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T-Mobile, MetroPCS to soon carry entry-level LG Aristo

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T-Mobile, and its prepaid arm, MetroPCS, will soon sell the LG Aristo as part of their smartphone portfolios. The phone runs Android 7.0 Nougat and offers up a 5-inch display, and 13-megapixel rear camera.

Other specifications for the phone include a 1.4.GHz quad-core processor, 16GB internal storage, and a 5-megapixel front-facing camera. Rounding things out are a fingerprint reader, microUSB charging port, 3.5mm headphone jack, and support for Wi-Fi Calling/

MetroPCS will be the first of the two carriers to sell the phone when it does so on January 23. Retail pricing shakes out to $129.99 but an instant rebate drops it down to $59 plus tax.

T-Mobile dials up the LG Aristo two days later on January 25 with a $144 price tag. Customers can purchase the phone for $0 down and $6 monthly payments over two years. As an added incentive, subscribers can buy a Tech21 case and screen protector at 25% off when paired with the phone.

Republic Wireless rings up the Moto G4 Play for its latest smartphone

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Republic Wireless this week begins offering the Motorola Moto G4 Play as part of its handset roster. Priced at $149, it’s an Android 6.0 Marshmallow smartphone with a 5-inch display.

The Moto G4 Play draws strength from a 1.2GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 410 processor with 2GB RAM. Internal storage capacity is 16GB but a microSD card slot allows for up to 128GB of extra space. Cameras include an 8-megapixel rear shooter and a front-facing 5-megapixel selfie snapper.

Available in black and white options, the phone has a water-repellent nano-coating so it’s designed to handle splashes and the occasional spill.

Republic Wireless offers a unique set of rate plans, all of which lean on Wi-Fi coverage over traditional networks. Known as Adaptive Coverage, it, of course, helps to keep the cost down. According to the carrier, its rates are some 40%-60% less expensive than similar packages from bigger carriers.

A sample of Republic Wireless plans are as follows:

  • Unlimited Talk & Text + WiFi Data /$15 a month
  • Unlimited Talk & Text + WiFi Data + 1G Cellular Data / $20 a month
  • Unlimited Talk & Text + WiFi Data + 2G Cellular Data / $30 a month
  • Unlimited Talk & Text + WiFi Data + 4G Cellular Data / $45 a month

Based in North Carolina, Republic also lets consumers bring their current phones over for usage on its service. If your phone is supported, all you need to do is order a SIM card and pick a plan.

Android Wear 2.0 to launch on Feb. 9, 2017

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According to reports circulating on Twitter, Android Wear 2.0 will launch on February 9th and support eighteen different smart-watches. Evan Blass of Venturebeat was the first to report “Mark your calenders…” for the February 9th date and soon after there were follow-up reports on the devices that would officially support Android Wear 2.0.

Sources indicate that the following devices will be supported by Android Wear 2.0, with more to be announced in the upcoming weeks.

  • Moto 360 Gen 2
  • Moto 360 Sport
  • LG Watch Urbane 2nd Edition LTE
  • LG Watch Urbane
  • LG G Watch R
  • Polar M600
  • Casio Smart Outdoor Watch
  • Nixon Mission
  • Tag Heuer Connected
  • Fossil Q Wander
  • Fossil Q Marshal
  • Fossil Q Founder

The biggest improvement coming to Android Wear 2.0 is the ability to run the application directly from the smart-watch with wi-fi support. This will remove the requirement of having the phone within bluetooth range in order to use all functions of an application.

Multiple options will be available for replying to messages
Multiple options will be available for replying to messages

Other improvements include more discreet notifications, smart replies to messages and a mini QWERTY keyboard that may test a user’s dexterity ability to type on a small surface. For now we will have to wait for official word from Google, but all signs indicate a full reveal should be coming very soon.

ZTE shows off specs for crowd-sourced Hawkeye smartphone

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ZTE has officially announced the specifications for its crowd-sourced smartphone, named Hawkeye. The device which was originally announced as ‘Project CSX’, can still be purchased through Kickstarter for $199. With that price-point, expectations were set fairly low in regards to overall specs, but ZTE has packed in a fair amount of tech including Senseye eye-tracking and a self-adhesive case.

Full Specifications:

  • OS: Android 7 Nougat with OTA updates
  • CPU: Qualcomm Snapdragon 625 (Octa-core 2.0GHz)
  • Display: 5.5″ FHD 1920 x 1080 resolution
  • Camera (Rear): Dual Lens 13MP + 12MP with optical zoom and OIS
  • Camera (Front): 8MP
  • Memory: 3GB RAM / 32GB ROM (expandable with additional 256GB microSD)
  • SIM: Dual SIM slot
  • GSM: 850/1900/900/1800
  • UMTS/HSPA: 850/1900/AWS/2100
  • LTE: B2/B4/B5/B7/B12/B13/B66 CAT6
  • Battery: 3000 mAh
  • WIFI 802.11 b/g/n/ac 2.4GHz/5GHz • BT4.2 / HFP1.6
  • Other Features: Fingerprint sensor, Senseye Hi-Fi audio, NFC, USB Type C, Qualcomm Quick Charge 2.0, Voice Navigation
The phone looks fairly basic but has some very unique features not found in other phones
The phone looks fairly basic but has some very unique features not found in other phones

If all funding is met, the Hawkeye phone from ZTE is set to launch in September 2017, barring any other hurdles. It will be interesting to see if a mid-range developer can successfully launch a device through user feedback and crowd-funding. The promise of interesting features including the ability for dual-SIMs should draw in a fair amount of interest for the Hawkeye smartphone.

The Galaxy S8 may be a bit smaller than its predecessor

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According to new renders obtained by GSMArena, the Galaxy S8 and S8 Plus may be a bit smaller than expected. The site was able to obtain the exact dimensions of the upcoming devices based on information received from a case maker.

Galaxy S7 vs S8 size
Image courtesy of GSMArena

The new Galaxy S8 will measure in at 140.14 x 72.20 x 7.3mm, which is a bit shorter, thinner, and wider than the current Galaxy S7. The Galaxy S8 Plus, which will presumably replace the “Edge” lineup, measures in at 152.38 x 78.51 x 7.94mm. Compared to the Galaxy S7 Edge, this makes the S8 Plus taller and wider.

Galaxy S8 Plus vs S7 Edge
Image courtesy of GSMArena

Because of these factors, the expectation is that Samsung will provide more screen real-estate with the upcoming devices. This seems to be a new trend that is making its rounds, especially after the release of the Xiaomi Mi MIX which has everyone clamoring over it.

New Samsung Galaxy S8 leaks point to the inclusion of a popular Note feature

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The Samsung Galaxy S8 leaks are coming fast and furious now. We’ve brought you news the past few days about the possibility of the design language changing and our first look at the new lockscreen for the device. Today, something a little bit different.

Despite rumors of the new phone(s) dropping the 3.5mm headphone jack, these new case leaks suggest otherwise. In fact, it isn’t the headphone jack that Samsung might drop, it’s the USB port if these cases are accurate to the true S8 design. We’re extremely skeptical of Samsung releasing a phone without a microUSB or a USB type-C port, but our leaker indicates that Qi charging will be the standard charging method for the S8 and S8 Plus.

s8 s pen leakThe bottom of the cases have three cutouts that we can see. The far left is the speaker, the middle cutout is for microphone and the one on the right is supposedly for the new S-Pen. We’ve received no information beyond simply that the S8 will have the popular Note feature included, but to say we have a couple of questions would be undercutting it.

s8 s pen leak 2Will both the rumored S8 and S8 Plus have the S-Pen? Will it be exclusive to the S8 Plus? How will Samsung differentiate the Galaxy S lineup from the Note lineup since we’re allegedly getting both a 5″ and a 6″ Galaxy S and now they allegedly are including the S-Pen.

We have a ton of questions beyond this and the Unpacked event can’t come soon enough.

Thanks to our friends at Mobile Fun for providing these pictures!

Order a ride share straight from Google Maps! [How-To]

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Last week, Google gave me another reason to never download another map or direction app, they integrated ordering an Uber or Lyft directly into the Google Maps interface and, you guessed it, we are here to show you how to use it.

Prerequisites:

I know, no fluff this time. I’m so excited about this addition that there is simply no time for extras; we are jumping right in.

There are a couple things you need to get started

  1. You must have Google Maps installed and logged into your google account.
  2. You must have either an Uber or Lyft account (or both)

Catching a Ride:

  1. Launch Google Maps
  2. Search your destination
  3. Tap the navigation button at the bottom right (blue car)
  4. Tap the ride sharing option (guy with a briefcase)
  5. Select the vendor you want (or whoever is closer/cheaper)
  6. Select the car you want
  7. Tap the Request button

Your ride is now on its way. Never had to leave the app. Take note that you will need to make sure you are logged into your vendors account. You can choose to pay for this service with any payment method you have set up with either the vendor or Google.

Have fun and ride safe.

What do you think about this new addition? Leave us a comment below with your thoughts.

Smashy Road: Arena can be madcap driving fun (review)

There’s a fairly new car-based game out; it combines simple gameplay, smooth visuals, customization, and lots of wild action. It’s called “Smashy Road: Arena”. It’s a follow-up to the title “Smashy Road: WANTED” by the developer BearBit Studios.
It’s a free game that’s family-friendly, and can be played as either single or multi-player.

Setup

Setting up the game is very simple. Just download from the Play Store to your device, and fire it up. It does tie to Google Play Games but if you’re not new to this (presuming you’re not) then off you’ll go.

screenshot_20170106-225846Once started, you really are thrown right into a single play starting screen, where you begin by tapping on a control. Before doing so, though, there’s also an “Online” button that you can press; this takes you out of single-player and puts you into a four-player death match game, where three other players are on the same track as you.

Also, if you do tap to play the single-player game, once in you’ll find a settings/gear screenshot_20170106-231055 button to press. In here you can customize your vehicle. In the game there are 30 possible vehicles, 30 different paint schemes, and 10 weapons to choose from. As is common, you start out with only 1 option for each (the others are available for purchase, if you’re the truly impatient type). The others can become available as you accumulate time (and points) screenshot_20170106-231136playing the game.

Gameplay

The controls couldn’t be simpler: you tap the left side of the screen to go left, and right to go right. That’s it. No accelerator, brakes, shifting, drifting or other driving control to worry about. There is one other control, and that’s weapon launch; but we’ll get to that shortly.
Once you tap and are going, your car is quickly brought to full acceleration. Your objective is to outrun and evade various police, SWAT, and military pursuit vehicles, all while trying to pick up cash and usable items, and also avoiding dead ends, corners, and sudden drop-offs.

screenshot_20170106-225934The pick-up items you can acquire can be cash (for future upgrading), fuel, health points, and assorted other accessories that can help you stay alive a little longer. You also have a weapon on top of your vehicle. You can’t just use it willy-nilly, though; if a pursuing vehicle stays within close range long enough (either by you keeping it close or it just out-driving you), screenshot_2017-01-02-14-39-11then a “fire” button will appear and you can blast the vehicle away, accumulating points and giving you some breathing room.
The more successful you are at staying alive and free, the more and more powerful the vehicles decide to join the chase; until it becomes extremely challenging to stay away.

The environment or ‘track’ you find yourself on (there are eight environments available) is generally a large square, made of a combination of city and country landscapes. The square has a definite edge to it, either by way of mountainside or sheer cliff. The mountain you’ll just bounce off of, going going over the cliff means instant death and “game over”.
There’s also quite a few cliffs on the interior of a given track, so you really have to watch where you’re going. If you’re not heading towards a cliff, there’s plenty of other obstacles to clear: houses, trees, buildings, railroad tracks, bridges, rocks, traffic flotsam, other vehicles….the list goes on.

Your game ends in one of four ways:screenshot_20170106-225656

  1. You drive off a cliff (this will happen a lot).
  2. You run out of gas.
  3. Your health points run out (by accumulating too much damage).
  4. You are cornered by the pursuing vehicles, and are arrested.

Visuals & Audio

Smashy Road: Arena uses the now very popular graphic look of what I dub “8-bit 3D”. If you’re familiar with the game “Crossy Road” (similar name, but different developer), then you know what I’m talking about.

screenshot_20170106-225701Colors are very saturated; and the 8-bit look doesn’t lose its charm here. It kind of gives the feel of playing an old-style game, but in a 3D world. The graphics are very fluid in their movement; I couldn’t detect a single slowdown or hiccup.  Very smooth.

One part of the game display I didn’t like is that the ‘zoom’ of the game seems kind of close-up. Once your car is at speed, it can be difficult to see upcoming railroad tracks, buildings, or cliffs. I died more often by driving straight off a mid-environment cliff than by being caught by police.
This gets better the more you play, but one has to play quite a bit (at least I did) to start getting comfortable with this. I’m sure it’s part of the gameplay strategy by the developer…zooming your view out farther would probably make it too easy. But still just a little farther would have upped the replay-ability, in my opinion.

Audio is great, though simple (again, likely by design). And it’s not the 8-bit synth you may expect, but rather realistic in nature. Music plays in the background, while assorted sound effects pop up right on time to the on-screen action.

Conclusion

I have to recommend Smashy Road: Arena. It’s a pretty fun car escape game that is definitely hair-raising to play, but not too complicated to scare people away. I do with the player’s view was a bit more zoomed out, but all-in-all it’s a quality title worthy of at least a download to give it a try.

 

Download Smashy Road: Arena from the Play Store here.

 

 

Umi shows off touch-free tricks for the UMi Z’s camera

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Ever find yourself in a situation where you encounter something truly breathtaking and want to capture it in a photo? Of course you have. What about scenarios where you are having an incredible time with friends and something funny happen that you want to preserve in a digital file. Just all of the time, right?

As quick as we can be to break out our phones to snap a photo, sometimes things are just so fleeting that we cannot keep up. What to do? Get quicker on the draw? Maybe. Keep your camera app up and running at all times? Nope.

Perhaps the most frustrating camera problem that we’re seeing is trying to get everyone in a selfie. Moreover, how do you take a group shot without your arm showing and taking up a decent amount of space? UMi understands your pain points, so that’s why it has baked in some hands-free features in its upcoming UMi Z handset.

umi_z_cameraFor starters, the UMi Z comes with Smile Detection. As you might suspect, it will automatically snap a picture when it detects a smile in the frame. No need to press a button; the shutter triggers by itself.

Additionally, the handset include Gesture Detection, too. All you have to do is simply make a peace sign or two finger ‘V’ symbol with your fingers. The camera detects the gesture and begins counting down from three. That’s it!

umi-z-camera-close

The best part is that the touch-less gesture works on both the front and the back cameras for the forthcoming phone. So, feel free to put the handset down somewhere you can get a nice wide angle and throw up a victory symbol with your fingers. Just remember to put your hand down before the timer ends.

There are only a few days left to get the UMi Z at its pre-sale price of $219.99. After January 21, the cost goes up by $60 where it will be sold at $279.99 across various channels. Click here to learn more about the phone and/or to place an order for yourself!

 

Nokia 6 vs Moto G4 Plus (Budget Smartphone Showdown)

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Budget phones are getting better and better these days. You can now get features which were previously available only on premium devices, for affordable rates. So for this showdown I want to compare one of the best budget handsets to date, the Moto G4 Plus to Nokia’s comeback handset – also a middle-range offering.

Yes, it looks like a new Moto G5 Plus is on its way, but if the rumors are right the phone shouldn’t see significant upgrades. Anyway the Moto G4 Plus is a handset known for its spectacular battery life and given Nokia’s legacy of releasing devices with long life cycles, this spec shootout is more than warranted. So read below to see how the two devices compare against each other:

Display

5.5-inch with 1920 x 1080 resolution vs 5.5-inch with 1920 x 1080 resolution

Nokia 6 PromoThe two phones have very similar displays, both protected by Corning Gorilla Glass 3. However, the Moto G4 Plus is a bit more curvaceous than the Nokia 6 which features more pronounced edges. Anyway, when it comes to display it all depends on your aesthetic likes and dislikes.

Computing power

Snapdragon 430 vs Snapdragon 617

Adreno 505 vs Adreno 405

4GB of RAM vs 2GB/3GB/4GB of RAM

Moto G4 Plus feat image (FILEminimizer)In our review of the Moto G4 Plus we found the phone runs extremely smooth. The higher-end version (4GB of RAM) in combination with light stock Android software makes using the phone a real breeze – browsing the web, emails, texting or light game play – there’s nothing the phone can’t handle.

Now the Nokia takes advantage of the Snapdragon 430 which is made up of eight 1.4GHz Cortex-A53 cores. While both chips are designed to deliver performance at affordable prices, you’ll find the Snapdragon 617 works a bit better.

For example, the X6 LTE with Cat 4 speeds in the Snapdragon 430 are a little slower than the X8 LTE with Cat 7 speeds found in the Snapdragon 617. However, the former does get Adreno 505 treatment.

The Moto G4 Plus comes with several RAM options, so if you have a limited budget you can choose a lower variant. When it comes to the Nokia 6 you only get 4GB of RAM. Take it or leave it!

Cameras

16MP/8MP vs 16MP/5MP

Back of Nokia 6
Back of Nokia 6

Both phones come equipped with a main camera of 16MP capacity. The Moto G4 Plus’s snapper take advantage of phase detection & laser autofocus and dual-LED (dual tone) flash while the Nokia 6’s offers phase detection autofocus plus dual-LED flash.

In the selfie department, users are probably going to like the 8MP snapper on the Nokia 6 better than the 5MP one sitting on the front of the Moto 4G Plus.

Software

Android 7.0 Nougat vs Android 6.0 Marshmallow

Moto G4 Plus fingerprint scanner (FILEminimizer)Being launched in 2017, the Nokia 6 runs Android 7.0 Nougat out of the box, but the Moto G4 Plus should get Nougat treatment soon, too.

Even so, the stock Android version on the Moto G4 Plus will make a lot of users having. Motorola’s version of Marshmallow is almost untouched aside from a view additional Moto apps and feats (like Moto Actions – with which you can control a few aspects of your phone via movement).

Battery

3,000 mAh vs 3,000 mAh

We are yet to see how the Nokia 6 behaves in real life, but given that it features the same battery capacity as the Moto G4 Plus and runs the optimized Android 7.0 Nougat, we can speculate the phone will enjoy a long life cycle.

On top of that the Nokia 6 takes advantage of a lower-end processor which shouldn’t put too much of a strain on the battery. So we expect the phone to be quite a lot like the Moto G4 Plus in the battery department.

Other features

64GB of internal storage vs 16GB/32GB/64GB

Moto G4 Plus SIM and MicroSD (FILEminimizer)The Moto G4 Plus offers more options in terms of internal storage for those who are on a more limited budget. Don’t forget the phone has a microSD card slot which allows for memory expansion up to 256GB. The Nokia 6 has one too.

Pricing

$245 vs $269

The Nokia 6 will only be available in China for the time being, while the Moto G4 Plus is available on Amazon. The premium version (4GB of RAM + 64GB of internal storage) costs $269, but the 2GB of RAM + 16GB of internal storage option can be yours for $229.99.

Wrap-up

It seems to me the two phones are on-par on many aspects, although the Moto G4 Plus should run a bit smoother. We’re yet to see how the cameras compare (the Nokia 6 should ship out to consumers soon), but in theory the results should be quite similar. However, I should note the Moto G4 Plus is not a phone that distinguishes itself in the camera department, but rather for being snappy and long lasting. As for the Nokia 6P, all the right ingredients for a decent mid-ranger are here complete with FHD display, a hefty 4GB of RAM and Android 7.0 Nougat out of the box.