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Tuesday, 27 March 2018

The Samsung Galaxy A8 (2018) is powered by a Octa-core (2x2.2 GHz Cortex-A73 & 6x1.6 GHz Cortex-A53) CPU processor with 4 GB RAM. The device also has 32 GB internal storage + microSD (up to 256 GB (dedicated slot)) and a 5.6-inch Super AMOLED capacitive touchscreen (1080 x , 441 ppi) display. It has a 16MP rear camera and supports Wifi, NFC, GPS, 3G and 4G LTE. It packs in a Non-removable Li-Ion 3000 mAh battery at 8.4mm device thickness and weight 172g, running on Android 7.1.1 (Nougat).


The latest Samsung Galaxy A8 (2018) price in Malaysia market is range from RM 1648.

Samsung Galaxy A8 (2018) Specification (A530F)

General General
  • Available Status: Available. Released 2018, January
  • Network Bands: 2G & 3G & 4G
  • SIM: Single SIM (Nano-SIM) or Dual SIM (Nano-SIM, dual stand-by)
  • Dimension: 149.2  x  70.6  x  8.4 mm
  • Weight: 172 g (6.07 oz)
  • Body Type:
    Front/back glass, aluminum frame
    - Samsung Pay - IP68 certified - dust/water proof over 1.5 meter and 30 minutes
  • OS: Android 7.1.1 (Nougat)
  • CPU: Octa-core (2x2.2 GHz Cortex-A73 & 6x1.6 GHz Cortex-A53)
  • Chipset: Exynos 7885 Octa
  • GPU: Mali-G71
  • Internal: 32 GB, 4 GB RAM
  • External Memory: microSD, up to 256 GB (dedicated slot)
  • Battery: Non-removable Li-Ion 3000 mAh battery
  • Colors: Black, orchid grey, gold, blue
Connectivity Connectivity
  • GPRS: Yes
  • EDGE: Yes
  • 3G/4G Speed: HSPA 42.2/5.76 Mbps, LTE-A (3CA) Cat11 600/75 Mbps
  • Wi-Fi: Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac, dual-band, WiFi Direct, hotspot
  • Bluetooth: 5.0, A2DP, EDR, LE
  • NFC: Yes
  • USB: 2.0, Type-C 1.0 reversible connector
Entertainment & Features Entertainment & Features
  • Sensor: Fingerprint (rear-mounted), accelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass, barometer
  • GPS: Yes, with A-GPS, GLONASS, BDS
  • Messaging: SMS(threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Mail, IM
  • Radio: FM radio
  • Browser: HTML5
  • Java: No
  • - Fast battery charging
    - ANT+ support
    - MP4/WMV/H.265 player
    - MP3/WAV/WMA/eAAC+/FLAC player
    - Photo/video editor
    - Document viewer
Camera Camera & Video
  • Primary: 16 MP, f/1.7, phase detection autofocus, LED flash
  • Secondary: Dual: 16 MP + 8 MP, f/1.9, 1080p
  • Video: 1080p@30fps
  • Feature: Geo-tagging, touch focus, face detection, panorama, HDR

Screen Screen
  • Super AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
  • 5.6 inches, 79.6 cm2 (~75.6% screen-to-body ratio)
    1080 x 2220 pixels, 18.5:9 ratio (~441 ppi density)
  • Multi Touch: Yes
  • Corning Gorilla Glass (unspecified version)
    - Always-on display
Sound Sound & Music
  • Alert Types: Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
  • Loud Speaker: Voice 69dB / Noise 70dB / Ring 81dB
  • 3.5mm jack: Yes
    - Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
  • Radio: FM radio
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Huawei Nova 2i smartphone was launched in October 2017. The phone comes with a 5.50-inch touchscreen display with a resolution of 1080 pixels by 2160 pixels.

The Huawei Nova 2i is powered by 1.7GHz octa-core HiSilicon Kirin 659 processor and it comes with 4GB of RAM. The phone packs 64GB of internal storage that can be expanded up to 256GB via a microSD card. As far as the cameras are concerned, the Huawei Nova 2i packs a 16-megapixel primary camera on the rear and a 13-megapixel front shooter for selfies.

The Huawei Nova 2i runs Android 7.0 and is powered by a 3340mAh non removable battery. It measures 156.20 x 75.00 x 7.50 (height x width x thickness) and weigh 164.00 grams.


The Huawei Nova 2i is a dual SIM (GSM and GSM) smartphone that accepts Nano-SIM and Nano-SIM. Connectivity options include Wi-Fi, GPS, Bluetooth, NFC, USB OTG, FM, 3G and 4G (with support for Band 40 used by some LTE networks in India). Sensors on the phone include Compass Magnetometer, Proximity sensor, Accelerometer, Ambient light sensor and Gyroscope.

About Huawei
The Chinese telecommunications company has been manufacturing mobile phones since 1997. It is also the largest telecom infrastructure maker in the world. The company also makes Android smartphones and tablets. Recently it has stepped into the smartwatch market with an Android Wear based device. It is another one of the big smartphone manufacturers from China.
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Oppo F5 design

Most companies that have adopted taller 18:9 screens have stopped somewhere short of achieving a true borderless look, and the Oppo F5 is no exception. There's barely any material to the sides, but since our review unit has a white front face, they're still very visible. The forehead and chin areas above and below the screen are still fairly pronounced, and the front camera is especially prominent next to the earpiece.
We never like it when companies ship phones with plastic screen protectors already affixed - while this means that people who want them don't have to worry about finding one the right size and applying it correctly, we find that it greatly detracts from any device's look. The "borderless" effect is really diminished by the extra line of plastic you see running around the edges of the screen, and that is exactly the case with the Oppo F5.
The rear shell is made of a warm gold with a matte metallic texture. Depending on the light, it can look very pink. There's a shiny chrome ring running around the phone's sides where the metal meets the white front panel, and there are also chrome antenna lines at the top and bottom of the rear, in the iPhone 7-style that has already been copied by others. While the look is generally quite nice, we think that this phone will look a lot better in black.
You'll find the power button and dual-SIM tray on the right, while the volume buttons are on the left. The top is blank except for a mic pinhole, but the bottom is quite busy with a 3.5mm audio socket, Micro-USB port, mic, and speaker grille. The fingerprint sensor on the back is surprisingly well within reach, and its slightly oblong shape means that it's hard to miss. The single camera is unfortunately raised quite a bit, and its metal edges are a bit rough.
The Oppo F5 is reasonably thin at 7.5mm, and weight is very manageable at 152g. The texture of the rear shell makes this phone easy to grip. You won't be able to reach all corners of the screen with a single thumb, due to its size and proportions, but you can stretch without feeling as though the phone might fall from your hand any second. As far as phones with extra-large screens go, this one is fairly easy to use and handle.
oppo f5 rear ndtv oppof5

Oppo F5 specifications and software

The screen measures 6 inches diagonally, but of course this phone is a lot more compact overall than the phablets that were popular a few years ago. Its resolution is 1080x2160 pixels, which is what you get when you stretch full-HD in only one dimension to turn 16:9 into 18:9.
The processor is a MediaTek MT6763T, which was launched very recently and features eight ARM Cortex A53 cores, four of which run at 2.3GHz while the other four run at 1.65GHz. It also features an integrated Mali-G71 MP2 GPU and improved image processor. The Oppo F5 can only use one SIM on a 4G network at any time. Also, the phone reboots each time you swap SIMs, which is annoying.
Oppo has launched the F5 with 4GB of RAM and 32GB of storage, but has also announced that another version with 6GB of RAM and 64GB of storage will become available in December. Incidentally, the 6GB/64GB version will be available in black and also red, but not the gold finish that we have for review.
Other specifications include a 3200mAh battery, 16-megapixel rear camera, 20-megapixel front camera, and standalone microSD card slot. For connectivity, there's dual-band Wi-Fi 802.11n, Bluetooth 4.2, and GPS. We're disappointed to see a Micro-USB port instead of the more modern Type-C standard. Another surprise is that fast charging is not supported, even though the charger that ships with the phone is as oversized as Oppo's VOOC chargers.
oppo f5 sides ndtv oppof5
Oppo's custom skin is called ColorOS, and here we have version 3.2 running on top of Android 7.1. It's one of the most expansive custom UIs, and is also highly polished. A lot of elements are inspired by iOS, including the relocation of quick toggles to a panel that pops up when you swipe upwards from the bottom of the screen. All app icons live on your homescreens, and there are custom versions of the Photos, Music, Videos, Browser, Clock, and other similar apps. Bloatware is restricted to Facebook, WPS Office and Amazon's Shopping and Prime Video apps (even though this phone is a Flipkart exclusive). However, when you tap on Oppo's own AppStore, you're encouraged to download 12 assorted social media apps and games which were apparently "chosen" for us - based on no identifiable parameters.
The Settings app is very different from stock Android and you might have to hunt around a bit for what you need. Thankfully, there's a hidden search bar at the top if you scroll up a bit. You'll find controls for a lot of ColorOS features including Clone Apps, which lets you duplicate a few apps in order to use two accounts; Game Acceleration, which claims to improve performance and reduce distractions; Gestures and Motion, which lets you set up multiple shortcuts; and Split Screen which as its name suggests lets you run supported apps side by side on the large screen. There are also per-app controls to force apps into a 16:9 letterbox on screen, in case they can't scale well automatically. A toggle for the one-handed mode is buried within the list of optional icons that can be shown in the Quick Settings panel, and we think it should have been much easier to find and enable, considering the size of this screen.
Oppo has tried to implement a face recognition security feature, and we're sure that there will be a lot of interest in this now that Apple has made such a splash with the iPhone X. However, it took multiple failed attempts to register a face before we could set it up. We tried several different times under different kinds of light and in different locations, but the process would fail at arbitrary points, telling us that our face was too blurry, too close or too far, and that we shouldn't try to set this feature up while in motion even though we were perfectly still. Facial recognition also failed sometimes in low light, but then worked moments later even if we had our eyes closed. When it did work, it took a second or two longer than the fingerprint reader, and only worked if we hit the power button on the side first. In day-to-day situations, the fingerprint reader was much faster and more natural.
oppo f5 slots ndtv oppof5

Oppo F5 performance

It takes a little while to get used to a larger screen, and we had only minor issues with apps not scaling well. For example, YouTube videos in landscape mode were letterboxed both horizontally and vertically, making them look like they were playing inside a black box. Dead Trigger 2 scaled well in-game, but the menus were cropped at the sides. We expect that app developers will get better about supporting this aspect ratio since more and more phones are adopting it.
Other than that, the display itself is very good. It's crisp and bright, with punchy colours and excellent viewing angles. Everything from text to movies looks great, and we did find ourselves feeling immersed especially with video, and we think the experience will be even better with the black version of this phone. The main downside is that the preattached screen protector picks up scuffs and smudges all the time, and isn't very easy to clean.
The built-in speaker is impressive, delivering clear and rich audio in games and videos. The bundled headset is decent enough - the sound is exceptionally open and clear, but bass is completely lacking, and it also feels rather uncomfortable after even a few minutes.
Benchmark performance was generally stronger for the Oppo F5 than for its prime competitors, the Honor 9i (Review) and Vivo V7 Plus (Review) in terms of CPU performance, though graphics scores favoured the latter two. We recorded 64,303 in AnTuTu, 48,854 in Quadrant, 6,008 in 3DMark Ice Storm Extreme, and 22fps in GFXBench.
oppo f5 camera ndtv oppof5
The rear camera is pretty good, and we were happy with the shots we were able to take both in the daytime and at night. Details seemed to come out well and colours popped in all our sample shots, although the autofocus did slip up on occasion. Textures were generally very good, and most samples looked more than satisfactory when seen at full size on a PC monitor. In low light and even indoors under artificial lighting, a surprising amount of detail was preserved. Even though there was visible noise and grain in our darkest shots, and objects in dark places had fuzzy edges, many of them were still quite usable. Videos also come out quite sharp and smooth under different lighting conditions.
Of course the main attraction here is the front camera, and that's what we're coming to right now. Faces in selfies generally come out very good, but objects in the background aren't reproduced as well. You can capture some excellent selfies for social media this way, which we suppose is the whole point. The lack of an actual flash is surprising for a selfie-focused phone, but the screen flash does help to some extent. As for the AI-enhanced beautification mode, it's hard to say how much of a difference it makes. When setting it to its highest and lowest levels manually, there's a clear difference in skin tones but it's also possible to go overboard and look extremely artificial. Oppo says that the F5 is smart enough to know whether the subject is a man, woman or child and apply the correct kinds of transformations, and we hope that the AI can be improved over time as more people use it.
Other than this, you get a few filters and watermarks to play with in the camera app, and there's even an artificial depth effect which is more of a gimmick. The app itself looks like Apple's iPhone camera app and you have the same mode selection strip and even a 2x zoom button in the same place, despite the fact that there's no secondary camera to switch to. Video recording goes up to 1080p with both the front and rear cameras, and there are also time-lapse and panorama modes.
We were able to get a day and a half of usage out of the Oppo F5 on a single charge. Battery life is pretty good, even if you take a lot of photos, play games for a bit and watch some streaming video. Our HD video loop test ran for 11 hours, 24 minutes which is good considering the large screen. The main disappointment here was the lack of quick charging which we are now quite accustomed to. It took us an hour to get from 10 percent to 65 percent, which is adequate but not ideal.
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The 10th anniversary Apple iPhone is here, and it’s called the iPhone X (pronounced “iPhone Ten”). The Cupertino, California-based company made it official at an event on the Apple Campus in the Steve Jobs Theater — and in our iPhone X review, we call it “the best iPhone ever.”
Indeed, Apple CEO Tim Cook called the new iPhone X “the biggest leap forward since the original iPhone,” and it’s easy to see why. The OLED display — an iPhone first — is called the Super Retina Display and measures 5.8 inches, with a resolution of 2,436 × 1,125 pixels. It features Dolby Vision and HDR10 for stunning high-contrast video playback, as well as TrueTone dynamic white-balance adjustment, a feature of the 10.5-inch iPad Pro and the new iPhone 8 models. The screen takes up the whole screen and there’s no home button — you unlock your phone with your face. Oh, and it’s water- and dust-resistant, and capable of charging wirelessly.

Price and availability

iPhone X plant
iPhone X pre-orders are slated to deliver on November 3, but many people found themselves having to wait until the end of November or December to receive one. It looks like Christmas came early, though, as The Verge confirms there are multiple reports of shipping estimates moving up as early as November 6. You should check your shipping estimate from Apple to see if your device is arriving sooner.
The iPhone X costs $1,000, and it’s available in limited stock at Apple stores, carriers, and retailers on November 3. You can nab one in either 64GB or 256GB, but the latter will cost $1,150. If you’re planning on picking one up at a store, Apple recommends arriving early — you may want to consider waiting on line the night before or early in the morning.
Some carriers, like Sprint, are cutting customers a discount. New and existing customers on the carrier’s Sprint Flex plan will be able to get a 64GB iPhone for $22.22 per month for 18 months ($400) with an eligible trade-in. For a full list of iPhone X prices and pre-order information, check out our iPhone X buying guide.
The iPhone X was the third phone announced by Apple on September 12, joining the iPhone 8 and 8 Plus. It followed the Series 3 Apple Watch, which comes with built-in cellular connectivity.

OLED display

Apple released a support document about the iPhone X’s OLED display. The document states users may see slight shifts in color when looking at the screen from an angle. Apple also warned that users may experience screen burn-in with extended use of the phone.
But most recently, DisplayMate — the company that makes professional-grade software for display calibration — published its detailed results for the iPhone X. According to its testing, the iPhone X has the best smartphone display on the market. Based on lab tests and measurements, the device earned DisplayMate’s A-plus rating — which is the highest ever. The results noted that the X had close to “textbook perfect calibration and performance,” along with the highest absolute color accuracy, highest full-screen brightness for OLED smartphones, among others.

Warranty information

With the iPhone X pre-orders now live, MacRumors spotted that Apple released pricing information about the phone’s repairs. In the U.S., Apple will charge you a flat rate of $280 for iPhone X screen repairs and $550 for any other damages. If it’s a manufacturing defect, then it’s covered by Apple’s standard one-year warranty.
Pricing also varies depending what country you’re in:
  • U.K: 286 euros for screen repairs, 556 euros for other damage
  • Australia: $420 for screen repairs, $820 for other damage
  • Canada: $360 for screen repairs, $710 for other damage
  • Germany: 321 euros for screen repairs, 611 euros for other damage
But these prices are only applicable to those who don’t purchase AppleCare+ for the iPhone X. AppleCare+ is optional, but it extends an iPhone’s coverage to two years based on the original purchase date of the device. If you decide to purchase the extended warranty plan, then screen repairs will only cost you $30 and any other damages will be $100.

Production woes reportedly hamper iPhone X supply

Apple will sell the iPhone X in 55 countries around the world. But there will be delays.
The iPhone X’s Face ID sensor is reportedly taking more time to assemble than expected, according to The Wall Street Journal, contributing to shipping delays. The problem lies in an “imbalance” between the so-called Romeo module, an infrared dot projector that beams more than 30,000 invisible dots to create a depth map of faces, and the Juliet module, which analyzes the pattern produced by those dots.
According to Bloomberg, it was earlier this fall that Apple realized production problems meant it wouldn’t have enough iPhone Xs for the holidays. Sources familiar to the situation say Apple’s solution was reportedly to let suppliers reduce the accuracy of the iPhone X’s Face ID feature. Lowering the requirements for its Face ID technology would permit the firm to speed up production. The change also means that it takes less time to test completed modules. But it’s still unclear how these changes will decrease the technology’s efficacy.
Following Bloomberg’s detailed report on Face ID accuracy being reduced, Apple responded to the claim. The company’s spokeswoman Trudy Muller said, “Bloomberg’s claim that it reduced the accuracy spec for Face ID is completely false and we expect Face ID to be the new gold standard for facial authentication.” Muller also assured users that both quality and accuracy of Face ID remains the same, and the chance of someone other than you unlocking your phone is still one in a million.

Camera, A11 Bionic chip, and AR

The iPhone X’s camera has a dual-lens 12-megapixel rear camera with dual optical image stabilization, consisting up of a wide-angle f/1.8 aperture lens and a telephoto f/2.4 aperture lens. The 7-megapixel front camera supports Portrait mode and has auto image stabilization and exposure control. Apple’s new image signal processor provides advanced pixel processing and a new color filter, and both cameras use the new Natural Lighting effect introduced on the iPhone 8 and ARKit augmented reality features. Finally, video has also been improved with 4K resolution movies at 60fps and slow-motion video at 240fps.
DxOMark — a website focused on assessing image quality for mobile phones, lenses, and camera sensors — recently evaluated the iPhone X. The site released its results, which indicate the device received an overall score of 97 out of 100 — the second-highest score in the DxOMark Mobile overall ranking. With the best Photo sub-score so far — 101 points — results stated the iPhone X is the top performer for stills. In comparison to the iPhone 8 Plus, DxOMark specifically pointed out the iPhone X’s improved telephoto lens led to higher results in Zoom, Exposure, Noise, Texture, and Artifacts.
iPhone X close up
The iPhone X retains the A11 Bionic chip from the iPhone 8, a 64-bit super efficient processor with a new Apple-designed graphics unit, which has 30 percent more speed than the existing unit. It has six cores and better performance than the A10 Fusion chip, and while Apple typically doesn’t publish RAM specifications, filings from China electronics regulator TENNA show the iPhone X has 3GB of RAM. Apple says the high-performance cores to provide a 25-percent speed increase and a 70 percent boost from the four performance cores.
Regarding battery life, the iPhone X lasts about two hours longer than the iPhone 7 Plus on a single charge. That’s not surprising; according to Chinese electronics regulator Tenaa’s filings, the iPhone X’s has a 2,716mAh battery, which isn’t far off from the iPhone 7 Plus’s 2,900mAh. It supports wireless charging via Qi-compatible accessories, and Apple will introduce a proprietary charging solution called AirPowerearly next year.

Face ID

Apple iPhone X Review
Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends
Apple’s new facial recognition technology, Face ID, makes its debut on the iPhone X. It works using the TrueDepth camera system hidden in the notch at the top of the display. Glance at the iPhone X and it illuminates your face with an infrared dot array, allowing the infrared camera to identify it. It even works in the dark. Using the iPhone X’s six-core A11 Bionic processor paired with 3GB of RAM, a neural engine processes the image in real time, mapping the contours and shape of your face mathematically.

Don’t worry about Face ID being less secure than other biometric systems; it’s not. The chance of someone other than you unlocking your phone with Touch ID is one in 50,000, Apple says, but for Face ID it’s one in a million. Apple Pay requires you to look at the phone when you go to pay, and it works with existing apps that use Touch ID for authentication.Apple claims Face ID isn’t confused by hairstyles, hats, or beards. According to Apple software chief Craig Federighi, the iPhone will be able to recognize your face through “most” sunglasses, too, as long as they let through enough infrared light. Protections against masks and pictures are in place, and face data is stored in the secure enclave inside the A11 Bionic chip.
On top of that, Apple has implemented some software protections against people stealing your phone and just holding it to your face to unlock it. For starters, if you don’t stare at the phone itself, it won’t unlock. And if you grip the buttons on both edges of the phone, the device will temporarily disable facial recognition.
If you remember when Apple first implemented Touch ID, you’ll remember some bumps and bugs at first — but many of those bugs shouldn’t exist with Face ID. In fact, developers won’t even have to worry about implementing it — if an app uses Touch ID, it will automatically also use Face ID. Craig Federighi, Apple’s senior vice president of software, said as much in an interview with John Gruber on Daring Fireball.

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vivo v9 
Phone companies are experimenting with the thin bezel to distinguish their products from those of rivals. Samsung Galaxy S9 and S9+ have no sideways bezel and their screen almost touches the spine. The Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 has no bezels on three sides. Apple iPhone X has almost no bezels around the screen except for a small strip at the top called a notch. After Asus, Chinese company Vivo has adopted a similar notch-like design in its latest smartphone, the V9. It is priced at Rs22,990 and will be available in champagne gold, pearl black and sapphire blue colour options through offline stores from 2 April, 2018.
Here are the key features of the Vivo V9:
Vivo V9 has a notch-like thin strip (measuring 1.85mm) at the top. However, the rest of the screen is not completely bezel less as it is in the Apple iPhone X. There is a thin bezel (5.93mm) under the screen.
Vivo has managed to accommodate a truly big 6.3-inch screen in a 154.8mm x 75.1mm form factor, which is quite impressive. The Redmi Note 5 Pro (starts Rs 13,999) offers a slightly smaller 6-inch screen, yet it is slightly bigger at 158.6mm x 75.4mm.
At 150g, Vivo V9 is the lightest big-screen smartphone with a screen size of 6 inches or more. The Redmi Note 5 Pro has a 6-inch screen and tips the scales at 181g.
The V9’s screen offers a slightly wider aspect ratio of 19:9 and screen resolution of 2,280x1080p. Most thin-bezel smartphones including the Redmi Note 5 Pro offer an aspect ratio of 18:9 and screen resolution of 2,160x1,080p.
The V9 is also one of the few smartphones which run the latest Android 8.1 (Oreo) out of the box with Vivo’s custom UI called FunTouch OS. Xiaomi’s Redmi Note 5 Pro still runs Android 7.1 but is expected to get the Android 8 update sometime this year.
Vivo has used Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 626 octa-core processor to power the V9 and has clubbed it with 4GB RAM. The smartphone offers 64GB internal storage with the option to expand by another 256GB via microSD card. The Redmi Note 5 Pro runs on a slightly more powerful Qualcomm Snapdragon 636 octa-core processor with up to 6GB RAM (in the Rs16,999 variant).
For camera buffs, the V9 has a 16-megapixel camera for capturing detail shots and a 5-megapixel camera for taking shots in bokeh and portrait mode. For selfie enthusiasts the phone has a 24-megapixel camera with AI-backed beauty mode and AR stickers. The front camera can also be used for unlocking the smartphone or an app with the face as ID. We don’t know how good this feature is, as of now.
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