaccurate. Calorie burn predictions were also dubious, unless I truly did only burn double-figure calories in an hour-long weights session.

One surprise exception was sleep tracking, which to me seemed vaguely reliable — at least, compared to distance or heart rate. If you just want a cheap and feature-sparse sleep tracker, this could be a valuable option.

Still, the Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active really struggles to prove itself as a useful health tracker given how ropey the testing results were. It fares a little better with its ‘smartwatch’ lifestyle functions as it was quick to send through notifications and let you control music.

It’s par for the course for fitness trackers to opt for offering a range of features, with the Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active trying to track loads of metrics and health considerations. However, it seems that Xiaomi’s focus on breadth over depth has resulted in a wearable that’s hard to recommend. If you want a fitness tracker that has all the good bits of the Band 9 Active and few of the issues, opt for the standard model or the bigger and pricier Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Pro.

The Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active being worn in a park.

(Image credit: Future)

Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active: Specifications

Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active: Price and availability

The Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active alongside the standard and Pro versions.

(Image credit: Future)
  • Costs $44.99 / £19.99 / AU$42.99
  • Cheaper alternative to Band 9
  • Released in October 2024

The Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active was unveiled in China in October 2024, alongside the Band 9 Pro, and was slowly rolled out globally over the subsequent months. It’s now available to buy in most countries globally including the US, UK and Australia.

You can buy the Band 9 Active for $44.99 / £19.99 / AU$42.99, so it’s an incredibly cheap fitness tracker — though you don’t need to know currency conversions to know that some folks get it cheaper than others. I found some significant price fluctuations on Amazon, with Australian shoppers on the retailer getting a variation of a few dollars depending on the color option, and UK buyers being shown prices literally twice as high as on Xiaomi’s own website! So shop around to find the best price.

That’s a roughly $15 / £15 / AU$20 drop in price compared to the Xiaomi Band 9, a healthy discount that means that the budget band will likely undercut the original one even when the middle child is on sale. The cost also roughly matches the Xiaomi Band 8 Active from last year.

There aren’t many cheap fitness trackers at this price bracket that bear mentioning, so the Active’s competitors are all (relatively) pricey alternatives like the other Smart Band 9 models and options from Samsung and Fitbit if you can find them reduced. More on competition later.

  • Value score: 4.5/5

Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active: Design

The Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active being worn in a park.

(Image credit: Future)
  • Display doesn't look great
  • Rectangular body plus strap
  • Fairly well protected against bumps and water

The Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active has a pretty utilitarian design. Its body measures 4.6 x 2.7 x 1cm and weighs 16.5g, so it’s pretty small, and it totes a 1.47-inch display with a 172 x 320 resolution.

The band is made of TPU, which feels like a rubbery plastic, and can be adjusted for a wide range of wrist sizes. You can pick up the Active in black, beige or light pink, and your choice is reflected in the band’s body and strap.

With a 5ATM water resistance, the watch can withstand submersion in water at up to 50 meters — however, there are no swim tracking modes on the band, making this a feature you won’t need to test.

The Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active being worn in a park.

(Image credit: Future)

I bumped and bashed the Band 9 Active a fair few times during testing and it didn’t show a mark — it’s a good pick for clumsy wearers. It’s also small enough that you can wear it to bed without it being too noticeable and annoying.

The display, frankly, doesn’t look great, but that’s what you’re getting for your low entry fee. You can put your own photos as your watchface too which is a nice touch, even if faces end up looking a little like old-school RuneScape characters.

  • Design score: 3/5

Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active: Performance

The Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active being worn in a park.

(Image credit: Future)
  • Many metrics seem inaccurate
  • Poor at pulling data from smartphone for GPS
  • 50 sports tracking modes in all

The Xiaomi Smart Band 9 offers about 50 different fitness tracking modes, roughly a third as many as its two siblings though all the basics are covered (and then a few). Before you remark about how many that is, bear in mind that not all fitness tracking modes are equal.

Basically all of the fitness modes track time and heart rate, and some throw GPS in on top — the reason you’d pick between different tracking modes is so it’ll show up as a different entry in your fitness log, and because you can set different workout goals for different activities.

For testing purposes I used outdoor running, outdoor cycling and strength, but the fill list includes everything from badminton and baseball to billiards and ‘back’ (back workouts, that is).

Unfortunately, they’re not great: most of the Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active’s fitness tracking features don’t work as they’re supposed to.

Here’s an example: one testing day I ran to my gym, which is usually 1.6km but the ‘outdoor running’ mode only recorded it as 1.4km. Then at the gym, I turned on ‘strength’ mode for my workout, and it told me I was at a low heart rate — despite the fact I hadn’t caught my breath after the run, and could feel my heart rate to be elevated.

The Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active being worn in a park.

(Image credit: Future)

The GPS issue is the most pronounced; multiple times during testing the watch wouldn’t report the full distance of a run or cycle (or, on one occasion, any distance at all, instead of the 4km I had cycled). From my testing, I seemed to lose on average 20% of the distance I actually traveled. It seems to be an issue with how the watch connects to your phone, as the Active only has Connected GPS (which utilizes your phone’s GPS, instead of having it built-in). I would have considered it being an issue with my phone, had I not tested the Band 9 Pro immediately before the Active.

The heart rate issue is also a shame — it’s one of the most important metrics that people use fitness trackers for, so the fact that it’s so obviously inaccurate is a real shame.

Now for a surprise: sleep tracking worked pretty well, surprisingly so given the rest of the performance. It was acccurate in terms of timing, even if I lay in bed reading before sleeping or remained prone for a while after waking up. It also offered basic-but-useful breakdowns of types of sleep (REM, deep, etc) as well as wake-up times and your resting heart rate (for however accurate that is…). If all you want out of a fitness tracker for is sleep tracking, this budget option might be alright.

  • Performance score: 2/5

Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active: Features

The Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active being worn in a park.

(Image credit: Future)
  • Mi Fitness app used on phone
  • Music playback, notification handling and more
  • 14-day battery life

Beyond the iffy fitness tracking options, the Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active more or less ticks all the feature boxes you’d expect for a cheap fitness tracker.

Through Bluetooth with your phone it can tell you the weather, control your music (well, skip, back a track and play/pause) and ping you with notifications. I recommend customizing which notifications get sent to your tracker, lest you want to be pinged every few minutes with the latest weather report.

The Band 9 Active connects to your phone via Bluetooth 5.3 and the connection was faultless during my testing — except, of course, for the weird GPS issue. You connect to the Mi Fitness app, which can bring you a few extra ways to use your band.

The main one (for me) is that it gives you more depth to examine your past workouts, with a rough GPS map and other metrics. You can also see the results of various metrics tracked via the watch like training load, stress, energy and your vitality score.

You can also use the app to customize your watch to a limited degree — like I said you can set a background photo or pick from a wide range of other displays. You can also tweak some settings of the fitness tracking metrics and set a password for the tracker.

Xiaomi cites the battery life for the Band 9 Active at being 18 days, or about two-and-a-half weeks. From my testing, I’d say you can reliably get two weeks of use out of the band before needing to charge it, but that extra four days may be a stretch if you’re not sparing with your use.

  • Performance score: 3.5/5

Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active: Scorecard

Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active: Should I buy?

The Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Active being worn in a park.

(Image credit: Future)

Buy it if...

You're only in it for sleep tracking
If you only want a sleep tracker, and don't care about other health features, then you'll find the Band 9 Active fit for purpose.

You don't care about health at all
Just want a way to control your music, see notifications and check on the weather from your wrist? Then the Band 9 Active is fine for you and you won't need to spend any more.

You want a simple user interface
The Band 9 Active strips some features from its siblings, but this makes it very simple to use for technophobes or seniors..View Deal

Don't buy it if...

Your budget goes any higher
For only a small price increase, you can buy the Smart Band 9 which is a lot better in every way.

You care about tracking heart rate, calories or location
I've already mentioned in detail how iffy the fitness tracking modes of the Band 9 Active are. Don't use it if you actually care about tracking your health.

Also consider

Xiaomi Smart Band 9

For only a small price increase, you can buy this fitness tracker which fixes all of the Active's problems, plus looks nicer and lasts for longer.

Read our full review

Fitbit Inspire 3

A few years of price cuts means that the Fitbit Inspire 3 is fairly affordable, though it'll still set you back the equivalent of several Band 9 Actives.

Read our full review

First reviewed: January 2025

Xiaomi Mix Flip 2 to bring a much larger battery, thinner and lighter body
7:04 pm |

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

We recently heard that Xiaomi's Mix Flip, its debut flip-style foldable, has been doing so well sales-wise that the company is planning to launch its successor early. The Mix Flip 2 was also said to be a major iteration and not just a small incremental upgrade, and today we finally have some details about that. According to a new rumor from a tipster over on X, the Mix Flip 2 will have a 5,600 to 5,700 mAh battery. Compared to the original Mix Flip's 4,780 mAh cell, that's a significant (and very welcome) improvement. Original Xiaomi Mix Flip The Flip 2 is also said to be both...

« Previous PageNext Page »