Organizer
Gadget news
Tata buys Pegatron’s iPhone making plant in India
1:57 am | January 25, 2025

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

Tata Electronics has acquired a 60% stake in Pegatron's iPhone manufacturing plant in India. Back in March last year, Tata also bought Wistron's operations in India, so it's clearly serious about becoming a big player in electronics manufacturing in India. The acquisition of the controlling stake in Pegatron Technology India has been cleared by the Competition Commission of India. Following the acquisition, Pegatron India will undergo a rebranding to align with the new ownership structure. Tata has already been operating an iPhone assembly plant in Karnataka, acquired via the...

Google Identity Check will help protect your accounts in case of device theft
12:02 am |

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

Last year, Google introduced several theft protection features for Android, including Theft Detection Lock, Offline Device Lock and Remote Lock. Identity Check is the latest security feature that aims to prevent thieves from accessing your digital accounts in case of theft. The feature will require biometric authentication for certain device settings when you are not in a trusted location. If your device is outside one of these locations, you will need to authenticate using your biometrics. This will prevent thieves from changing your device PIN, biometrics, turning off Find My Device,...

vivo X200 review
10:08 pm | January 24, 2025

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

Samsung Galaxy S25 series coverage wrap-up
10:02 pm |

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

Samsung delivered the hotly-anticipated Galaxy S25 phones this week, along with a couple of surprises – it resurrected the “Edge” branding and it is going back into VR (well, it’s XR now). We will start with the trio of phones, the Samsung Galaxy S25, S25+ and S25 Ultra. Below we’ve linked all relevant info for them: specs, comparisons, prices, our hands-on review and even a camera shootout between the S25 Ultra and last year’s Ultra. Below that is a list of other relevant links – we’ve put the Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge at the top. Long story short, there are no curved screen edges here,...

Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 review: a well-rounded portable laser projector with Google TV
10:00 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets Home Theater Projectors Televisions | Tags: | Comments: Off

Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22: One minute review

Epson’s smaller, portable EpiqVision home projector models were long overdue for an update, and that’s just what it has done with the Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22. This introduces the tilting, swiveling stand design that’s proven so popular with many other recent projectors, and it packs in Google TV for streaming, which helps bring the EpiqVision Mini EF22 closer to parity with its competition. Add in a pair of stereo speakers and the EpiqVision Mini EF22 proves an effective all-in-one system.

The Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 beams a laser through its 3LCD projection system, providing respectable brightness near 1,000 lumens. It makes for a decent picture, though it doesn’t manage quite the exciting color gamut of triple-laser options like the JMGO N1S Pro. Its 1080p resolution will also have you sticking to smaller projection sizes than you might otherwise opt for with the best 4K projectors like the BenQ X300G or even the older Xgimi Horizon Pro.

While the EpiqVision Mini EF22 is a simple and effective little home theater projector selling for a reasonable $999, it struggles to contend with the market it’s entering. Not only are there many great new projectors in the $1000-$2000 range but there’s also a sea of slightly older models that have come down in price. It’s a good projector, but I’m hard-pressed to find a reason to choose it over the alternatives. I’d snag myself a BenQ X300G or Xgimi Horizon Pro instead, both of which have been seeing some impossible-to-ignore discounts.

Epson EF-22 projector on table with remote

(Image credit: Future)

Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 review: Specs

Epson EF-22 projector on table

The JMGO N1S Pro 4K delivered strong picture quality across the board (Image credit: Future)

Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 review: Prices & release date

  • Release date: October 2024
  • Price: $999

The Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 launched in late 2024 with a starting price of $999 (£799, AU$1,599). It has seen some discounts since then, though these tend to come and go. The EpiqVision Mini EF22 comes in a variety of colors, giving you more options. You can find it in Stone Blue, Opal Green, Quartz Rose, Onyx Black, and Diamond White.

Epson EF-22 projector on table

(Image credit: Future)

Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 review: Design & features

  • Built-in stand makes setup easy
  • Google TV and automatic image adjustments
  • Built-in 2x 5W stereo speakers

Like many of the new consumer projectors in 2024, the Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 comes with a stand built in. This makes it easy to adjust the vertical tilt and horizontal angle of the projector, even supporting vertical projection up toward the ceiling. This provides a simpler setup, though anything but a perfectly lined-up projection will result in some digital corrections that detract from the usable image.

The EpiqVision Mini EF22 makes automatic vertical and horizontal keystone adjustments very quickly, letting you shift the projector around and see the image change shape in real time. It’s also quick to focus automatically. It has an optional setting to avoid obstacles when projecting, and this proves effective, but it is a slower process than the other automatic corrections, taking a few seconds. The EpiqVision Mini EF22 rounds out its smart projection features with eye protection that dims the projector when it detects someone in front of it.

The Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 is plenty compact, proving not dramatically different in size from the JGMO N1S I recently tested. That said, projectors can certainly come smaller, as LG showed with the LG CineBeam Q. It’s hard to have small projectors get very bright or offer solid audio, though, and those aren’t sacrifices the EpiqVision Mini EF22 made. It features stereo speakers and is rated to hit 1,000 ISO lumens. It also comes with Google TV. Unfortunately, Epson didn’t make the most of the projector’s size, as it opted to include just one HDMI port (with ARC), a USB-A port, and a 3.5mm audio output jack. It’s providing options, but not many. The focus of the EpiqVision Mini EF22 really is on being a standalone device that doesn’t call for external connections.

The Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 comes with a simple remote. It’s all plastic with rubber buttons and nothing too elegant, but it’s effective. It has simple navigation controls, a Google Assistant button, a shortcut to the HDMI input (making the input selection button a bit redundant), dedicated volume and brightness controls, and shortcuts for projection settings, auto-focus, as well as YouTube, Netflix, and Prime Video. None of the buttons have backlighting, making it a bit hard to use in the dark, but at least some of the buttons are white, and it’s easy enough to feel out the volume buttons.

  • Design & features score: 4/5

Epson EF-22 showing image of animated movie with toys

The JMGO N1S Pro 4K's picture is at its best with bright and colorful images (Image credit: Future)

Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 review: Picture & sound quality

  • Decent brightness
  • No unsightly motion smoothing
  • Color could use a boost

The Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 provides an overall good-looking image, but it’s not the most impressive I've seen in this projector category. While natural content looks solid, with the projector offering a great presentation for Dune, it can struggle elsewhere. In the extremely colorful Mind Game, it didn’t keep up with some of the triple-laser options on the market, like the JMGO N1S, and I noticed some banding in color gradients. That said, the 3LCD technology avoids some of the unsightly swimming-pixel artifacts I’ve seen from DLP projectors displaying large monotone regions, as well as DLP rainbow artifacts.

The EpiqVision Mini EF22 doesn’t keep up with some of its 4K competition either. BenQ’s X300G may have originally been much more expensive, but it’s come down considerably in price, and it has the chops to really threaten the EpiqVision Mini EF22.

I took a rough measurement to overall brightness in the Dynamic profile, which achieved 959 lumens with an ANSI test pattern and a matte white screen. There again, it’s just decent. Competitors like the Dangbei Atom and JGMO N1S offer as much, and slightly more expensive options from BenQ and JMGO take it to another level.

Gaming on the Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22, I found the projector added considerable latency if it had any sort of processing going on (i.e., keystone correction or digital zoom). With these disabled, the projector still had a tangible delay between actions and on-screen effects, but it wasn’t significant enough to slow me down as I worked my way through numerous encounters in Hades. Oddly enough, there’s no specific picture profile for gaming that would disable the projector's processing automatically, so you’ll have to manage these settings on your own.

With two speakers on the rear of the EpiqVision Mini EF22, it works reasonably well whether you set the projector up in front of you or at the back of the room. They provide a bit of stereo separation, which adds a touch of depth, though they’re no substitute for a dedicated audio system. They get reasonably loud for a small, quiet room, but the sound gets a bit muddled at higher volumes, making it hard to pick out everything that’s going on in a song, for example. You’ll get clear enough mids and a bit of bass, but higher frequencies tend to suffer when the volume is cranked.

To the EF22’s credit, it doesn’t mess around with any unsightly motion smoothing. Right from the jump, it provides good, clear motion.

  • Picture and sound quality score: 3/5

Epson EF-22 projector on table closeup of lens

(Image credit: Future)

Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 review: Value

  • Effective all-in-one package
  • Comes up short next to the competition

The Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 puts plenty into one package. It’s a decent projector, providing a bright image that can handle impromptu movie nights or let you settle in to binge the next hot series, as long as you turn the lights off. With Google TV, it’s ready to stream a great variety of content with no external sources. And it packs in a good enough set of speakers to make do in quiet, intimate viewing conditions. The built-in stand also proves helpful, making it that much easier to set up in various places without the need to stack up a pile of books or go buy a separate stand.

The biggest thing holding the EpiqVision Mini EF22 back in the value department is the competition it faces. You can get much brighter projectors and ones that offer 4K or provide more vivid color for the same price or just a little more. Compared to these, the EpiqVision Mini EF22 ends up feeling lacking.

  • Value score: 3/5

Epson EF-22 projector on table pointing at ceiling

The JMGO N1S Pro 4K comes in a styrofoam carry case. Although portable, it is on the weightier side (Image credit: Future)

Should I buy the Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22?

Buy it if...

You want a simple all-in-one: The Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 is easy to set up and easy to use. It has the streaming platform, speakers, stand, and display all covered. It performs decently in each department as well, giving you a reasonably well-rounded experience.View Deal

You can’t stand DLP rainbow artifact and dithering: Epson’s 3LCD projection technology gets around a couple visual artifacts that often impact DLP projectors. If you see rainbows or are distracted by weird pixel movement when watching DLP projection, you may prefer the look of Epson’s projector. View Deal

You can’t stand motion smoothing: The Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 doesn’t mess around with motion smoothing at all. While most projectors I test have it enabled by default, forcing you to turn it off manually, the EF22 lets you avoid it entirely. View Deal

Don't buy it if...

You can’t control ambient lighting: Projection at 1,000 lumens is decently bright and can work in a dim or dark room. But if you can’t close the blinds and dim the lights, it won’t be enough for a bright room.View Deal

You’re a big gamer: The Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 has no optimizations for gaming. It requires all of its image adaptations to be disabled to avoid serious input latency, and even then the latency is perceptible. There are much better gaming projector options, like the BenQ X300G.View Deal

You plan on setting it up with more home theater gear: A key aspect of the Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 is its all-in-one nature. It’s well-rounded, but not exceptional in any one area. If you’re planning on pairing your projector with separate speakers and video sources, you may as well go with one that goes more all-in on visuals (and one that has more useful ports).View Deal

Also consider

JMGO N1S Pro

The JMGO N1S Pro costs twice as much, but its tri-laser projection system is brighter and way more colorful. If you can tolerate DLP artifacts, it makes for a great alternative with more stunning visuals.

Read our JMGO N1S Pro reviewView Deal

LG CineBeam Q 4K Projector

The LG CineBeam Q gets you upgrades in color quality and resolution thanks to its 4K, triple-laser projection system. It’s also tiny, making it far more portable. But it sacrifices brightness and audio for its size.

Read our full LG CineBeam Q reviewView Deal

BenQ X300G

While this projector might have a high MSRP, it’s recently seen its price reduced to become incredibly competitive. It’s much brighter and offers 4K visuals and gaming enhancements. If you can live without the built-in stand of the Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22, strongly consider this one instead.

Read our full BenQ X300G reviewView Deal

Epson EF-22 projector Google TV interface

(Image credit: Future)

How I tested the Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22

  • Tested at home in multiple, real-world viewing conditions
  • Presented the display with a variety of media and formats
  • I have tested numerous projectors and displays over the last half-decade

I tested the Epson EpiqVision Mini EF22 at home, in real-world conditions. This saw it faced with ambient light coming in from numerous windows, in-room lighting, as well as ambient noise that both the projector and speaker systems had to overcome. The projector was tested both against a bare, white wall and an Akia Screens CineWhite screen. It was presented with streamed content, HDR and non-HDR, and PC gameplay.

My testing evaluates the projector’s performance concerning its price and competition from other models that I and my colleagues at TechRadar have tested.

I have been testing projectors since 2021 and displays for even longer.

Xiaomi 15 Ultra leaks in hands-on image
8:37 pm |

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

Xiaomi's upcoming 15 Ultra is getting a global release just like its predecessor, an exec recently confirmed. The phone will be made official next month at the earliest, and ahead of that today it's time to see it in a live hands-on image for the first time. A tipster on X has shared the image you can see below, purportedly depicting the Xiaomi 15 Ultra's back in all its glory. The camera island is huge like it was in the Xiaomi 14 Ultra, but the sensors, LED flash array, and Leica branding all occupy new spots. The frame also seems to have been redesigned as to not flow into the...

Garmin Instinct 3 review: Instinctively a winning fitness watch
8:01 pm |

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

Garmin Instinct 3: One minute review

I know the Garmin Instinct 3 has a lot to live up to. After all, the Garmin Instinct 2 received a rare, coveted five stars in our official review. With a variety of sizes (from 40mm to the Instinct 2X Solar at 50mm), solar-powered and non-solar versions, a smorgasbord of fun colorways, and – my personal favorite – a hybrid Garmin Instinct Crossover, there truly was an Instinct 2 for everyone.

The Instinct 3 runs along very much the same lines, with a selection of cool colorways, a variety of sizes, and two key screen options. The smallest 40mm size is called the Instinct E, and is most reminiscent of the Instinct 2: there’s only the MIP (Memory in Pixel) option with no solar charging and no flashlight. In 45mm and 50mm sizes, you can choose between a bright, smartwatch AMOLED screen and a classic Garmin MIP screen equipped with Garmin’s Power Glass solar charge technology, offering ‘unlimited’ battery life in bright enough conditions, if you’re out and about with it exposed to sunlight for several hours.

It only really makes a big difference during endurance exercise on sunny days, when it can slow down the GPS mode’s drain on the battery life, but it’s nice to have. We got the AMOLED 45mm version to test in its cool, minty Neotropic colorway, but I do have a soft spot for the digital watch-esque MIP screens that the best Garmin watches used to use as standard. As is, this feels more like a Garmin Forerunner 265, with limited map capabilities, although the case design is still stereotypically Instinct.

The Instinct series has never offered the full-color topographical maps more premium watches in Garmin’s range have, and I was wondering if the AMOLED screen meant we’d finally see topographical maps on an Instinct, but there are no maps or touchscreen here. I suppose Garmin has to distinguish between the ranges and keep the Instinct’s price down somehow.

The Instinct 3 has handled all my training with accuracy, and was as intuitive to use as the Instinct 2. It was easy for me to replace my daily Instinct Crossover with this with barely three minutes of setup, seamlessly taking over with my sleep tracking, Body Battery and Training Readiness scores from my old watch.

Overall? As a pre-existing Instinct fan, I love it. It’s fast, it’s bright, it looks fun, and most importantly, it’s useful. Yes, it’s chunky and plasticky, and if you don’t like the old design, you won’t like this one either. But it’s not a sleek metal communications tool: it’s a toy, and it’s best played with outside.

Garmin Instinct 3: Price and availability

Garmin Instinct 3 hands-on

(Image credit: Future / Stephen Warwick)
  • Instinct E starts at $299 / £259 / AU$549
  • 45mm Instinct 3 starts at $399 / £349 / AU$829.
  • 50mm Instinct 3 starts at $449 / £429 / AU$929

The Garmin Instinct 3 is available now on Garmin’s website and other retailers, slightly confusingly with five different prices, depending on which model you pick.

The cheapest Instinct E is available now for $299 / £259 / AU$549. The 45mm watch starts at $399 / £349 / AU$729 for the MIP Solar screen, rising to $449 / £389 / AU$829 for the AMOLED screen option. The largest 50mm watch with MIP Solar screen is available from $449 / £429 / AU$829, rising to $499 / £449 / AU$929 for the AMOLED screen option.

It’s cheaper than most Forerunners and Fenix watches, although it does make up for this by using less premium materials and skipping some premium software features. Overall a good value package, but not ludicrously so, especially compared to some of Polar and Coros' cheaper offerings. You won't be disappointed by the price, but it's not quite a steal.

  • Value score: 4/5

Garmin Instinct 3: Specifications

Garmin Instinct 3 hands-on

(Image credit: Future / Stephen Warwick)

Below are the specifications for our review unit, the 45mm AMOLED Instinct 3.

Garmin Instinct 3: Design

Garmin Instinct 3 in Neotropic Green with torch lit

(Image credit: Future / Matt Evans)
  • Chunky polymer casing
  • Choice of screens
  • Intuitive, unchanged Garmin layout

The Instinct 3 builds closely on the design legacy of the Garmin Instinct 2, and the casing looks mostly the same. It’s got loads of colors, it’s roughly the same thickness, roughly the same weight (with just a gram of difference between the 45mm Instinct 3 versus the 45mm Instinct 2), and it’s still got five buttons and similar bezel indentations. The main differences are the metal accents, the new AMOLED screen option, and the flashlight, neither of the latter are available on the smallest Instinct E.

The new AMOLED screen is clear and bright, although it's not a touchscreen. I like the default watch face layout, although this is easily changed, and navigating around the watch with the five-button control interface is intuitive for me (a regular Garmin user) even if my Apple Watch-wearing fitness writer, Stephen Warwick, was offended at the lack of touchscreen.

While Garmin’s Forerunner, Venu and Fenix watches have adopted the hybrid of buttons and touchscreen, it’s another feature missing from the AMOLED Instinct 3 to keep it affordable. The same could be said of the chunky ‘fiber-reinforced polymer’ (read that as ‘thick plastic’) casing, with slim metal accents the only thing separating it from being too childish for some users. Metal screws give it a rugged edge.

Functionally, the heart rate and skin temperature sensor array have not been given a slight upgrade, with the watch still sporting the Elevate Gen 4 heart rate sensor instead of the more accurate Gen 5. Garmin should really have included the up-to-date sensor, even if it skimped on a couple of premium software features. The universal Garmin proprietary charger remains the same, only with a newer USB-C cable instead of USB-A, as is standard with most Garmins now.

  • Design score: 4.5/5

Garmin Instinct 3: Features

Garmin Instinct 3 in Neotropic Green

(Image credit: Future / Matt Evans)
  • Almost all of Garmin’s wellness features
  • New torch is useful
  • Basic directional maps

For the uninitiated, opening a Garmin watch and scrolling down with the ‘down’ button provides a list of wellness, navigational, and quality-of-life widgets. Outdoor-focused widgets range from the weather, sunrise and sunset times, and a compass shortcut to your sleep tracking information. Wellness stuff includes your last completed workout, sleep, Body Battery and your Training Readiness score. As a watch tailored to the great outdoors, all the functionalities you expect can be found here and the list can be customized as usual to suit your needs. Climbing a mountain? Stick the altimeter at the top. A keen marathon runner? Choose the ‘Race Calendar’ widget.

It’s fun, intuitive and acts like the watchOS 11 widget stack, but less flashy. I found most of the usual Garmin stuff there, but some premium features like Endurance Score and Hill Score were missing. They would have been nice to have. As previously mentioned, there’s no topographical maps functionality either, just basic directional guidance, but there have never been maps on an Instinct watch, and most of the time directions are all you need. You can, however, still retrace your steps with the ‘TracBack’ feature, along with a slew of other navigational tools.

Hardware-wise, the new torch is very useful: it comes in four intensities and a less dazzling red option, just like the torch on the Garmin Fenix 8. I’ve already used the red light on an evening run and the white light to help me stumble my way to the bathroom at six am. In the morning, you’ll get a daily digest, Garmin’s ‘Morning Report’ detailing information on your sleep, the weather, your Training Readiness, and a motivational message. Garmin’s been doing this for a while and it’s refined the feature over the last couple of years. Its long battery life means you won’t shy away from wearing it to bed.

  • Features score: 4.5/5

Garmin Instinct 3: Performance

Garmin instinct 3 in neotropic green on wrist

(Image credit: Future)
  • Superb battery life
  • Navigational features fine
  • Comparable to other Garmins

The bottom line is, if you’ve used another Garmin, this will all be very familiar. There’s no reinventing the wheel here, and as I’m trying to review the watch in a vacuum, I can’t really dock points for lack of innovation. It’s a superb running and walking watch, with lots of features at a reasonable price point.

Heart rate tracking doesn’t betray any major inaccuracies compared to pace and cadence of runs and walks, even though it uses the older sensor. It showed comparable statistics to the Apple Watch Ultra 2. it’s got a serviceable strength training mode most people won’t bother with, and will even track other outdoor disciplines such as surfs with GPS information, including travel speed and estimated number of waves caught.

All of Garmin’s outdoor-focused features are clear and present here, and the AMOLED screen offers a similar experience to the Garmin Forerunner 265 and 965: intuitive to navigate with the buttons, even with gloves on, and the widget list is easy to customize. I tried TracBack on one long run, and that worked fine even without maps, helping me retrace my steps easily enough. Even the screens viewed during exercise are customizable, not just the home menu of widgets.

The battery life is really good, far outperforming many other running watches in its price bracket, with the exception of Coros. The AMOLED 45mm Instinct doesn’t reach Coros’ 24-day heights, but its listed 18-day battery life was accurate based on my testing period. I occasionally used the torch indoors and outdoors at night and found it bright enough for my needs, but not as bright as the Epix Pro (Gen 2)’s more powerful, similar torch.

  • Performance score: 5/5

Garmin Instinct 3: Scorecard

Garmin Instinct 3: Should I buy?

Buy it if...

You exercise outdoors
This is an excellent adventure watch for running, cycling, hiking, surfing and more.

You don’t own an up-to-date Garmin watch
It’s a good buy for those without a Garmin already, as it’s a quintessential Garmin experience at a lower buy-in than a Forerunner or Fenix watch.

You don’t care about maps
Don’t need full-color, GPS, topographical maps, and happy with a little arrow offering directions instead? You’ll be fine with the Instinct 3.

Don't buy it if...

You're a heavy metal fan
The Garmin Instinct 3’s polymer casing is rugged and durable, but can feel a bit plasticky compared to metallic watches.

You want a smartwatch experience
This is very much a fitness watch, first and foremost. Those looking to use third-party apps to their fullest extent or answer emails should look elsewhere. View Deal

You’re a gym bunny
Predominantly workout indoors? The Garmin Instinct 3 has little to offer you in comparison to an Apple or Samsung Watch. View Deal

Also consider

Coros Pace 3

The best value running watch, and an excellent Garmin alternative.

Read our full review

Garmin Fenix 8

The best premium Garmin, with all the features missing from the Instinct series.

Read our full review

How I tested the Garmin Instinct 3

Garmin instinct 3 in neotropic green on wrist

(Image credit: Future)

I wore the Garmin Instinct 3 during strength training workouts, boxing workouts, runs and even went surfing with it. I tested its TracBack features on a long out-and-back run, checked its heart rate readings against an Apple Watch Ultra, and ran the battery down over 16 days of use.

First reviewed: January 2025

Honor trolls Samsung
7:21 pm |

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

Samsung unveiled the Galaxy S25, Galaxy S25+, and Galaxy S25 Ultra a couple of days ago during its grand Unpacked event, and today one of its competitors has reacted to the news - a bit later than we're used to, but still. We're talking about Honor. The brand chose to troll Samsung with an X post about unboxing a series of accessories, implying that the accessories would be needed in order to make it Samsung's best year yet. Or something like that. See for yourself in the video below: No true companion is complete without these... ... or just use an HONOR Magic7 Pro.#HONORMagic7...

Rokform debuts Rugged Case for Samsung Galaxy S25 phone lineup
6:00 pm |

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

Rokform, an established maker of premium mobile device cases and accessories, has debuted its Rugged Case for the new Samsung Galaxy S25 phone lineup, including the S25 Ultra, S25 Plus, and S25. The Rugged Case offers military-grade drop protection in a sleek, lightweight design. Unique to the Rugged Case design is three sets of N52 neodymium magnets, which enables it to easily mount to any magnetic surface in any orientation — an especially useful feature for gym-goers, first responders, and military. The case also features easy-press buttons and textured grips for reliable control, even...

Asus ROG Phone 9 FE’s specs and images surface
4:33 pm |

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

Asus unveiled the ROG Phone 9 and ROG Phone 9 Pro last November, and we recently learned that the Taiwanese brand is planning to launch an FE model, which has been certified in multiple countries. While Asus is yet to divulge anything about the ROG Phone 9 FE, its images and specs have surfaced online, leaving little to the imagination. The Asus ROG Phone 9 FE looks similar to the ROG Phone 9 Pro, and the source says it will be available in Phantom Black color at least. It will be 8.9 mm thick, weigh 225 g, and come with AirTrigger controls. Asus ROG Phone 9 FE's leaked...

« Previous PageNext Page »