Wednesday, September 1, 2021

Samsung Galaxy A52s 5G launched

 Just two weeks after its initial debut, Samsung’s Galaxy A52s 5G was unveiled in India. The 6/128GB version will retail for INR 35,999 while the 8/128GB trim will go for INR 37,499 and Samsung is offering an INR 3,000 cashback or upgrade bonus. You can scoop one up starting today from Samsung’s online shop or partnering online and offline retailers.


Galaxy A52s 5G builds upon the Galaxy A52 5G with a more capable Snapdragon 778G chipset and slightly faster 25W charging with the charger provided in the box. Everything else from the 6.5-inch AMOLED screen with 120Hz refresh rate to the 64MP quad cameras and 4,500 battery is identical across the two phones. The software front is covered by One UI 3.1 based on Android 11.

Google Pixel 6 and 6 Pro to become available on October 28, a new rumor says

Google has already pre-announced its upcoming Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro flagship smartphone duo, promising all of the details for "later this fall". Just when would that be, though?



Well, earlier a rumor started spreading like wildfire saying that Google would announce the duo on September 13, the week of Apple's big iPhone launch. That seemed like a pretty bad idea on Google's part, and now a new rumor comes to refute that report sort of.

Google Pixel 6 and 6 Pro to become available on October 28, a new rumor says
See, while the September 13 date was meant to be for the announcement, the new info says the Pixels will be released on October 28. As in, that's when they will become available. Pre-orders are allegedly set to start on October 19.

Now, this doesn't fully discount the possibility of a September 13 event - after all, Sony is known to wait many months after announcing a new device before it starts pre-orders. So one month wouldn't be that much, but this isn't how Google has done things in the past. This means that if the October 28 release date pans out, the most likely time for an announcement would be on October 18 or 19 (a Monday and Tuesday, respectively).

This is all speculation, however. It's important to note, however, that the source of the new information is very adamant that the dates are accurate - for whatever that's worth.

As a quick recap, the two new Pixels should be powered by Google's custom-designed Tensor SoC (although how custom that actually remains up for debate). The phones will have in-display fingerprint readers, and a 50 MP main camera.

Friday, July 12, 2019

Xiaomi Mi Superbass Wireless Headphones Launch in India on July 15

After announcing that it will be launching the Redmi K20 and K20 Pro in India on July 17, Chinese smartphone and consumer electronics manufacturer Xiaomi has today announced that it will be launching a new pair of headphones in India on July 15.



The announcement has been made on Twitter by the company’s official Indian handle, with the hashtag “#BreakTheWire” and “#MiSuperbassWirelessHeadphones” along with an image of the headphones; clearly Xiaomi isn’t trying to hide anything other than the price at this point.

According to the image embedded in the tweet, the headphones have a decidedly sporty look, and will come in at least a black and red color scheme. The image also mentions that the headphones will have a 20 hour battery life, and will come with 40mm drivers, which is par for the course for headphones of this size; although I’m sure Xiaomi will price these much lower than other headphones with 40mm drivers.


On the Amazon page for the headphones (yes, there’ already one), the company mentions that the headphones will have deep impactful bass output, and that they are “made for bass lovers.” The page also claims that the headphones will have superfast Bluetooth connectivity with no compromise on sound quality which leads me to think they’ll come with aptX support and maybe Bluetooth 5.0 for faster and better connections.

As mentioned earlier, the Mi Superbass Wireless Headphones will be launching on July 15, Midnight, and according to Mi India’s tweet, will be available on Mi.com and Amazon India for a yet to be disclosed price.

Source

Thursday, July 11, 2019

“Agent Smith” the new malware that affected millions of Android devices

Cyber security solutions provider Check Point on Wednesday revealed that 'Agent Smith," a new variant of mobile malware, has quietly infected around 25 million Android devices globally, including 15 million mobile devices in India.



Disguised as a Google-related app, the malware exploits known Android vulnerabilities and automatically replaces installed apps with malicious versions without the users' knowledge or interaction, said Check Point Research, the threat intelligence arm of Israel-based Check Point.

The malware currently uses its broad access to the devices' resources to show fraudulent ads for financial gain, but could easily be used for far more intrusive and harmful purposes such as banking credential theft and eavesdropping.This activity resembles previous malware campaigns such as "Gooligan", "Hummingbad" and "CopyCat".

"The malware attacks user-installed applications silently, making it challenging for common Android users to combat such threats on their own," said Jonathan Shimonovich, Head of Mobile Threat Detection Research at Check Point.

"Agent Smith" was originally downloaded from the widely used third-party app store, 9Apps and targeted mostly Hindi, Arabic, Russian and Indonesian-speaking users.So far, the primary victims are based in India though other Asian countries such as Pakistan and Bangladesh have also been impacted.

There has also been a noticeable number of infected devices in the UK, Australia and the US as well.Check Point has worked closely with Google and at the time of publishing, no malicious apps remain on the Play Store, said the company.

"Combining advanced threat prevention and threat intelligence while adopting a 'hygiene first' approach to safeguard digital assets is the best protection against invasive mobile malware attacks like 'Agent Smith,'" said the report.

In addition, users should only be downloading apps from trusted app stores to mitigate the risk of infection as third party app stores often lack the security measures required to block adware loaded apps.

Pi 4 has a notable USB Type-C power issue

A bug has recently been identified with the USB Type-C implementation on the new Raspberry Pi 4 single board computer. It was already confirmed officially by the board's co-creator Eben Upton.



Apparently, the Raspberry Pi 4 refuses to take power from certain USB Type-C cables. Most notably ones that users have re-purposed from Macbooks and other new Type-C powered laptops.

Without getting overly technical, what is happening here is that certain cables identify the Raspberry Pi 4 incorrectly as an audio adapter accessory and then refuse to provide sufficient power.

The solution for now - either use the official Raspberry Type-C power adapter or a non e-marked Type-C cable. What is that, you may ask? Well, then read the next paragraph for a more nerdy explanation, or simply skip it if that's not your cup of tea.

Electronically marking Type-C cables refers to the process of implementing certain maker chips on one or both ends of the cable. The USB specification allows for these to be connected in two main ways and come in two flavors - passive and active, mostly depending on whether they need to augment the actual data transfer through the cable or not. Furthermore, e-marked cables are required if you need a full-featured cable, like one that needs USB 3.1 Gen1 or Gen2 (which are no longer called that), or uses USB Alt-Mode or provides more than 3 amps of current. The Type-C cables that ship with most laptops likely tick at least one of these boxes, which is what apparently causes the Raspberry Pi 4 incompatibility.

While this issue might sound bad, it shouldn't actually be that hard to correct in future revisions of the Raspberry Pi 4 board. And its definitely not uncharacteristic for the UK company to go though several revisions for its popular fruit-themed single board computers.

After all properly designing these to remain compatible with previous Raspberry Pi models while making them exponentially more powerful with each generation is no easy task. $35 now get you a surprisingly potent quad-core Cortex-A72 chipset, 1GB of LPDDR4 RAM, two micro HDMI ports, Gigabit Ethernet, two USB 3.0 ports and many more goodies.

Source

Thursday, April 26, 2018

Google big Gmail update with redesigned UI and new security features

Google has revealed the brand new version of Gmail, which comes with more than just visual changes. There are dramatic updates that have been made to the usability and most importantly, the security of the service.



One of the biggest changes is to the increase in security. Gmail now includes a confidential mode, that comes with a suite of features. Users can now send each other emails that have an expiry date, after which the email will no longer be available. To reduce the chances of an unauthorized person reading the email, the email can now be locked behind text message authentication and the recipient will have to enter the code sent over SMS to access the email.

The inclusion of new Information Rights Management controls make it possible to disable the option to forward, download, copy or print the emails that you send. Lastly, security warnings within Gmail have been revamped to make the threat more obvious while opening potentially risky email.



Gmail now also includes AI powered features, including Nudging, Smart Reply and high-priority notifications. Nudging will remind you to follow up on an important email so you don't forget. Smart Reply has been brought over from the mobile apps to the web to enable auto suggested replies to emails so you can one-click reply.

As part of the redesign, the UI now features buttons to archive, delete, mark as read and snooze on the items in your inbox, so you don't even have to open the email thread to access these features or mark the email individually and apply the changes. The side panel now integrates better with other G Suite apps. Offline capabilities allow you to search, write, respond, delete or archive up to 90 days of emails without internet connectivity.



Business users are getting the new Gmail starting today. Personal users will soon start seeing the option to opt-in from the Settings menu on the top right.

Source | Source

Monday, October 30, 2017

Nokia to launch Nokia 7 in India tomorrow

HMD Global is hosting an event in India on October 31, where it is widely expected to introduce the Nokia 7. The smartphone was launched in the international market earlier this month.



HMD Global will be live broadcasting the launch event, which will kick starts at 12:00 PM. You can log in to Facebook and follow this link to catch the live unveiling. HMD Global sent out the invitations, revealing nothing except the date to ‘unveil the next milestone for Nokia phones’. However, as it precedes the Nokia 7 global launch, it is most likely to be about the same product.

Nokia 7 is said to be the company’s first smartphone to boast a glass body design. It also carries forwards the ‘Bothie’ feature from Nokia 8, which allows you to capture images and record videos from both the rear and front cameras simultaneously.

In terms of specifications, the Nokia 7 packs a 5.2-inch full HD IPS display with Corning’s Gorilla Glass 3 protection on top. It is equipped with Qualcomm Snapdragon 630 SoC and paired with 4GB/6GB of RAM and 64GB of internal storage.

For optics, there’s a 16-megapixel rear camera with f/1.8 aperture, and a dual-tone LED flash. Up front, there is a 5-megapixel camera with f/2.0 aperture with 84-degree field-of-view for selfies and video calling.

Internationally, the Nokia 7 is priced at RMB 2,499 (approximately Rs 24,600) for the base variant and RMB 2,699 (approximately Rs 26,500) for the higher variant. At the given pricing, Nokia 7 could compete against Honor 8 Pro, Samsung Galaxy A7 (2017), and the Moto Z2 Play in the sub-Rs 30,000 segment.

Sunday, October 29, 2017

New update to Samsung Galaxy J5 (2017) brings BlueBorne fix

Samsung has started pushing out a new update to its Galaxy J5 (2017) smartphone. Currently hitting units in Europe, the update weighs in at 392MB, arrives as version J530FXXU1AQI3, and brings along fix for the BlueBorne vulnerability.



The vulnerability, for those who aren't aware, allows a remote attacker to take control of devices via Bluetooth. What's more bothersome is that the process doesn't even require the device being attacked to be paired to the attacker’s device, or even to be set on discoverable mode.

So this is no doubt an important update. In addition, it also includes Android security fixes for the month of August.

Source | Source

Saturday, October 28, 2017

Sony launches Xperia R1 and R1 Plus in India

Sony launched two new handsets in the Indian markets, the Sony Xperia R1 and the Sony Xperia R1 Plus. These smartphones are powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon octa-core processor and R1 is priced at Rs. 12,990 and R1 Plus at Rs. 14,990.



Both the handset comes with the same features, in fact, the company should have used just one name i.e. R1, cause the only difference between R1 and R1 Plus is the RAM / ROM.  Sony Xperia R1 comes with 2GB RAM and 16GB ROM and Sony Xperia R1 Plus comes with 3GB RAM and 32GB ROM.

R1 and R1 Plus are dual SIM handset running Android Nougat and will get Android Oreo. The Screen on both the handsets is of size 5.2 inches, 2.5D curved glass and supporting 1280 x 720 pixels resolution.



These smartphones are powered by Snapdragon 430 octa-core processor coupled with Adreno 505 GPU. Weight is 154 grams, and thickness is 8.89mm. On the back the primary camera can shoot in 13MP resolution, comes with LED flash support and on the front, there is a 8MP camera with predictive hybrid Autofocus.

Other features are 4G, VoLTE, Bluetooth 4.2, GPS with GLONASS, USB Type C port and Wi-Fi. A 2620 mAh battery powers these smartphones.



Sony Xperia R1 price in India is Rs. 12,990 and the Sony Xperia R1 Plus comes for Rs. 14,990. These new smartphones will hit the stores on 10th November.

Thursday, October 26, 2017

Oppo R11s goes live on Oppo site

The Oppo R11s is now almost completely revealed, days before it is supposed to be announced on November 2.



The phone is now officially listed on Oppo's Chinese website so people can register their interest in buying it. There's also a live product page for the Oppo R11s.

You'll be able to buy the Oppo R11s in Champagne, Black, Red and a special Star Screen red, in which the red color continues under the front glass. Judging by the current price of the Oppo R11 - around 3,000 CNY for the 64GB model - we can expect something similar for the Oppo R11s.

The Oppo R11s is said to retain the Snapdragon 660 chipset and 4GB of RAM of its predecessor but upgrade the dual cameras on the back. The front holds a 6.0-inch 1080x2160px AMOLED with a tall 18:9 aspect ratio and no physical buttons.

Meanwhile, Oppo has quietly released a 128GB version of its Oppo R11 - so far the phone was only available in 64GB flavor.

Source | Source