الجمعة، 20 مايو 2016

Time-saver edition Apple iPhone SE

iPhone SE time-saver review


The iPhone SE is a perfect fit for a time-saver review, it seems, as Apple didn't come up with a new design or new internals. Instead, the innards come from an iPhone 6s, while the design is a direct copy of the iPhone 5s. While on paper this sounds like a great combination, it's not exactly breaking news, is it?
One way to interpret this move is to conclude Apple is taking the easy road and is merely recycling an existing chassis design to produce a lower-cost iPhone without hurting margins. Another possible interpretation is that they are reviving the iconic iPhone 5/5s design in an attempt to cater to a group of users who not only want a cheaper iPhone but would also prefer the smaller form factor.
Let's not forget that a third of Apple users are still using older 4-inch smartphones.

Key specifications


  • 4.0"640 x 1136 pixels

  • 12MP2160p

  • 1.84GHzApple A9

  • 2GB RAM16/64GB

  • 1624mAhLi-Po
The iPhone SE has this nice nostalgic feeling of the good old iPhones when they were always shaking the market, and its compact size and powerful hardware will be appreciated by many. It will hardly attract any new users to Apple's platform, but will allow those who are stuck in the past to level up.

Design and build quality

The Apple's iPhone SE design is on the catwalk for a third time in a row, and there are no surprises here. After the dawn of the glass iPhones, the new metal chassis introduced by the iPhone 5 quickly became a fan-favorite. It was in fact so popular that in the aftermath of the iPhone 6 premiere the new exterior was considered as a disappointment because of the departure from the old looks.
Sure, Apple could have shrunk the iPhone 6 chassis for the iPhone SE instead, but we suspect they've intentionally decided to keep the iconic chassis. Plus, nobody can't argue it was easier for development and production - faster, and, of course, cheaper.

Samsung Galaxy S7 edge review

Pushed way out of its comfort zone and into a high-stakes flagship redesign last season, Samsung's back to what it does best -- making itself comfortable at the top of the heap. OK, it sounds like a bold claim but by no means incredible if you've seen the Galaxy S7 edge.
Yet, this isn't exactly a galaxy far, far away. The Samsung Galaxy S7 edge looks a lot like its predecessor, and we've heard a lot of people calling it the same device. Can't blame them really - Samsung indeed focused on refinement this time around and if you caught our regular Galaxy S7 review, you'd know we liked what they come up with.
Anyway, the real deal is on the inside. If only you look at the features it brings back, such as water protection and a microSD slot, you may conclude that the Galaxy S7 edge is what the S6 edge should've been.
Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge review
But that's not where the hardware novelties end. We paid due attention to the camera in our MWC coverage and the review of the vanilla Galaxy S7 to conclude that the dual pixel autofocus, wider aperture and bigger pixel size more than make up for the lower sensor resolution.
The new flagship wouldn't have done without an engine upgrade - we guess Qualcomm's return as a chipset supplier is another sign of things getting back to normal after the Project Zero coup. The Galaxy S7 pair is powered by either Snapdragon 820, or the latest Exynos 8890, each with 4GB of RAM.
There is a bigger display with an always-on option, and a more robust battery too. The Samsung Galaxy S7 edge runs the latest Android of course, skinned with the latest TouchWiz.

Key features

  • Curved 5.5" Super AMOLED display of 1440p resolution; 534ppi; Always On capabilities;
  • Gorilla Glass 4 front and rear panels
  • IP68 certified - dust proof and water resistant
  • USA model: Snapdragon 820 chipset - quad-core Kryo processor (2x 2.15GHz and 2x 1.6GHz cores); Adreno 530 GPU; 4GB of RAM
  • Global model: Exynos 8890 chipset - octa-core processor with four 2.6GHz Mongoose and four 1.6GHz Cortex-A53 cores; Mali-T880 MP12 GPU; 4GB of RAM
  • 12MP f/1.7 main camera with phase detect autofocus, optical image stabilization, LED flash
  • 2160p video at 30fps; 1080p@60fps; 720p@240fps; HDR
  • 5MP f/1.7 front-facing camera, 1440p video recording at 30fps
  • 32/64GB of built-in storage; microSD slot up to 200GB
  • Cat.9 4G LTE (450Mbps); Wi-Fi a/b/g/n/ac; Bluetooth 4.2, ANT+, NFC; GPS, GLONASS and Beidou
  • Heart-rate monitor, barometer, SpO2 sensor
  • Wireless charging (Qi/PMA)
  • 3,600 mAh non-removable battery, fast charging

Main disadvantages

  • Hefty price tag
  • Sealed battery
  • No FM radio or IR blaster
Samsung did well to bring back two of the most valued features - the microSD slot and water protection but the new design precludes any way of accessing the battery outside an authorized service center. The FM radio and IR blaster are gone for some reason at least in our Exynos version of the handset.
Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge review
Now, whatever deals there may have been in the debut week - including a free Gear VR headset - the Galaxy S7 edge remains among the most expensive mass-produced phones right now. But if Apple can charge as much, no harm in Samsung trying as well.
So, what is the Samsung Galaxy S7 edge really made of and is it worth the asking price? Read on as we try to find out!

Android N

UPDATE: What's new in Android N beta 2?

Google promised frequent updates to its beta service for Android N and the first one has arrived. While there isn't a whole lot new in this 250MB update, there are a couple of visual tweaks and some minor additions.
New look folders
The overall look of folders in Android has been given a facelift in this beta, and I'm not impressed. Icons are now displayed inside a circle with a thick white border and it looks more like a dodgy third-party alternative than something cooked up by Google.
As this is a beta, this could all change and I really hope it does.


The new look folders
Emojis that, finally, look like real people
Google has added support for the latest batch of emoji in the second N beta and they look like real people, as opposed to the yellow blobs they were before. Obviously this is a small update, but nice nonetheless.
Vulkan support
As with all new versions of Android, expect to see a lot of under the hood improvements and new APIs added. A standout so far is support for the new gaming API Vulkan. This is a powerful 3D rendering engine and Google says is will provide "a significant boost in performance for draw-call heavy applications".
We've already seen what Vulkan can do in the super-slick gaming performance of the Samsung Galaxy S7, so it's good news that the rest of the Android crowd can join the party.
Other visual tweaks
Google has refreshed the initial set-up screen for Android making it easier and more straightforward to get going, while adding a 'Calculator' shortcut to the quick settings screen.
You can read our in depth hands-on of the original Android N release below

WE TAKE GOOGLE'S ANDROID N DEVELOPER PREVIEW FOR A SPIN

Android N is the developer build of the next version of Google’s mobile operating system – known amongst tech gossips as Android Nutella.
This is an early sneak peak that’s designed to give developers time to take advantage of the OS’s new features, not the next full version of Android. As a result, Android N is not intended for general consumers. In fact, for now it’s best you don’t download it.
Being a developer build, installing it requires you to agree to a fair amount of tracking from Google, which monitors the build to spot and fix bugs ahead of the full version’s release. You also run the risk of bricking your phone or tablet, as the code is still in development and may include more than a couple of bugs.
I’ve downloaded the OS onto my spare Nexus 6 and taken it for spin. So you can get all the details of Android N’s coolest features, without risking your smartphone or tablet.
Video: Check out our Android N hands-on
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ANDROID – STACKED NOTIFICATIONS AND DIRECT REPLY

Powering up the Nexus 6, the OS initially looked pretty similar to Android Marshmallow. The app tray’s exactly where it’s meant to be and Google Now is still a simple left swipe away.
However, delve a little deeper and you’ll spot a number of subtle differences. The notification bar has been given a refresh. Swipe down once and a new shortcuts bar to key features like Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and flashlight will appear above your incoming app notifications. Previously you had to swipe down twice (or swipe down with two fingers) to get access to the quick settings.
Google has also spruced up the way Android handles notifications in general. On N, app developers can opt to have notifications from their software come in stacked bundles in the notifications bar or lock screen. The feature is currently live on most of Google’s own apps, including Hangouts and Gmail, and from what I’ve seen works a treat.
Multiple messages on Hangouts appear in stacks, with a line telling me who's recently messaged me. From there I can expand the bundle by pulling it open with a two-finger gesture and pick which specific alert I want to address – removing the need for me to launch the app each time I get a new IM.


 Android N on the Nexus 6 (left), Android Marshmallow on the Nexus 5X (right)

ANDROID N – MULTI-WINDOWS SUPPORT

Multi-window support has been a staple feature for Samsung’s Galaxy range of smartphones for quite some time now, and is a key selling point for its latest Galaxy S7 and Galaxy S7 Edge handsets.
That's why it’s no surprise Google’s decided to add multi-window support to Android’s core code on N. The feature can be activated within any open application by pressing down on the phone or tablet’s overview button – the square one on the bottom right of the UI. From there you can select the second app you want to have on screen and customise how much display real estate it gets using an onscreen slider.
Android N

The multi-window support worked great on the Nexus 6 I tested Android N on and was a massive productivity aid. The feature allowed me do things like keep the reference web page I was reading about on Chrome while I was chatting to colleagues on Hangouts, removing the need for me to switch between apps while multi-tasking.
The multi-window support is also set to get even better as, eventually, it’ll also be possible to drag an item from one app into the other. This will let you do things like drag a photo from your camera reel straight to your Facebook app to upload it – I couldn’t get the feature to work during my hands-on, though, as Facebook doesn't run correctly in splitscreen at the moment.

ANDROID N – PICTURE-IN-PICTURE

Picture-in-picture is another feature I didn’t get to test during my hands-on, which is a little sad as it sounds quite cool. The feature is designed for Nexus player and other Android TV devices. As the name suggests it will add picture-in-picture support so you can minimise videos being played to the corner of the screen – like you can in Android’s current YouTube app.
This will mean you can browse the web, or check your social media feeds when important alerts come in, without having to pause what you’re currently watching – which, let’s face it, will be cool. If it works.
Related: Nexus 6P review

GOOGLE’S DEVELOPER BUILD ALSO BRINGS A NUMBER OF UNDER-THE-HOOD UPDATES THAT SHOULD IMPROVE ANDROID N’S POWER EFFICIENCY AND LOWER ITS OVERALL SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS.

For starters, Google has expanded and improved the Doze feature it added in Android Marshmallow. Doze lets Android devices figure out when they’re not being used and go into a custom power saving mode that reduces battery drain. The improved version on Android N works whenever the screen is turned off, not just after prolonged periods of inactivity.
Android N

Google has backed this up with a few improvements to Android’s core structure that should let app makers reduce how much juice their wares consume while running in the background. If developers take advantage of the new feature, this adds up to mean the final version of Android N should be far more efficient than Marshmallow.
As a final perk, Google’s also continued its work on Project Svelte. Project Svelte is an initiative Google unveiled alongside Android 4.4 KitKat. It’s a project that aims to reduce Android’s overall system requirements – which is important, as it means the OS will in theory run faster and work with lower-end components.
Related: Pixel C review

ANDROID N – OPENING IMPRESSIONS

Making any final judgement on Android N is a fool’s errand, as the OS is a work in progress. All I can do is judge it as an early indicator of what to expect from the final new Android version that Google is set to unveil later this year.
But so far I'm impressed by Android N. Google appears to have listened to user feedback and is working to give developers the tools they need to fix the OS usability and power consumption issues.
If developers get behind the changes and start adding the functionality to their wares, the final version of Android N could be an incremental update to the OS, on a par with Marshmallow.

A closer look Sony Xperia X hands-o

Introduction

Sony invited us over to Tokyo to give us a glimpse of the upcoming Xperia X - the pioneer in the company's new lineup that puts an end to 6 generations of Xperia Z flagships.
The Xperia X is not a direct successor to the Z5, mind you, this is a burden the Xperia X Performance will have to deal with. Instead, it ushers in Sony's new design language, which let's face it, does build upon the fundamentals of the old one.
The Xperia X also introduces us to most of the flagship's hardware, while still letting it keep exclusivity on some features - IP68 certification and top-class chipset in particular.

Sony Xperia X at a glance:

  • Form factor: body, 2.5D glass rounded bevel screen
  • Screen: 5" Triluminos display, 1080p resolution (441ppi)
  • Camera: 23MP/1080p with 1/2.3" sensor, f/2.0, Predictive Hybrid AF; 13MP selfie camera
  • Chipset: Snapdragon 650 (2x A72 + 4x A53 cores); 3GB of RAM
  • Storage: 32GB, expandable with microSD cards
  • OS: Android 6.0 Marshmallow
  • Audio: stereo speakers, Hi-Res audio, DSEE HX, LDAC
  • Battery: 2,620
The Xperia X does get the top-spec camera of its bigger brother (or should we say wiser, as they're both 5-inchers) - that means 23MP maximum resolution, phase detection autofocus, and a f/2.0 aperture lens. What it misses out on is 4K video recording, which is inexplicably missing from the Xperia X Performance spec sheet, too.
Sony Xperia X hands-on
We already got a chance to handle the Sony Xperia X a couple of months ago at MWC, so this time, we'll approach our hands-on with a focus on the camera department. We figured we'd spend the few precious moments we had with the phone on the important stuff.

Ascension Huawei P9 review

Huawei pulled the wraps off its next flagship in London in early April. London streets and buildings were the perfect backdrop for black-and-white photography and everything looked extra special through the P9's secondary black-and-white lens. But there is more to the P9 than just the duo of cameras. The P9 is a proper high-end device with the premium feel and build quality to go with it so after a short hands-on, we were more than eager to get started working on a full review.
Back in the day, the Huawei Ascend P6 was the first real push of Huawei towards the high-end market spectrum. It was notable for its super-slim design, metal frame, and beautiful panels.
The Huawei P7 improved on the design and hardware, while the P8 after it offered great night photography and selfie pictures.
Today, the P9 makes a big step ahead, opening the door to a new photography genre for mobile photographers and bringing along a bunch of nice shooting modes, faster hardware, and an even better design.
Huawei P9 review
The Huawei P9 has a mid-sized 5.2" IPS 1080p display. It runs on the latest Kirin 955 chipset with 3GB of RAM, and comes with a plethora of connectivity options, and a beefy 3,000 mAh battery. But its key selling points are the exquisite design and exceptional photography skills.
The P9 comes with a duo of 12MP snappers co-designed with Leica - a regular 12MP sensor is joined by a second monochrome 12MP sensor - both with Leica optics and featuring hybrid auto-focus, which combines laser, depth, and contrast detection. On board, we also find Leica-exclusive color modes and a real-time shallow depth of field effect, among many others. And if you are into selfies, then the front 8MP camera will not disappoint.
And this is just the beginning. You can get the P9 with ceramic white finish, or brushed aerospace-class aluminum and each of those is as appealing as a piece of art. Interested already?

Huawei P9 key features

  • Aluminum with sandblasted finish or ceramic unibody
  • 5.2" 1080p IPS LCD capacitive touchscreen, 423ppi
  • HiSilicon Kirin 955 chipset: octa-core CPU (4xCortex-A72 @ 2.5GHz plus 4xCortex-A53 @ 1.8GHz), Mali-T880 MP4 GPU
  • 3GB of RAM/32GB of built-in storage, or 4GB/64GB;
  • Android 6.0 Marshmallow, Huawei EMUI v4.1 overlay;
  • Dual 12MP Leica camera with hybrid AF, color and monochrome sensors, f/2.2 aperture; 1080@60fps video recording
  • 8MP front camera, f/2.4 aperture; 1080p video recording; wide selfie
  • Hybrid DualSIM/microSD card slot (up to 128GB)
  • Cat. 6 LTE (300/50Mbps); dual-band Wi-Fi a/b/g/n/ac, Wi-Fi hotspot, Wi-Fi Direct; Bluetooth 4.2 LE; NFC; GPS/GLONASS/Beidou; USB Type-C
  • 3,000mAh Li-Ion battery, Rapid charging

Main disadvantages

  • No 4K 2160p video recording
  • Non-removable battery
  • Hybrid DualSIM/microSD card slot limits options on the dual-SIM model
  • No 3D Touch like the Plus model
Huawei P9 lacks three things the P9 Plus builds upon - the bigger 3D Touch-enabled screen, an AMOLED panel, and an AF 8MP snapper with f/1.9 aperture. Those three account for the €100 price gap. But both devices lack 4K video recording, which is not cool for one of the coolest flagships around. We don't know if it's a GPU thing or Huawei just can't do 4K capturing yet. But we really wish this wasn't the case.
Huawei P9 review
Screen resolution is also not class-leading but Huawei seems to stick to 1080p even for its priciest devices. Since Huawei is more than eager to compare the P9 to the iPhone 6s, we guess 1080p would suffice. However in Android world, these days flagship phones are expected to come with 1440px QHD screens so that's another competitive setback to keep in mind.
Anyway, the Huawei P9 has more than enough to make it worthy of its flagship status, and we can't wait to explore it in detail. Our traditional hardware inspection kicks off right after the jump.

April 2016 Smartphone buyer's guide

Introduction

The major releases for the first half of 2016 are out, time to see what's worth spending your hard earned cash on. For all the flagship goodness we saw at the MWC (and other events), there's an equal measure of amazing entry-level and midrange handsets out there.
And we don't use "amazing" lightly here, the €200-€300 phones offer metal unibodies, capable cameras, fast chipsets, large batteries, the works. You can even get a metal-clad phone at just over €100 - some smart shopping can get you a quality gadget even if you're on a shoestring.
That's the point of this article, to set you on the right track, point to what's good out there and warn against some potential bad choices.
These days there are only two things where you really have to spend more to get more - screen and camera. The €600+ flagships have eye-popping screens with perfect color rendering, excellent sunlight legibility and goodies like Always On mode.
They also have cameras that handle different types of photography well enough that you can leave your digital camera at home and focus on the moment of settings and dials.

Everything else is suffering from diminishing returns - sure, the flagships get the latest chipsets, but the perceived difference in speed may not always be obvious. Game developers have to develop for the masses, so a game would rarely need Chipset 9000+ to work. Battery life is often better at the low-end than the high-end, good audio quality only matters with headphones that cost more than some of the phones on this list and so on.
For each phone we list the most important specs in a table to make comparisons easier. If you need to dive into more detail, we have reviews of many of these phones. We pulled out relevant complaints from these reviews so you'll know the downsides of each phone.
The build-up is driven by price - we start at sub-€100 phones and go all the way to the premium stuff. You can read end-to-end or jump straight to the page that matches your budget. If you do that though, don't forget to check the previous chapter and the one after. It can either save you a few bucks or help you spot a phone that delivers something you want at an acceptable price premium.

How does the Range Rover Sport SVR sound so good

We delve into the art of noise to find out just why the SVR gives such good
The sound of a Range Rover Sport , at first, it sounds like a distant Chinook helicopter, all low and rumbly and full of trouble. When it really gets going you might mistake it for a passing NASCAR. For an SUV, it’s fantastic, and utterly riotous. So let’s go inside Range Rover’s acoustic bunker, known properly as the NVH department, to see how they make this thing sound so good.
NVH is industry-speak for noise, vibration and harshness, and people in this line of work devote much of their lives to making car cabins hushed and peaceful places in which to be. But occasionally they’re asked to go full Spinal Tap, and create a rock ’n’ roll sound worthy of the fastest Range Rover ever built.
Photography: Richard Pardon
This feature was originally published in the May 2016 issue of Top Gear Magazine.