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lundi 3 octobre 2016

Xiaomi Launches the Mi Box in USA for $69

There's no denying that Xiaomi has become a strong player in the smartphone market in Asia, thanks to its affordable lineup, its spec-heavy mid-ends and great-value flagships. Markets outside of Asia, though, have not yet tasted the offerings from Xiaomi. That changes today, in some part at least, as Xiaomi is launching the Mi Box in the United States for a price of $69.

Although not a smartphone, the Mi Box is the first device from Xiaomi that is launching in the USA. The device was unveiled back at Google I/O 2016, and was supposed to land in early Q4 2016. In simple terms, the Mi Box is a Set Top Box that runs Android TV, but when you keep in mind the current scenario of Android TV STB products, the Mi Box is perhaps the cheapest you could buy, while still getting some great value for money.

Mi Box

The Mi Box supports 4K video at 60fps, made possible by quad-core Cortex-A53 with the Mali 450 GPU and 2GB of RAM inside the device. There's also support for Dolby Digital Plus audio playback. You also get 8GB of storage, HDMI 2.0a compatibility, a voice-activated Bluetooth remote, and optionally, a game controller (sold separately).

Of course, there is Android TV on the device, so you get all the apps and advantages of that ecosystem. Xiaomi is also bundling a few software service freebies to entice more users to purchase the Mi Box.

For $69, the Mi Box certainly offers a pretty good deal, especially for first time adopters who do not want to invest too much into Android TV. The device is available in the US from today (change the region to US to get the option to purchase), though orders will be shipped out on October 6th. You can also find the device in Walmart soon, though exact dates for availability in retail outlets is not known yet.

What are your thoughts on the Mi Box? Let us know in the comments below!



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Opinion: The LG V20 Offers One of the Best Year-on-Year Improvements of 2016

On September 6, LG unveiled their latest flagship device, the V20. A few months back we wrote about the V20, discussing how important this device is for LG. Given LG's declining sales and increasingly lackluster offerings, many were hoping LG would provide a solid flagship option with this device.

Now that the V20 has been officially announced, and has been making its rounds in the blogosphere, we can see if it is the device LG needs. The V20 was presented as being the device to "trim the fat" from devices past. During the launch event, LG stated that they listened to customer feedback while designing the V20, and used the feedback when deciding what features to keep and remove. It is important to note that this is not the XDA LG V20 review, and there won't be a review for the time being given none of our in-depth reviewers currently have a V20. This article is meant to be a reflection on the released specs, features and UX improvements of the V20, how it is different from the rest of LG's flagships and how it improves upon the V10. Most importantly, we'll look at what makes the V20 an improvement over the V10 to see if LG stayed true to its word.

"In developing the V20, we looked at the consumers who are fan of the V series. We wanted to really examine what they liked about it, what they needed — and so we looked at popular aspects of it, and we built upon [them]. So you get more of everything you love, and less of everything you didn't need."

Frank Lee

LG_Article_3Starting off we'll look at the changes from the V10 to the V20. The most obvious is the decision to move from a rubberized back to a metal back. This will add to the premium feel of the device, and has done so without leaving the MIL-STD-810G certification behind. Having a metal back this time around will eliminate the peeling issues many V10 owners faced, myself included. It does not appear to be the same faux metal that was found in the G5 as well, meaning there is no false sense of premium.

Seeing a return from the G5 instead of the V10 is the set of dual rear cameras. The dual cameras were introduced on the V10 in the form of front facing cameras, and served a similar purpose as those on the G5's back. The main shooter acts like a regular camera, and the second camera is used to increase the range on the optical zoom. The V10 introduced manual controls for video, aimed to cater to content creators looking to make the best movies possible. The V20 sees the return of manual video controls, with the same amount of control offered in the V10.

For what seems like the first time ever, LG released a phone in the second half of the year with an up to date Android Version right out of the box. Last year's V10 was launched with Android Lollipop, a month or so after the release of Android Marshmallow. This year, the V20 is releasing with the most current version of the OS. This is something that is a rarity in the Flagship-level world sometimes even in Q4. Samsung, Motorola, Sony, LG, and many others usually wait until months later to release devices on the latest platform. Another OEM that has done this is HTC with their A9 offering, which fell just short of the 'flagship' category, and also on its promises of receiving timely updates. Until now each version of Android is debuted on a Nexus device, this year the device to debut Android Nougat is the LG V20.

v20nogat2Not only being up to date, the software seems to break the mold of LG UX of years past. This year LG has focused on marketing the features of Android Nougat, instead of promoting their UX suite. Google has even used the LG V20 to showcase some of Android Nougat's new features, as well as promoting it on the Android Nougat website. The V20 also debuted one of Google's new features: In Apps Search, which will use Google to search through your apps for information.

Something LG built on from the V10 to the V20 is the audio. The V20 is the first phone to feature a 32-bit Hi-Fi Quad DAC. This means that any Audio coming from high-quality devices will sound significantly better than most other phones, as the phone is able to drive more-premium headphones. The V10 DAC was very highly praised, and current impressions from the blogosphere are showing that the V20 outperforms the V10 in headphone quality. The speakers on the V10 were very lackluster, and the majority of early users of the V20 have claimed that the speakers perform much better.

LG also boasts a robust HD Audio Recording ability as part of the "built with the storytellers in mind" theme of the device. The V20 has beefed up the microphones, allowing for 15 extra decibels of audio intake over the V10. The V20 now also includes a feature packed audio recording app to take full control of its three microphones, something not available on the V10. Previous LG phones have gotten a bad rap for having lackluster microphone performance, but so far impressions from various owners of the V20 have shown that said tend is over. This phone is being heavily marketed to content creators, and it appears that it can live up to its promise of extraordinary capturing abilities.

v10screen

The V10's second screen had lots of potential, and the V20 builds upon it.

The V20 may have plenty in common with the G5, but it still holds plenty in common with it's older brother the V10. For starters, the touted Second Screen has made a return. This was a huge talking point on the V10, and came with quite a bit of backlash. It was written off quite early for causing display light bleeding issues, alongside claims of being a 'gimmick' for only offering redundant functionality.

I've used the V10's second screen for the better part of a year, and have found a new level of functionality most week long reviews overlooked. As it stands, the way in which I use my V10 is completely different than how I use any other Android phone. I utilize the features offered on the second screen in a way that allows me to rarely interact with the navigation bar. Setting a shortcut to my launcher in the app shortcuts screen negates the need for a home button, and the recent tasks screen negates the need for a recents button.

Quick contacts and music controls eliminate the need for me to have to leave whatever I'm doing to text a friend or change songs. The V20 added onto this functionality, this time around all notifications are going through the Second Screen, and interacting with them will open the Quick Reply Feature of Android Nougat. The quick settings widget that was only available when the V10's screen was off is now available at any time when the V20 is powered on. It also seems that it is now possible to place shortcut widgets on the apps shortcut panel, with Google In Apps search being the main example.

removableback

The V20 also retains LG's signature feature (and a rare breed these days), a removable battery. Up until now, there hasn't been a flagship phone with a metal removable back — metal bodies and removable backs were deemed incompatible. The G5 showed that it was possible to have a metal phone with a removable battery, but through a pop out slot on the bottom of the phone. Poor build quality with the G5's pop out slot showed that it was an unsuccessful attempt, and the device ultimately failed to sell its modularity. The slot rarely sat flush with the phone, and provided an awkward experience for changing batteries. The V20's take at a metal phone with a removable battery shows that sometimes the classic approach is the best, even if it takes plenty of engineering to bring it up to speed with current trends.

While all the features and additions are great, this isn't everything that is needed to produce a hit phone. Marketing plays a huge factor in how a phone is sold, and so far LG has been dropping the ball on marketing the V20. The launch event was streamed through Facebook, and was announced the day before Apple's iPhone 7 announcement. LG has announced phones months ahead of launch before, but planning the day before a large competitor's announcement is peculiar. It could be reasoned that LG was attempting to topple the hype behind the new iPhone, however it appears to not have worked with many consumers almost flat out forgetting the V20 was launched. On top of that, no one knew when the phone would officially launch, with multiple dates going around as to when you can even order the phone. This issue with early announcements and delayed releases has hurt many products before, including LG's G5.

This marketing hiccup will surely hinder the V20 sales, but an unfortunate recall of another top OEM flagship will certainly help. We wrote on how this OEM's recall will leave a gap to be filled by other OEMs, discussing the gravity in which the recall is affecting their brand. The V20 appears to be a worthy successor to last year's V10, improving on what was needed, and not making sacrifices to get there. It's a no holds barred, flagship-level device that sports a robust amount of features not available anywhere else. It doesn't come with the latest Snapdragon 821 processor, nor the the most RAM, but it's another phone designed for life that improves upon its predecessor in every way that counts, with no compromises sticking out like a sore thumb. LG will need to strike a homerun with this device if they hope to pull mobile sales back from a continuous decline. But by the looks of it, this phone has the punch it takes… now it's just a matter of seeing where LG takes it.

Check out XDA's LG V20 Forums! >>



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Win an Honor 8: 4GB RAM, Dual-Camera, Premium Design

We're back with another Honor 8 contest, and like before, it's open to all countries! You can enter the contest in numerous ways. Each point you earn is considered an entry, so the more points you earn, the higher your chances are of winning. As a reminder, the Honor 8 is the current flagship from Honor and sports dual-cameras, USB Type-C with fast-charging, a Kirin 950 CPU with 4GB RAM, and a 5.2″ 1080p display. We will pick the winner around during the week of October 17. Good luck!

Win a New Honor 8!

  Honor 8 XDA Review   Honor 8 Forums

  Win Stuff from Honor



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Facebook Announces Messenger Lite For Older Devices and Emerging Markets

Facebook just announced Facebook Messenger Lite, a new low-resource version of Facebook Messenger (much to the disdain of the developers of Lite Messenger for Facebook), joining Facebook Lite in their portfolio.

Facebook Lite LogoFacebook Messenger Lite is a cut down version of Facebook Messenger, weighing in at under 10 MB. It is designed to be fast to download (even on slower data connections) and fast to open, and includes many of the basic Facebook Messenger features like "messaging, sending and receiving photos and links, and receiving stickers." However no mention was made in the announcement of calling, location sharing, read receipts, or various other features, some of which have likely been cut in order to get down to the smaller APK size that they are targeting. Facebook also made extensive mention of how Facebook Messenger Lite was designed with a focus on slow and unreliable network connections, and how it will help expand Facebook Messenger into markets that it previously couldn't reach.

David Marcus, Facebook's VP of Messaging Products, stated that Messenger Lite was created "for people, who still own older Android devices (think 2009-2011) that have less available 'disk' space, memory, and lower performing CPUs, and that often run on lower bandwidth connections", rather than for people buying current entry-level phones. Back when dual core processors were just starting to hit the market, batteries were commonly around 1400 mAh, Samsung hitting the 1 GHz mark was considered impressive, and many phones were shipping with storage amounts measured in Megabytes. Phones like the Motorola Droid, the HTC Desire, and the Samsung Galaxy S II. Technology has changed substantially since then, and it can be easy to forget how different those devices were from current flagship phones like the Moto Z Force, the HTC 10, or the Samsung Galaxy Note 7 if you haven't seen them in a while, but there are still people out there that use older devices, and Facebook wants to see those people using their communication platform.

Facebook Messenger Lite

Facebook is aware of the reputation that Facebook Messenger has as being a bit of a resource hog, and were very careful in their launch announcement to avoid undercutting their full Facebook Messenger offering. While having people on Messenger Lite is nice for Facebook, they would prefer that people use the full Messenger offering to avoid splintering which parts of the userbase can use which features with each other. They know that there is a risk of people switching from Facebook Messenger to Facebook Messenger Lite, especially as many people have been asking for improvements in Facebook Messenger's resource usage for quite a while now (which was redoubled by Facebook's removal of messaging functionality from the mobile website earlier this year), and are stressing that Facebook Messenger Lite is targeted for early smartphones, the likes of which are becoming increasingly rare in the Western world. As a result, Facebook may decide to permanently keep country restrictions on Messenger Lite similarly to what they are currently doing with Facebook Lite.

Facebook Messenger Lite will be initially launching in Kenya, Tunisia, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, and Venezuela, with promises of more countries being added shortly. It will be interesting to see what countries Facebook Messenger Lite comes to, and what steps Facebook takes to promote it there. Messenger Lite looks like it could be a solid product, but Facebook will need to take some steps to advertise it if they want people to actually use it (although their methods with Facebook Lite seem to have been fairly successful, with it reaching a couple hundred million installs already).

It also will likely only launch on Android, as there are limited numbers of smartphones on other OSes in developing markets (although many companies like Samsung, Microsoft, Apple, and Mozilla have been attempting to make inroads into the market), and Facebook extensively mentioned Android in their announcement.

What are your thoughts on Facebook's strategy of Lite apps? Do you think it is a wasted effort with early smartphones being on their way out? Or is it a smart strategy to target markets that Facebook Messenger cannot reach, especially for something social where every user matters? Let us know in the comments below!



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Samsung Sells 30,000 New Galaxy Note 7 Units in South Korea in 2 Days

Samsung has been working hard to get back on their feet after the whole defective battery issues with the Galaxy Note 7. The last couple of months have not been good to the South Korean tech giant, but things are finally starting to level out for them. It did seem like business was going to get rocky for Samsung again when a replaced Galaxy Note 7 caught fire, but that looks to be an isolated incident and not another batch of defective batteries.

Two weeks ago we started seeing safe Galaxy Note 7 units appear in major US wireless carrier stores. This first started with AT&T, but then branched out to the other major US carriers as well. Just like in the United States, Samsung had also suspended sales in other countries as well. The company just resumed sales of the Galaxy Note 7 in their home country of South Korea on October 1st as they had previously announced.

Along with resumed sales, Samsung is also offering South Korean customers a 50% discount on screen repairs for those who buy the device in October. One would suspect that customers would be worried about buying the Galaxy Note 7 right now, but this doesn't seem to be the case. In South Korea, a smartphone is said to be a "hit" if they are able to sell 10,000 units per day and the Note 7 has surpassed this benchmark.

The Korea Herald is reporting that since sales of the Galaxy Note 7 have resumed, Samsung has been able to sell 30,000 units on Saturday and Sunday. This has to be a relief for Samsung, but the real test is if they will be able to keep up with these sales numbers, especially outside of their own turf in South Korea. Dedicated Samsung fans would have likely bought the Note 7 anyway, but it'll be interesting to see if the smartphone has staying power after the reputation that has been building around it.

Source: The Korea Herald



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Xiaomi Brings the Redmi 3S+ to India via Retail Stores

Xiaomi has been very impressive in their push to increase their online presence. For a long time, buying a smartphone online from Xiaomi was the only official way you could get one of their smartphones or tablets. There have always been unofficial resellers here and there, but the company's flash sales were the only official channel they had and they did this to keep inventory costs down as low as possible.

Then, we started to see Xiaomi branch out a little and sell their products in their own Mi.com webstore as well as 3rd-party websites like Flipkart and Amazon. It had become clear that while the flash sale method works when a device is first released, they could sell much more by expanding their online presence. Online retailers like Flipkart and Amazon have done well for the Chinese electronics maker, but now they're looking for even more retail outlets.

The company just announced they will be building 1,000 of their own brick and mortar retail locations by 2020, but they're also looking to tap into other physical retail stores. It looks like the Redmi 3S+ will be Xiaomi's first smartphone to hit physical retail stores in India. The device was first released back in June of this year and offers reasonable hardware specs for the price Xiaomi sells it for.

You can buy the Redmi 3S+ in India, but it will be available exclusively through the company's retail partners. Xiaomi is advertising a number of their partners in the announcement tweet, but doesn't include them all. So, if you're a frequent Sangeetha, Poorvika, Big C, StoreKing, or Just Buy Live shopper, then you will start to see the Redmi 3S+ on their store shelves. The twitter announcement also mentions it will be available at "other leading retail stores," but doesn't announce the names of those other retail stores.

Source: @RedmiIndia



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New Pixel and Pixel XL Details Emerge as Preorder Pages go Live

There's been a number of Google Pixel and Pixel XL leaks over the weekend and most seem to reassure us of things we've already heard in rumors. And throughout these leaks, we've learned a couple of new things that hadn't been talked about before. There have been official renders leaked from multiple retailers who accidentally pressed the publish button too early. Which is interesting to have seen happen when even Google isn't scheduled to announce them until tomorrow.

First, we learned that Google Pixel and Pixel XL customers will be able to store unlimited "full resolution" images in Photos instead of being limited by the amount of storage you have on your Google account. We also see there will be a "Smart Storage" feature that will automatically free up storage on your phone so you're never told about being out of storage because of the photos and videos you have on your device.

Live Cases will be available for both the Pixel and the Pixel XL so users can use images from Google Earth and Google Trends to personalize their devices. But what will likely excite even more people is the new leak that suggests the Pixel and Pixel XL will be available in 32GB and 128GB variants. This leak comes from a photo that was allegedly taken from the Telstra system. This photo also shows the 2 color options that will be available at launch (Quite Black and Very Silver). There's no mention of the rumored Really Blue in the Telstra system though.

Nexus fans have been begging for Google to sell 128GB variants of their devices for years but the Mountain View search giant hasn't offered them barring the Nexus 6P. It's interesting to see that a 64GB version isn't shown in this leak, and it makes us curious how much the 128GB version will cost since the base model of the Google Pixel is rumored to be priced at $650 here in the United States. In any case, we'll likely learn tomorrow!

Source: Ausdroid



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