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Zeblaze GTR 3 Pro with AMOLED screen is official in Nepal under Rs. 5000!

Zeblaze has been introducing affordable smartwatches with packed with features in the Nepali market for quite some time. Now they have launched two more of such offerings — BTALK 3 and GTR 3 Pro! Here in this article, we will be discussing the Zeblaze GTR 3 Pro in detail, its price in Nepal, specifications, and more!

Zeblaze GTR Pro 3 Overview

Design and Display

The Zeblaze GTR Pro 3 comes with a “Premium Artistic” design and features a case with drilling carbon coating. Additionally, the watch bezels are hand-polished 316L stainless steel frame. It measures 45.00 x 45.00 x 10.70 mm in dimensions and weighs 46.50 grams with the strap. You get a liquid silicone strap that comes in three colours: Starlight Silver, Midnight Black, and Champagne Gold.

Zeblaze GTR 3 Pro Design

In terms of display, the watch comes with a curved bezel-less design and features a UHD AMOLED display with a 1.43” diameter. It boasts a resolution of 466 x 466 pixels as well as a pixel density of 326 PPI. Furthermore, the display is protected by Corning Gorilla Glass and is capable of achieving peak brightness of 1,000 nits. Finally, the watch boasts an IP68 dust and water resistance along with an AOD feature.

Performance and Features

Powering the ZeBlaze GTR 3 Pro is a Realtek 8763EW chipset and offers all the good things the BTALK 3 offers. This includes 300+ watch faces, a choice to upload images as a watch face, 100+ professional workout modes, health tracking, and sleep-tracking features. Meanwhile, the company has remained silent regarding the menstrual cycle tracking feature.

Zeblaze GTR 3 Pro Features

Unsurprisingly, the ZeBlaze GTR 3 Pro also offers you with Hi-Fi Bluetooth calling feature and offline voice assistant. In addition to these features, it also displays calls, text, Gmail, and smartphone app notifications. Lastly, you can access many more features with the FitCloudPro app.

Battery and the rest

In terms of battery, the Zeblaze GTR 3 Pro comes with a 260 mAh Lithium Polymer battery. The company is confident that this watch can give you 14 days of typical usage. However, with heavy usage, the battery life drops to 5 days and just 365 minutes with continuous voice calling. The watch also offers a new “Battery Saver Mode” and takes about 90 minutes to fully charge.

For connectivity, it comes with Bluetooth 5.2 (BLE).  It is compatible with devices running on Android 5.0 or iOS 10.0 and above. Furthermore, the GTR Pro 3 also features a 3-axis accelerometer and gyroscope along with a wrist heart rate monitor and pulse ox blood oxygen saturation monitor.

Zeblaze GTR 3 Pro Specifications

  • Design: Premium and round
  • Materials: Hand-polished 316L stainless steel frame, Drilling carbon coating case, Liquid silicone straps, Corning Gorilla Glass
  • Dimensions: 45.00 mm x 45.00 mm x 10.70 mm
  • Weight: 46.50 grams, 27.50 grams (without straps)
  • Display: 1.43″ UHD AMOLED Panel, 326 PPI, 1000 nits peak brightness, AOD feature
  • Resoultion: 466 x 466 pixels
  • Chipset: Realtek 8763EW
  • Durability: IP68 dust and water resistance
  • Sensors: Wrist heart rate monitor, pulse ox blood oxygen saturation monitor, 3-axis accelerometer, and 3-axis gyroscope
  • Connectivity: Bluetooth v5.2 (BLE)
  • Battery: 260 mAh Lithium Polymer, Up to 14 days (Typical usage)
  • Charging: 1.5 hours, magnetic charging (in the box)
  • Features: 300+ watch faces, 100+ professional workout modes, Hi-Fi Bluetooth phone call, offline voice assistant, smart notifications, health and sleep tracking
  • Compatibility: Android 5.0+ or iOS 10.0+
  • Companion App: FitCloudPro (Android | iOS)
  • Colour: Starlight Silver, Midnight Black, and Champagne Gold

Zeblaze GTR 3 Pro Price in Nepal and Availability

This smartwatch is available for you to purchase from our affiliate partner — Hukut Store! The Zeblaze GTR 3 Pro price in Nepal is set at NPR 4,490.

Zeblaze Smartwatch Price in Nepal (Official) Availability
GTR 3 Pro NPR 4,490 Hukut Store
Buy Zeblaze GTR 3 Pro here
  • Meanwhile, check out our review of the Redmi Watch 3 Active

Samsung’s new 25W GaN charger is a lot more power-efficient

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As 2023 is closing its end, the entire world is waiting to see the new line of Samsung flagships. Until then, Samsung is keeping its launch cycle steady with an updated version of its 25W charger with GaN construction. In this article, we will discuss the new Samsung 25W GaN Charger, alongside its features, expected price in Nepal, and more.

Samsung 25W GaN Charger Overview:

The South Korean tech giant, Samsung’s, new 25W GaN Charger looks identical to its 25W predecessor for the most part. But the biggest difference is that the newer model is slimmer since it uses Gallium Nitride (GaN) material. Available in black and white colour options, it has a single USB-C to USB-C connector.

Samsung's new Super Fast Charger

USB PD 3.0, PPS support

Furthermore, the Samsung 25W GaN charger supports USB Power Delivery (PD) 3.0 as well as PPS (Programmable Power Supply) protocols. It is also a lot more power efficient, as per the company. This guy only consumes 5mW (milliwatt) of power in its idle state, which is almost 4 times less compared to the older model’s 20mW. Lastly, Samsung says it has used recycled plastic here in an effort to be more environmentally friendly.

Samsung 25W GaN Charger Price in Nepal and Availability

In South Korea, the Samsung 25W GaN Charger is already available to purchase for KRW 25,300 (around USD 19 / INR 1,555) just for the adapter. Or KRW 33,000 (around USD 25 / INR 2,030) with the cable included. When it makes its way here, we expect the Samsung 25W GaN Charger price in Nepal to be NPR 2,999.

Samsung 25W GaN Charger Price in South Korea (Official) Price in Nepal (Expected)
Adapter only KRW 25,300 NPR 2,999
With wire KRW 33,000 NPR 3,899

Foldable phones will FINALLY be for the regular folks!

Foldables are the hot take in the tech community at present. It seems as if every smartphone company is having its go in this category. However, all these products have a common thing — they cost an arm and a leg! But now, the paradigm finally seems to be shifting with the Huawei Pocket P series and Samsung Galaxy Z FE!

Budget Foldables Rumours Roundup:

Huawei Pocket P series

Huawei has been producing one of the most impressive foldable smartphones in the market. They released the Huawei Pocket S last year, which is one of the most budget-friendly foldables. But now the Chinese tech giant is one-upping themselves with an entry-level foldable in the works.

Huawei Pocket S

Rumours have it, that Huawei will be launching this foldable under the moniker of the “Pocket P” series. This scoop comes from the tipster, Revengus, who states that this foldable will come out in the first half of the year 2024. Furthermore, they also say that this foldable will have a price tag of USD 735 or lower. This will put the Huawei Pocket P series in the same price range as the Techno Flip V. Adding on, the global availability of the device is yet unknown.

Samsung Galaxy Z FE

It is well-known that the FE series are watered-down versions of much more potent offerings from Samsung. Reports say that Samsung is working on an FE version of its own foldables — which are held as the best in the line. This is the extent of information available regarding the Galaxy Z FE as of now.

However, sources are speculating this budget-friendly foldable from Samsung will go live alongside its premium folds. Such that, Samsung will probably unveil the Galaxy Z Fold 6 and the Galaxy Z Flip 6 somewhere around August 2024.

Conclusion

As a person who loves the concept of a folding phone, but however, not quite able to afford it — this latest development absolutely excites me! In order to cut down the prices, companies will probably opt for less capable hardware. Given that, foldable phones already make quite a few compromises on their hardware compared to their flagship counterpart, I am dying to see how these new affordable folds will unfold to be! *pun intended*

  • Meanwhile, check out our review of OPPO Find N2 Flip

Vivo launches the Vivo Y78t silently, here’s what it’s like!

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Vivo, the Chinese smartphone manufacturer giant has launched a new mid-range phone in the form of Vivo Y78t in its home country. This smartphone made an appearance in the Chinese certification databases a while back with a model number V2312BA. But now — the Vivo Y78t has made its appearance in the market, let’s look at its specs, expected price in Nepal, and more!

Vivo Y78t Overview

Design and Display

Given that Vivo hasn’t been very vocal about this new release, there aren’t many official images and renders floating around. However, from what is known, it seems, that the Vivo Y78t is following the footsteps of the Vivo Y78 series, in terms of design. The “t” variant will also have a side-mounted fingerprint sensor for security.

Vivo Y78t

On the front, we have a 6.64-inch LCD panel with FHD+ resolution with 2,388 x 1,080 pixels. Similarly, the screen will feature a refresh rate of 120Hz as well as a touch-sampling rate of 240Hz. The screen is likely to have a centre-aligned hole-punch camera cutout.

Performance

We have the Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 chipset serving as the brain of the Vivo Y78t. This Qualcomm chip features 8 cores and is built on relatively recent 4nm technology. Furthermore, one of three memory and storage configurations support the SoC viz. 8GB + 128GB, 8GB + 256GB, and 12GB + 256GB. The RAM featured here is an LPDDR4x unit while the storage is an UFS 2.2. And finally, the phone comes with OriginOS 3.0 based on Android 13.

Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 Chipset

Camera and the rest

In terms of optics, we are getting a dual-camera setup on the back. The primary of which is a 50-megapixel sensor. Similarly, the auxiliary unit is a 2-megapixel depth sensor helping out with portrait shots. And up front, we have an 8-megapixel unit helping out with the selfies. We can surely expect Vivo to add its camera flair, which it is so well known for.

Juicing up the entire unit is a massive 6,000 mAh cell that supports a 44W flash charge. Furthermore, the Vivo y78t accepts dual-SIM with VoLTE support. We also get dual-band WiFi and Bluetooth v5.1 support for wireless connectivity. Whereas we are getting a USB-C and the celebrated 3.5mm audio jack for a wired connection.

Vivo Y78t Specifications

  • Design: Rounded rectangle shape with a flat design
  • Display: 6.64” LCD panel, 120Hz refresh rate, 240Hz touch sampling rate
  • Resolution: FHD+ (2,388 x 1,080 pixels)
  • Chipset: Octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 (4nm)
  • Memory: Up to 12GB
  • Storage: Up to 256GB
  • OS & UI: Android 13 with OriginOS 3.0 on top
  • Rear Camera: Dual-camera (50MP Primary + 2MP Depth Sensor)
  • Front Camera: 8MP (Centre-aligned hole-punch camera cutout)
  • Security: Side-mounted Fingerprint sensor
  • Navigation: 6,000 mAh with 44W fast charging via USB Type-C
  • Connectivity: Dual-SIM, 4G VoLTE, Bluetooth v5.1, 3.5mm headphone jack

Vivo Y78t Price in Nepal and Availability

At this time, the new Vivo Y78t has been announced in China only and will go on sale on 22 October 2023. This new smartphone bears an astounding resemblance to the iQOO Z8x. However, if and when it does arrive in Nepal, we expect the Vivo Y78t price in Nepal to be NPR 32,999 for the 12/256GB variant.

Vivo Y78t

Price in China (Official) Price in Nepal (Expected)
12/256GB CNY 1,499

NPR 32,999

Meanwhile, check out our iPhone 15 Pro Max review after a month

New OPPO Find N3 brings a lot to Foldable Experience

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Okay, the Oppo Find N3 is official in the global market alongside its doppelganger, the OnePlus Open. Yes, you read that right. Initially, the Oppo foldable was stated to be China-exclusive, to note. In this article, we’ll be discussing the specifications, features, and expected price of the OPPO Find N3 in Nepal.

OPPO Find N3 Overview

Design

On the design side, the OPPO Find N3 brings an upgrade to the Find N2, but with a similar weight and thinner design. At most, the leather version of this smartphone measures around 11.9mm when folded. Moreover, identical to its OnePlus siblings, the OPPO Find N3 brings in an Alert Slider.

OPPO Find N3 Alert Slider

Oppo has used an aviation-grade hinge, which is claimed to last a long time. For water resistance, Find N3 is rated to have an IPX8 rating. Furthermore, it is available in Classic Black/Red with vegan leather and Green/Champagne Gold with a matte glass finish.

Display

Getting to the display, the cover screen is a 6.31” AMOLED display with 2484 x 1116px in resolution, a 20:9 aspect ratio, and a peak brightness of 2800 nits. OPPO uses the LTPO3 tech that caps at 120Hz refresh and goes all the way down to 1Hz.

Unfolding the Find N3 reveals a better and bigger screen, with a 7.82” LTPO panel with 1-120Hz dynamic refresh rate and 2440 x 2268px resolution. Nonetheless, the peak brightness is the same as the cover display.

Performance and OS

This device carries the most out of the hardware, as it brings the best Qualcomm chip for now, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 (4nm). This SoC includes 1x [email protected], 2x [email protected], 2x [email protected], and 3x [email protected], plus an Adreno 740 GPU. The chip is paired with 16GB of LPDDR5X RAM and 512GB of UFS 4.0 storage.

OPPO Find N3 Processor

Color OS 13.2

As for software, the device delivers ColorOS 13.2, based on Android 13. This version of the OS upgrade brings a lot of new additions to utilize the big screen of the OPPO Find N3. One of the highlighted features is “Boundless View”.

By the looks of it, the Boundless View allows users to expand the window beyond the screen border while working in split-screen mode. With this view, one app is focused while other apps still stay within the view, so switching between the windows is much easier. Further, the new Canvas Shift helps to switch between expanded view, full screen, and normal split-screen view in just one click.

OPPO Find N3 OS

Further, swiping down with two fingers in the middle of the screen splits the screen in half for another app to open. There is even an “App Library” on the new “Global Taskbar” and a “File Pocket” to easily drag and drop files. Additionally, with Smart Split Screen, the device chooses the optimal layout for the apps you open on multiple screens.

Camera

At the back, the Find N3 brings in a triple camera setup with Hasselblad branding. The primary lens is a 48MP shooter with OIS and a f/1.7 aperture. Moreover, the OIS is also carried to the 3x zoom sensor, which can shoot a sharper 64MP resolution. Lastly, there is an ultra-wide lens with 114˚ FOV and a ½” sensor.

OPPO Find N3 Camera

Similarly, as with most of the foldables, there are two selfie cameras. One is on the cover screen (20 MP), while the other is embedded in the inner display, which can shoot at 32MP resolution.

Battery and others

The Oppo Find N3 ships with a 4805 mAh lithium polymer cell. With 67W PD charging, 10 minutes of charging can juice it up from 0% to 35%. Connectivity options on this foldable include 5G, tri-band WiFi 7, NFC, GPS, and a USB Type-C port. Other than that, there is an in-display optical sensor for fingerprint unlocking.

OPPO Find N3 Charging

OPPO Find N3 Specifications

  • Display:
    • Outer: 6.31-inch OLED, 10-120Hz LTPO refresh rate, 2484 x 1116 pixels
    • Inner: 7.82-inch Flexible OLED, 1-120Hz LTPO refresh rate, 2440 x 2268 pixels,
  • Chipset: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 (4nm)
  • Main Camera: Triple:
    • Primary: 48 MP, f/1.7 OIS, multi-directional PDAF
    • Ultrawide: 48MP f/2.6 lens, PDAF
    • Telephoto: 64MP f/2.2, 3x optical zoom, OIS, PDAF
  • Selfie Camera:
    • Inner: 20MP with f/2.2 ultrawide lens
    • Outer: 32MP with f/2.4 ultrawide lens
  • Memory: 16GB RAM with 512GB storage
  • Software: Android 13-based Color OS 13.2
  • Battery: 4805mAh Li-Po battery
  • Charging: 67W PD (wired)

OPPO Find N3 Price in Nepal and Availability:

In Singapore, the Oppo Find N3 costs SGD 2,399 for the 16/512GB. If it ever launches here, we expect the OPPO Find N3 price in Nepal to be NPR 273,000.

OPPO Find N3 Price in Singapore (Official) Price in Nepal (Expected)
16/512GB SGD 2,399 NPR 272,999

    Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 Review: Should you buy?

    The Lenovo LOQ 15, was a pretty decent gaming laptop for the price. It did fall short on a few aspects like display and build quality but the LOQ 15’s performance was pretty impressive overall. And today I’ve got the Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 2023 with me, which addresses those exact concerns with its bright, color-rich display and a fairly premium build among other stuff.

    It does cost a little more to accommodate all that so that made me question; does spending a little more on things like better build quality and display make sense or should you save a few bucks on performance and performance alone? Let’s find that out in my Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 2023 review.

    Okay, starting with the price, the Helios Neo 16 costs NPR 225,000 for the 16GB RAM and 1TB SSD with RTX 4060 graphics in Nepal. And all this gets you Intel’s Core i7-13700HX processor, alongside an RTX 4060 graphics, 16GB of DDR5 RAM, and a terabyte of Gen4 SSD. While you can more bucks to get an RTX 4070 variant which costs NPR 258,000.

    That reminds me — starting this year — Acer has divided its “Helios 300” lineup into two factions. There’s Helios 16 and Helios Neo 16, with the Neo model serving as the cheaper option of the two.

    Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 Review: Specifications

    • Dimensions: 14.18 (W) x 11.02 (D) x 1.05 – 1.11 (H) inches, 2.6 kg
    • Build Quality: Aluminum lid,
    • Color Options: Obsidian Black
    • Display: 16-inch anti-glare IPS panel, 165Hz refresh rate, 100% sRGB, G-SYNC, MUX Switch, Advanced Optimus
    • Resolution: WXGA (1900× 1200 pixels) resolution, 16:9 aspect ratio
    • Keyboard: Full-size backlit keyboard (white)
    • Trackpad: Multi-touch trackpad, Windows Precision drivers
    • Security: TPM 2.0 chip
    • Processor: Intel Core i7-13700HX CPU (Raptor Lake)
      • 8C/16T, 5.0 GHz Max Turbo frequency, 30MB L3 Cache
    • RAM: 16GB DDR5-4800 in dual-channel mode (up to 16GB)
    • Storage: 1TB M.2 2280 PCIe 4.0 SSD (1x M.2 2242 and 1x M.2 2280 slot)
    • Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 (140W)
      • 8GB GDDR6 VRAM, 2.37 GHz boost clock
    • Audio: 2x 2W speakers, Nahimic Gaming Audio
    • Battery: 90 Watt-hours Li-Po battery
    • Power Supply: 230W Smart AC power adapter
    • Webcam: HD (720p) camera, E-shutter, Array microphones
    • Connectivity: WiFi 6E, Bluetooth 5.1
    • I/O Ports: 2x USB Type-C (Thunderbolt 4), 2x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A, 1x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A, 1x HDMI 2.1, 1x RJ45 (LAN), 1x mic / headphone combo jack, 1x power connector
    • Price in Nepal: NPR 225,000 NPR 210,000 (Intel Core i7-13700HX, RTX 4060, 16GB RAM, 1TB SSD)
    • What’s inside the box: Laptop, power adapter, quick start guide
    • Buy Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 here

    Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 Review:

    Design and Build

    Besides the processor of choice, the regular Helios 16 also enjoys other perks like a per-key RGB keyboard, a faster display, and a more subtle design language. Anyway, as you can see here on the Neo 16, you get these random numbers and letters on the lid. I would’ve preferred it more if it was just the “Predator” logo instead of all… this.

    Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 Morse Code Lid

    The Morse code-like patterns next to the I/O at the back also feel way too “form over function” for me. But the good news is that these patterns on the lid are easy to miss if you’re not looking at them up close.

    And it turns out that Acer has hidden a message that we’re meant to decipher for an “exclusive reward”. I’m no cryptographer by any means so I went straight to the internet for help and it turns out all these ciphers will lead you to this website. Where solving all the clues will get you… drum rolls please… this “exclusive Predator wallpaper”, which I’m 90% sure is AI-generated!

    Build

    • Dimensions: 399.3 x 295.5 x 26.8-27.6 mm
    • Weight: 2.6 kg

    Anyway — looking beyond all the pseudo-cyberpunk aesthetics — the Helios Neo 16 is actually a pretty well-built machine.

    Its aluminum lid feels solid (so does the hinge) and the keyboard deck here doesn’t flex much either. Then again, this is not the lightest gaming laptop as it weighs a hefty 2.6 kg, while this charging brick is nearly half as heavy as the laptop itself!

    I would also have liked it if Acer had included some sort of anti-fingerprint coating on the lid since this guy catches fingerprint smudges a little too easily.

    Acer has cut no corners when it comes to port selection though. It’s got one HDMI 2.1 and a couple of Thunderbolt 4 ports at the back, meaning you can practically connect up to three 4K 120Hz displays to the Neo 16.

    Both USB-A connections on the right are the faster ones with 10 Gbps speed too, while the left one is the older Gen 1 port with 5 Gbps speeds.

    Display

    • 16-inch WQXGA (1920 x 1200 pixels)
    • 165Hz refresh rate
    • 400nits peak brightness

    The Helios Neo 16’s display leaves little room for complaint as well. Be it a smooth 165Hz refresh rate, a sharp QHD resolution, Advanced Optimus support, or G-SYNC compatibility to prevent screen tearing, it’s got everything you might look for on a gaming machine.

    Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 Display

    It also has a fast 3ms response time but make sure to turn ON the “LCD Overdrive” setting — which brings down the response time. It’s turned off by default, which is weird!

    Other than this, the Neo 16 delivers on its display promises just fine. Acer claims 500 nits of brightness. You got it! What about 100% sRGB colors? Yep, that’s here too. So aside from gaming, web surfing, and all that stuff, you can also use it for light photo/video editing.

    Keyboard and Trackpad

    As for the keyboard, the Helios Neo 16 brings a usual set of full-sized membrane keys with a couple of interesting shortcuts. Like a dedicated key to launch Acer’s performance control tool called “PredatorSense”. Or this nifty little hotkey up top that lets you shift through different power modes with a simple click.

    Either way, typing on the Neo 16’s keyboard is a fairly enjoyable experience. And apart from the accented WASD and arrow keys, it also has a 4-zone RGB lighting.

    But if you recall, last year’s Helios 300 actually had a per-key RGB thing going on for itself, while Acer has reserved that for the slightly more expensive Helios 16 only this time.

    This plastic trackpad sees a nice upgrade on the Neo 16. It’s considerably larger now, so I had no trouble working with stuff like multi-finger gestures or drag-and-drop actions. The click response of its integrated left and right keys isn’t the best I’ve seen, but considering it’s a gaming laptop after all, I can let this one slide.

    Audio and Webcam

    • Speakers: Dual Stereo Speakers
    • Webcam: 720p HD webcam

    Unfortunately, the speaker system on the Helios Neo 16 is nothing to write home about. Acer likes to throw in words like “DTS X: Ultra” audio and whatnot to make it sound impressive on paper but honestly, there’s nothing significant in its sound output really.

    And this webcam shares a similar story as well. You’re looking at a mere 720p camera and everything looks like it has a watercolor filter somehow… with little detail to talk about. I would’ve also liked to see a privacy shutter too but I guess you’re gonna have to just… tape it up if you’re that much of a privacy freak.

    Performance

    • CPU and GPU: Intel Core i7-13700HX, RTX 4060
    • Memory and Storage: 16GB LPDDR5-4800 RAM, 1TB M.2 PCIe 4.0 x4 slot SSD

    O…kay. That brings me to performance. And if we know one thing about Acer’s “Helios” lineup of gaming laptops, it’s that they bring some of the best performance for the price.

    This time as well, Acer has tried to work its magic by going with Intel’s unlocked processor and the highest TGP graphics for the best gaming results.

    More specifically, you can choose from three 13th Gen CPUs — all unlocked — and three RTX 40 series GPUs — all with 140W of maximum graphics power. Whereas my unit has the middle-of-the-line Core i7-13700HX CPU and an RTX 4060 graphics, next to 16GB of DDR5 memory, and a terabyte of PCIe Gen4 SSD with good read/write speeds.

    Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 Gaming

    And since it’s a gaming laptop, neither the memory nor the storage is soldered to the motherboard so you can freely upgrade them down the line.

    Now, the Helios Neo 16’s gaming performance itself is… interesting to say the least. With its i7-13700HX processor, I was expecting it to perform notably better than the LOQ 15 which has AMD’s Ryzen 7 7840HS chip, but the results I’m getting are surprisingly similar in most games.

    I know I’m just considering the CPU here because even though the Helios Neo 16 has a higher TGP RTX 4060 graphics card, that’s not a big deal as NVIDIA’s 40 series midrange GPUs can’t really hit above 100W or so in real life usage.

    A leap over the Ryzen version?

    Anyway, as I mentioned before, I’m not seeing that performance leap this Intel chip should be bringing.

    There’s some obvious advantage in CPU-intensive games like the newly updated Counter-Strike 2 — with the Helios Neo 16 managing roughly 17% higher average fps. But other than this, the LOQ 15 is holding its ground perfectly fine.

    And these two are essentially seesawing in every other game I tested. The only exception I found was with Star Wars: Jedi Survivor, where the Neo 16 posted almost 30% higher fps at High graphics with ray tracing turned off. Although we’re back to getting similar scores when turning on ray tracing and DLSS 3.

    Benchmarks

    Not just games, but I ran CPU-focused benchmarks like Cinebench R23 too and these two laptops are neck to neck once again. I’m not really sure what’s going on here because I’ve tested this same CPU before on MSI’s Raider GE68 HX, and in comparison, this guy is posting significantly lower scores.

    Maybe Acer is worried about thermals and is undervolting the CPU a bit but I don’t see any reason for this since the Helios Neo 16’s thermals are terrific. Truly.

    It doesn’t look like Acer has made any changes to the cooling system from last year but man this thing stays cool. In all my gaming sessions, the highest temperature I logged around the keyboard deck was just around 34°C, which is beyond impressive. The same area on the Lenovo LOQ 15 — for instance — measured roughly 40°C!

    I should warn you though — this comes at the expense of the fan noise — as the Neo 16 gets as loud as 60 – 61dB under the “Turbo” mode with the fan speed set to “Max”. And you’re gonna need a really good pair of headphones (maybe even ones with active noise cancellation) for the least amount of distraction.

    Battery Life

    • 90Wh, 4-cell Li-ion
    • 230W AC Adapter

    Moving on, the Helios Neo 16’s 90Wh battery usually lasted around 4 hours for me when setting it to “Balanced” mode and doing everyday chores. And when letting the laptop automatically switch between the integrated and discredited GPU. So… that’s pretty impressive.

    Likewise, filling it up with this monstrous 330W power adapter takes just a little under two hours.

    Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 Review: Conclusion

    So in conclusion, the Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 is not the easy recommendation I was hoping it would be. Yes, it offers great 1080p (and even 1440p) gaming results — with commendable thermals, display, and everything. But I’m not sure if all that’s enough to justify its price tag versus all the competition.

    Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 Casual

    Especially since a couple of them with more powerful last-gen RTX 3070 Ti graphics are currently available at much lower prices than what Acer is asking for this thing. But if you really want DLSS 3 — which is unfortunately exclusive to the RTX 40 series — and if you can find it on some amazing deals, then the Helios Neo 16 is definitely worth grabbing as well.

    Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 (2023) Review Pros and Cons

    Pros

    • Decent build quality
    • Sharp, color-rich 165Hz display
    • Nice keyboard, trackpad
    • Good 1080p/1440p gaming
    • Excellent cooling system

    Cons

    • Could’ve been priced more aggressively
    • Somewhat flashy design
    • Fan noise can get loud
    • Just 720p webcam

    OnePlus Open launched with an impressive spec sheet, and a price to match

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    OnePlus is entering the foldable space with a bang. Their latest OnePlus Open comes with all the bells and whistles to compete against market leaders like the Galaxy Z Fold, and Google’s Pixel Fold. Let’s learn more about it in this article where we discuss the design, specifications, and expected price in Nepal of the OnePlus Open. 

    OnePlus Open Overview

    Design and Display

    OnePlus has put a lot of effort into designing the Open. For starters, it is considerably lighter than the competition (Pixel Fold: 283g, Z Fold 5: 253g) and weighs about the same as last year’s iPhone 14 Pro Max (~240 grams). And, it opens flat and closes flush with no gaps which is impressive for a first-gen foldable. Reviewers also mention that the crease (on the inner screen) is barely visible on regular use which is always a plus. 

    OnePlus Open design

    Moving on to the displays, you get a regular-looking 20:9 6.31-inch OLED cover display outside while the larger inner screen boasts 7.82 inches of screen estate. Both are 10-bit 120Hz LTPO screens with an impressive peak brightness of 2800 nits. 

    Performance 

    And onto performance, the OnePlus Open continues to impress. It ships with the flagship Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 processor with one X3 prime core at 3.2 GHz, two A715 and two A710 performance cores at 2.8 GHz, and three A510 efficiency cores at 2.0 GHz. Complementing that, you get 16GB of LPDDR5X RAM for multitasking and 512GB of fast UFS 4.0 storage. 

    The phone boots on Oxygen OS 13.2 based on Android 13.

    Cameras

    OnePlus Open camera

    The Open features quite a bold look courtesy of its camera module. The large circular island features a 48MP main shooter,  a 48MP ultrawide, and a 64MP telephoto lens. The inner screen features a 20MP selfie cam of f/2.2 aperture while the cover screen also features a 32MP front camera both of which are housed in their respective hole-punch(es). 

    Other Specs

    Under the hood, the slim foldable is packing a respectable 4800mAh battery. According to OnePlus, you can fill the device from 1 to 100% in just 42 minutes using the included 67W fast charger. The fingerprint sensor is embedded into the side power button and the phone also features WiFi 7 alongside Bluetooth 5.3, and NFC for connectivity. Strangely, wireless charging is missing from the foldable. 

    OnePlus Open Specifications:

    • Body: 239/245 grams, IPX8 water-resistant, Ceramic Shield (front), Armor Aluminum frame
      • Folded: 153.4 x 73.3 x 11.7/11.9 mm
      • Unfolded: 153.4 x 143.1 x 5.8 mm
    • Display:
      • Cover: 6.31″ AMOLED, 120Hz adaptive refresh rate (10 – 120Hz)
      • Main: 7.82″ AMOLED, 120Hz adaptive refresh rate (LTPO)
    • Resolution:
      • Cover: 2K (2484 x 1116 pixels), 20:9 aspect ratio
      • Main: 2K (2440 x 2268 pixels), 1.0758:1 aspect ratio
    • Other Properties:  Ceramic Guard(Cover display), HDR10+
    • Chipset: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 (4nm Mobile Platform)
    • CPU: Octa-core:
      – 1x Cortex-X3 (3.2 GHz)
      – 2x Cortex-A715 (2.80 GHz)
      – 2x Cortex-A710 (2.80 GHz)
      – 3x Cortex-A510 (2.0 GHz)
    • GPU: Adreno 740
    • Memory: 16GB LPDDR5X RAM, 512GB UFS 4.0 storage (non-expandable)
    • Software & UI: Android 13 with Oxygen OS 13.2 on top
    • Rear Camera: Triple (with LED flash);
      – Primary: 48MP f/1.7 sensor, PDAF, OIS
      – Ultrawide: 48MP f/2.2 sensor, 114º FOV
      – Telephoto: 64MP f/2.6 sensor, 3x optical zoom, OIS
    • Selfie Camera:
      – Outer: 32MP f/2.4 sensor
      – Inner: 20MP f/2.2 sensor
    • Audio: Stereo speaker with Dolby Atmos enhanced audio, No headphone jack
    • Security: Side-mounted (capacitive), Face unlock
    • Sensors: Accelerometer, Barometer, Gyro, Geomagnetic, Hall, Proximity, Light
    • Connectivity: Dual-SIM (2xNano + eSIM), Wi-Fi 7 (tri-band), Bluetooth 5.3, GPS / Galileo / Glonass / BeiDou, NFC, UWB, 4G LTE (VoLTE), 5G
    • Battery: 4805mAh battery with 67W wired charging
    • Wireless Charging: Yes (10W), 4.5W reverse wireless charging
    • Color Options: Icy Blue, Phantom Black, Cream

    OnePlus Open Price in Nepal and Availability

    The OnePlus foldable is available for pre-order in India for INR 1,39,999. If and when it makes it here, we expect the OnePlus Open price in Nepal to be around NPR 2,59,999.

    OnePlus Open  Price in India (Official) Price in Nepal (Expected)
    16/512GB INR 1,39,999 NPR 2,59,999

    • Meanwhile, you can check our Oppo Find N2 Review. 

    OPPO is creating its own ChatGPT for smartphones

    1

    The Chinese smartphone giant Oppo is going all in on Artificial Intelligence (AI) and plans to make its own Chat-GPT-like assistant. In this article, let’s take a look at what Oppo is planning to do with its latest venture AndesGPT. 

    OPPO AndesGPT Overview 

    It’s no secret that we use our phones every day and while some assistants like Google Assistant truly add a lot of value to that experience, most others are not very capable. So, with the recent rise of Large Language Models (LLM) like Chat GPT, many companies like Vivo, Xiaomi, Huawei, and Oppo are willing to bet on AI to supercharge their upcoming assistants.

    LLMs and Smartphones

    That being said integrating an LLM to a smartphone is harder than it sounds. Large Language Models are trained on thousands if not millions of text data and require a lot of computing power to work as intended. So, the obvious choice would be to run the LLM in the cloud which is how you and I can use ChatGPT on our smartphones regardless of our own hardware. But OPPO and others are planning to run the LLM locally on your smartphone. This will require a lot of computational power so it’s not an easy path to pursue, but if they are successful, there are lots of advantages too. 

    AndesGPT will work without WiFi

    One of OPPO’s ventures is AndesGPT which will be powering its AI assistant Xiao Bu. AndesGPT is an LLM-like Chat GPT but one that will run locally. Now, it’s likely going to have way fewer parameters than Chat GPT but fine-tuning the model should allow OPPO to achieve impressive feats like local text generation, AI personalization, real-time language translation, accessibility features, and a whole lot more. Something like Infinix’s Folax does have integrated GPT-3 (cloud-based) but it leaves a lot to desire due to a lack of proper optimization so only time will tell how practical this approach pans out to be. 

    OPPO AndesGPT benchmark

    Right now, the development looks to be pretty promising as AndesGPT was able to score 98.33 in the “Knowledge and Encyclopedia” ability test of the SuperCLUE LLM benchmark. That’s just a couple of points behind GPT 4 which got a full score of 100.

    OPPO’s other AI ventures

    OPPO has eyes on the greater prize as well. Though LLMs are all the rage right now, the company is also investing in other aspects of emerging AI like computer vision. Computer vision is an AI technology that enables the identification and understanding of objects and people in images and videos. In a sense, you can also see it as an extension of OPPO AndesGPT,  where this model will not only be able to read your text inputs but also ‘see’ through images and ‘hear’ through voice.

    Meizu 20 Classic goes official with Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 and 16GB RAM

    2

    Chinese company Meizu just launched a new phone called the Meizu 20 Classic. The 20 series already has the Meizu 20, 20 Pro, and 20 Infinity launched some months ago. Let’s dive into the specs, price, and availability of the new Meizu 20 Classic in Nepal.

    Meizu 20 Classic Overview:

    Design and Display

    The Classic model introduces new colors this time: Green, Iron Grey, and Yusheng White. The Meizu’s new logo on the back cover is now relocated in the middle. As for the design, you get a boxy frame with flat frames and curved edges.

    Meizu 20 Classic colors

    For display, it has a 6.55″ OLED panel with FHD resolution and 144Hz refresh rate as well. As seen in the pictures, the bezels also look quite minimal.

    Performance and Software

    Under the hood, the phone brings Qualcomm’s flagship Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chip inside. It is paired with 16GB RAM and up to 512GB of UFS 4.0 internal storage. As for the software, the phone boots on Android 13 based on Meizu’s Flyme 10 OS.

    Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2

    You may also like:

    Camera

    The device features a triple camera system on the back. You get a 50MP primary + 16MP ultrawide + 5MP macro lens setup. Over on the front, there is a 32MP snapper for selfies and video calls.

    Battery, connectivity, and Others

    The smartphone gets its juice from a substantial 4,700mAh battery and fast 67W wired charging support. In terms of connectivity, it features 5G, WiFi 6, NFC, GPS, and a USB Type-C port. For biometrics security, you get a 3D ultrasonic fingerprint sensor.

    Meizu 20 Classic Specifications:

    • Display: 6.55″ (2400 x 1080 pixels) FHD+ OLED, up to 800 nits brightness
    • CPU: Snapdragon 8 Gen 2
    • OS: Android 13 based – Flyme 10 OS
    • Memory: 16 GB LPDDR5X RAM
    • Storage: 256/512GB UFS 4.0 storage
    • Rear Camera: Triple (50MP primary + 16MP ultrawide + 5MP macro)
    • Front Camera: 32MP (punch-hole)
    • Battery: 4700 mAh with 67W fast charging
    • Sensors: 3D ultrasonic fingerprint sensor
    • Others: USB Type-C, Stereo speakers, Bluetooth 5.2, 5G SA/NSA Dual 4G VoLTE, Wi-Fi 6E 802.11 ax (2.4GHz + 5GHz) 2×2 MIMO

    Meizu 20 Classic Price in Nepal and Availability 

    The Meizu 20 Classic is already available in China and it costs CNY 3,099 (approx. $423) for the 16GB + 256GB model. For the 16GB + 512GB model, it costs CNY 3,399 (approx. $464). If the phone launches in Nepal then we can expect the price to start from NPR 67,999.

    Meizu 20 Classic Price in China (Official) Price in Nepal (Expected)
    16GB + 256GB CNY 3,099 NPR 67,999
    16GB + 512GB CNY 3,399 NPR 74,499

    Meanwhile, check out our review of Realme 11 5G Review.

    Infinix Zero 30 Review: Amazing Attempt

    Infinix is back at it again with another smartphone that has created a lot of hype. Just like the GT 10 Pro which I reviewed a month ago, the Infinix Zero 30 seems like a killer deal on paper with a 144Hz AMOLED display, powerful Dimensity 8020 chipset, 4k 60 front and back recording, and a 5000 mAh battery with 68W fast charging. But does it actually hold up in real-world usage? What’s the catch here.. Well..keep reading to find out.

    But before my full review, here are the brief specifications of the Infinix Zero 30.

    Infinix Zero 30 Review: Specifications

    • Body: 164.5 x 75 x 7.9 mm, 185gm
    • Display: 6.78-inch AMOLED, 144Hz refresh rate
    • Resolution: FHD+ (2400 x 1080 pixels), 20:9 aspect ratio
    • Chipset: MediaTek Dimensity 8020 (6nm Mobile Platform)
    • Memory: 8/12GB RAM (+ Up to 9GB Virtual RAM), 256GB storage
    • Software & UI: XOS 13 on top of Android 13
    • Rear Camera: Dual
      – 108MP primary, f/1.7, 1/1.67”, OIS
      – 13MP ultrawide, f/2.2, 120° FOV
      – 2MP depth, f/2.4
    • Front Camera: 50MP, f/2.5 (punch-hole)
    • Audio: Stereo speakers, Speaker Hub
    • Security: In-display fingerprint sensor
    • Battery: 5000mAh with 68W fast charging

    Infinix Zero 30 Review:

    Design 

    The Infinix Zero 30 just feels fantastic in the hand. It’s sleek and this vegan leather variant that I have feels premium to the touch as well. Infinix has also gone with quite a bold look for the camera module, and I found it to be pretty lightweight at just 183 grams.

    It’s still a big phone, but overall I’m really impressed with the hands-on feel of this thing. Sadly there isn’t any sort of IP rating but I guess we can’t expect everything from a midrange phone in the first place.

    Infinix Zero 30 Review - Design

    Display

    • 6.78-inch FHD+ AMOLED panel
    • 144Hz refresh rate
    • 10-bit colors, 950 nits peak brightness

    Its impressive run continues on the display front too. You get a 10-bit 144Hz curved AMOLED panel here with up to 950 nits of peak brightness that’s great to look at. And these gentle curves make the Infinix Zero 30 feel more premium than it actually is… although as with curved displays, there are some accidental mistouches every now and then.

    Infinix also offers a couple of color presets to choose from but I really wish both of them weren’t calibrated to look so rich and saturated. That means if you’re a fan of more neutral colors, this is something you’re gonna have to live with here.

    And HDR playback is a mixed bag as well. The Infinix Zero 30 can stream HDR videos on YouTube just fine, but it can’t do so on Netflix.

    Speakers and Haptics

    • Stereo speakers with DTS

    Watching movies and shows on it feels great, especially paired with the loud stereo speakers. The speakers don’t sound the fullest and lack some of that lower frequency but are very competitive for the price.

    Haptics are nothing out of the ordinary and just about what you’d expect from a mid-ranger. It’s pretty weak and barely noticeable in your pocket, especially, if you’re moving around. I missed a good number of calls because of it, but unsurprisingly, that’s not the first time it has happened.

    Performance

    • Octa-core MediaTek Dimensity 8020 5G SoC (6nm)
    • 8/12GB LPDDR4X RAM, 256GB UFS 3.1 storage (fixed)
    • Android 13 (XOS on top)

    Now for the performance. This Infinix (Zero) 30 comes with a pretty powerful Dimensity 8020 chipset which — like most other MediaTek processors we’ve seen this year — is also a rebranded product. More specifically, the 8020 is just Dimensity 1100 with a new name that launched almost 3 years ago.

    Rebrandings aside, this is quite a competent chip I must say. As you can see from these benchmarks, it easily keeps up with if not straight outperforms, most of its competitors.

    Infinix Zero 30 Benchmark Scores

    And the real-world usage is also no different. Getting through the UI is buttery smooth and responsive on the Zero 30 and I haven’t noticed any lag or stutter under regular everyday use like browsing the web, scrolling through social media, and stuff. Switching between apps and multitasking has not been a problem either.

    Infinix Zero 30 Review - Casual Use

    I also like how Infinix has been generous in terms of memory since the Zero 30 comes with a base 8GB RAM and 256GB storage.

    Gaming

    If we are talking about gaming, however, the story takes a slight turn. Due to the slim form factor, the Infinix Zero 30 is not the best at dispersing heat. As such, the phone quickly throttles the CPU which isn’t great for gaming. It isn’t to say you can’t game on the Zero 30, just that you’ll be sacrificing some fps for the sake of everything else. Even then, the phone does get noticeably warm, especially on the front and around the camera module.

    Starting off with PUBG Mobile at Smooth and Extreme, the gameplay was fairly smooth with a few stutters here and there. The phone did get hot after a few minutes of gameplay and performance took a hit. So, compared to phones like IQOO’s Z7 Pro and Motorola’s Edge 40 Neo, the performance of the Zero 30 was slightly underwhelming.

    Infinix Zero 30 vs Moto Edge 40 Neo vs Z7 Pro PUBG Mobile

    On Injustice 2 at default settings, I was getting anywhere from 80-100 fps. It was smooth sailing with no noticeable drops or stutters.

    Genshin Impact ran smoothly on Medium Settings ( Motion Blur Off and Frame Rate cap to 30) and gave consistent 30 fps. On Low settings with frame rate set to 60, I got an average of 48fps. As I said, this phone WILL get hot while gaming (39.3°C front, 36.5°C back, peak CPU temp 73°C) and you will notice frame drops during fights or intense scenes, but it isn’t surprising given the form factor.

    Infinix Zero 30 Genshin Impact graph

    I also played Mobile Legends and Asphalt 9, both of which ran with no problems.

    Camera

    • Triple camera setup at the back
    • (50MP main, 13MP ultrawide, 2MP depth)
    • 50MP selfie camera (hole-punch)

    To be fair, Infinix isn’t exactly marketing this as a gaming phone. But it is promising a lot in the camera department. So let’s get into that now.

     Here, the Infinix Zero 30 uses Samsung’s 108MP HM6 sensor for the main camera and it also brings a 13MP ultrawide shooter, while selfies are handled by a 50MP sensor that supports autofocus.

    4k 60 fps

    And as I mentioned before, its biggest highlight is the ability to record 4K 60 fps videos from both primary and selfie cameras. Which is something no other phone in this price range can do, by the way. And after taking a lo…t of video samples, what I found is that its 4K 60 fps footages during daytime are pretty decent actually.

    You can notice some minor jitters every now and then and it doesn’t drown out the ambient noise that well, but there are plenty of details and the overall stabilization isn’t nearly as bad as I expected.

    I also won’t suggest you recording at 60 fps at night when there isn’t enough light since the videos turn out quite noisy.

    This is because compared to something like a 30 fps video, you’re giving the camera exactly half the time to expose each frame, resulting in more noise in lowlight conditions.

    Infinix Zero 30’s ultrawide camera can also record at up to 4K 30 fps, and the results are pretty similar.

    4K 60 fps recordings from its selfie camera are decent too. The footages aren’t as steady as I’d like but if you’re serious about vlogging on a budget, I can easily see the Infinix Zero 30 being a perfectly workable tool when paired with a cheap gimbal and an external microphone.

    Daylight

    Likewise, I compared its cameras with the Galaxy A34, which is one of the best camera phones under 30,000 currently. And in terms of videos itself, it turns out that the Infinix Zero 30 doesn’t quite match Samsung’s level of stability and exposure handling at practically every resolution.

    But I’m a little surprised to see how well it’s doing against Galaxy A34 in the photography department. During the day, photos from both phones come out nice with a good amount of details. Infinix does need to work on its color processing as its images are a bit warmer but overall, it’s not too bad.

    And I like how its ultrawide shots are (somewhat) consistent with those from the main camera too. The detail level is consistently better (than A34) here and it handles highlights and shadows pretty impressively.

    Portraits and Selfies

    As for portraits, the Galaxy A34 earns an easy point. Not only does it have better edge detection and color processing, but the Infinix Zero 30 tends to add a pinkish hue to the subject’s face which I am not a big fan of. Its selfies also leave a lot to be desired as the Galaxy A34 handles skin tones miles better.

    Lowlight

    But the Zero 30 is a champ when it comes to lowlight photography. There’s not much shutter lag and they have more details and better dynamic range than A34.

    You can also choose to shoot in the “Super Night Mode” which takes in more light but this gave me some weird-looking images from time to time.

    Battery and Charging

    • 5000mAh with 68W fast charging

    Now let’s talk about the battery. I was surprised to find out that this slim guy is packing a 5000 mAh cell. And after some use, I can say that while the battery life is good it’s not great.

    Infinix Zero 30 vs Galaxy A34 - Charging

    It lasted me through the day just fine, but the battery drain was quite horrifying as the Zero 30 lost anywhere between 15 to 20% overnight. After a little bit of digging, I did find that turning on “Bedtime mode” helps a lot but yeah, this is something Infinix needs to fix ASAP!

    Infinix Zero 30 Review: Conclusion

    To wrap things up, I think the Infinix Zero 30 is a great overall package for the price that pushes the boundary for smartphone cameras in the midrange arena. Especially in terms of videography. It does under-deliver on its promise of “stable, shake-free videos every time”, but I hope this encourages the competition to follow suit in the future anyway.

    There are also a couple of optimization issues for Infinix to sort out but all in all, the Zero 30 makes a lot of sense under 25,000 rupees. I’ll admit — this segment does have a few other compelling options like the Motorola Edge 40 Neo(review) and the iQOO Z7 Pro as well — but it easily stands out against the competition. Mostly through its videography abilities.

    Infinix Zero 30 Review: Pros and Cons

    Pros

    • Good value for money
    • Capable Camera Setup
    • Powerful chipset
    • Smooth 144Hz OLED display

    Cons

    • Thermal throttles quickly
    • Software optimization could be better