Nothing has begun rolling out Nothing OS 4.0, its latest operating system based on Android 16. Here is a clear breakdown of all the new changes in this update.
Updated status bar iconsRefreshed first-party app icons
Nothing OS 4.0 updates the entire visual layout. First-party app icons now have a cleaner and more minimal look. Status bar icons for Wi Fi, battery and data follow a more consistent style that is easier to read. The lock screen gets refreshed fonts along with two new clock faces. System animations have been reworked so gestures, transitions and the Notification Shade feel faster and more stable. The update also adds light haptic feedback when you reach the maximum or minimum volume.
New Lock Screen Clocks
The new version adds features that aim to cut distractions and improve daily flow. Glyph Progress now supports rides, deliveries and timers across the screen and the Glyph Interface. Because it is built on Android 16, it is no longer limited to specific partners and will support more apps that use the progress feature. Pop up View has been refined to support two floating apps at once, with simple gesture switching. Extra Dark Mode offers deeper blacks, better contrast and lower battery use in low light.
Refined Pop-up ViewHidden Icons
More Widget Sizes
Apps can now be hidden in the App Drawer without moving them to a Private Space. Weather, Pedometer and Screen Time widgets now come in new 1×1 and 2×1 sizes. A new System and Apps Dashboard shows which apps are running in the background and lets you optimise performance with one tap. Universal Search gains filters so you can narrow results more quickly.
Nothing OS 4.0 also introduces Playground. It lets you create your own widgets by chatting with AI, with no coding required. A new Widget Drawer keeps all your widgets in one place so you can organise and access them easily.
The update improves AI transparency. AI Status Hints show when an LLM is active in the status bar. The AI Usage Dashboard shows how AI features are being used across the system.
Xiaomi is changing its approach to smartphones. The company has sharply reduced the number of new models it launches each year. This shift marks a major break from its earlier strategy, which focused on flooding the market with a wide range of devices under multiple sub-brands. Xiaomi now aims to streamline its product lineup and focus more on software longevity, global consistency, and ecosystem integration.
Credit: VCG
Fewer phones, deeper integration
The decision comes even as the global smartphone market shows signs of recovery. According to Xiaomi’s Q2 2025 report, its smartphone revenue declined 2% YoY, despite overall market growth. In contrast, the company’s AIoT segment posted a 44.7% increase, reaching 38.7 billion yuan (about $5.4 billion). Its electric vehicle business generated over 20 billion yuan ($2.8 billion) in quarterly revenue, driven by strong demand for the SU7 and YU7. These figures suggest that smartphones are no longer Xiaomi’s primary engine of growth.
Xiaomi founder and CEO Lei Jun outlined the Human-Car-Home strategy as a key part of the company’s vision for the next decade. This ecosystem approach positions the smartphone as a central node connecting electric vehicles, smart home devices, and AI-powered platforms. In this context, product value depends less on specs or pricing and more on software experience and ecosystem performance.
To support this shift, Xiaomi has extended software support for major models. The Xiaomi 15 and Redmi Note 14 series now receive four OS upgrades and six years of security patches. This matches the update policies of brands like Samsung and Apple. However, supporting extended updates across dozens of regional variants has become increasingly difficult. The transition from MIUI to HyperOS requires Xiaomi to reduce product fragmentation and standardize global platforms.
Xiaomi’s experience in India played a key role in this shift. The company’s shipments in India dropped 42% YoY in early 2025, causing it to fall from first to sixth place in market share. Product overlap between Redmi, Poco, and Xiaomi lines led to confusion, while fragmented software builds across regions created delays and inconsistencies.
Xiaomi has responded by assigning each sub-brand a clearer role. Redmi targets the mass market, Xiaomi covers the mid-to-premium segments, Poco focuses on performance, and Civi caters to design-conscious users. HyperOS now serves as a global foundation to reduce regional variations and simplify maintenance.
The company is also reducing efforts in niche categories. It has been confirmed that there will be no Mix Fold 5 this year, while the Civi 5 Pro remains exclusive to China. Foldables require significant R&D investment and still represent a small portion of the market. Xiaomi prefers to allocate resources to areas like phone-to-car integration and smart cockpit systems, where it sees greater strategic value.
Xiaomi’s new direction rests on four key pillars: extended software lifecycles, a unified global software platform, a focus on durable hardware, and deeper ecosystem integration. This approach reduces the total number of phones launched each year, but improves quality, consistency, and user engagement.
For more daily updates, please visit our News Section.
With the launch just around the corner, the OnePlus Ace 6T — which will ship globally as the OnePlus 15R — has basically leaked in full. Fresh renders from reliable tipster @evleaks leave very little for OnePlus to reveal, and the big takeaway is exactly what earlier rumors hinted at: this year’s R-series model is going all-in on performance, even if that means trimming down the camera setup.
The renders show a design very much in line with the OnePlus 15. You get the same clean, squared-off frame, a flat back, and an overall look that wouldn’t feel out of place on a flagship.
But flip the phone around and the difference becomes obvious. Instead of the triple-camera layout we saw on the 13R (including a genuinely useful 2x telephoto), the Ace 6T sticks to just two rear cameras. The 50MP telephoto is simply gone, leaving a cleaner but less versatile camera island. This lines up perfectly with the design language of the standard Ace 6 in China and with the teaser OnePlus recently shared for the 15R.
Why the change? The answer seems pretty straightforward: the Ace 6T is debuting as the first smartphone powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Gen 5, and that chip alone puts it squarely in “performance-first” territory. For context, the Chinese version has scored 3.5 million on AnTuTu. OnePlus appears to have cut the telephoto lens to keep the overall price from creeping too high. The move echoes what other brands have done in the mid-premium segment lately.
According to a previous report, there’s also a limited Genshin Impact Edition on the way, likely with themed accessories and packaging, but nothing in the leaks suggests any hardware differences beyond cosmetics.
Whether this strategy resonates depends on what buyers prioritize. If you loved the 13R’s balanced camera setup, the downgrade will sting. But for users who want the fastest chip they can get without paying true flagship money, the Ace 6T/15R might end up ticking every box that matters.
Either way, once OnePlus officially unveils the device, the conversation is guaranteed to shift from “Is the telephoto gone?” to “Was it worth it?” in the 2026 mid-range race.
Xiaomi’s HyperOS 3 rollout — now tied to Android 16 globally — is picking up speed. After hitting several flagship and mid-range models earlier this month, the stable update has quietly arrived for four more popular devices that users have been waiting on.
Poco M6 Plus 5G
The newest phones to get the HyperOS 3 stable build are the Poco F7 Pro, Poco F7, Poco M6, and Redmi 13. The rollout is happening in waves through incremental OTA updates, so you may not see the notification right away. As usual, timing varies by region and device batch.
Here are the builds currently pushing out:
Poco F7 Pro – OS3.0.4.0.WOKMIXM
Poco F7 – OS3.0.3.0.WOLMIXM
Poco M6 – OS3.0.2.0.WNTMIXM
Redmi 13 – OS3.0.2.0.WNTMIXM
It’s not a huge surprise to see the F7 series finally join the list. Their Chinese twins — the Redmi K80 and Redmi Turbo 4 Pro — received their Android 16-based HyperOS updates earlier, which usually signals that the global Poco versions aren’t far behind.
HyperOS 3 is one of Xiaomi’s most ambitious software updates in years. Beyond the performance tuning under the hood, it brings a fresh visual layer with features like HyperIsland (Xiaomi’s take on Dynamic Island), new lockscreen styles, a more capable Gallery editor, and tighter integration with Google’s Gemini AI. There’s also Touch to Share, expanded system-wide translation, and enhanced AI writing and voice tools on supported hardware.
If you own one of these newly supported models, it’s worth checking the updater over the next few days. The Android 16-based HyperOS 3 build should reach your device as soon as your region’s rollout window opens.
Oppo launched the A5x in India back in May, but it looks like the company is already lining up a successor. A leaked promotional image, shared by tipster Abhishek Yadav on X, shows what appears to be the next model in the series.
The marketing material confirms the phone packs a 6,500mAh battery, a small bump from the 6,000mAh unit in the current A5x. Meanwhile, the charging speed stays the same at 45W. Oppo is also calling it the “segment’s biggest battery” phone.
The teaser also gives a first look at the design. The phone doesn’t resemble the A5x much at all. It swaps its predecessor’s layout for a new vertical pill-shaped camera module. Still, it is likely to house a single rear camera alongside an LED flash.
Last but not least, the device can be seen in two colors — blue and black.
While Oppo hasn’t shared specs for the new model, the current A5x gives a good idea of what to expect.
Revisiting Oppo A5x
Oppo A5x ships with a 6.67-inch HD+ LCD running at 120Hz and can hit up to 1,000 nits of peak brightness. It is also built durably with MIL-STD-810H certification, an IP65 rating, and a reinforced “360° Armour Body” design.
Oppo A5x 5G
Inside, the A5x uses MediaTek’s Dimensity 6300 chipset paired with a Mali-G57 MC2 GPU. First optics, it has a single 32MP rear sensor with an f/1.85 aperture and an LED flash. The front selfie camera is a 5MP shooter.
Oppo A5x was launched in India for an asking price of Rs 13,999 for the base model. So we are expecting the A6x to also target the sub-15,000 segment.
For more daily updates, please visit our News Section.
Oppo unveiled the Reno 15 and Reno 15 Pro last week in China. Unlike the previous generations, the standard model has arrived with a smaller form factor equipped with a 6.32-inch display. At the Reno 15 series unveiling event, the company confirmed that it will add a third model called the Reno 15c in December in China. While it shared an image of the phone, the company did not confirm any of its specs. A new leak, courtesy of tipster Bald Panda, has revealed the key specifications of the Reno 15c.
Oppo Reno 15c key specifications (rumored)
Oppo Reno 15c
As per the leak, the Oppo Reno 15c will be equipped with a 6.59-inch flat OLED screen that offers a 1.5K resolution and a 120Hz refresh rate. Under the hood, the device is equipped with the Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 chipset.
The rear camera setup of the Reno 15c may include a 50-megapixel (Sony LYT-600), an 8-megapixel (Sony IMX355), and a 50-megapixel (Samsung JN5) sensor. These could be for the primary, ultra-wide, and telephoto cameras, respectively.
The other details of the Reno 15c are under wraps. Likely, the brand will start teasing its arrival in the next few days in China. In terms of pricing, it could be positioned lower than the Reno 15.
Oppo is also said to be working on the Reno 15 series for the global market. There is a possibility that the global models could be slightly different from their Chinese counterparts. While the rumored Reno 15 Pro Max is not a part of the series for the Chinese market, it remains to be seen whether it is included for the global market.
For more daily updates, please visit our News Section.
After months of testing, Nothing has finally started rolling out the stable version of Nothing OS 4.0, based on Android 16. The first phone to receive the latest upgrade is the Nothing Phone 3. The brand has also laid out a roadmap for the remaining devices, which we’ll discuss later in this article.
The Nothing OS 4.0 update for the Nothing Phone 3 is tagged with the firmware version B4.0-251117-1909. Those who have already installed the open beta build should receive a minor update weighing about 700MB, while the remaining users will receive the complete package with a hefty download size of about 3GB.
If you’re rocking a Nothing Phone 3, go to Settings > System > System updates to manually check for updates. Please note that the update isn’t pushed to all users in a single day, so it may take a few days before the update appears on your Nothing device.
Nothing recommends backing up important data before installing the update. Also, keep in mind that the device may temporarily heat up and experience increased battery drain due to excessive background optimizations after installing the update. Everything should get back to normal in just a few days.
Nothing OS 4.0 changelog for the Nothing Phone 3:
New Features:
Added AI usage dashboard. When using Essential Space, it automatically tracks AI large model usage for enhanced privacy transparency. Path: Settings > Intelligence toolkit > AI usage.
Hiding apps directly from the home screen and App drawer is now supported. Find hidden apps via: Home screen > App drawer > Hidden icons.
Managing the search scope is now supported in App drawer to display results within a specific scope.
Added more size options for Weather, Pedometer, Screen Time widgets.
2×2 size is now supported for most QuickSettings tiles.
Pop-up view now supports two floating icons for easier switching.
System upgrade supports app optimisation to improve startup speed. Path: Settings > Apps > App optimisation.
Essential Innovations
Introducing Playground (Alpha) — come to experience unique creations from the Community, including Essential Apps, Glyph Toys, Camera Presets, and EQ Profiles.
Essential Apps (Alpha) are now open for download. Enjoy the AI-powered, community-crafted apps that blend creativity with efficiency.
Visual Enhancements
Nothing app icons have been redesigned with an all-new, fresh look.
Updated status bar icons with a more intuitive look.
Updated the lock screen password page with wallpaper blur effect.
Added 2 new lock screen clock faces in Customisation.
Extra dark mode is now available, bringing a more immersive dark style. Path: Settings > Display > Dark theme > Extra dark mode.
Improved transition animations in certain scenarios for a smoother, more fluid experience.
Glyph Interface
Phone (3) users, you told us the Glyphs could use more love, so we got to work. We’re excited to bring key refinements to Flip to Glyph to make the feature more customisable and impactful for daily use, along with refreshed versions of popular legacy Glyph features, reimagined for the Glyph Matrix. We hope you enjoy them!
Always-On Glyph Toys will now be activated with Flip to Glyph instead of on timeout, ensuring you always have a quick and reliable gesture to enable the toy of your selection.
Added a setting to choose whether Flip to Glyph switches your phone to Silent or Vibrate mode.
Tooltip now clearly states that calls are not affected by the “Essential Notifications only” option under Flip to Glyph – no more guessing!
While in Flip to Glyph, give your phone a quick shake while plugged in to instantly see the charging status.
The long-awaited Glyph Progress is back, now using Android 16 Live Update notifications for improved compatibility with third-party apps. Enable it via Settings > Glyph Interface > Glyph Progress.
Glyph Timer returns with a refreshed animation. Add it as a Quick Settings tile or enable it manually via Settings > Glyph Interface > Glyph Timer.
Last but not least, some features we at Nothing really wanted ourselves:
Introducing a new Moon Phase toy, showing exactly how the moon will look tonight.
Tired of the built-in toys? A new button on the “Manage Glyph Toys” page takes you directly to community-made creations on Nothing Playground.
The Glyph Mirror toy will now also save a matrix-styled photo. Déjà vu?
The Glyph Interface will now temporarily disable when you put your phone in your pocket. No notifications are that Essential that they need to glow through your pants.
While the Nothing OS 4.0 rollout timeline remains vague, the company has announced that the update will reach the rest of its smartphones over the coming weeks. The CMF phones will receive this major upgrade by the end of the year, while the Phone (3a) Lite will follow early next year.
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Samsung’s next mid-range phone may have just revealed more of itself. After the Galaxy A57 quietly appeared on Samsung’s internal test server earlier this month, the device has now surfaced on Geekbench with a new Exynos chip under the hood.
The listing confirms that the A57 is powered by the Exynos 1680, which succeeds last year’s Exynos 1580 used in the Galaxy A56. According to the benchmark entry, the smartphone achieves a single-core score of 1,311 and a multi-core score of 4,347 on Geekbench 6.5 for Android.
Here’s the Exynos 1680 equation
More interesting is what the benchmark listing suggests about Samsung’s CPU decisions. The Exynos 1680 appears to maintain the same clock speeds as its predecessor but with a rearranged core layout. It has:
1 Prime core @ up to 2.91GHz
4 Performance cores @ up to 2.6GHz
3 Efficiency cores @ up to 1.95GHz
That’s one more performance core and one fewer efficiency core compared to the Exynos 1580. On paper, this should deliver higher sustained performance rather than maximum power savings; however, we’ll have to see how that plays out in real-world use.
The tested Galaxy A57 unit also includes 12GB of RAM and was running Android 16.
The recent Geekbench run is a follow-up to one from August, which revealed only its OpenCL score. For those unaware, OpenCL is commonly used to benchmark graphics performance.
Galaxy A56
There are still many aspects we don’t know about, including design, cameras, battery, charging, and features. That said, it’s highly likely that Samsung will ship an AMOLED display with a 120Hz refresh rate and a 5,000mAh battery.
The Galaxy A57, at the very least, is expected to launch in March.
For more daily updates, please visit our News Section.
Apple’s fascination with high-end, slightly offbeat iPhone accessories isn’t slowing down. After dropping the iPhone Pocket (that starts from $150), the company is back with another designer collaboration — this time a MagSafe grip and stand.
The new accessory, called the Hikawa Phone Grip & Stand, attaches magnetically to the back of any MagSafe-equipped iPhone. At a glance, it looks like a more artsy version of the PopSocket, but Apple is pushing the angle that this one is different. And to be fair, the backstory is a little bit interesting than the average grip.
The designer behind it, Bailey Hikawa, has spent years making sculptural, ergonomic iPhone grips and cases. Her work caught Apple’s attention because she wasn’t just riffing on aesthetics; she was trying to build something that’s easier for all kinds of hands to use. According to Apple, the design process involved interviewing people with limited hand strength, dexterity issues, or conditions that make it harder to hold a phone steady. The end result is meant to reduce the effort needed to keep an iPhone in your hand.
Apple is selling the grip in two colors: a loud, neon Chartreuse and a more muted Crater finish that appears to use recycled materials. The shape is a bit quirky — almost like a soft, silicone loop with a cutout in the middle. It’s intentionally flexible and low-tension, so you’re not fighting to slide your fingers in or keep a grip on it. Hikawa’s own website lists a couple of extra colors, including Cobalt Blue and a Blurple Swirl pattern, but the price is the same $69.95 no matter where you buy it.
As for compatibility, it’s simple: if your phone has MagSafe (iPhone 12 and newer), this grip will work. MagSafe cases are supported too, and it fits every size from the Mini all the way up to the Pro Max.
BenQ has quietly added a new ultra-short-throw laser projector to its pro lineup, and it’s a bit of a standout. The LU895UST packs 5,000 ANSI lumens into a body that’s noticeably smaller than most projectors in the same brightness class.
The basics: it’s a WUXGA laser model with a 0.253:1 throw ratio, so you can blow up an image to around 200 inches while keeping the unit just a few centimeters from the wall. BenQ is pitching it at simulation setups, immersive exhibits, and higher-end education spaces, where big, bright visuals matter but there’s no room for a long-throw projector.
Color coverage hits 93% of Rec.709, and there are dedicated picture modes for Simulation, HDR10, and sRGB. BenQ also claims a 3,000,000:1 FOFO contrast ratio — standard marketing math, but typical for laser projectors in this range.
Because many of the use cases involve multi-projector blends, the LU895UST comes “blending ready,” with 2D Keystone correction and extra alignment tools to help stitch images together cleanly. Connectivity is what you’d expect: two HDMI 2.0b ports (HDCP 2.2), RJ45 for network control, USB-A, and a basic 10W speaker for when you don’t want to hook up an external setup.
The footprint is one of the more interesting bits. At 327 × 328.3 × 131.6 mm, it’s compact enough that installers won’t have to fight for ceiling space or wall clearance — no small thing in museums or small simulators. The LU895UST is already listed for €3,999 or $4,799.
For venues that need a huge picture in a bright room without sacrificing space, this model looks like one of BenQ’s more practical launches in a while — and possibly the new reference point for compact, high-lumen UST projectors.
With its next major launch just a few days away, Huawei is doing what it does best before a flagship debut: dropping carefully timed teasers. This time, the company’s CEO has shared the first official camera samples from the Mate 80 Pro, Mate 80 Pro Max, and the top-tier Mate 80 RS Ultimate Design — all focused on portraits and long-range zoom.
The photos, posted on Weibo, include two shots from the Mate 80 Pro, three from the Pro Max, and one from the RS model. The image samples suggest all three phones deliver standout portrait performance and strong telephoto results, with accurate colours and high dynamic range. The regular Mate 80 wasn’t part of this batch, but it’s still expected to appear at next Tuesday’s event.
Huawei isn’t stopping with the Mate 80 lineup, either. The company is also gearing up to show off the Mate X7, its second foldable of 2025. Earlier hints have also suggested that at least some Mate 80 models will feature a new “ultra-long battery” mode, though details remain fuzzy for now.
Interestingly, Huawei hasn’t shared anything concrete about the camera hardware behind these samples. Even the border watermark — which usually lists some hardware details, including the aperture and focal length — is missing that information. It feels like a deliberate choice to keep the specifics under wraps until launch.
The photos themselves look impressive, but for five out of the six shots, a lot of the impact comes from careful framing and naturally appealing subjects rather than any obvious hardware advantage. And as always, manufacturer-provided samples tend to be hand-picked and may even receive a bit of polishing, so anyone eyeing the Mate 80 series should take these early teasers with healthy skepticism.
With the full reveal coming later this November, Huawei is clearly trying to steer attention toward imaging — an area where its flagships have long excelled. We’ll share our own camera impressions as soon as we get to test the devices.
The Snapdragon 6s Gen 4, announced in October, delivers higher performance and expanded capabilities to mid-range phones by incorporating modern chip technologies and premium features from flagship chipsets. Qualcomm would be hoping for a stronger presence in the mid-range segment with this new chip, but its biggest rival, MediaTek, already has an answer to that: Dimensity 7400.
The Dimensity 7400 was announced earlier this year and has a similar spec sheet to the Snapdragon 6s Gen 4. Both have the same CPU cores, but they also bring notable differences. We’ll look at every aspect of the two chips, including benchmark numbers, in this detailed comparison to find out which delivers superior performance.
Snapdragon 6s Gen 4 vs Dimensity 7400: Benchmark numbers
Note: The Geekbench 6 scores for the Snapdragon 6s Gen 4 were obtained from an alleged Moto G100s listing. For the Dimensity 7400, we tested the Motorola Edge 60 to get the benchmark scores.
The Snapdragon 6s Gen 4 has scored 1,018 single-core points and 2,893 multi-core points in the Geekbench 6 test. These are good numbers for a lower mid-range chipset, but the Dimensity 7400 is slightly ahead with 1,058 points and 3,041 points in single-core and multi-core tests, respectively.
While the differences aren’t huge, the Dimensity 7400-powered devices should offer better CPU performance compared to the Snapdragon 6s Gen 4.
Geekbench 6
Single core
Multi core
Snapdragon 6s Gen 4
1,018
1,058
Dimensity 7400
2,893
3,041
We weren’t able to compare GPU scores because no device with the Snapdragon 6s Gen 4 chip has been released yet. We’ll update the scores here after testing.
Snapdragon 6s Gen 4 vs Dimensity 7400: Key differences
The Snapdragon 6s Gen 4 is manufactured using Samsung’s 4nm process node, while the Dimensity 7400 uses TSMC’s 4nm node. The latter generally offers better performance and power efficiency.
CPU, GPU, & NPU
Both mid-range chipsets feature octa-core CPUs with four Cortex-A78 performance cores and four Cortex-A55 efficiency cores. The difference here is that all cores in the Dimensity 7400 run at a relatively higher speed than those in the Snapdragon 6s Gen 4.
The higher clock speeds of the CPU cores and TSMC’s advanced manufacturing on the Dimensity 7400 should deliver higher peak performance than the Snapdragon 6s Gen 4. This also reflects in the benchmark scores.
For graphics rendering, the Snapdragon chip has an Adreno GPU. Qualcomm hasn’t revealed much about the GPU, but it claims the chip is 59% faster than the 6s Gen 3 and supports 144fps gaming. Additionally, the chip supports Variable Rate Shading and Qualcomm Game Quick Touch to improve touch latency and render graphics more efficiently.
The Dimensity 7400 is equipped with Mali-G615 MC2 GPU, which is 10% faster than its predecessor. Furthermore, it comes with MediaTek Adaptive Gaming Technology (MAGT) 3.0 and MediaTek’s Network Observation System (NOS) for improved performance, power efficiency, and connectivity.
Both chipsets also have NPUs for on-device AI capabilities: Qualcomm Hexagon NPU on Snapdragon 6s Gen 4 and MediaTek NPU 655 on Dimensity 7400. They also help optimize various aspects of the device, including camera, connectivity, and gaming.
Camera & Imaging
The Snapdragon chip features dual 12-bit Spectra ISPs, allowing up to 200MP photo capture and 2K HDR video recording at 30fps. Additionally, it supports 720p slow-motion video recording at 240 fps.
The 12-bit HDR ISP on the Dimensity 7400 also supports up to 200MP single camera. It supports precise noise reduction (MCNR) and video HDR for sharp, clear outputs. The Dimensity chipset also supports Google Ultra HDR image and up to 4K video recording.
Connectivity
Both chips have Release 16 5G modems, but their capabilities differ. The Snapdragon 6s Gen 4 offers up to 2.9 download speed, while the Dimensity 7500 can reach up to 3.27Gbps. The peak download speed remains the same for the Snapdragon chip on a Wi-Fi 6E connection. The Dimensity 7400 also supports Wi-Fi 6E, but MediaTek hasn’t revealed the data transfer speed.
Qualcomm Spectra dual ISPs (12-bit) up to 200MP single camera up to 32MP single camera at 30 fps with zero shutter lag up to 16+16MP dual cameras at 30 fps with zero shutter lag up to 2K HDR video recording at 30 fps 720p slow-mo video recording at 240fps Hardware-based noise reduction support
Imagiq 950 ISP (12-bit) up to 200MP single camera up to 4K video recording at 60 fps Google Ultra HDR support hardware-based noise reduction (MCNR)
Connectivity
Qualcomm Release 16 5G modem peak speed: 2.9 Gbps Wi-Fi 6E Bluetooth 5.4
Qualcomm Release 16 5G modem peak speed: 3.27 Gbps Wi-Fi 6E Bluetooth 5.4
POCO will launch the POCO F8 Pro, POCO F8 Ultra and the new POCO Pad X1 in global markets on 26 November. The company has been posting short teasers over the past few days, confirming key features ahead of the event.
The POCO Pad X1 will be introduced on the same day at 16:00 GMT+8. It will come in Grey and Blue. The back has a square camera module with a 13MP main camera and an LED flash. The sides show the power button, speaker grilles and another physical button.
POCO confirmed that the Pad X1 runs on the Snapdragon 7+ Gen 3 chipset. The tablet will feature a 3.2K display with a 144Hz refresh rate. POCO describes the screen as crystal clear and says it will support Dolby Vision Atmos.
The Pad X1 was previously spotted on Geekbench. The listing showed the tablet running Android 15 and an 8GB RAM variant. The benchmark results matched the expected performance for the Snapdragon 7+ Gen 3 chip.
Reports suggest that the POCO Pad X1 could be a rebranded version of the Xiaomi Pad 7. If this is accurate, the final hardware could be similar to Xiaomi’s tablet. The Xiaomi Pad 7 features an 11.2-inch LCD display with a 3.2K resolution, a 144Hz refresh rate, Nano Texture Display, anti glare and anti reflective features. It has a 3:2 aspect ratio, TÜV Rheinland low blue light certification, HDR 10 and Dolby Vision support.
The Xiaomi Pad 7 has a metal unibody. It runs on the Snapdragon 7+ Gen 3 chip with up to 12GB RAM and 256GB storage. It packs an 8,850mAh battery with 45W fast charging. The rear camera is 13MP and the front camera is 8MP. It runs Android 15 with HyperOS 2, which includes AI Writing, AI Live Subtitles and Xiaomi Creations. Other features include a 6.18mm body, 499 gram weight, IP52 rating, WiFi 6E, Bluetooth 5.4, Workstation Mode, Focus Keyboard support and quad speakers.
A new budget smartphone from Oppo has made its way to China’s MIIT certification. The device, listed under the model number PLT120, has also received wireless approval under certificate number 2025-21820, which is usually a strong sign that a launch isn’t far away.
That said, we’re not yet sure what the PLT120 corresponds to in terms of its marketing name. For now, let’s go through the details.
Oppo PLT120 Specs via MIIT
The PLT120 features a 6.75-inch display with an HD+ resolution of 1570×720. It’s almost certainly an LCD panel. The dimensions are on the larger side, measuring 166.6 × 78.5 × 8.61 mm, with a weight of 216 grams.
The heft could be the result of a large battery. The PLT120 packs a 6,830 mAh rated-capacity cell, which Oppo is likely to market as 7,000 mAh.
Under the hood, the device is powered by a 2.4GHz octa-core processor. MIIT listings don’t reveal exact chip names, but this configuration suggests a mid-tier, 5G-capable SoC. Oppo also seems to be offering generous memory options, with 8GB or 12GB of RAM and 128GB or 512GB of storage.
Connectivity support includes all the usual radios: Dual SIM, 5G (NSA/SA), LTE bands, WCDMA, GSM, Bluetooth, and USB.
On the camera front, the PLT120 keeps things simple. There’s a 50MP primary camera on the back paired with a 2MP secondary sensor. Up front, users get an 8MP selfie camera.
The phone also supports fingerprint unlocking, face unlock, and basic sensors like gravity, proximity, and ambient light. It runs Android–though the certification doesn’t mention the version–likely ColorOS based on Android 15.
This Black Friday, XGODY is bringing its most advanced projectors to customers at some of the lowest prices of the year. Known for creating simple, smart, and accessible projection solutions, the brand is offering significant discounts on two of its leading models, the XGODY N6Pro and XGODY N5. Both devices are designed to make big-screen entertainment easier and more enjoyable for families, students, and home-theater lovers.
XGODY N6Pro: A Smarter Way to Experience the Big Screen
Premium Visuals With Intelligent Features
The XGODY N6Pro offers a high-quality cinematic experience with native 1080P resolution, HDR10, 700 ANSI lumens, and a 5000:1 contrast ratio, ensuring sharp images and bright, vivid colors. Three levels of adjustable brightness make it comfortable for day or night use.
Powered by Whale OS, the N6Pro includes official Netflix certification and comes preloaded with YouTube, Prime Video, Disney+, plus access to over 8,000 apps. With 32GB of storage, users can install and stream content without limitations.
Connectivity is also a major strength, thanks to WiFi 6.0, Bluetooth 5.4, and support for AirPlay, Miracast, Transscreen, and TV Cast, making it compatible with iOS, Android, Fire TV Stick, gaming consoles, and Bluetooth speakers.
Easy Setup and Flexible Design
The N6Pro includes auto focus, auto keystone correction, auto obstacle avoidance, and auto screen alignment, allowing it to adjust the picture within seconds. The 135° rotating stand, built-in 5W speaker, and AI voice remote make it suitable for living rooms, bedrooms, or outdoor use.
XGODY N5: Compact, Smart, and Ready for Everyday Viewing
The XGODY N5 Projector is designed to bring smart, high-quality projection into everyday spaces. With native 1080P resolution, 4K decoding, HDR10 support, and a 3000:1 contrast ratio, the N5 delivers vivid colors, sharp details, and bright visuals with its 450 ANSI lumens. It’s built-in Whale OS, official Netflix certification, integrated 135° swivel mount, and AI voice remote make it easy to use anywhere, from the bedroom and living room to outdoor movie nights.
Black Friday Deal
For Black Friday and Cyber Monday, XGODY is offering the N5 at a major discount. Originally priced at $139, it is now available for just $89 with the code XGDN5R88. The deal is available on Amazon and the official XGODY website. This offer gives buyers access to a smart streaming projector with auto focus, auto keystone correction, WiFi 6.0, Bluetooth 5.2, and multi-protocol casting at one of the best prices of the season.
XGODY is also hosting a limited giveaway for N6Pro or N5 buyers. Customers who share real usage experiences — through photos, videos, or written posts — on platforms like YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, Reddit, Pinterest, Twitter, or community forums can receive a free 100-inch ALR projection screen.
Reward: Free 100-inch ALR screen
Limit: First 300 participants (first-come, first-served)
Campaign Period: November 20 – December 31, 2025
Participation: Submit via banner on xgody.com or contact XGODY via email/DM
With major discounts on both the N6Pro and N5 projectors, XGODY is making big-screen experiences more accessible than ever. Whether for movies, games, learning, or family time, these projectors deliver smart performance, strong visuals, and easy setup, all at impressive Black Friday prices.
For years, the smartphone industry’s unspoken rule has been clear: if you want a compact device, prepare to compromise. Brands reserve their best cameras, batteries, and performance for “Ultra” and “Pro” variants, leaving small-screen enthusiasts with a choice between overloaded premium devices or underpowered budget options. I spent two weeks testing the vivo X300 Standard, and it systematically demolishes that compromise.
Design: Finally, a True One-handed Phone
The X300 is built for people who actually use phones with one hand. At 6.3 inches and 183 grams, it achieves something rare: a device that doesn’t force you to choose between portability and capability.
vivo didn’t cut corners on materials. The matte AG glass back comes in four colors—Black, Blue, Purple, and Pink—and resists fingerprints while catching light in subtle, shifting patterns. It feels premium, not plasticky. More importantly, it doesn’t slip from your grip when you’re juggling coffee and groceries. After a week of daily use, I’d forgotten what a relief it is to have a phone that doesn’t require finger gymnastics.
Software: OriginOS 6 Actually Understands Real Usage
Running Android 16 with OriginOS 6, the X300’s software revolves around three principles: smoothness, intelligence, and personalization. But unlike most manufacturer skins, Vivo’s execution respects how people actually work.
Real-World Performance, Not Benchmark Theater
Multitasking doesn’t faze this phone. I had a dozen apps running background processes while gaming, and never noticed a frame drop. More impressively, vivo’s interface rendering makes everyday actions—scrolling lists, switching apps, loading content—noticeably snappier than other small-screen flagships I’ve used.
Standout Features
Drag & Go sounds like marketing fluff until you actually use it. Drag a hotel address to the OriginOS shelf and navigation launches instantly. Drag a check-out time to Notes and you’ve saved yourself three taps. It’s the kind of friction reduction that adds up.
AI Meeting Captions transcribed calls in real time with surprising accuracy, and the Driving Commute Service automatically simplified my notifications when it detected I was in the car. These aren’t gimmicks; they’re practical tools I used daily.
Global Support – The system offers real-time translation for over 30 languages—including English, Spanish, and French—enabling one-click translation of chat messages or foreign-language webpages. It also integrates seamlessly with Google services with zero compatibility issues, a critical requirement for global users (Please check the video).
Notification Stacking – Alerts from the same app automatically fold into a single stack, keeping the lock screen uncluttered and ensuring important information remains easy to locate.
Imaging: Where This Phone Punches Above Its Weight
The X300’s camera system is its crown jewel, and the telephoto lens is the star—rare for a non-Pro device.
Telephoto Lens: Sharp Details with Minor Trade-Offs
Our testing team captured real-world sample shots using the telephoto lens, with impressive results: sharp-edged grass plants, intricate garden roof tiles, detailed sculptures on ancient buildings, and the sleek architectural lines of the Shanghai World Financial Center were all rendered with exceptional clarity. This is no “mini” downgrade of a flagship camera—it functions as a capable standalone imaging system.
That said, we observed a minor limitation at 223mm focal length: the AI sharpening algorithm creates a trade-off. While it boosts edge sharpness, it also introduces slight smearing, especially in overcast weather or complex indoor lighting. In these conditions, detailed objects may appear slightly AI-generated—a flaw, but one that is forgivable when comparing a standard model to its Pro-tier counterpart.
A key advantage is the 50MP periscope telephoto lens equipped with CIPA 4.5 professional anti-shake technology. Whether capturing portraits or macro shots of flower petals, results remain consistently sharp—a feature many brands omit from standard models to cut costs.
200MP Zeiss Main Camera: Consistent Quality Across Lighting Conditions
The 200MP Zeiss main camera uses a custom large-size Samsung HPB sensor—the same core hardware that made the X300 Pro a favorite among photography enthusiasts. It maintains sharpness in low-light environments and bright sunny landscapes, delivering reliable quality across diverse shooting scenarios.
Ultra-Wide and Portrait Capabilities
The ultra-wide-angle lens also performs strongly, capturing expansive scenes without distortion (sample photos available for reference). For portraits, the X300 Standard retains the X200 series’ popular focal lengths: 23mm, 35mm, 50mm, 85mm, and 100mm.
Vivo’s imaging style prioritizes “enhanced appeal” over strict realism—skin blemishes are subtly softened, a choice that sparks mild industry debate but aligns with consumer preferences for flattering portrait results.
Video and Creator-Centric Features
Video Performance: The device supports 4K 120fps LOG video mode and up to 2.8K 60fps video stabilization. Our sample videos showed minimal shakiness during walking shots, making them suitable for casual content creators and vloggers.
Post-Processing Tools: “Shoot First, Crop Later” allows users to adjust framing after capture, while video-to-Live-Photo conversion preserves dynamic moments (e.g., street scenes, event highlights) without requiring perfect initial composition.
AI Portrait Erasure: Notably, this feature stands out as more natural and realistic than competing solutions. Users can even reposition people within a photo, and the results remain visually authentic—offering unprecedented flexibility for post-shoot editing.
Performance: Strong Benchmarks and Real-World Gaming Stability
To evaluate performance comprehensively, we combined benchmark testing with real-world usage scenarios—ensuring results reflect how users actually interact with the device.
Benchmark Results
Real-World Gaming Test
We subjected the device to heavy gaming with Honkai: Star Rail, maxing out graphics settings and frame rates: 0–10 minutes: Maintained a stable 60fps, with responsive controls and no lag or frame drops—handling the game’s initial load and complex in-game environments effortlessly.
10–15 minutes: Performance throttling kicked in, causing slight frame rate fluctuations (55–60fps). Concurrently, the device’s body temperature reached approximately 50°C (122°F), feeling noticeably warm to the touch.
15+ minutes: Frame rates dropped further to 35–45fps, likely due to limited inner thermal space. This is physics, not failure. Slim bodies have less thermal mass. If you do play games for over 30 minutes, expect throttling. For everything else—including my typical 15-minute gaming sessions—it stays smooth.
Display: Compact but Thoughtful
While the 6.3-inch display is compact, Vivo has implemented smart tweaks to balance display quality and long-term eye comfort: AI Adaptive Eye Comfort Mode: Adjusts the screen’s color temperature based on ambient light to minimize eye strain. The display also holds Germany’s TÜV Low Blue Light certification, making extended scrolling less tiring.
In-Display Fingerprint Unlock: Operates in just 0.2 seconds—fast enough for seamless one-handed access—and functions reliably even with wet hands, addressing a common pain point for users.
Small Screen Mode: Sliding inward from the bottom edge of the screen shrinks the display to a one-hand-friendly size, enabling easy access to top-screen icons without adjusting grip.
Battery Life: Big Capacity Solves Small-Screen Limitations
Small-screen phones are often criticized for poor battery life, but the Vivo X300 Standard addresses this with a combination of hardware upgrades and software optimizations. At its core is a 6040mAh battery—unusually large for a compact device. Our real-world testing recorded up to 14 hours of mixed usage—including web browsing, social media scrolling, and photography—on a single full charge
Complementing the large battery is 67W fast charging: it reaches 50% battery in 18 minutes and a full charge in approximately 45 minutes, eliminating anxiety about low power during busy days.
The Verdict: The Small-Screen Phone to Beat in 2025
The Vivo X300 Standard redefines what a small-screen flagship can be. It retains a slim, 183g, 6.3-inch body for effortless one-handed use while delivering flagship-level performance in three critical areas: imaging, processing speed, and battery life.
Its greatest strength is the 50MP anti-shake periscope telephoto + 200MP Zeiss main camera combo—a pairing that lets small-screen users capture professional-quality photos without paying Pro-tier prices. It excels at shooting “distant or small” subjects in daily life, outperforming even our highest expectations for a small-screen flagship in this price range. For photography enthusiasts, it even supports custom lenses, matching the X300 Pro’s versatility.
If you’re tired of choosing between portability and performance, the Vivo X300 Standard is the 2025 small-screen flagship worth Buying.
Bowers & Wilkins has launched the Px8 S2 McLaren Edition, a new version of its Px8 S2 wireless headphones created with McLaren Automotive and the McLaren Formula 1 Team. The headphones use the McLaren Papaya finish with Anthracite Grey accents, along with visible McLaren Speedmark details on the headband and earcups. The design also includes diamond-cut edges on each elliptical logo plate and soft Nappa leather on the memory-foam headband and ear cushions.
The Px8 S2 McLaren Edition focuses on sound performance and the look that connects to McLaren’s identity. It features Bowers & Wilkins noise-cancellation technology that reduces outside noise without affecting music quality. This model is the third product in the partnership and improves on the original Px8 S2.
Audio performance is driven by upgraded 40mm Carbon Cone drive units. The units have a redesigned chassis, voice coil, suspension and magnet for higher detail and better resolution. They are angled toward the listener’s ears to keep a consistent distance across the surface of each driver, which improves imaging and stereo width. The headphones support Qualcomm aptX Adaptive 24/96, aptX Lossless and Bowers & Wilkins DSP to deliver 24-bit, 96kHz high-resolution audio.
Users can control the headphones through the Bowers & Wilkins Music app. The app allows adjustment of noise cancellation, transparency mode, battery levels, wear sensor sensitivity and the Quick Action button. There is also a five-band EQ with the option to save presets. Battery life is rated at 30 hours, and a 15-minute charge provides up to seven hours of use.
The Px8 S2 McLaren Edition will be available from 19 November. Lyle Smith, President of Sound United at HARMAN, said the new model highlights the ongoing partnership with McLaren.
The Bowers & Wilkins Px8 S2 McLaren Edition will be sold on the Bowers & Wilkins website and through selected retailers for £729, €829 and $899.
For years, the biggest copyright fights around generative AI have focused on the companies building the technology. Now, for the first time, a regular user is at the center of a criminal case. In Japan, a 27-year-old man is being recommended for prosecution after allegedly using Stable Diffusion to recreate a copyrighted illustration and selling the result as a book cover.
Stable Diffusion image samples
Police in Chiba Prefecture say the man issued an enormous number of prompts — reportedly around 20,000 — in an effort to push the open-source model into reproducing a specific protected image. According to reporting from Yomiuri Shimbun (machine translated), this appears to be the first case anywhere in the world where an end user, not the creator of the AI tool, is facing criminal copyright charges over AI-generated artwork.
Until now, enforcement has almost always targeted developers. Getty Images famously went after Stability AI in the UK, and courts in the US have repeatedly ruled that AI-generated images can’t be copyrighted at all. Going after individual users has been viewed as unrealistic — they typically don’t have the resources of a tech company, and proving deliberate copying inside a complex diffusion model is extremely difficult.
Legal analyst Kensaku Fukui notes that the key factor here is intent. The sheer volume of prompts and the alleged effort to steer the system toward a specific artwork could set this case apart from the everyday “draw this in x style” prompts people type for fun. If prosecutors argue successfully that he used Stable Diffusion as a kind of sophisticated photocopier, the ruling could have major implications.
It’s still unclear which artist or copyright holder (if any) filed a complaint, or exactly what image was supposedly duplicated. What is clear is that this case pushes into new territory: at what point does prompting an AI shift from creative play to criminal reproduction? With most lawsuits still aimed at the companies behind these models, the outcome in Chiba could set an early precedent — and determine whether everyday users of generative AI may one day be held criminally liable too.
If you’re looking for a good entry-level of headphones, then here is a huge discount on JBL TUNE 760NC. The headphones are originally retailing for ₹7,999, which is currently marked down to an incredible price of ₹3,499, a massive 56% saving on Amazon. As an icing on the cake, you can get up to ₹1,500 Discount on select cards, bringing the effective price down to an incredibly low ₹1,999.
These headphones are built around two core features: JBL’s legendary Pure Bass Sound and powerful Active Noise Cancellation (ANC). Which means no tension about distracting chatter and ambient noise, for the TUNE 760NC creates your personal sound bubble, allowing you to immerse yourself fully in your music, work, or audiobooks.
Performance meets endurance with an excellent battery life, offering up to 50 hours of playtime. It comes with Bluetooth 5 and having support to aptX codec and more. JBL TUNE 760NC has a smart design that includes a lightweight, foldable frame and comfortable earpads, making it an ideal travel companion.
Additionally, headphones are packed with Multi-Device Connectivity, so you can seamlessly switch from watching a movie on your tablet to answering a call on your phone. They also feature AUX and Voice Assistant Support for complete versatility.
Please Note: When you buy something using the links in our articles, we may earn a small commission at no cost to you.
If you’re interested, head over to the Amazon product page now and secure your JBL TUNE 760NC in Blue, Black, White, or Rose color options before this limited-time offer and the card discount vanish. Also, don’t forget to check whether your card is eligible for the discount, as the instant discount is applicable for a few select cards, such as those from IDFC Bank.
For more deals and discounts on gadgets, follow our dedicated section for deals.
There’s a quiet but fascinating dispute brewing in Europe’s smartphone industry. As the EU’s new Ecodesign rules kicked in this summer, most major brands simply stretched their software support timelines to six or seven years and moved on. It looked like a smooth transition toward longer-lasting phones.
Motorola, however, isn’t convinced — and its pushback comes down to one surprisingly powerful word in the regulation.
The Ecodesign rules (Commission Regulation 2023/1670), which came into effect on June 20, cover everything from repairability standards to battery durability. But the part that drew the most attention was software longevity. On its own website, the European Commission confidently stated that the rules would ensure “operating system upgrades for longer periods (minimum 5 years from the date on which the last unit of a product model is no longer placed on the market).”
That sounded like a straightforward requirement. And most smartphone makers quickly changed their software update policy to comply with the new rule. But Motorola took a closer look at the actual legal text instead. Buried in Annex 2, title 1.2, paragraph 6(a), the key line reads:
“From the date of end of placement on the market to at least 5 years after that date, manufacturers […] shall, if they provide security updates, corrective updates or functionality updates to an operating system, make such updates available at no cost…”
That “if” changes everything. The regulation doesn’t explicitly force manufacturers to provide updates — only that, if they do, those updates must remain free for at least five years. Since no company charges for patches anyway, Motorola argues the rules don’t actually require longer support.
As a result, the brand continues to ship phones in Europe with relatively shorter timelines, sometimes barely hitting four years. The Motorola Edge 70, for instance, is reportedly eligible for up to four major OS updates and six years of security updates in Europe
Whether Motorola’s interpretation stands remains to be seen, but the situation highlights how much can hinge on a single word — and how regulations that sound clear in a press release can get far murkier once you read the fine print.
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