Home Blog Page 100

Motorola Razr (2025) Review

The Motorola Razr is one of those names that still turns heads, even now. It helped define the flip phone era back in the early 2000s, and in 2025, it’s still carrying that legacy, just in a very different form. This year’s standard Razr model (not to be confused with the Plus or Ultra variants) makes a clear play: deliver the look and feel of a modern foldable without the high-end price tag. And honestly? It mostly succeeds.

What Motorola is doing here is pretty smart. By bringing the Razr experience down into $699 range, it’s trying to make foldables feel less like luxury experiments and more like everyday phones. That strategy isn’t just about price, it’s about style too. With curated Pantone color options and finishes that feel more like a statement piece than a boring slab phone, the Razr 2025 is just as much about how it looks in your hand as what it can do.

It has surprised me and pretty much everyone who I’ve come in contact with, in some way or another.

With the Razr 2025, Motorola delivers an experience that’s equal parts stylish, smart, and genuinely satisfying. That’s award-worthy in our book.

The Motorola Razr 2025 box displayed on a table outdoors, showcasing its sleek design and branding.

Specs You’ll Want to Know

FeatureDetail
Main Display6.9″ Foldable LTPO AMOLED, 1080×2640, 120Hz
External Display3.6″ AMOLED, 1056×1066, 90Hz
ProcessorMediaTek Dimensity 7400X
RAM8GB LPDDR4X (with RAM Boost)
Storage256GB UFS 2.2
Rear Cameras50MP main + 13MP ultrawide/macro
Front Camera32MP
Battery4500mAh
Charging30W wired, 15W wireless
OSAndroid 15
Price~$699

Design That Honors the Past, With a Few Upgrades

There’s something oddly comforting about flipping a phone shut. Motorola leans into that nostalgia hard, but gives it the modern hardware treatment. Folded up, the Razr is satisfyingly compact as it slips easily into a pocket or small bag. Unfolded, it’s a slim, albeit tallish slab with enough screen real estate for whatever you’re doing.

The finish you choose changes the whole vibe. I spent time with the Lightest Sky version, a speckled white that resists fingerprints surprisingly well (though it’s a bit slippery). Other color options like Spring Bud, Gibraltar Sea, and Parfait Pink add a playful personality that’s missing from a lot of today’s all-black-everything phones.

The hinge has been upgraded, too. Whether it’s titanium or stainless steel (sources vary), it feels sturdy and confident with every open and close. The crease? Still there, but it mostly disappears while you’re using the screen. For me, it was not unlike getting used to the hole-punch camera or “notch” that came about a few years back.

And yes, there’s an IP48 rating here, which is good news for accidental splashes or dust. It’s not sand-proof, though, and that’s something to keep in mind if you’re beach-bound.

Two Screens, Two Experiences

The inside screen is a 6.9-inch LTPO AMOLED that hits up to 120Hz with plenty of brightness, Motorola claims 3000 nits, though real-world use suggests not quite that high. Either way, it’s solid outdoors, and vibrant indoors. Scrolling is buttery, text is crisp, and HDR content looks great.

A close-up view of the Motorola Razr 2025 held in a hand, featuring its external display showing notifications and the time.

The real surprise, though, is the outer display. At 3.6-inches, it’s more usable than you’d expect. You can text, call, check maps, or even run full apps without flipping open the phone. It supports 90Hz and 1700 nits brightness, so it’s fast and easy to read outside. Some have even called it the most usable cover screen on any clamshell foldable, and I’m inclined to agree.

One of the most tangible software wins is how Motorola has designed the experience around the external display. You’re not just checking notifications, but running full apps, replying to messages, controlling music, getting directions, or even playing games. All without flipping the phone open.

This is a huge deal compared to other clamshell foldables where the outer screen feels limited or requires a lot of workarounds. Motorola’s implementation is straightforward and user-friendly.

There are also customization options for what appears on the outer display, from custom app tiles to animated wallpapers and widgets. You can tweak it to prioritize what you actually use such as weather, music controls, quick text replies, etc.

This is all to say that the external display isn’t a gimmick. It’s thoughtfully integrated and genuinely useful, which helps extend battery life and saves you from constantly flipping the phone open for every little thing. And if you’re trying to unplug more often, or spend less time on your handset, it’s a great way to be connected just enough.

Close-up of a smartphone's external display showing time and app options, with a blurred background.

It took me a little more time than I might like to admit, but once I configured the external screen’s panels and apps, I loved how much I could do with it. Moreover, I also appreciate that I can dial things way down to something that keeps me connected without overwhelming and inundating me with notifications.

Software and AI: A Light Touch with Smart Add-ons

Out of the box, the Razr 2025 runs Android 15 with Motorola’s own “My UX” interface layered on top. The good news is that it stays pretty close to stock Android. If you’ve used a Pixel phone or any Motorola device in the last few years, you’ll feel right at home. No heavy theming, no bloated system overlays. It’s just clean design with a few thoughtful Motorola touches.

These touches, as it turns out, I welcomed with open arms. It might sound silly to some, but I love that I can change fonts, colors, and other settings in ways that that Pixels do not. There’s a lot to play with when it comes to making things feel uniquely mine, but it stops well short of what we might find in devices built in China.

Animations are smooth, transitions are fluid, and menus don’t feel bogged down with unnecessary visual flourishes. That matters a lot on a foldable, where you’re switching between the outer screen and main display fairly often. It needs to feel cohesive — and here, it mostly does.

moto ai: Motorola’s Smarter Side

This year, Motorola is pushing its own AI features under the “moto ai” branding, and they’re surprisingly useful in day-to-day scenarios. A few standouts:

  • Pay Attention: A live transcription tool that can capture lectures, meetings, or conversations on the fly. It’s geared toward students or anyone who likes searchable voice notes.
  • Photo Enhancement: AI tuning for camera output, especially helpful in adjusting skin tones, lighting, and background blur. Not always subtle, but often effective.
  • Suggested Replies: If you’re in the middle of texting or chatting, moto ai can propose context-aware responses; think Gmail Smart Replies but on steroids.
  • Auto-Organized Notes and Reminders: There’s light integration with Google Tasks and Calendar, but Motorola’s system can also parse messages or screenshots to suggest reminders or action items.

That said, some moto ai features are cloud-dependent. They rely on a stable 5G or Wi-Fi connection to work properly, which could be a drawback in low-connectivity areas. Unlike Google’s newer on-device AI (Gemini Nano), these tools don’t seem fully optimized for offline use yet.

A person holding a Motorola Razr 2025 smartphone with a metallic finish, showcasing the Motorola logo and 'razr' branding on the back.

Google Gemini Integration

During setup, you’re prompted to enable Google Gemini, which adds another layer of AI-driven help. This comes into play through smart suggestions, search enhancements, and contextual assistance across apps.

Gemini is still evolving, but on this device in mid-2025, it works best for:

  • Summarizing long articles or webpages
  • Pulling quick info from Gmail or Calendar
  • Generating replies or rewriting messages (especially in Gmail)

It does create a bit of a dual-AI experience: moto ai handles phone-specific stuff, while Gemini floats across your broader Google world. It’s not confusing, but it is something to be aware of.

Even without the AI stuff, Motorola includes a handful of classic features that long-time users might recognize:

  • Moto Actions: Twist to launch the camera. Chop twice for the flashlight. These gestures are still here and still surprisingly handy.
  • Peek Display: A toned-down, battery-saving ambient display for notifications, designed to show you what matters with a quick glance.
  • Gametime Mode: Blocks interruptions while gaming and gives you tools for screen recording and performance tweaks.
  • Ready For (Limited): While not fully featured on this Razr model, Motorola’s “Ready For” desktop-like mode does exist in a basic form. You can cast your screen or run certain apps in desktop mode, though it’s more robust on higher-end models.
A person holding a Motorola Razr 2025 flip phone, showing the external display with time and app icons.

Update Policy & Security

Motorola has historically lagged behind other manufacturers when it comes to software updates, but things are improving. For the Razr 2025, you can expect:

  • Three years of OS upgrades
  • Four years of security updates

That’s respectable for a mid-tier foldable, though it’s worth noting that Google’s Pixel phones and Samsung’s Galaxy devices now offer five to seven years of support.

The Setup Experience: Mostly Seamless

Setup is standard Android fare: pick a language, connect to Wi-Fi, sign into Google, transfer data (or start fresh), and you’re good. You can skip most steps if you want to dive in quickly. Motorola also uses setup to pitch you on enabling AI tools early, so it feels like part of the experience rather than a bolt-on.

One thing to note: if you buy through a carrier like Verizon, expect a few extra steps (and probably a few extra apps you’ll end up disabling).

Once I set it up the way I wanted, the Razr 2025 felt like it was designed just for me, and that’s something I haven’t said about a phone in a long time.

One of the few gripes that users to have is “bloatware” or the pre-installed apps, games, and services. There’s a noticeable amount of pre-installed software but some, like Perplexity AI or Microsoft Copilot, might be helpful to certain users. While they can’t always be removed, they can be tucked away in folders. This might irk anyone looking for a more minimal Android experience but I feel like these are the types of apps we’ll see standardized moving forward.

A Motorola Razr 2025 flip phone displayed on a wooden surface, showcasing its external screen with various app themes, time, and a camera module.

That said, bloat wasn’t overwhelming to me. It’s more of a mild annoyance than a dealbreaker.

Real-World Performance: Good Enough for Most

The MediaTek Dimensity 7400X isn’t a powerhouse, but it gets the job done. You get 8GB of RAM, and Motorola uses storage-based RAM Boost to simulate up to 16GB. That works okay for multitasking, but real physical RAM is still better. And for most people, 8GB is sufficient.

Day-to-day tasks are smooth: social apps, email, browsing, media. Heavy gaming? Not so much. You’ll notice some lag with intensive titles, and loading times aren’t lightning fast. This phone wasn’t built for that kind of use, and that’s okay. Would I recommend the Pro or Ultra for gaming? Unless you’re really looking for the flip design, your money might buy you more power on a dedicated gaming handset.

Storage is fixed at 256GB, and there’s no microSD slot. Again, not a surprise in this price bracket. As I used this phone, it felt like a very intentional effort to bring smart flip phones to a much wider base.

Cameras: More Capable Than You’d Think

You’ve got a 50MP main sensor with OIS, a 13MP ultrawide that doubles as a macro lens, and a 32MP front-facing camera. But the real magic is in how you can use them.

Because it folds, the Razr lets you take selfies with the main camera using the cover screen as a viewfinder. It also works great in “handycam” mode, where you partially fold it and shoot video like an old camcorder. You can watch your subject on the front screen and use you finger to zoom in/out on the side screen. Little things like this make the camera experience more fun and creative.

Image quality is solid in daylight. Colors are punchy, and moto ai helps with exposure and skin tone. Low-light shots are a mixed bag, though. They’re usable, but not flagship-level. Zoom is digital only, and you’ll notice the drop in sharpness at higher levels. So, if you’re after an upper-end camera experience, you’ll spend a bit more. Either for a variant of the Razr, or for a more premium counterpart.

Still, for what you’re paying, the camera system is versatile and honestly kind of fun to use.

Audio and Call Quality: Gets the Job Done

Stereo speakers with Dolby Atmos are here, and they’re loud enough for podcasts or casual Spotify listening. Bass gets a little muddy at higher volumes, but it’s fine for most situations. No 3.5mm jack, of course, but you can use USB-C or Bluetooth 5.4 for audio.

Call quality is strong. Earpiece volume is high, and microphones do a good job keeping your voice clear.

Battery Life and Charging: Surprisingly Solid

Battery life has often been a weak spot for compact foldables, but the Motorola Razr 2025 makes real progress. It packs a 4,500mAh battery which is larger than last year’s Razr and even the pricier Razr Plus model. Clearly, Motorola prioritized endurance here, and it pays off.

Under moderate use, most folks should end the day with 20 to 30 percent left in the tank. Even heavier use such as GPS, gaming, or hotspotting should still get you through a full day. Standby drain is impressively low too, helped by smart software and the ability to handle quick tasks via the outer screen instead of waking the main display.

When it’s time to recharge, the Razr supports 30W TurboPower via USB-C. It’s not record-breaking, but it’s fast enough: expect a 50% top-up in about 25 to 30 minutes and a full charge in just over an hour. You’ll need your own USB-C PD charger, though as there isn’t one included in the box.

Wireless charging is also present, which isn’t a given at this price. The Razr supports 15W Qi charging, making it easy to top off overnight or during the day on a desk pad. Just note it doesn’t support Qi2, so you won’t get magnetic alignment. It’s best to stick with flat pads or stands where the phone stays put.

Rounding things out, Motorola’s software includes a “Battery Protection” mode that can learn your habits and slow charging overnight to help preserve battery health. There’s even battery share support for topping off other devices via USB-C.

Is It Worth It?

At around $649 to $699, the Motorola Razr 2025 hits a sweet spot that hasn’t really existed in foldables until now. It’s not trying to beat flagship phones on raw specs, and it’s not pretending to be a luxury device. Instead, it offers:

  • A modern take on a classic flip phone
  • A surprisingly useful external display
  • A pocketable form factor that still delivers all-day battery life
  • Solid everyday performance and camera versatility

You do give up a few things in the process: no telephoto lens, mid-tier gaming performance, and perhaps a bit of bloatware on the software side. But if your phone habits lean toward messaging, social, browsing, and you like your tech with a little personality? This might be exactly your speed.

Final Thought: A Lifestyle Foldable Done Right

The Motorola Razr 2025 doesn’t just keep the flip phone dream alive, it sort of reshapes it into something far more practical, personal, and frankly, more fun than I expected. It’s not trying to compete spec-for-spec with the latest flagships, and it doesn’t need to. What it does instead is remind us that phones can be tools, accessories, and little moments of delight all wrapped into one.

In a world where slab phones all tend to blur together, this one dares to feel different. It’s easy to carry, surprisingly powerful for its price, and thoughtfully designed in ways that show Motorola really understands who this phone is for. The external display alone has changed how I use my phone day to day. Now I can enjoy less screen time, more control, and fewer distractions.

Sure, it has its trade-offs. But they’re the kind that feel intentional, not like corners were cut. If you’re looking for a stylish foldable that nails the basics and doesn’t break the bank, the Razr 2025 is easy to recommend. And if you’ve ever felt like modern smartphones just aren’t fun anymore? This might just bring a little joy back into your pocket.

Google Rolls Out June Pixel Drop with VIP Widgets, Smarter Stickers, and Android 16

0

Google’s latest Pixel Drop is here, landing alongside the official rollout of Android 16 for Pixel phones. The June 2025 update introduces a collection of new features aimed at improving accessibility, creativity, and everyday convenience for Pixel users, especially those wielding Pixel 6 or newer devices.

Here’s a look at what’s new.

Pixel VIPs Widget Puts Your People Front and Center

The new Pixel VIPs feature makes it easier to stay connected with your closest contacts. Available exclusively on Pixel phones, the VIPs widget pulls from the Contacts app to spotlight key details like birthdays, recent calls or messages (including WhatsApp), and location updates when shared. VIPs can even override Do Not Disturb, so your favorite people don’t get silenced when things get quiet.

This feature runs on-device for privacy, and works with Pixel 6 and newer models.

Gboard Now Lets You Create AI Stickers with Pixel Studio

An animated jelly avocado character with happy facial features and hearts, displayed on a smartphone screen with a customizable keyboard.

Stickers just got an upgrade. Pixel users can now create personalized, animated stickers directly in Gboard, powered by generative AI in Pixel Studio. Users can type a prompt (think: “sad starfish with sunglasses” or “jelly avocado with sparkles”), pick an emotion, and Gboard does the rest. You can even use your own photos; backgrounds are automatically removed to isolate the subject for sticker-style flair.

This is live on Pixel 9 phones in select countries and languages.

Expanded Access to Fan-Favorite Features

Several existing Pixel features are getting a wider rollout. Satellite SOS, previously U.S.-only, is now supported in Australia for Pixel 9 series devices, letting users reach emergency services without Wi-Fi or cellular coverage. Meanwhile, AI-powered Recorder summaries are expanding to French and German on newer Pixel models, and the Clear Voice feature (for minimizing background noise in recordings) now comes to Pixel 8 devices.

Photography Tips Now Built Into the Camera App

Pixel’s Camera app is getting an educational boost. A new question mark icon in the top-right corner opens an interactive guide with visual examples and usage tips for each shooting mode. It’s a quick way to improve shots without Googling “how to use Night Sight again.”

Magnifier App Gets Real-Time Object Recognition

The Magnifier app now supports live search, helping users find and identify items on-screen without taking a picture. Just type in what you’re looking for—like a dish on a menu—and the app highlights it on the fly with haptic feedback. This feature works on Pixel 5 and up (excluding tablets and foldables).

Pixel 9 and newer phones running Android 16 also gain LE Audio hearing aid support, enabling easier access to audio presets, volume control, and calls directly through the phone.

Expressive Captions Add More Personality to Spoken Text

A smartphone displaying a soccer game scene with players in red and blue uniforms, and a speech bubble featuring commentary about the game.

Expressive Captions, Google’s enhanced live captions feature, now does a better job interpreting emotion, tone, and even stretched-out words (like “yessss”). It’s now available in more countries, including Canada, the UK, and Australia—though only in English and on Pixel 6 or newer.

Smarter Google Photos Editing with AI Suggestions

An upgraded Google Photos editing experience is rolling out soon with smarter AI-powered suggestions. Users can expect quicker access to suggested edits, intuitive tool recommendations, and better organization of frequently used features—all aimed at streamlining the photo-fixing process.

For more on all the new features landing in the June Pixel Drop, visit the official Pixel Drop hub or check out Google’s community post.

Android Highlights Six New Features Aimed at Personalization, Convenience, and Control

0

Android is spotlighting a fresh wave of updates that bring smarter tools and more personal touches across its platform. The latest feature drop includes six additions rolling out to Android devices, focusing on customization, ease of use, and better integration across services like Google Messages, Google Photos, Gboard, Google Home, and Wear OS.

Personalized Group Chats in Google Messages

A smartphone screen displaying the 'Add group name and photo' interface in Google Messages. Users can enter the group name 'Travel Buddies' and see a profile icon above the text field.

Google Messages is getting more expressive with upcoming support for custom icons and names in RCS group chats. Android users will soon be able to personalize conversations, quickly identify which friends have RCS enabled, and temporarily mute noisy threads with duration-based notifications.

AI-Powered Editing in Google Photos

The redesigned Google Photos editor introduces new AI-powered tools to simplify the photo editing process. Features like “Auto Frame” and “Reimagine” allow users to crop, expand, or modify photos with natural gestures and descriptive prompts. The updated interface puts editing tools within easier reach, whether tapping, circling, or brushing.

Cross-Device Favorites in Google Home

A smartphone displaying Google Home settings for smart devices on the left, and a smartwatch interface showing live controls for doorbell and thermostat on the right.

Managing smart devices is now more seamless with the ability to assign Google Home Favorites to specific devices. Android users can pin home controls, such as cameras, speakers, and thermostats, to the devices they use most, including Google TV, Android phones, and Wear OS smartwatches.

Flexible Safety Check in the Personal Safety App

The Personal Safety app now supports extending Safety Check timers mid-session. This update allows Android users to add time to their check-in schedule with a tap, helping them stay protected during solo activities without needing to restart the feature. If there’s no response at the end of the timer, location data is automatically shared with emergency contacts.

New Emoji Kitchen Combos in Gboard

A collection of four colorful emoji icons, including a pleading face, a hot dog, a smiling turtle, and a surprised crab, showcased on a green background.

Gboard’s Emoji Kitchen is expanding with new sticker combinations that blend familiar emoji into fresh creations. Whether it’s a “thankful carrot” or a “pointing pig,” Android users can continue to remix emoji into stickers for more creative chats.

Faster Transit Payments on Wear OS

Wear OS users in supported cities can now pay for public transit directly from their smartwatch without opening Google Wallet. By enabling the new setting, users can tap to ride using transit cards or supported credit and debit cards, making commutes quicker and more convenient.

To learn more about these updates and explore what’s coming in Android 16, visit the official Android announcement.

Android 16 Officially Launches, Debuts First on Pixel Devices

0

Google has officially launched Android 16, marking its earliest major OS release in recent years. The update is rolling out now to Pixel devices, with support for other Android phone makers expected later this year.

Android 16 introduces several under-the-hood improvements and usability upgrades designed to make the platform more intuitive, secure, and accessible. The update also lays the groundwork for the new Material 3 Expressive design language, bringing a fresh layer of polish to Android’s visual experience.

Smarter Notifications and Real-Time Updates

Notification panel displaying updates for package, person, and animal sightings at a home

Android 16 refines how users interact with notifications by introducing two key improvements. First, it enables real-time “live updates” from compatible ride-share and food delivery apps, letting users track their driver or order directly from the notification panel without diving into the app. This feature is expected to integrate with systems like Samsung’s Now Bar and OPPO and OnePlus’ Live Alerts as it expands.

To reduce visual clutter, Android 16 also introduces auto-grouping for app notifications. Instead of a rapid-fire stream of messages from a single app, related alerts are bundled together to keep things neat and scannable.

Better Support for Hearing Aids and Accessibility

For users with LE Audio hearing aids, Android 16 makes a noticeable leap in call clarity. Until now, most hearing aids relied on their own microphones, which are typically optimized for picking up the other caller’s voice, not yours. With this update, users can switch to using the phone’s microphone for better audio pickup, especially in noisy settings.

User interface of Android 16 showing hearing aid settings with volume controls and microphone options for improved call clarity.

There’s also improved on-device control: Android 16 adds native volume and mic settings for hearing devices, offering a more consistent and accessible experience directly from the phone.

Stronger Security with Advanced Protection

Android 16 introduces system-level access to Google’s Advanced Protection Program, offering mobile users a more powerful defense against online threats. The feature is designed for high-risk users, journalists, political figures, or anyone who wants an extra layer of safety. Once activated, it shields the device from malicious apps, phishing attempts, scam calls, and unsafe sites with a single toggle.

Tablet Features Get a Desktop-Like Boost

Google is bringing more desktop-style flexibility to large-screen Android devices. In collaboration with Samsung, Android 16 debuts a new desktop windowing feature that allows users to open, resize, and move multiple app windows, much like on a traditional computer. It complements the existing split-screen and single-app views, making multitasking on tablets and foldables more seamless.

Tablet interface showing a system settings menu for customizing shortcuts alongside a multi-window view of web applications.

Keyboard power users will appreciate the upcoming support for custom shortcuts, along with taskbar overflow support for better app management. These productivity tools aim to bridge the gap between mobile and desktop workflows, and Google says additional features, like external display support, are on the horizon.

More to Come

Android 16 packs even more updates behind the scenes, including HDR screenshots, adaptive refresh rates, identity verification enhancements, and early glimpses at the new Material 3 Expressive UI. Future updates will extend to Wear OS 6 and other Android devices later in the year.

Developer Upgrades and a New SDK Cadence

Android 16 marks the beginning of a new major/minor SDK strategy. This release, the only one this year with behavior-affecting changes, is joined by a quarterly release cadence, one of which (Q3) will focus on visual polish, and another (Q4) will include new APIs without breaking existing apps.

Google is also pushing for more adaptive Android app experiences across screen sizes, aspect ratios, and device form factors. Developers targeting Android 16 (API level 36) will need to accommodate expanded support for resizable and multi-window layouts, especially on devices with a smallest width of 600dp or greater.

Time to Test and Target

Google encourages developers to begin testing and updating their apps now, using the Android Emulator or installing Android 16 on supported Pixel devices. Libraries, SDKs, and game engines should be audited for compatibility, especially for apps that interact with ART internals, rely on scheduled jobs, or use deprecated accessibility methods.

More details, including developer tools, compatibility guides, and links to the latest Android Studio, are available in the official announcement on the Android Developers Blog.

Boost CRM Efficiency: Why NetSuite – Salesforce Integration Is a Game-Changer

0

If systems are not integrated, teams work more slowly, important information is lost, and important opportunities are not found. Whenever your CRM and ERP are disconnected, your workers spend too much time on data instead of serving people. Therefore, a lot of companies choose to integrate NetSuite with Salesforce to overcome the gap and achieve better results.

What Is NetSuite – Salesforce Integration

NetSuite – Salesforce integration brings together the business’s most common platforms, Salesforce (CRM) and NetSuite (ERP). Both areas deal with sales data, client information, finance aspects, inventory, and many other subjects.

By integrating, the data is passed automatically from one system to the other. Once a deal is completed in Salesforce, it can automatically create a new order in NetSuite. No copy-pasting. The work does not require back-and-forth email messages.

The key data shared often includes:

  • Ways to reach out to customers
  • You should get sales orders and invoices from the company.
  • Prices of goods and the stock held by the company
  • Payment and billing history

Companies utilize this connection to minimize manual entry, prevent errors, and expedite business processes.

Many choose no-code or low-code integration tools like Skyvia because they’re faster to set up and don’t require full-time developers. This https://blog.skyvia.com/netsuite-salesforce-integration/ guide shows how tools like Skyvia connect both systems in minutes.

How CRM Works Improves With Integration

A unified system boosts your process speed, makes your information cleaner, and enhances your customer experience. Here’s how:

1. Views into your customers’ behavior in real time

If Salesforce and NetSuite are connected in real-time, both your sales and support teams will always have a complete understanding of the entire customer situation. They don’t have to use a different tool to look at orders or check their account history. This speeds up the process and stops any delays from happening.

2. Only single accounting is used.

Manual work takes a lot of your time. Processing time is considerably slow, and tiny mistakes in the data can result in mistakes in billing and shipping. Precisely, integration skips this process. The moment data is entered in one system, the second system will also be updated, without any further effort.

3. Less waiting time and more prompt actions

It’s important to see if the product is available in stock before confirming a purchase. Find out whether some of the invoices the client has are past due. With everything working together, the results happen immediately. So, you’ll experience faster quotes, faster callbacks, and fewer sales being lost.

4. enhanced collaboration among several departments

When all these departments use the same information, there is less confusion. The fact that everyone sees the same numbers makes working in teams much easier.

All things considered, improving CRM helps both a specific team and the whole company.

Key Features to Look For in an Integration Tool

Some integration tools differ from one another. If you wish to link Salesforce and NetSuite, using a simple connector is not enough. You should select a solution that aligns with your approach, ensures your information is secure, and is straightforward to operate going forward.

Your first step should be to do a two-way data sync. If you make any changes in one platform, they will be instantly reflected in the other. As a result, both systems run together and do not require more effort from your team.

Find a way to build applications without knowing how to code. It’s unnecessary to hire a developer or develop new code. Skyvia provides your workers with a straightforward way to create and utilize workflows.

Make certain that log reports and alerts are in place. If an issue arises, your team should find out what happened and the reasons behind it. Good tools make it easy to spot records that do not sync, skipped ones, or delayed data.

Ensure that the data source includes filters and simplified maps. It is important that you are able to control the data going between systems and how fields are aligned. It makes things easier by using less space and taking less time.

Use Cases Where Integration Makes a Big Impact

We should examine how integration benefits our work and helps us save time. They are not simply helpful; these features are what NetSuite – Salesforce integration helps with each day.

1. Also, when leads are converted into sales orders, ensure that they are synced together.

A sales rep uses Salesforce to seal a completed deal. To raise an invoice without integration, they would have to contact finance by email or add all the details manually in NetSuite. Thanks to the automation of integration, there are no more repetitive tasks that take several hours every week.

2. Checking the performance of stocks before the deal is made.

Have you ever encountered a situation where a client requested a product and you weren’t sure if it was in stock? If the stock information in NetSuite reaches Salesforce, reps can see if an item is available right away and speed up the sales process.

3. The report will contain all the necessary information as soon as possible.

When your team has to create monthly reports, combining information from two resources takes time and is not accurate. When teams use integration, they have just one point of reference and work better and more dependably.

4. Customer support learns all about the problem.

A lot of the time, support teams need access to information about past orders, invoices, or shipping. Whenever they ask finance or sales for information, it decreases efficiency. It allows them to use all these things only when they are necessary.

They address the real problems, instead of only making little gains.

Why a Strong Salesforce – NetSuite Link Saves Time and Builds Trust

Things become a lot easier for businesses when Salesforce and NetSuite are synced. All the necessary details for finalizing sales are always available to them. By using finance, you can eliminate any problems that come with manual order entry. When support deals with complaints, they can act fast using all the available customer information. This results in a better service, fewer slip-ups, and a quicker rise in the company’s growth.

Time spent on data transfers between your tools is a warning sign that you are already losing ground. All you require is simple programming and short IT projects. With Skyvia, setting up the processes takes little time, and you don’t need to write code.

You should reflect on whether your tools are useful for your teams or if they slow them down instead.

In the case of the second one, you should connect Salesforce and NetSuite in an effective way. Changing technology is not what integration is about. This solution helps your team expand, offer support, and do sales with unlimited potential.

EDITOR NOTE: This is a promoted post and should not be considered an editorial endorsement

EUVOLA Launches Kickstarter for Emotional AI Companion That Remembers, Reacts, and Connects

0

EUVOLA, a San Francisco-based startup, has announced the launch of its emotional AI companion device via Kickstarter, positioning itself as the first at-home product of its kind designed for emotional presence and human connection. The campaign is now live, with early bird pricing starting at $199 (regularly $299), including one year of Premium Access. Shipping is expected to begin around September 2025.

A New Kind of AI: One That Listens, Learns, and Feels Familiar

Unlike voice assistants or chatbot apps, EUVOLA is a standalone desktop device with an 8-inch HD touchscreen, proximity sensors, and an ambient light system that adjusts to the emotional tone of conversations. The goal isn’t to manage your calendar or order groceries so much as to offer a comforting, emotionally intelligent presence in the room.

Designed for users seeking companionship, emotional continuity, or simply a more meaningful way to interact with AI, EUVOLA builds emotional memory over time. Users can upload a voice sample and photo to craft a digital likeness of someone familiar, imagined, or missed. The result is a personalized avatar that doesn’t just reply, but remembers, adapts, and expresses empathy.

Key Features and Specs

  • Display: 8-inch HD touchscreen for expressive, lifelike avatars
  • Sensors: Proximity and ambient light sensing for presence and mood-aware lighting
  • Emotional Memory: Local-first storage with encrypted cloud support available by consent
  • Personalization: Create a custom companion using a photo and voice sample
  • Design: Aesthetic desktop presence with dynamic lighting tied to emotional context

At the core of the experience is the Empathetic Response System, built in collaboration with psychologists and emotional wellness experts. This system enables EUVOLA to engage with validating language, natural expressions, and responsive timing, whether that means offering a greeting or simply acknowledging your presence with a soft glow.

Built for Presence, Not Performance

EUVOLA emotional AI companion device with an HD touchscreen displaying a smiling woman's face, designed for emotional presence and human connection.

EUVOLA’s design philosophy leans into emotional intimacy rather than digital productivity. It’s intended for individuals living alone, navigating grief, or seeking consistent emotional support, as well as for curious early adopters who want to see what emotionally aware AI can become.

The device does not include a camera, and conversations are encrypted and processed locally unless cloud storage is enabled by the user. After the first year, the Premium Access subscription, needed for personalized voices and memory features—will cost $14.99/month or $149/year, with a standard no-cost mode available for basic companionship.

EUVOLA is now available to back on Kickstarter and for pre-order via the official EUVOLA website. The campaign will run for 45 days.

Suunto Aqua Open Ear Headphones Review

I recently happened upon a company a few months ago when I began looking into some alternatives to Garmin watches. Suunto, as it turns out isn’t necessarily new, just new to me. The Garmin competitor has created quite the buzz over the last few years with solid releases of several fitness smartwatches. After spending time with the Suunto Race S, I began testing its new Aqua Open Ear Headphones. And I’ve come away impressed yet again.

Design

If you remember Jawbone or Shokz bone-conducting units, the Suunto Aqua will feel familiar when you take them out of the box. This technology uses vibrations to transmit the audio into the ear from an external position. It’s really cool tech for a very common job like listening to music.

You have a banded, over ear design that wraps around the back of your head. This allows for a large, internal battery and room for physical controls. It also gives them a sealed chassis throughout that lends to the full IPX68 waterproof. Yep, you can swim in these and Suunto has a large presence in the swimming market, allowing the Aqua headphones to fit right into the lineup.

The left earpiece on the has a dedicated button for play/pause of media and controlling calls. That side is devoid of any other buttons, but does have an NFC sensor in the portion just behind the ear. This makes for easier pairing with a new connected device, and honestly, NFC needs a resurgence. 

The opposite side has most of the business end when it comes to controls. Here, under the main portion of the earpiece, you have a power button and volume control buttons. The last thing you want while working out or swimming is fumbling for buttons, and the layout on the Aquas makes it easy.

Audio

Listen, these types of open ear devices are never going to compete with the likes of Bose here. There’s no ANC or even passive noise cancellation with the earbuds being inserted into the ear canal. This can lead to a more muted audio experience. 

This doesn’t mean that it’s bad, though. Audio is still very decent. There are three audio profiles that you can tweak the feedback as well. Changing these default settings can give you the opportunity to make the listening options fit your needs.

With full IPX68 waterproofing and 32GB of internal storage, the Suunto Aqua headphones are a swimmer’s dream, letting you take your tunes underwater without your phone. Plus, the integrated head tracking offers valuable insights into your technique, helping you train smarter and improve your swim.

Swimming

It’s not every day that you find a set of earbuds promoted to be used underwater. The Suunto Aqua have been built for this from the ground up and rated to be completely waterproof up to 5 meters. Naturally, I took these buds for a quick dip in my in-law’s pool to find out.

Surprisingly, the Aqua earbuds performed very well in this environment. The over ear, banded design allows them to move around without being constricting, while also keeping the Aquas in place well enough to keep listening. I was able to keep my tunes going throughout the pool session with zero issues. 

You can even completely remove the need of having your phone connected if needed. Using the Suunto app, you can move up to 32GBs of audio files to the headphones internally. Having this flexibility in areas you may not be close to your phone like large pools or open water make this a huge win for the Aqua headphones.

Another swim specific technology on board is head tracking. While this can be used for some common audio controls, it really shines for swimming metrics. Using that same accelerometer, the Suunto Aqua logs techniques like head pitch, glide time, stroke type, and even breathing while you wear them in the water.

Battery Life

The Suunto Aqua open earbuds are rated for around ten hours of playtime alone. I’ve found this to be pretty accurate in my testing. Pumping up the equalizer using some of the “punchier” audio profiles can tank this a bit but still well within similar runtimes.

The includes charging cradle adds another 20 hours of charging on the go thanks to its internal battery bank. This gives you a total of 30 hours to swim your heart out while wearing the Suunto Aqua buds. 

Final Thoughts

Water sports are a huge deal in many parts of the world. Having a dedicated, and well-thought-out product like the Suunto Aqua bone conducting earbuds fills a gap in that market. Having great battery life, full waterproofing up to five meters, and comfortable design to makes these a swimmer’s dream.

The Suunto Aqua headphones can be purchased in either Black or the Lime Blue you see in this review directly from the company’s site or Amazon. Full retail is $180, and I think that’s more than worth it if you need capable headphones while swimming or fitness outdoors in the elements regularly.

JBL Expands Bar Series with Five New Soundbars Built for Home Theater Fans

0

JBL is turning up the volume on home entertainment with the launch of its latest Bar Series, a collection of five new soundbars designed to deliver immersive, theater-quality audio in any living space. From casual streaming setups to full-blown surround sound experiences, the new lineup leans on JBL’s cinematic roots and fresh tech upgrades to meet a range of needs and budgets.

MultiBeam, Dolby Atmos, and Detachable Speakers Set the Stage

At the core of each model is HARMAN’s MultiBeam 3.0 technology, which delivers panoramic sound from a single soundbar. For more dramatic impact, most models support Dolby Atmos and DTS:X*, with up-firing drivers and detachable rear speakers included on higher-end variants like the JBL Bar 1300MK2 and Bar 1000MK2.

The new series doesn’t stop at big sound. JBL is introducing SmartDetails, a proprietary tech aimed at reproducing subtle audio cues such as footsteps and ambient textures, adding emotional depth to everything from action movies to indie dramas.

AI Sound Boost (exclusive to the flagship Bar 1300MK2) pushes subwoofer performance further, enhancing bass response without distorting at higher volumes. Dialogue clarity also gets a boost across the board thanks to PureVoice 2.0, JBL’s updated voice enhancement system.

Meet the New Lineup

  • JBL Bar 1300MK2: The flagship model features a dual 8-inch driver subwoofer, six up-firing speakers, and detachable wireless surrounds. It supports true Dolby Atmos and DTS:X and adds Bluetooth speaker functionality to the detachable units. AI Sound Boost is exclusive to this model’s subwoofer.
  • JBL Bar 1000MK2: Offers a similar setup in a more compact footprint, with two up-firing drivers, detachable rear speakers, and a 10-inch subwoofer.
  • JBL Bar 700MK2: Trades in physical up-firing drivers for a virtual Dolby Atmos setup while still offering detachable surrounds for true rear-channel sound.
  • JBL Bar 500MK2 and Bar 300MK2: Built for first-time home theater buyers, these more budget-friendly models scale back the hardware but still include virtual Dolby Atmos and access to the same software platform.

Powered by JBL One Platform

All five models are built on the JBL One Platform, which supports high-res streaming, spatial audio, and deep customization. Users can tweak a 7-band EQ, set up one-touch music “Moments,” and receive over-the-air software updates. Compatibility with major music services and apps means setup is as flexible as the soundstage.

Availability

The JBL Bar 1000MK2, 700MK2, 500MK2, and 300MK2 will be available on JBL.com starting June 2025. The flagship Bar 1300MK2 will follow in October 2025.

*DTS:X will be included at launch with the Bar 1000MK2; Bar 700MK2, 500MK2, and 300MK2 will receive DTS Virtual:X via OTA update later in 2025.

OnePlus Pad 3 Review

0

OnePlus has long been a player that may not be a household name in the US, but challenges the top tier manufacturers on a regular basis. Whether it’s releasing one of the best phones of the year, to pushing the limits of fast charging tech, OnePlus moves the needle all the time. The company is back in 2025 with the new OnePlus Pad 3, and this heritage continues with arguably the best Android tablet on the market.

Design

OnePlus didn’t change much of the overall design from the previous Pad 2, but it did grow in size. The new 13.2 inch LCD with a 3.4k resolution, 7:5 aspect ratio, 12-bit color and pixel density of 315 PPI offers a crisp display ready for pretty much anything you throw at it. This offers much more screen real estate over the 12.1 display on last year’s Pad 2.

Internally, you have the latest Snapdragon 8 Elite paired with 12GB of RAM and 256GB of storage. You might be surprised to learn this is the only RAM and hard drive options, but OnePlus stated that they’ve found this is the sweet spot for users for the Pad lineup over the years and made the decision to minimize the SKUs available. I think it was the right move. This gives plenty of horsepower and storage for most users.

Oh, did we mention how thin the tablet is? At less than 6mm, its svelte design can be easily moved around the office space, or throw in a bag, with no issues. Even with the optional keyboard, the overall footprint is less than most modern 13-inch laptops.

One omission I wish was here on the hardware side is a fingerprint reader. Having this built into the power button seems easy enough and something I’ve missed coming over from my Pixel Tablet. There is OnePlus’ face recognition that is excellent, and fast, but I just would have liked to see the more secure biometrics option.

Daily Use

I’ve been blown away by the consistency and daily driving of the OnePlus Pad 3 and keyboard combo. This truly is the most mature laptop replacement I’ve used in the Android market, and it’s not even close. While I’ve always made the argument that Android at its core is a better desktop replacement than iOS, manufacturers have failed to nail this presentation. 

“The OnePlus Pad 3 isn’t just a tablet; it’s the most mature Android laptop replacement I’ve used, seamlessly integrating into my workflow with its expansive display and desktop-level UI. It truly redefines what an Android tablet can be, offering a powerful and versatile experience that challenges traditional laptops.”

OnePlus is the first one where I didn’t feel like I missed my laptop completely. The excellent UI elements like Open Canvas, Floating Windows, and split screen options are really the options that make it feel like a true operating system and not a big phone like many tablets. If you’ve used a modern desktop, then you won’t feel as out of water when you sit down in front of the OnePlus Pad 3 interface.

The additional screen size makes is slightly cumbersome as a standalone tablet, but the tradeoff while using it in keyboard mode is well worth it. Having more physical space to open docs, answer emails, or take a web call was the right move to grow the panel size.

Adding in the flexibility of the removable keyboard and the Stylo 2 (no new stylus this year) round out the feature set to make this an even better for the new generation of tech buyer who may have never owned a real PC. That’s the market I feel like OnePlus is covering here, and smartly so.

The new 13.2-inch panel makes it obvious this is meant to be a full iPad Pro competitor. Honestly, this makes sense for OnePlus. The company has long had one of the most complete ecosystems inside the bigger Android environment. Having a full desktop/laptop level device fills a void they need to cover. This is a computer that is housed in a tablet format. Hard stop.

You may have also noticed that I’ve referenced the entire review to this point, as the keyboard and tablet are one device. While you can purchase them separately, and OnePlus has a very nice origami folio case as well, to understand the true power of this tablet the OnePlus Smart Keyboard is a must. You are doing yourself, and OnePlus, a disservice if you don’t buy them as a combo, and it’s not surprising when we get to cost that early bird buyers have fantastic options to make this a reality.

While I think it’s a full desktop replacement for most people, OnePlus has another neat trick for those using other operating systems as well. The previous sharing of notifications and first party sharing with other OnePlus devices is there just like last year, but now you can also share docs and files across Windows and macOS with the company’s OConnect software.

This news suite makes sharing files across all our operating systems seamless. Need to drag and drop files to your Mac. Done. Share notifications with the OnePlus 13. Yep. OnePlus is offering a full ecosystem amongst its own devices, but also taking in consideration of existing workflows outside of Android makes it top-notch using the latest OxygenOS 15 with OConnect.

Oh, and we have to have the obligatory future updates software talk. The OnePlus Pad 3 will receive three Android OS updates (Android 15 out of the box, then Android 16, Android 17, and Android 18). The OnePlus Pad 3 will receive 6 years of security updates, which is an increase of 2 years from the OnePlus Pad 2. I’d love to see OnePlus extend the OS updates to five years of Android versions. Laptops get replaced every 6–7 years, more like an appliance in most homes. If positioning the Pad 3 as a more “only computer” device, longevity matters.

AI is Here Too 

It wouldn’t be a gadget launch in 2025 without some coverage here. OnePlus has the combination of its internal AI found built into OxygenOS 15 and first party support for Gemini with the Pad 3 software side of things. OnePlus AI handles all the on device options that it can and has been very useful in my testing. Things like universal search and conversation recommendations have come in handy to help lessen the tediousness of trivial workload tasks.

When I need to delve a little further with the full backing of Google and the web, I was able to easily use Gemini as the onboard assistant on the Pad 3. This replaces the previous iteration of Google Assistant found on the Pad 2 as we’ve seen in many devices this year like the OnePlus 13. The combination Gemini and OnePlus AI seems like the right balance of local task helper and online powerhouse for a device like the Pad 3 toeing the line of mobile and desktop environments.

Battery Life

Another fantastic performance metric of the OnePlus Pad 3 is endurance. The Pad 2 was already a great tablet for battery life, and the new tablet is even better. The massive internal battery is the largest OnePlus has ever offered in a device, at 12,140mAh. The power station gives the Pad 3 plenty of cells to get you through a full work day without issue.

Standby power has been significantly increased as well. I noticed this in my usage immediately. I never really saw a noticeable drop in battery percentage coming back to the Pad 3 if it was lying unused on my desk. OnePlus advertises that the tablet with stay charged up to 70 days of consistent dormant use, and I’d estimate this to be mostly true.

I’m also impressed in both the charge times and that OnePlus included the appropriate SuperVOOC charger in the box. Yes, in the box. No cheaping out to have you searching for a secondary charger with the purchase of the Pad 3 tablet. This gives you the full 80 Watts of power needed to fully charge from zero percent in around 90 minutes. Thanks OnePlus!

Final Thoughts and Pricing

I’ve been blown away by the entire lineup of OnePlus devices released in 2025. The OnePlus Pad 3 simply rounds out this portfolio to offer one of the most powerful, mature Android tablets you can buy. I can’t think of any competition on the market that offers a more full-fledged media tablet that can fully replace most laptop tasks when paired with the OnePlus Smart Keyboard.

Pricing and Availability: The OnePlus Pad 3 is available for pre-order now in the US, with the 12GB RAM/256GB storage model priced at $699.99. For those looking to maximize their productivity, the Smart Keyboard is available for $199.99, and the OnePlus Stylo 2 for $99.99. A Folio Case is also available for $49.99.

Pre-order Dates and Deals (US/Canada via OnePlus.com):

  • Pre-order/Launch Date: The OnePlus Pad 3 was available for pre-order and launched on June 5, 2025.
  • Pre-order Offer (June 5 – July 7, 2025): Users who pre-order can enjoy two free gifts worth up to $299 (US) / CA $399 (Canada). Gift options include the OnePlus Pad 3 Smart Keyboard ($199.99 US / CA $249.99 Canada), the OnePlus Stylo 2 ($99.99 US / CA $149.99 Canada), and the OnePlus Pad 3 Folio Case ($49.99 US / CA $64.99 Canada).
  • Student Offer (June 5 – July 31, 2025): Students can save an extra 10% during this limited-time offer.
  • Trade-in Offer (June 5 – July 17, 2025): Trade in an eligible device to receive a $100 (US) / CA $100 (Canada) trade-in bonus.
  • Open Sale Date: The open sale for the Pad 3 begins on July 8, 2025, through OnePlus.com, Amazon, and Best Buy in the US, and OnePlus.com and Best Buy Canada in Canada.

Pairr Mini Wireless Android Auto and CarPlay Adapter Review

Android Auto and CarPlay have changed the way I drive my cars, plain and simple. Being able to have my phone just become the entire entertainment suite when I jump in my vehicle has been a fantastic and welcome enhancement to my in-vehicle time. A new company is attempting to take that a little further with the Pairr Mini, an Android Auto and CarPlay dongle to upgrade wired auto models.

Design

The design is pretty standard here, being it’s just a USB dongle. The key appeal of the Pairr Mini is that all the internal hardware and the USB-S A connection are all in a single item. No interconnected, or separate, cabling. Just one piece of tech to plug into your available car port.

While I love the seemingly seamless concept of the Pairr adapter, I can see one negative. Automotive interiors can be crowded at times. With this being essentially a short, stubby USB stick, I can see some layouts not allowing for the adapters dimensions to be plugged in. I can also see why some OEMs opt for the USB cord that plugs into a dongle.

Daily Use

Thankfully, neither one of my family’s cars had this issue. Both my Mazda, and the wife’s Jeep, had ample room and everything just works. If you’ve used wired Android Auto or CarPlay connections, getting the Pairr dongle going is identical. The unit has a Bluetooth ID instead of the immediate wired connection, but once established, you’ll go through the same steps to get your preferred OS on the infotainment of your vehicle.

Upgrade your ride effortlessly: The Pairr Mini delivers seamless wireless Android Auto and CarPlay in a remarkably compact, single-piece design. Say goodbye to cable clutter and hello to instant connectivity.

I literally had zero issues in my few weeks of using the Pairr Mini. The startup time is less than 20 seconds from starting the car to getting to your phone’s home screen. Afterward, the UI and interface are fluid. I notice very little latency issues or lag. If you didn’t know this was a wireless adapter, you’d never know the difference from being physically plugged into the dash.

This goes for both major mobile operating systems. I had the same consistent performance

Final Thoughts

My car not having wireless CarPlay/Auto from the factory has made me somewhat of a connoisseur of these type of dongles. The Pairr lives up to the competition and adds to it in a few ways. The compact, integrated design makes it very minimal if you have that space to plug in without issue. It really isn’t noticeable in either ports available in my Mazda once installed.

Lastly, the price is fantastic. At just $40, you don’t have to break the bank. I’d almost call it an impulse purchase or necessity for those with limited, wired infotainments systems. Once you’ve installed the Pairr Mini, you’ll never go back to reaching for a cable unless you need a phone recharge.