Sunday 27 August 2017

Jio phone all round specification

Phone
Jio Phone mobile was launched in July 2017. The phone comes with a 2.40-inch display with a resolution of 240 pixels by 320 pixels.

The Jio Phone is powered by 1.2GHz dual-core SPRD 9820A/QC8905 processor and it comes with 512MB of RAM. The phone packs 4GB of internal storage that can be expanded up to 128GB via a microSD card. As far as the cameras are concerned, the Jio Phone packs a 2-megapixel primary camera on the rear and a 0.3-megapixel front shooter for selfies.

The Jio Phone runs KAI OS and is powered by a 2000mAh removable battery.

The Jio Phone is a single SIM (GSM) mobile that accepts a Nano-SIM. Connectivity options include Wi-Fi, GPS, Bluetooth, NFC, Headphones, FM and 4G (with support for Band 40 used by some LTE networks in India).
About Jio
Reliance Jio Infocomm is an Indian telecom operator that's a subsidiary of Reliance Industries, and launched its services in September 2016.

Display

2.40-inch

Processor

1.2GHz dual-core

Front Camera

0.3-megapixel

Resolution

240x320 pixels

RAM

512MB

OS

KAI OS

Storage

4GB

Rear Camera

2-megapixel

Battery Capacity

2000mAh

Jio Phone detailed specifications
GENERAL
Release dateJuly 2017
Form factorBar
Battery capacity (mAh)2000
Removable batteryYes
ColoursBlack
SAR valueNA
DISPLAY
Screen size (inches)2.40
TouchscreenNo
Resolution240x320 pixels
HARDWARE
Processor1.2GHz dual-core
Processor makeSPRD 9820A/QC8905
RAM512MB
Internal storage4GB
Expandable storageYes
Expandable storage typemicroSD
Expandable storage up to (GB)128
CAMERA
Rear camera2-megapixel
FlashNo
Front camera0.3-megapixel
SOFTWARE
Operating SystemKAI OS
CONNECTIVITY
Wi-FiYes
Wi-Fi standards supportedNA
GPSYes
BluetoothYes, v 4.10
NFCYes
InfraredNo
USB OTGNo
HeadphonesYes
FMYes
Number of SIMs1
SIM 1
SIM TypeNano-SIM
GSM/CDMAGSM
3GNo
4G/ LTEYes
Supports 4G in India (Band 40)Yes
SENSORS
Compass/ MagnetometerNo
Proximity sensorNo
AccelerometerNo
Ambient light sensorNo
GyroscopeNo
BarometerNo
Temperature sensorNo

Thursday 23 February 2017

Samsung galaxy S8 latest leaks ! Rumours !

Samsung galaxy S8

one of the largest upcoming smartphone in upcoming months



Just a day after complete spec sheet for the Samsung Galaxy S8+ leaked, a similar leak has emerged for the Galaxy S8, revealing almost identical specs.


The only difference is display - the Galaxy S8, according to the leaked image above, will sport a 5.8-inch (full rectangle)/5.6-inch (rounded corners) QHD+ Super AMOLED display. Here are the two leaks side-by-side:



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The only key specs that these sheets don't reveal is the chipset and the battery capacity. Both the S8 and S8+ will be unveiled at a dedicated event next month, and will go on sale worldwide on April 21.


Google pixel XL v/s apple iphone 7 Plus ! Best review ever !

Google pixel XL v/s apple iphone 7 plus














The Pixel XL is impressive for the first Google branded phone but is it good enough to give the iPhone 7 Plus problems? Read on.
I switched, as an experiment, from the iPhone 7 Plus to the Pixel XL. This is my take after more than a month. What follows is meant to wrap up, as briefly as possible, earlier takes.




Note that I did not -- and will not -- ditch my iPhone 7 Plus. It's still sitting right next to the Pixel XL on my desk.



And note that reportedly holiday sales of the Pixel were strong, with Pixel devices accounting for 12.3 percent of phone activations with Verizon, according to Bloomberg. Some stores didn't have enough inventory to meet demand, the report said -- which I can confirm, after canvassing local Los Angeles Verizon stores.




Chassis: For me, this is a pretty big deal. The weight, how it sits in your hand, and the ability to fit a large screen into a relatively small chassis (aka, bezel size) for one-handed operation are all boxes to be checked when buying a phone. Google succeeds here. Though slightly thicker (we're talking only about a 1mm difference) than the 7 Plus, it's lighter and, side by side, the Pixel XL is smaller and feels that way in your hand. That said, I can't definitively say that the XL's chassis is better than the 7 Plus' (I've always liked the feel of the iPhone 6/6s/7). What I can say is that, at the very least, it's the iPhone's equal. And I'm guessing some may prefer the XL because of its smaller size despite having the same 5.5-inch display.





UX (user experience): Subjective yet important. The only thing I'll say here (because it's so subjective) is that it was a painless switch to Android 7.1 Nougat from iOS*. Everything I need is on both phones and once you're inside an app, it's often impossible to tell which phone you're using. And compared to the Android that ran on my Moto X (2nd gen) a couple years back, Android is smoother/vastly improved.






Performance: Cite all the benchmarks you want but for what I do it's a draw. Some benchmarks show the iPhone 7 Plus' A10 Fusion processor beating the XL's Snapdragon 821. Fine. But I don't see it. Both phones are fast and smooth -- and when I'm doing something as simple as scrolling a graphics-intensive Web page or more processor-intensive stuff like working with photos/video, both are faster than any smartphone I've used before.


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