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Showing posts with label HTC One. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HTC One. Show all posts

Monday, October 14, 2013

HTC One Mini announced for India at Rs 36,790


  HTC one mini smartphone

नई दिल्ली। एचटीसी ने 4.3 इंच के एचडी डिसप्ले और क्वालकॉम स्नैपड्रेगन 400 प्रोसेसर के साथ वन मिनी स्मार्टफोन लांच किया। इसकी कीमत 36, 790 रुपये रखी गयी है। एचटीसी वन का छोटा वर्जन ही एचटीसी वन मिनी है। इन दोनों के डिजायन में काफी समानताएं हैं।
एचटीसी ने इस स्मार्टफोन को डुअल कोर, 1.4जीएचजेड क्वालकॉम स्नैपड्रगन 400 मोबाइल प्रोसेसर, 1 जीबी रैम और 16जीबी ऑन बोर्ड स्टोरेज से अपडेट किया है। हालांकि इसमें मेमोरी कार्ड स्लॉट नहीं है। इसका 1280 गुणा 720 पिक्सल रिज्योलूशन के साथ 4.3इंच सुपर एलसीडी2 टचस्क्रीन डिसप्ले इसे खास बनाता है। साथ ही इस डिसप्ले को बनाने में कार्निग गोरिल्ला ग्लास 3 का उपयोग किया गया है।
एचटीसी वन मिनी में 4.1 मेगापिक्सल अल्ट्रापिक्सल रियर कैमरा के साथ ऑटोफोकस और एलइडी फ्लैश भी है। यह कैमरा फुल एचडी वीडियोज भी रिकार्ड कर सकता है। साथ ही इसमें 1.6 मेगापिक्सल कैमरा है जो 720 पी एचडी विडियो को सपोर्ट करता है। एचटीसी वन मिनी सेंस 5.0 यूजर इंटरफेस के साथ एंड्रायड 4.2.2 जेली बिन से भी अपडेट किया गया है। साथ ही इसकी खास बात है 1800एमएएच बैटरी।

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Sony Xperia Z1 review: a high-spec cameraphone without the hump

Sony Xperia Z1 review 20 megapixels and no humps
It's time to set the record straight: the original Xperia Z, launched back in February, was a decent phone. A solid phone. It was as if Sony had suddenly paused its chaotic schedule of handset releases in order to take stock of what Android users actually want: things like 1080p, microSD and a premium look and feel. And yet, the Xperia Z failed to be compelling. It wasn't just its subpar battery life that held it back. It was also the lack of a standout feature, which caused the phone to be buried amidst all the news of the GS4 and the HTC One -- and also by the announcement of the Lumia 1020 Windows Phone, whose camera suddenly made Sony's pokey, 13-megapixel module look like old technology.
That's why today, just seven months later, we're looking at a new flagship: the Xperia Z1 (codenamed Honami, and not to be confused with the Xperia ZL), with a far more boast-worthy camera and some other subtle-but-important enhancements. Buyers of the Xperia Z may understandably be displeased at being left behind so soon, but -- as much as we feel for them -- we'd hazard a guess that they don't constitute an especially large population anyway. In contrast, the Xperia Z1 should have much greater mainstream appeal. Read on to discover why.

Source: News in Hindi

HTC reportedly suffering One mini shortage due to casing problems

HTC reportedly suffering One Mini case shortage
HTC just can't catch a break, it seems: Reuters claims that the company now faces a One mini shortage due to both "design difficulties" with the casing as well as other, unnamed factors. The site's sources didn't explain the shortfall in detail, although we likely can't chalk it up to popularity. Analysts weren't expecting HTC to ship more than 200,000 One minis per month, which suggests that any supply problems would hurt the firm's bottom line. We've reached out to HTC for comment, and we'll let you know if it can confirm or deny its manufacturing woes. In the meantime, we'd suggest buying the full-sized One if you can't find its tiny counterpart in stores.

Source: News in Hindi

Sony Xperia Z1 review: a high-spec cameraphone without the hump

Sony Xperia Z1 review 20 megapixels and no humps
It's time to set the record straight: the original Xperia Z, launched back in February, was a decent phone. A solid phone. It was as if Sony had suddenly paused its chaotic schedule of handset releases in order to take stock of what Android users actually want: things like 1080p, microSD and a premium look and feel. And yet, the Xperia Z failed to be compelling. It wasn't just its subpar battery life that held it back. It was also the lack of a standout feature, which caused the phone to be buried amidst all the news of the GS4 and the HTC One -- and also by the announcement of the Lumia 1020 Windows Phone, whose camera suddenly made Sony's pokey, 13-megapixel module look like old technology.

That's why today, just seven months later, we're looking at a new flagship: the Xperia Z1 (codenamed Honami, and not to be confused with the Xperia ZL), with a far more boast-worthy camera and some other subtle-but-important enhancements. Buyers of the Xperia Z may understandably be displeased at being left behind so soon, but -- as much as we feel for them -- we'd hazard a guess that they don't constitute an especially large population anyway. In contrast, the Xperia Z1 should have much greater mainstream appeal. Read on to discover why.

Source: News in Hindi