Huawei បញ្ចេញផាប្លេតស៊េរីថ្មី ដែលមានសមត្ថភាពអស្ចារ្យ ទាំងអេក្រង់ និងកំលាំងម៉ាស៊ីន!
Huawei បញ្ចេញផាប្លេតស៊េរីថ្មី ដែលមានសមត្ថភាពអស្ចារ្យ ទាំងអេក្រង់ និងកំលាំងម៉ាស៊ីន!
នេះជាផាប្លេតស៊េរីថ្មីមួយ របស់ Huawei ដែលទើបប្រកាសជាផ្លូវការ ហើយវាមានឈ្មោះថា Honor V8 ដែលមានអេក្រង់ទំហំ 5.7 អ៊ីង, អាចបង្ហាញរូបភាពដល់កម្រិតច្បាស់ 1440 x 2560 QHD និងប្រើប្រាស់បន្ទះឈីប Kirin 950 SoC ជាមួយស៊ីភីយូ 8 គ្រាប់ ថែមទាំងរ៉េមទំហំ 4GB ប្រភេទ LPDDR4 ។ មានជម្រើសអង្គផ្ទុកទិន្នន័យ 32GB, 64GB និង 128GB ថែមទាំងអាចបន្ថែមមេម៉ូរីក្រៅបានទៀតផង។
ផាប្លេតនេះមានកាមេរ៉ាក្រោយចំនួន 2 ទំហំ 12 មេហ្គាភិចសែល អាចថតរូបភាពបានជាលក្ខណៈ 360 ឌឺក្រេ, កាមេរ៉ាមុខទំហំ 8 មេហ្គាភិចសែល, មានសេនស៊ឺស្គេនម្រាមដៃ, មានថាមពលថ្មទំហំ 3500mAh និងមានបច្ចេកវិទ្យាសាកបញ្ចូលថ្មរហ័ស។ ផាប្លេតនេះក៏មានប្រើប្រាស់រន្ធ USB Type-C, បច្ចេកវិទ្យា NFC, Huawei Pay, ដំនើរការប្រព័ន្ធប្រតិបត្តិការ Android 6.0 អមជាមួយ EMUI 4.1។ ចំពោះតម្លៃលក់លើទីផ្សារប្រទសក្រៅ សម្រាប់អង្គផ្ទុកទិន្នន័យ 32GB តម្លៃ 384 ដុល្លារ, សម្រាប់អង្គផ្ទុកទិន្នន័យ 64GB តម្លៃ 430 ដុល្លារ និងសម្រាប់អង្គផ្ទុកទិន្នន័យ 128GB មិនទាន់មានបញ្ជាក់ពីតម្លៃនៅឡើយទេ។
នេះពិតជាផាប្លេតមួយ ដែលមានតម្លៃធូរថ្លៃ ហើយសមត្ថភាពវិញ មិនធម្មតាអាចតតាំងជាមួយស្មាតហ្វូនកំពូលៗរបស់ស្មាតហ្វូន ឬផាប្លេតដទៃបាន ស្របជាមួយតម្លៃប៉ុណ្ណេះពិតជាល្អ តែបើលក់នៅក្នុងស្រុកយើង អាចមានតម្លៃថ្លៃជាងនេះបន្តិច។
About the Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge
About the Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge
About the Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge
Announced 21st of February 2016, meet the new flagship smartphone from Samsung... The Samsung Galaxy S7 & S7 Edge have a new design crafted from the finest metal and glass with an awesome 5.5-inch quad-HD display for the S7 Edge variant. Photos never looked more beautiful with the new and improved 12MP camera, starting from scratch the photo and video capture has been completely redesigned with a f/1.7 lense. Use your handset for longer with a Li-Ion 3000 mAh battery. An octa-core processor means your experience on the Android Marshmallow 6.0 OS is an excellent one with no lag, no matter how many apps you have open!
GENERAL | GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100 HSDPA 850 / 900 / LTE |
PHYSICAL | 150.9mm x 72.6mm x 7.7mm mm |
OS | Android, Android OS, v 6.0 (Marshmallow) |
DISPLAY | 5.5 inches (~76.1% screen-to-body ratio), Quad-HD - 1440 x 2560 pixels (~534 ppi pixel densi |
PROCESSOR | Exynos 8890 Octa |
INTERNAL MEMORY | 32GB with 4GB of RAM |
EXTERNAL MEMORY | microSD, up to 200 GB |
DATA SPEED | HSPA 42.2/5.76 Mbps, LTE Cat9 450/50 Mbps |
BROWSER | HTML5 |
Push, App | |
MESSAGING | App, SMS, MMS |
APP STORE | Google Play Store |
CONNECTIVITY | |
CAMERA | 12 mega pixel (1/2.6' sensor size, 1.4 µm pixel size, geo-tagging) |
FRONT CAMERA | 5 mega pixel () |
BATTERY | Non-removable Li-Ion 3600 mAh battery |
TALK TIME | |
STANDBY TIME | |
VIDEO | 4K - 1/2.6' sensor size, 1.4 µm pixel size, geo-ta |
MUSIC | App |
RADIO | App |
GPS | YES |
JAVA | NO |
This is the stunning iPhone 7 we all deserve
This is the stunning iPhone 7 we all deserve
Apple’s last four iPhones all share a design that easily places them among the most sleek and sophisticated smartphones the world has ever seen. The iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus are all shockingly thin and handsome, and they’re characterized by smooth curves and a staggering attention to detail. It’s difficult for even the harshest Apple critic to argue otherwise.
As gorgeous as Apple’s latest smartphones are, however, Apple made a few questionable decisions that most people agree are blemishes on an otherwise marvelous design. Recent reports have suggested that Apple will look to right these wrongs in the upcoming iPhone 7, and know we can finally see what an iPhone that lives up to the rumors would actually look like. In a word: Stunning.
MUST READ: Why are all the best apps on my iPhone are made by Apple’s two biggest rivals?
From the moment Apple unveiled the iPhone 6 back in 2014, critics focused on two design oddities they said marred the look of an otherwise striking smartphone. The protruding camera lens and plastic antenna lines on the back of the phone are indeed something of an eyesore for many users, and some have even gone as far as to call them appalling.
Personally, I’m not a fan of the camera bump or the antenna lines, though I would probably stop short of calling them “appalling.”
Reports from a number of independent sources have begun to paint a picture of Apple’s next-generation iPhone 7, which will launch this coming September if Apple stays true to form. While nothing is confirmed until Apple shows off its new iPhone 7 on stage, reliable sources have said that the next-gen iPhone will look much like the current model but will do away with the camera bump and dramatically change the design of the antenna lines for the better. Here’s the latest report that claims to shed light on the look of Apple’s iPhone 7.
In other words, Apple’s new smartphone may very well be the stunning iPhone we all deserve.
Graphic designer Arthur Reis is one of several people who spend a fair amount of time imagining what unreleased Apple devices might look like. As is the case with his peers, Reis’s designs typically are not rooted in reality. But Reis used concepts laid out in recent reports to mock up his newest creation, and the results are nothing short of beautiful.
Reis’s new iPhone 7 concept can be seen in his photo album on image hosting site Behance, and he also used them to create a video posted recently to YouTube. You’ll find several images of this sleek iPhone 7 concept below, and the aforementioned iPhone 7 concept video follows at the bottom of the
Microsoft’s Windows 10 Anniversary Update doubles up on Start Menu advertising
Microsoft’s Windows 10 Anniversary Update doubles up on Start Menu advertising
One of the changes Microsoft introduced when it launched Windows 10 was the ability to show suggested applications, aka advertisements, within the Start Menu and on the lock screen. The “suggested application” function can be disabled relatively easily, but Microsoft is making changes in Windows 10 to increase application visibility and hopefully entice more users to head for the Windows Store.
Once the Anniversary Update drops, the number of promoted apps in the Start Menu will double, from five to 10. To accommodate this change, the number of static Microsoft applications will decrease, from 17 to 12.
Many of these promoted applications (aka Programmable Tiles) aren’t actually installed on the system by default. Instead, they take the user to the Windows Store where the app can be installed.
Neowin isn’t sure if this will apply to existing Windows 10 PCs, or if this change will only go live on new installations. Either way, it’s a smart move for Microsoft.
Shifting paradigms
One of the most significant barriers to Windows Store adoption is the entrenched behavior of Windows’ users. For decades, Windows users have been used to downloading software from various sites on the Internet. If you need a media player, you use VLC or MPC-HC. If you need messaging software, you can download various apps from individual vendors or grab an all-in-one product like Trillian or Pidgin. Your first browser might come from Microsoft, but if you want something else you’ll head for Firefox or Google Chrome.
Microsoft wants users to see the Windows Store as a one-stop shop for its applications, but it’s difficult to shift how people use a system they’ve spent decades with. We don’t blame the company for using promoted apps what the Windows Store can offer. The problem is, the majority of the programs we’ve seen on the Windows Store don’t compare well against the applications you can download on the Internet. We’ve chronicled the problems with various UWP games already, but applications you download from the Windows Store are often tablet-centric and explicitly designed around certain limitations Microsoft enforces.
The real problem for the Windows Store isn’t getting people to look at it — it’s building up an application library of stuff people want to actually use. This has been a problem for Microsoft since it launched Windows 8, and while the store’s layout and UI have improved significantly, breakout application successes are few and far between. The app model simply hasn’t caught on for desktop software, possibly because most people expect PC software to be more complicated and have a greater range of capability than the application-equivalent. On a smartphone or tablet, apps can be good stand-ins for browsing or using websites. On desktops, the existing paradigm is different. Unless Microsoft can offer users some stellar software, it may not see the uptake it’s looking for, no matter how many PC users upgrade to Windows 10.
Huawei Mate 8 looks good, can be better
Huawei Mate 8 looks good, can be better
China's Huawei is on its way to becoming the new Samsung.
The Korean company established itself as a phone giant by making inroads into the Android scene with notable devices filled with progressive features and designs.
Huawei started out the same way, and things picked up after it launched the Ascend Mate 7 last year.
Then, the world finally took notice when it launched the highly rated Nexus 6P in partnership with Google, and the public has been curious as to what it will come up with next.
The new Mate 8, which drops the Ascend branding, is a 6-inch device that bears many of Huawei's signature elements. Like Samsung, Huawei makes its own processor and its Kirin chipset has managed to stand up well to Qualcomm's Snapdragon processor, such that its use these days is rarely highlighted as a negative.
The Mate 8 maintains Huawei's design language of using a chiselled unibody metal frame. The chamfered edges and 2.5D screen enhance the premium look and feel of the phone, and the edge-to-edge screen helps to establish a smaller device profile.
Despite the use of metal and a proprietary processor, the device did not heat up with extended use.
Battery life is outstanding, with the 4,000mAh battery routinely lasting me the entire day during the review.
Like the Nexus 6P, Huawei has placed the fingerprint sensor in the rear, just under the camera lens. Given the large frame of the Mate 8, this makes more sense than having the sensor placed in the front, under the screen, and I could use my forefinger to unlock the device.
The sensor is incredibly responsive, and a tap on it, even if the screen is on stand-by mode, will wake the device up promptly.
But while the Mate 8 is clearly aimed at the higher-end market, some of its features pale in comparison with its competitors'. For one thing, the display is still stuck at full high definition. With its 6-inch screen, the differences in colours and visual details are obvious when compared to the richer quad HD screens out there.
But the biggest letdown is the camera, which performs adequately but is no match for the likes of Samsung, LG or Apple.
Colours are slightly washed-out, especially in indoor and low light shots, and there is a pixelated, grainy hue to images.
Mind you, I am comparing the camera to last year's Samsung Galaxy Note 5, LG G4 and Apple iPhone 6s Plus, and not with this year's models, which have improved cameras.
• Verdict: Although the Huawei Mate 8 looks and feels good, it is nowhere near as accomplished as its Nexus 6P cousin. Its tiny flaws also give rise to the question of whether Huawei single-handedly designed the 6P with some help from Google or if Google steered that entire project.
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