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Realme 9 5G launched with Dimensity 810, 90Hz LCD screen

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Realme announced two new 9 series phones today. It includes the new Realme 9, which brings a new processor and support for 5G connectivity. In this article, we will be discussing the key specs, features, expected price, and availability of the Realme 9 5G in Nepal.

Realme 9 5G Overview

Design and Display

Realme 9 5G comes with a 6.5” 90Hz display, which was not there on last year’s Realme 8. However, the company has also replaced the Super AMOLED screen with an IPS panel. That being said, it still retains the 180Hz touch sampling rate and the left-aligned camera cutout.

The phone is 8.5mm thick and weighs around 188 grams. You can choose between two colors: Stargaze White and Meteor Black.

Realme 9 5G Design and Display

Performance

Under the hood, Realme has gone with the 5G-ready Dimensity 810 5G chipset. In addition to the support for 5G connectivity, it even brings a newer 6nm process which makes it more power-efficient compared to the Helio G95 on the Relame 9i.

The two chipsets feature the same 2x Cortex A76 + 6x Cortex-A55 core configuration. However, the performance cores are clocked a little higher on Dimensity 810. Talking about graphics, Dimensity 810’s dual-core Mali G57 GPU is actually a downgrade from the quad-core Mali G76 on the G95.

Camera

At the back, Realme 9 5G brings a triple camera consisting of a 48MP primary sensor accompanied by a 2MP macro and a 2MP portrait sensor. In contrast, Realme 8 featured a quad-camera setup with a 64MP primary sensor and an 8MP ultrawide sensor. On the front, there is a 16MP sensor for selfies and video calls.

Realme 9 5G camera setup

Rest of the Specs

Fueling the Realme 9 5G is a 5,000mAh battery. The phone charges slower at 18W against its predecessor’s 30W charging. It still boots on Android 11 with Realme UI 2.0 on top. There is a side-mounted fingerprint scanner for biometrics.

Realme 9 5G is available in two memory configurations. The base variant has 4GB RAM and 64GB storage, while the top-end model comes with 6GB RAM and 128GB storage.

Realme 9 5G Specifications:

  • Display: 6.5-inches LCD panel, 90Hz refresh rate, 180Hz touch sampling rate
  • Resolution: Full-HD+ (2412 x 1080 pixels), 20:9 aspect ratio
  • Chipset: MediaTek Dimensity 810 (6nm)
  • Memory: 4/6GB RAM, 64/128GB storage (expandable)
  • Software & UI: Android 11 with Realme UI 2.0 on top
  • Rear Camera: Triple camera;
    – 48MP f/1.8 primary lens
    – 2MP f/2.4 B&W lens
    – 2MP f/2.4 macro lens
  • Front Camera: 16MP (punch-hole)
  • Security: side-mounted fingerprint scanner, Face unlock
  • Battery: 5000mAh with 18W SuperDart Charge

Realme 9 5G Price in Nepal and Availability (Expected)

Realme 9 5G will go on sale in India on March 14. There, its price is INR 14,999 for the 4/64GB variant and INR 17,499 for the 6/128GB variant. If it launches here, we expect the price of Realme 9 5G in Nepal to start at NPR 25,500.

Realme 9 Price in India (Official) Price in Nepal (Expected)
4/64GB INR 14,999 NPR 25,500
6/128GB INR 17,499 NPR 30,500
  • Meanwhile, check out our review of Realme 8.

Realme 9 5G “Speed Edition” goes official with Snapdragon 778G, 144Hz screen

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After launching the 9 Pro and 9 Pro+ last month, Realme has added two more phones to its latest number series. Among the two phones announced today, Realme 9 SE is a completely new phone with no direct predecessor. In this article, we will be discussing the key specs, features, expected price, and availability of the Realme 9 SE in Nepal.

Realme 9 SE Overview:

Performance

Realme has justified the Speed Edition moniker by including Snapdragon 778G under the hood. In terms of raw performance, it is even better than the Snapdragon 695-powered 9 Pro. It brings faster Cortex-A78 performance cores (1x 2.4GHz + 3x 2.2 GHz) and a capable GPU in the form of Adreno 642L. However, this chip is based on an older 6nm process.

Though you can choose between 6GB and 8GB of LPDDR4X RAM, you will get 128GB of UFS 2.2 storage on both. Likewise, there is also an option to expand the storage further with an external memory card.

Display and Design

Moving on, Realme 9 SE brings a 6.6” LCD screen with support for a 144Hz refresh rate. This makes it the fastest display in the series. Likewise, the screen is said to switch between six different levels of refresh rate based on the app and content. The screen boasts a 240Hz touch sampling rate and 600 nits of peak brightness.

Realme 9 SE Design and Display

Over on the back, Realme 9 SE has a shining textured design with anti-fingerprint properties. It is available in Starry Glow and Azure Glow color options.

Cameras

In terms of photography, Realme 9 SE brings a triple camera setup. The primary camera here uses a 48MP sensor. Accompanying it is a duo of 2MP sensors for portraits and macro, respectively. Unfortunately, there is no ultrawide shooter here. For selfies, Realme has included a 16MP shooter inside the left-aligned punch-hole display cutout.

Realme 9 SE Camera

Rest of the Specs

Realme 9 SE gets its juice from a massive 5,000mAh battery, and it has support for 33W fast charging. It has a side-mounted fingerprint scanner for biometrics. It even brings support for Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.2. The phone still boots on Android 11, which is quite a bummer given all the specs that it offers for the price.

Realme 9 SE Specifications:

  • Display: 6.6-inches LCD panel, 144Hz refresh rate, 240Hz touch sampling rate
  • Resolution: Full-HD+ (2412 x 1080 pixels), 20:9 aspect ratio
  • Chipset: Qualcomm Snapdragon 778G (6nm)
  • Memory: 6/8GB LPDDR4X RAM, 128GB storage (expandable)
  • Software & UI: Android 11 with Realme UI 2.0 on top
  • Rear Camera: Triple camera;
    – 48MP f/1.8 primary lens
    – 2MP f/2.4 B&W lens
    – 2MP f/2.4 macro lens
  • Front Camera: 16MP (punch-hole)
  • Security: side-mounted fingerprint scanner, Face unlock
  • Battery: 5000mAh with 30W SuperDart Charge

Realme 9 SE Price in Nepal and Availability (Expected)

Realme 9 SE will go on sale starting March 14 in India, where it starts at INR 19,999 for the base 6/128GB variant. If it launches here, we expect the price of the Realme 9 SE in Nepal to start at NPR 34,500.

Realme 9 SE Price in India (Official) Price in Nepal (Expected)
6/128GB INR 19,999 NPR 34,500
8/128GB INR 22,999 NPR 40,000
  • Meanwhile, check out our unboxing of the Realme 9 SE.

Huawei MateBook D 15 (2021) is now officially available in Nepal

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Last year, Huawei refreshed its MateBook D series of notebooks with the 11th gen Intel CPUs. The lineup consisted of two laptops: MateBook D 14 and D 15. The latter is now available in Nepal. So, let’s walk through the key specs, official price, and availability of the Huawei MateBook D 15 in Nepal.

Huawei MateBook D 15 Overview:

Performance

Huawei MateBook D 15 is powered by 11th Gen Intel Core i5-1135G7. It’s a quad-core CPU with 8 threads and a maximum clock speed of 4.20 GHz. There is no discrete GPU here, and users will have to rely on the integrated Intel Iris Xe graphics. As for memory, you get 8GB LPDDR4X RAM and 512GB of PCIe SSD.

Design and Display

As the monikers suggest, Huawei MateBook D 15 features a 15.6-inch IPS screen. The FHD screen has a 16:9 aspect ratio and typical brightness of 250 nits. Other than that, it has slim bezels and 178º viewing angles. Plus, Huawei has also attained TÜV Rheinland’s low blue light certification.

Huawei MateBook D 15 Design

This metal chassis is available in two colors – Moon Silver and Deep Space Gray. It measures 16.9mm in thickness and weighs around 1.56 kg.

Battery and Connectivity

As for the ports, you get one USB-C connection with charging support, three USB-A, one HDMI, and a 3.5mm combo jack.

Huawei MateBook D 15 Ports

 

The keyboard on the Huawei MateBook D 15 is backlit and the power button is home to a fingerprint scanner too. One of the keys hides the 720p webcam, which pops up only when you need it.

Huawei MateBook D15 features a 42Wh battery with support for 65W charging.

Huawei MateBook D 15 Specifications:

  • Body: 357.8W x 229.9D x 16.9H-mm, 1.56 kg
  • Display: 15.6-inches FHD (1920 x 1080) IPS, 250 nits
  • Keyboard: Full-sized backlit keyboard
  • Touchpad: Multi-touch supported touchpad
  • Processor: Intel Core i5-1135G7
  • Memory: 8GB LPDDR4X RAM, 512GB NVMe PCIe SSD 
  • Graphics: Intel Iris Xe
  • Audio: 2x speaker
  • Battery: 42 WHr, 65W USB-C power adapter
  • Webcam: 720p HD camera (hidden)
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac/ax (2×2 MIMO), Bluetooth 5.1
  • I/O ports: 1x 3.5mm mic/headphone jack, 2x USB 2.0 Type-A, 1x USB Type-C (charging supported), 1x HDMI, 1x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A

Huawei MateBook D 15 Price in Nepal (Official)

The official price of the Huawei MateBook D 15 (2021) in Nepal is Rs. 109,990 for the sole 8+512GB variant. You can buy the MateBook D15 from Huawei-authorized stores in Nepal.

Huawei MateBook D15 (2021)  Price in Nepal (Official) 
Core i5-1135G7, 8GB LPDDR5 RAM, 512GB PCIe NVMe SSD  Rs.  109,990
  • Meanwhile, check out our 2021 gaming PC build for under $1000.

Intel 12th Gen “Alder Lake” Review: Windows 10 vs Windows 11

This is our review of Intel 12th Gen Alder Lake CPU (Core i7-12700K) on Windows 10 and Windows 11. If you’ve watched or read our comparison between the 11th Gen Rocket Lake and 12th Gen Alder Lake CPUs, then you know that Intel is back with a bang! To pull this off, the company had to use every trick up its sleeve—from the hybrid core architecture to the new 10nm process node and everything in between.

What’s new with Alder Lake?

By now, you might already be familiar with the said hybrid architecture but in case you’re not, here’s a quick recap.

UNlike every other x86-based intel and amd processor of the past, alder lake is different. in a good way.

Contrary to a homogenous CPU design consisting only of high-performance cores, these 12th Gen CPUs also bring low-power high-efficiency cores into the mix. With this, Intel is promising a significantly more power-efficient workflow alongside improved performance.

Intel Core i9-12900K vs i9-11900K - Performance Per Watt
Image: Intel

For instance, the company claims that the Core i9-12900K delivers the same level of performance at 65W—compared to what the Core i9-11900K manages at 250W! Besides the core layout itself, the new CPU microarchitectures, cache architecture, and a multitude of other factors contribute to the upgrade as well—but you get the gist.

Intel 12th Gen Windows 10 vs 11: Thread Director

So, to make sure this novel CPU design doesn’t end up misbehaving with the operating system, Intel has worked closely with Microsoft to develop something called “Thread Director” that reportedly yields the best performance on Windows 11.

Intel Thread Director Overview 2
Image: Intel

Basically what it does is give the OS a better view of thread requests and the state of each core to help it decide whether a thread goes to a performance or an efficiency core. According to Intel, Thread Director monitors instructions at a nanosecond level and communicates with the OS on a microsecond level.

Windows 11 - Wallpaper

All this sure sounds fantastic on paper. But if history has taught anything, jumping on the new OS bandwagon this early on is not a good idea. So the question has to be asked: just how good is Alder Lake on Windows 11—if at all? For this, we ran a bunch of benchmark and gaming tests on Windows 10 and 11.

Test system specs

More specifically, all our Windows 10 (Pro) tests were running on the 21H2 version (OS build 19044.1466). On the other hand, our Windows 11 (Pro) machine was also on version 21H2 (OS build 22000.438).

CPU Intel Core i7-12700K
Motherboard Asus TUF Gaming Z690-Plus D4
Graphics Card MSI GeForce RTX 3070 Ventus 2X OC (8GB)
CPU Cooler AITC KA-F240 AIO Water Cooler (240mm)
Casing XPG Battlecruiser E-ATX Super Mid-Tower
– 4x XPG Vento 120mm ARGB fans
RAM 2x AITC RAPiDEZ 8GB DDR4-3600 (CL18)
SSD AITC FZ300 M.2 2280 PCIe 3 x4 (1TB)
PSU MSI MPG A850GF 850W (80+ Gold)

In terms of system specs, it’s the same that we used in our 11th Gen-12th Gen comparison. Once again, if you haven’t seen or read that comparison, I’ll highly recommend doing so because we’ve discussed all the nitty-gritty details of Alder Lake apart from its upgrades over 11th Gen there.

Intel 12th Gen Windows 10 vs 11: Performance

7-Zip

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - 7-Zip

Anyway, looking at the 7-Zip 32MB dictionary compression and decompression, their minimal difference can be simply written off as run-to-run variation. Same with Blender.

Blender Open Data

The BMW render took 1 minute 49 seconds on Windows 11 and a second less on Windows 10. The i7-12700K was slower by a couple of seconds on Windows 11 in the Classroom render as well. Likewise, this CPU completed all Blender benchmarks in 28 minutes and 5 seconds on Windows 10—which is 8 seconds faster than on the newer OS.

Besides render speed, I didn’t find any substantial advantage for this 12th Gen CPU on Windows 11 when it comes to power usage or temperature either. In Blender’s all-core full benchmark test, I clocked the CPU temperature on Windows 10 and 11 and 86 and 88°C respectively—while their power draw was also negligibly different at 186.796W and 188.146W.

AIDA64 Stress Test

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - AIDA64

AIDA64’s stress test yields identical outcomes on both operating systems—with an unthrottled CPU and similar power usage and temperature.

Cinebench R23

Cinebench R23 tells the same story in both single and multi-core benchmarks. Here, this Alder Lake processor’s single-core score on Windows 11 came to 1842—a roughly 1.68% worse result than on Windows 10.

Five minutes into the test, Windows 11 posted about 9.75% cooler CPU temperature although it was marginally behind in terms of power usage.

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - Cinebench R23 (Multi Core)

The Core i7-12700K was once again slightly better on Windows 10 under the Cinebench R23 multi-core test. Not that it matters at all, but it scored 22527 on Windows 10 and 22372 on Windows 11. Then again, running its multi-core 30 minutes stress test somewhat flipped the results in Windows 11’s favor.

Corona 1.3

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - Corona 1.3

Corona 1.3 render test puts it ahead of Windows 10 by a modest 3.08% as well. Wow, I’m almost running out of synonyms for these minute variations.

Handbrake

Thankfully, Handbrake conversion finally shows some meaningful upper hand for Alder Lake on Windows 11—or does it? You see, the i7-12700K completed converting a custom 895MB 4K H.264 file to H.265 in 1 minute and 28 seconds on Windows 10.

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - Handbrake (Default Priority)

To compare, Windows 11 finished the conversion 57.14% faster at just 56 seconds. Now, based on everything else I’ve discussed so far, this result is suspiciously fast. Further raising our doubts is the fact that this CPU pulled off the 1080p H.264 to H.265 conversion at the exact same time.

Therefore, I manually set Handbrake’s thread schedule priority to “High” from “Normal” for a rematch. Mind you that this is not regulation for most applications or most users—meaning the operating system’s scheduler automatically does it for you. But because Alder Lake introduces a hybrid core architecture that supposedly works better with Windows 11, I thought it was somehow necessary.

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - Handbrake (High Priority)

And lo and behold, Windows 10 actually completed the 4K conversion in 55 seconds when making this small change. It might be something to do with the scheduler, or this contrast is app-specific entirely—I’m not sure.

V-Ray, Premiere Pro

Moving on, we’re back to the tale of dismissable differences under the V-Ray 5 CPU render where this processor posted 15636 on Windows 11 and 15686 on Windows 10. Our custom Premiere Pro render was also nominally slower on Windows 11.

Time Spy (CPU)

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - Time Spy (CPU)

In a necessary change of pace, the i7-12700K scored 4.56% higher on the Time Spy CPU test on Windows 11.

PugetBench Photoshop

PugetBench’s Photoshop benchmark was moderately ahead on Windows 11 as well.

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - PugetBench (Photoshop)

As you can see from the chart, this Alder Lake CPU managed a 1018 overall score on Windows 10 and 1099 in the competition. Besides this, the GPU, General, and Filter scores are also better on Windows 11.

PugetBench Premiere Pro

On the other hand, PugetBench’s Premiere Pro benchmark delivered a mixed outcome.

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - PugetBench (Premiere Pro)

While i7-12700K’s results were superior on Windows 11 in terms of the overall score, Standard Export, and GPU—it fell behind on the Live Playback and Effects tests.

SPECworkstation 3.1

Our performance benchmark ends with SPECworkstation 3.1. As the name implies, this is a workstation benchmark that evaluates a system’s performance across various professional applications. Here, Windows 11 achieved its biggest victory on the Media & Entertainment (M & E) CPU test—outclassing Windows 10 by a decent 18.1%.

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - SPECworkstation 3.1

It was marginally leading in the Product Development (PD) CPU benchmark as well. On the contrary, Windows 10 secured a win in the Life Sciences (LS) CPU test since its 3.64 score is around 2.54% faster than Windows 11’s 3.55.

Intel 12th Gen Windows 10 vs 11: Gaming

By the way, I kept ray tracing, VSync, and DLSS OFF (wherever available) for all these gaming tests.

CS: GO

With that out of the way, let’s see if Alder Lake is any different on these two OS on the gaming front. Starting with CS: GO, the Core i7-12700K averaged 361.5 fps on Windows 10 and 371.6 fps on Windows 11 at 1080p resolution and Very High settings.

There’s a similar difference when switching to 1440p—whereas the 1% low fps is almost the same between the two operating systems. However, the 0.1% lows are almost ridiculously low on Windows 11 at both resolutions. I didn’t notice any significant frame drops or anything here—but even after multiple tests, the result was indistinguishable.

Forza Horizon 5

Regardless, Forza Horizon 5 has practically the same result on Windows 10 and 11 at either 1080p Extreme or Ultra preset. More importantly, both 1% and 0.1% lows stay at a respectable margin.

Civilization VI: Gathering Storm

But the Civilization VI Gathering Storm AI benchmark favored Windows 10, where Windows 11 was slower by 10.54 and 8.62% on 1080p and 1440p resolution respectively.

IntelCorei7-12700K - Windows10vs11 - Civilization VI

Cyberpunk 2077

The i7-12700K achieved basically identical scores on GPU-bound games like Cyberpunk 2077 too.

Under 1080p High settings, it managed 105.3 fps average on Windows 11 and 104.3 fps on Windows 10, while bringing it down to Medium graphics bumped those numbers by roughly 20%.

Red Dead Redemption 2

Red Dead Redemption 2 matches this conclusion at 1080p High and Medium settings as well.

Control

Likewise, Control yields 135.2 fps average at 1080p High preset on Windows 11 and 132.2 fps on Windows 10. The results are also comparable under Medium settings—but contrary to CS: GO—the 0.1% lows are far better on Windows 11 here.

Shadow of the Tomb Raider

IntelCorei7-12700K - Windows10vs11 - SOTTR

Moving on, Shadow of the Tomb Raider’s in-game benchmark gave 7.92 and 2.63% higher average fps on Windows 11 at 1080p Highest and High settings.

Hitman 3

IntelCorei7-12700K - Windows10vs11 - Hitman 3

Hitman 3’s average fps is pretty much the same on either OS, but the 1% and 0.1% lows are considerably better on Windows 11.

Borderlands 3

IntelCorei7-12700K - Windows10vs11 - Borderlands 3

Similarly, Borderlands 3 manages an average of 109.8 fps under 1080p Ultra graphics preset on Windows 10 and 110.6 fps on Windows 11. But this time, the 1% and 0.1% lows are much worse on Windows 11.

IntelCorei7-12700K - Windows10vs11 - Average FPS Count

Finally, let’s look at the 8 games/14 settings average fps of the Core i7-12700K on the two OS. On Windows 11, we’ve got 168.61 fps—keeping it slightly ahead of Windows 10’s 166.23 fps.

Intel 12th Gen Windows 10 vs 11: Conclusion

All in all, from everything I’ve discussed so far, it’s pretty clear that there’s really not much of a competitive advantage to Intel’s 12th Gen Alder Lake CPUs on Windows 11 when it comes to gaming or creative workloads. Maybe Thread Director’s algorithm isn’t mature enough to deliver the promised optimization on Windows 11—or maybe it was marketed more as Windows 11’s promotion instead.

Intel Core i9-12900K - i7-12700K Box 2

In any case, if your professional workflow runs perfectly fine on Windows 10 and you don’t see any Windows 11-exclusive features or visual overhaul to be that useful, stick with what you have. 12th Gen CPUs are great—but not necessarily on Windows 11. Not yet.

Intel Core i7-12700K Review: All Hail Alder Lake!

Before heading into this review of the Intel Core i7-12700K, let’s take a step back to see Team Blue’s journey so far. So, Intel’s 12th Gen “Alder Lake” desktop processors have been around for some time now. The company had faced incredible challenges and setbacks for the past couple of years. But it looks like Intel is finally back to its former glory.

From being stuck on the 14nm node for God knows how long (well we know “Cannon Lake” was supposed to introduce 10nm process node back in 2016) to losing business with Apple, the past couple of years have been especially testing for Intel.

But with the Alder Lake CPUs, Intel has delivered possibly the most substantial generational upgrade ever in the history of the Core lineup of processors. So, it’s crucial that we at least have a basic understanding of just how differently built the 12th Gen CPUs are.

Intel 12th Gen CPU - Highlights
Image: Intel

There’s big.LITTLE hybrid architecture (or “Big-Bigger” as Intel calls it), a new “Intel 7” process node, something called “Thread Director”, and a lot of platform upgrades. Let’s start with the belle of the ball—the hybrid architecture.

Intel 12th Gen “Alder Lake” Overview:

1. Hybrid CPU architecture

Unlike your typical processor with a single, homogenous CPU design, Alder Lake has a hybrid, heterogeneous core architecture. This consists of high-performance ‘P’ cores and high-efficiency ‘E’ cores—based on a new “Golden Cove” and “Gracemont” microarchitecture, respectively.

Such CPU design is pretty common on Arm-based mobile processors. But x86-based Intel and AMD CPUs have been married to the traditional CPU layout with a single class of high-performance cores for as long as there have been Intel and AMD processors.

Technically, Intel did experiment with the hybrid core design in 2020 with “Lakefield”. But they were short-lived and discontinued the very next year of the release. These penta-core CPUs consisted of one powerful “Sunny Cove” core and four low-power “Tremont” cores—and were designed for ultraportable, foldable, and dual-screen devices.

Intel 12th Gen P-cores vs 11th Gen - IPC Uplift
Image: Intel

However, Lakefield CPUs showed up in far-more expensive devices than anticipated and were ultimately outclassed by standard Intel/AMD machines. Getting back to Alder Lake, the ‘P’ cores are your run-of-the-mill performance cores that bring 19% improvement over 11th Gen “Cypress Cove” cores at the same frequency, says Intel.

P-cores vs E-cores

These handle demanding, single-threaded workloads that are time and latency-sensitive—like gaming and video rendering. In other words, the ‘P’ cores share the same foundation as Intel’s past “Core” CPU cores.

On the contrary, the “Gracemont” high efficiency ‘E’ cores are something borrowed from the company’s “Atom” class of low-power Celeron and Pentium Silver-branded processors. So, as you could imagine, the efficiency cores are tasked with all the other requests that are not as demanding—your background tasks and other multi-threaded workloads.

The idea of fusing these two in a single chip is that the aforementioned background tasks will not use up the valuable resources of the high-performance cores, while simultaneously delivering a lot more power-efficient workflow.

Intel 12th Gen E-cores vs Skylake
Image: Intel

According to Intel, these ‘E’ cores manage 40% better performance at the same power level (or same performance while consuming 40% less power) compared to 6th Gen “Skylake” cores in single-thread performance. Do note that the P-cores have hyperthreading enabled and can therefore run two threads per core—whereas the E-cores are single-threaded.

Incredible performance-per-watt

Now, all this sure sounds fantastic for Team Blue. AMD’s Ryzen 5000 series absolutely thrashed the 11th Gen Core processors in terms of power efficiency (besides the embarrassing performance dominance), so the use of low performance-per-watt CPU cores is a change born almost out of necessity.

But the problem arises when the operating system cannot properly schedule threads to the ‘P’ and ‘E’ cores. You can easily guess how terrible a gaming session would go if the OS assigned a game’s process requests to E-cores instead of P-cores.

2. Intel Thread Director

And that’s where the Intel Thread Director comes in. It’s a microcontroller built directly inside the CPU, which monitors each thread and the state of each core—and forwards this information to the operating system.

Kind of like a guard in a panopticon prison.

The OS scheduler then uses this info to decide where each thread goes—either to a performance or an efficiency core. Intel has worked closely with Microsoft to build a scheduler that can recognize the hybrid architecture of Alder Lake processors in Windows 11.

Intel Thread Director Overview
Image: Intel

As a result, Windows 11 has a clearer idea of the P-cores and E-cores—their power and efficiency levels. Conversely, Windows 10 simply recognizes E-cores as lesser capable P-cores—disregarding their performance-per-watt capability for less-demanding workloads. Intel and Microsoft even promise better performance and efficiency for Alder Lake processors on Windows 11.

Intel Core i7-12700K Review: Windows 10 vs 11

So just how much of that holds true? Not much, apparently. We ran our Core i7-12700K through a bunch of performance and gaming benchmarks on Windows 10 and 11 where the results were… let’s say less-than-flattering for the new operating system.

We’ll be publishing a separate review about 12th Gen’s performance (Intel Core i7-12700K) on the two OS but here’s a little sneak peek.

Intel Core i7-12700K - Blender - Windows 10 vs 11

The i7-12700K finished the Blender bmw27 render in 1 minute and 48 seconds on Windows 10 and took a second more on Windows 11. Similarly, Windows 11 lagged behind its predecessor by a negligible 3 seconds in Classroom render cycle.

Cinebench R23 paints a similar picture in both single-core and multi-core tests where Windows 10 comes off victorious. They’re neck-and-neck in terms of power draw as well.

Measured after 5 minutes into the Cinebench multi-core test, we recorded the i7-12700K sitting firm at 192W on Windows 11 and 191.280W on Windows 10. On the gaming front too, we didn’t find any compelling argument for Windows 11.

Intel Core i7-12700K - CSGO - Windows 10 vs 11

CS: GO managed an average of 361.5 fps in our 1080p de_dust2 gameplay with a 1% low of 199.4 fps on Windows 10, which marginally falls behind the 371.6 fps average and 201.7 fps 1% low of Windows 11. But there are some surprises and some heartbreaks about Alder Lake’s performance on these two OS, which I’ll be discussing in a separate review.

3. Intel 7

Another big upgrade that Intel has brought with the 12th Gen CPUs is the Intel 7 process node, which is 10nm-based. After being stuck on the 14nm node for desktop processors for multiple generations, this is a welcome breath of fresh air.

Intel 7 Process Node
Image: Intel

Now, you might be wondering why call it “Intel 7” and not 10nm Enhanced SuperFin (10ESF) which is what it really is? I initially dismissed it as a cheap marketing ploy to sell the idea that Intel has moved to 7nm—but the more I looked into it—the more this naming convention made sense.

Turns out, Intel’s 10nm node is pretty on par with TSMC’s N7 (7nm) and Samsung’s 7nm process node. And node names don’t even correspond to the size of a transistor on a chip. Anyway, Intel 7 reportedly brings 10-15% performance-per-watt gain compared to its predecessor.

While Intel’s not winning the power efficiency battle against AMD anytime soon, this is still a pretty big deal. Team Red’s Ryzen 5000 series were already based on a 7nm manufacturing process, and the company has confirmed TSMC’s 5nm technology for the upcoming Zen 4-based Ryzen 7000 CPUs.

Intel 12th Gen: Platform Upgrades

That leaves us with the other platform upgrades introduced with Alder Lake processors.

The most notable of them has to be the DDR5 RAM and PCIe 5.0 support. These CPUs support DDR5 sticks at up to 4800 MT/s alongside DDR4-3200, LPDDR5-3200, and LPDDR4X-4266 standards.

However, motherboards based on the Intel 600 series chipsets will have either DDr5 or ddr4 slots—not both.

So far, the company has announced nine chipsets in this lineup:

Z690 H610 R680E
H670 B660 Q670E
H610E W680 Q670

Unfortunately, Alder Lake uses the new LGA 1700 socket and therefore isn’t compatible with older motherboards—which means the platform upgrade cost for these CPUs will be a lot higher than say going from 10th Gen Comet Lake to 11th Gen Rocket Lake that uses the same LGA 1200 socket.

Therefore, in order to test the performance difference between last year’s Core i7-11700K and the i7-12700K, we went with the Asus TUF Gaming Z690-Plus D4 motherboard for the latter.

Test system specs

DDR5 is way too expensive right now, hard to find, and looking at a bunch of reviews, we found that it doesn’t deliver a significant performance jump either. Our motherboard capitalizes on this circumstance as it only supports DDR4 memory. And for our 11th Gen setup, we used the Asus TUF Gaming Z590-Plus WiFi. Here are the specs for both of our test systems:

11th Gen 12th Gen
CPU Intel Core i7-11700K Intel Core i7-12700K
Motherboard Asus TUF Gaming Z590-Plus WiFi Asus TUF Gaming Z690-Plus D4
Graphics Card MSI GeForce RTX 3070 Ventus 2X OC (8GB)
CPU Cooler AITC KA-F240 AIO Water Cooler (240mm)
Casing XPG Battlecruiser E-ATX Super Mid-Tower
– 4x XPG Vento 120mm ARGB fans
RAM 2x AITC RAPiDEZ 8GB DDR4-3600 (CL18)
SSD AITC FZ300 M.2 2280 PCIe 3 x4 (1TB)
PSU MSI MPG A850GF 850W (80+ Gold)

Intel Core i7-12700K Review: Specs Overview

Okay, so before moving forward with the review, let’s check out their specs real quick. The Core i7-11700K is an 8-cores, 16-threads CPU with 3.6GHz of base and 5.0GHz of single-core max turbo frequency. Besides, it has 16MB of Intel Smart Cache and a 125W TDP.

On the other hand, the i7-12700K is a 12-core processor with 8 P-cores and 4 E-cores with 20 threads in total. The base frequency of the P and E-cores are listed at 2.70 and 3.60GHz, respectively.

i7-11700K i7-12700K
Socket LGA 1200 LGA 1700
Lithography Intel 14nm FinFET Intel 7 (10nm)
Cores 8 Cores 12 Cores
8 ‘P’ cores, 4 ‘E’ cores
Threads 16 Threads 20 Threads
Base Clock 3.60 GHz P-cores: 3.60 GHz
E-cores: 2.70 GHz
Max Turbo Clock 5.0 GHz P-cores: 5.0 GHz
E-cores: 3.80 GHz
Unlocked Yes
PCIe Version 4.0 5.0, 4.0
Memory Version DDR4-3200 DDR5 4800 MT/s
DDR4 3200 MT/s
TDP 125W Base Power: 125W
Max Turbo: 190W
Cache 16MB Intel Smart Cache 25MB Intel Smart Cache
Graphics Intel UHD Graphics 750 Intel UHD Graphics 770

Moreover, E-cores can hit up to 3.80GHz whereas the P-cores can turbo boost up to 4.9GHz. Or 5.0GHz for a single core through Intel Turbo Boost Max 3.0. Cache memory has also been bumped to 25MB here and the company is even changing its power rating standard with Alder Lake CPUs.

Redefining power nomenclature

Instead of a single TDP value that’s not indicative of the highest power level, these processors have a Processor Base Power (PBP) and Maximum Turbo Power (MTP).

Intel 12th Gen - Power Definition
Image: Intel

In the case of i7-12700K, its 125W base power refers to the power when the CPU is executing workloads at base frequency—while the 190W turbo power is the highest power level at turbo frequencies. This power profile is more commonly called PL2—and it used to be that an Intel processor could sustain its PL2 state for a limited time only.

But the ‘K’ suffixed Alder Lake CPUs are pretty much unshackled from this time restraint. They can therefore stay at their turbo power all the time—given that there’s competent cooling and power supply to back it up.

We ran all our tests at stock speed. but you can get 4-8% higher performance if you choose to overclock this cpu.

Additionally, our OS of choice here is Windows 10 Pro (21H2 – 19044.1466) because of its greater reliability and overall stability than Windows 11.

Intel Core i7-12700K Review: Performance

7-Zip

So our benchmark test starts with 7-Zip 32MB dictionary compression where the i7-12700K pulls off a healthy 20.35% lead against the i7-11700K.

Intel Core i7-11700K vs i7-12700K - 7-Zip x64

The performance gap gets wider on the decompression benchmark. Here, the Alder Lake ends up with 119.401 GIPS (billion instructions per second) compared to 87.679 GIPS on the 11700K.

Blender Open Data

In our Blender all-core bmw27 benchmark, the 12th Gen CPU finished it at 1 minute and 48 seconds whereas the Core i7-11700K took 65 seconds more. Same thing with Classroom where the newer processor wins out by a substantial 57.60%.

Not just performance, but Alder Lake has a considerable advantage in terms of power efficiency as well. While the 11th Gen CPU draws around 218W throughout the render cycle, the i7-12700K consumed roughly 17% less power at 186W.

Cinebench R23

Moving on to Cinebench R23 single-core test, the i7-12700K scored 1873—while the i7-11700K managed just 1544. Because Cinebench bears a linear relation with a processor’s core-count (like Blender), multi-core results are all the more impressive on Alder Lake.

Intel Core i7-11700K vs i7-12700K - Cinebench R23

More specifically, we’re seeing a whopping 67% better score on the 12th Gen CPU. Although Cinebench R23 isn’t that emblematic of a system’s sustained performance, we still ran a 30-minute stress test to see these processors’ power levels, temperature, and any thermal throttling tendencies.

Intel Core i7-11700K vs i7-12700K - Cinebench R23 (Power, Temperature)

While it wasn’t taxing enough to cause thermal throttling in either CPU, Alder Lake was once again the more power-efficient of the two—even though the max temperature in both the CPU package was at about 93°C.

Intel Core i7-11700K vs i7-12700K - Cinebench R23 (Single Core, Power Draw)

The Core i7-12700K is easier on the power supply in Cinebench single-core test as well, where it was drawing 41.3W power as compared to 51.6W by the i7-11700K.

AIDA64 Stress Test

In contrast, AIDA64 gives us a better view of a CPU’s performance under stress. Mere seconds into the 30 minutes stress test, our 11th Gen processor was greeted with a “CPU Throttling – Overheating Detected” message.

After 5 minutes into the test, we graphed its power level at a colossal 205.465W whereas it got as hot as 111°C at one point. The i7-12700K passes this test with flying colors with no thermal throttling, just a 147.9W power draw, and a peak temperature of 83°C.

Prime95 Stress Test

We also ran the Prime95 stress test for half an hour which pushed both processors to the brink of thermal throttling. Here, the Rocket Lake CPU settled at around 201.93W—but the i7-12700K’s power level was sort of all over the place.

It started at 133W, then went up to 211W after a couple of minutes—only to fall back to 138W in the next 2-3 minutes—and finally found its peace at approximately 215W for the remainder of the test period. Mind you the CPU usage is at 100% at almost all times here—while the P-cores and E-cores throttled by about 300 and 200MHz respectively.

Corona 1.3, V-Ray 5

Next up is the Corona 1.3 benchmark where the i7-12700K is faster by a little over 50%, finishing the render in 1 minute and 7 seconds to i7-11700K’s 1 minute and 41 seconds.

V-ray 5 CPU render tells the same story where Alder Lake outclasses its Rocket Lake predecessor by a staggering 60%!

Productivity benchmarks

On to some real-world tests, the Core i7-12700K finished our Premiere Pro render in custom 1080p H.264 settings in 25 minutes and 58 seconds. This is impressively ahead of the i7-11700K that completed the render in 34 minutes and 51 seconds.

Similarly, when converting a custom 1080p H.264 file to H.265 on Handbrake, the 12th Gen was 35% faster. Weirdly enough, the i7-11700K eked out a feeble victory in 4K H.264 to H.265 conversion—completing the task in 1 minute and 24 seconds which is 4 seconds quicker than what the i7-12700K managed.

Time Spy (CPU)

On the other hand, this 12th Gen processor scored 15,631 on 3DMark’s Time Spy CPU benchmark. That’s 31.7% higher than the i7-11700K’s 11,868.

Intel Core i7-11700K vs i7-12700K - 3DMark Time Spy (CPU)

Not that it matters a whole lot, but we also ran a few GPU benchmarks including Unigine Heaven, Fire Strike Extreme, and Fire Strike Ultra—where the i7-12700K was victorious by the tiniest of margins.

Intel Core i7-11700K vs i7-12700K - GPU Benchmarks (RTX 3070)

Intel Core i7-12700K Review: Gaming

By the way, I kept ray tracing, VSync, and DLSS OFF (wherever available) for all these gaming tests.

CS: GO

Okay, let’s get into the gaming side of things now. CS: GO averaged at 330.9 fps with 1% and 0.1% low of 198.3 and 125.7 fps under 1080p gameplay at Very High settings on the Core i7-11700K.

The Alder Lake counterpart manages roughly 9% better average fps, while its 1% and 0.1% lows are basically the same as 11th Gen. For some reason, 1440p gameplay yielded even superior results on the Core i7-12700K—although not by much—with a 363.8 fps average and a 1% low of 200.6 fps. The i7-11700K sees a minor dip at 1440p, delivering 317.1 fps on average.

Forza Horizon 5

Likewise, this 12th Gen processor gave a nominal 6% better average fps on Forza Horizon 5 at 1080p Extreme, and 9% higher average fps at 1080p Ultra settings.

Civilization VI: Gathering Storm

Civilization VI: Gathering Storm’s in-game “Gathering Storm AI Benchmark” results are practically the same across the two CPUs. At both 1080p and 1440p High quality. Technically, the i7-11700K’s average turn time is around 5% faster!

IntelCorei7-11700K vsi7-12700K - Civilization VI

Shadow of the Tomb Raider

This Rocket Lake CPU was also marginally ahead in Shadow of the Tomb Raider’s 1080p in-game benchmark at the Highest graphics settings. But, the Core i7-12700K regains its momentum with a 5% higher average fps under High preset.

IntelCorei7-11700K vsi7-12700K - SOTTR

Red Dead Redemption 2

RDR 2’s results are comparable between these processors at both High and Medium settings since this game is more GPU-bound in nature.

Control

It’s the same with Control as well. The i7-11700K ends up at 132.1 fps average under DX12 1080p High preset compared to 132.2 fps on Alder Lake.

But one thing to note here is that the i7-12700K’s 0.1% low is almost bizarrely low at both High and Medium settings.

Cyberpunk 2077

Finally, Cyberpunk 2077 sings the same song with similar results at 1080p High preset. And an 11th Gen favorable performance under Medium settings.

Anyway, the Core i7-12700K does have better power efficiency even when gaming, circling around the 105W territory on Cyberpunk 2077’s 1080p High preset. To compare, we measured the i7-11700K’s power draw at 134W—which is about 27.6% more.

IntelCorei7-11700K vsi7-12700K - Cyberpunk 2077 (Power)

Let’s now look at the 6-game 12-settings average fps from these CPUs. As you can see from this chart, the 12th Gen Core i7-12700K leads the i7-11700K by roughly 5.5%.

IntelCorei7-11700K vsi7-12700K - Average FPS Count

Then again, some of the games we’ve tested are CPU-intensive while some lean on the GPU. Meaning, this isn’t the proper scale of performance difference of the said processors.

Intel Core i7-12700K Review: Conclusion

Wrapping up this review of the Intel Core i7-12700K, it goes without saying that Team Blue is finally… finally back. Pretty handsomely might I add! After being in the doghouse for the past couple of generations of products, Alder Lake is an entirely new chapter in the company’s book.

For this, Intel has conjured up a bunch of innovations—from the hybrid core architecture, a new 10nm process, and all the platform upgrades I discussed earlier like DDR5 and PCIe 5.0 support. Compared to last year’s Core i7-11700K, the i7-12700K brings a tremendous uplift in both single and multi-threaded workloads.

Multi-core performance is especially noteworthy and those four E-cores pull some serious weight. But power efficiency is something that haunts Intel to this day—despite leaving the 14nm node behind at long last.

New socket, who dis?

And if you were thinking of upgrading from your old Intel setup to Alder Lake, then the new socket makes the upgrade a lot more expensive. However, this shouldn’t be that big a deal to someone building a new system entirely.

Intel Core i9-12900K - i7-12700K - Box

Still and all, making the best out of these processors requires DDR5 RAM and Windows 11. Although most Windows 11-related issues have been pretty much resolved by now, at the moment, DDR5 is both scarce and expensive.

Oh God, it’s the GPU shortage all over again!

The good news is that DDR4 is still more than competent enough for most tasks, particularly gaming. At the end of the day, the fact remains that if you’re looking to buy a new CPU right now, then Alder Lake is absolutely the way to go.

The Core i7-12700K easily beats out i7-11700K and even AMD’s Ryzen 7 5800X at almost the same price. That’s insane! And just a few months after its launch, you can already find it at discounted prices; down to USD 385 from USD 409.

Unfortunately, countries like Nepal and India aren’t privy to such price-drops. This CPU currently retails at NPR 72,000 (USD 610) and INR 36,990 (USD 480) in these markets. But if you’re in no rush to get a new CPU, then waiting till the second half of 2022 to see how AMD’s Ryzen 7000 series would be a wise decision.

  • Watch our review video of the Intel Core i7-12700K CPU.

Intel Core i7-12700K Review: Pros & Cons

Pros:

  • Excellent single, multi-core performance
  • Massive upgrade over Core i7-11700K
  • Unlocked, can be easily overclocked
  • Supports PCIe 5.0, DDR5 memory
  • Finally does away with the 14nm process

Cons:

  • Power efficiency still not on par with AMD’s Zen 3
  • Costly upgrade from older Intel systems
  • DDR5 memory costs a fortune
  • Doesn’t ship with a CPU cooler inside the box

OPPO Reno 7 Pro Review: Better Than Vivo V23 Pro?

For this review of the OPPO Reno 7 Pro, I have been using it as my daily driver right alongside Vivo V23 Pro for the better part of 2 weeks now. On paper, both these phones provide almost the same level of performance, have amazing designs, and are marketed as good camera phones. And they share a similar price tag as well!

So, instead of making a head-on review of the OPPO Reno 7 Pro, I’ll be going through my overall experience using the phone and whether you should get this over V23 Pro or not. Let’s get right into it!

OPPO Reno 7 Pro Specifications:

  • Body: 73.2 x 158.2 x 7.45mm, 180 gm, Panda Glass back, Aluminum frame
  • Display: 6.5-inches AMOLED panel, 90Hz refresh rate, 180/1000Hz touch sampling rate, HDR10+, Up to 920 nits brightness, Gorilla Glass 5
  • Resolution: FHD+ (2400 x 1080 pixels), 402 PPI, 20:9 aspect ratio
  • Chipset: MediaTek Dimensity 1200-MAX 5G (6nm mobile platform)
  • CPU: Octa-core:
    – 1x Cortex-X1 (3.0 GHz)
    – 3x Cortex-A78 (2.6 GHz)
    – 4x Cortex-A55 (2.0 GHz)
  • GPU: Arm Mali-G77 MC9
  • Memory: 8/12GB LPDDR4X RAM, 256GB UFS 3.1 storage (fixed)
  • Software & UI: Android 11 with OPPO’s ColorOS 12 on top
  • Rear Camera: Triple (with LED flash);
    – 50MP Sony IMX766 f/1.8 primary sensor
    – 8MP, f/2.2 ultrawide lens, 118.9º FOV
    – 2MP, f/2.4 macro lens
    – Color temperature sensor
  • Front Camera: 32MP Sony IMX709 f/2.4 sensor (hole-punch cutout)
  • Audio: Dual stereo speaker, No 3.5mm headphone jack
  • Security: In-display fingerprint sensor (optical)
  • Sensors: Accelerometer, Geomagnetic, Gravity, Gyroscope, Optical, Pedometer, Proximity
  • Connectivity: Dual-SIM (Nano), WiFi 6 (802.11 a/b/g/n/ac/ax), Bluetooth 5.2, GPS / AGPS / Glonass / Galileo / QZSS / Beidou / NavIC, USB Type-C, 4G LTE (VoLTE), 5G
  • Battery: 4500mAh with 65W wired SuperVOOC (power adapter provided)
  • Color Options: Starlight Black, Startrails Blue
  • Price in Nepal: N/A (INR 39,999 for 12/256GB)

OPPO Reno 7 Pro Review:

Design & Build

  • 73.2 x 158.2 x 7.45mm, 180 grams
  • Glass front/back, aluminum frames
  • Notification light surrounding the camera module

So, when it comes to the design, OPPO phones never disappoint. I mean, they always have something refreshing and eye-catching to show for. And the Reno 7 Pro is no different.

It does not exactly change colors like the V23 Pro but it sure has its own thing going on. Here, OPPO has used a signature “glow” at the back which gives off a shimmering and gradient finish. And there’s this camera module that glows upon incoming notifications, charging, or when you get a call. I think it looks really really cool and reminds me of Samsung’s Galaxy J2 Pro from back in 2016.

Looks aside, the phone feels very up class on the hands too. OPPO has paired this glass back with aluminum frames, as a result of which the Reno 7 Pro has a good heft to it. While the back is quite slippery, this iPhone-like boxy build makes sure you get a good grip too.

All in all, even though its design is clearly “inspired” by iPhones, I kinda prefer it over the V23 Pro’s curved back. It also has Panda Glass protection at the back, unlike the V23 Pro which uses no form of glass protection on its rear panel. So, the Reno 7 Pro should be more resistant to scratches and other minor impacts.

Plus, another thing I love is this finish is that the phone does not catch fingerprints and smudges at all which makes life much easier for someone like me who does not like using a cover.

Display

  • 6.5-inches FHD+ AMOLED display
  • 90/180Hz refresh/touch sampling rate
  • Corning Gorilla Glass 5 protection

On the display front, well, things are not that different between these two phones. You get a similar 6.5 inch AMOLED panel here with a 90Hz refresh rate, 180Hz touch sampling rate, and HDR10+ compliance. This screen is plenty bright and feels smooth and responsive to use. Plus, the core quality of this display is also very good, which makes it an excellent option for multimedia consumption.

OPPO Reno 7 Pro - Display 1

But there’s one important thing you need to know about Reno 7 Pro’s display. Although it supports HDR video playback in Amazon Prime, there’s no HDR playback on Netflix as of yet. It’s quite strange, to be honest.

Also, its refresh rate is not adaptive—meaning you will have to stick with either 90 or 60Hz. There’s no middle ground between the two. I kept it at 90Hz all the time and thankfully didn’t notice any optimization issues, which is great.

But still, I have come to expect a smoother 120Hz refresh rate on smartphones in this price bracket, so I am slightly let down in this aspect. Other than that, the optical in-display fingerprint sensor here works like a charm and the tiny notch up top is not obtrusive at all.

Audio & Haptics

  • Dual stereo speaker setup
  • No 3.5mm headphone jack

And I found its haptic feedback to be quite good as well. It’s very subtle and certainly better than V23 Pro’s mushy feedback.

OPPO Reno 7 Pro - Design 1

Also, unlike the V23 Pro, you get dual speakers on the Reno 7 Pro. They’re not necessarily louder than the competition, but sound more balanced. Vivo’s single speaker delivers pronounced highs with little bass to enjoy whereas Reno’s audio output has a good balance of lows, mids, and highs. And I definitely prefer its audio over the V23 Pro.

Cameras

  • Triple camera setup at the back
  • (50MP main, 8MP ultrawide, 2MP macro)
  • 32MP selfie camera (punch-hole cutout)

Alright, let’s talk about the cameras now. Spoiler alert—I found its cameras to be fairly good, if not the best performing at its price range.

At the back, there’s a triple camera setup with a 50MP primary Sony IMX766 sensor, alongside an 8MP ultra-wide and a 2MP depth sensor. Interestingly, there’s also something called a color temperature sensor here, which supposedly improves color accuracy in an image by detecting light around the subject.

Normal Images

Anyway, the normal daytime photos from the main cameras here have a very subtle color reproduction, which is something most brands don’t go for.

Usually, Samsung, Realme, Vivo and even OnePlus’ color optimization is on the saturated side, so in comparison, you will get relatively flatter images from its cameras.

Therefore, if you are someone who likes editing their photos before posting on social media, OPPO gives a more flexible option here. Details in images are also decent and HDR works well in almost all instances here.

Selfie Images

I am especially impressed with how the IMX709 sensor on the Reno 7 Pro manages to maintain background exposure in selfies even in harsh sunny conditions.

Talking more about the selfies, they’re well detailed and with good HDR processing. You can notice a slight red/pink tint in some instances, but overall, this 32MP selfie camera does not disappoint.

Portrait Images

OPPO also advertises this phone as “the portrait expert” and on my tests, for the most part, it did manage to bring out fairly good-looking portraits with a well-exposed background. However, I feel like the shadow processing on subjects could have been better as they appear a bit dark at times.

Lowlight Images

Night-time shots also have good details in them when you zoom in, but they’re also quite noisy. Then again, Reno 7 Pro’s night mode works really well to remove the noise and bring out clear, bright, and even more detailed shots.

And the good thing is that this camera does not take a lot of time to process night mode pictures either. So, if you are out at night and want to try some nighttime photography, Reno 7 Pro will not disappoint.

Ultrawide Images

However, I wish I could say the same about its ultra-wide images too.

They’re just average and are lacking in terms of details and color processing compared to the primary camera. Also, most of the time the images come out hazy for no reason!

Videography

And if you are a vlogger, I wouldn’t recommend this phone for you either. First off, the selfie videos here are capped at 1080p 30 fps only. And natively, its exposure control isn’t that good as well. Turning on the AI mode does help with balancing the exposure to some extent though. As for rear cameras, you can record at up to 4K resolution at 30 fps—but there’s no stabilization in the footage.

OPPO Reno 7 Pro - Display 2

It’s only at 1080p 30 fps or 60 fps that you can get somewhat steady videos. So if you’re someone who shoots videos just casually, the Reno 7 Pro can do a fine job. But it’s certainly not meant for anything more than that.

In conclusion, the OPPO Reno 7 pro is a good camera phone for casual photography. However, it does not deliver anything exceptional in the videography aspect. As a result, it definitely is not a balanced camera phone overall but will do for general users.

Performance

  • Octa-core MediaTek Dimensity 1200-MAX 5G SoC (6nm)
  • 8/12GB LPDDR4X RAM, 256GB UFS 3.1 storage (fixed)
  • Android 11 with OPPO’s ColorOS 12 on top

Moving on, the Reno 7 Pro is the first phone to feature the custom Dimensity 1200-MAX chipset. For this, OPPO has collaborated with MediaTek—just like what OnePlus did with the Dimensity 1200-AI on the Nord 2. To note, the 1200-MAX is supposed to provide 22% faster processing and 25% more power efficiency compared to the standard Dimensity 1200.

Now, as I mentioned earlier, I have been using the Reno 7 Pro besides the V23 Pro with Dimensity 1200 chip. And during normal, everyday usage, I didn’t find any significant difference between the two. Both phones are fast enough and show no signs of distress even under heavy multitasking.

Gaming experience

But during gaming, I did notice the Reno 7 Pro bearing slightly more stable results, especially in demanding titles like Genshin Impact. I played the game on both phones at the highest of settings in 60 fps mode and got very similar fps. However, as you can see from this chart, the Reno 7 Pro delivers better stability.

But you should know that this stability comes at the cost of slightly higher temperatures—especially near the camera module during the first 5 minutes of the game. Likewise, the temperature rose to 42°C after 10 minutes or so.

In other games like PUBG and Call of Duty Mobile, I got similar results with both devices being able to manage 100% stability in their respective highest settings. OPPO has also optimized some games to take advantage of the 90Hz refresh rate here. For instance, I played Mech Arena in its highest settings and achieved 90 fps with 99% stability. However, other games like Oddmar that also have a 90 fps mode were limited to 60 fps only.

OPPO Reno 7 Pro - Gaming

Overall, I have to say that the Reno 7 Pro’s gaming performance is really good. I really like how the phone manages to give stable results in almost all games I tested. But do keep in mind that the phone gets warm after a few heavy gaming sessions.

Android 11… ANDROID 11!

Moving on, this phone boots on Android 11 with ColorOS 12 on top. For me, Android 11 on a premium mid-range phone in 2022 is completely unacceptable. There are rumors of the Android 12 update arriving very soon, although there’s no official statement from OPPO yet.

Moreover, the company hasn’t specified how many OS updates the Reno 7 Pro will receive over the years either. So, this is something OPPO needs to address ASAP!

About ColorOS, well, there’s the usual set of customizations, gestures, and not to mention a ton of pre-installed apps. We know that these things are not new to ColorOS, so naturally, the first thing I did after setting up the phone was try to uninstall them. And the good thing is that most of them can be uninstalled. Great!

OPPO Reno 7 Pro - UI

OPPO has also introduced something called “Omoji” here, which is pretty similar to Apple’s Memoji. With this, what you can do is create digital avatars of yourself and keep them as Always on Display and such. I found it quite interesting and therefore made one Omoji of myself too.

Battery

  • 4500mAh battery with 65W SuperVOOC charging

Getting to the battery life, well, I have been pretty satisfied with it so far. The Reno 7 Pro features a larger 4500mAh battery compared to a 4300mAh cell on the V23 Pro. Pair this with OPPO’s aggressive battery optimization, I got around 6 to 7 hours of SoT under moderate usage which included a lot of phone calls, texting, social media usage, and watching videos every now and then.

OPPO Reno 7 Pro - Charger

Charging this phone is super fast too, well not as fast as the Xiaomi 11T Pro with its 120W charging, but OPPO’s proprietary 65W Super VOOC charger gets this device from 0-100% in around 32 minutes only.

OPPO Reno 7 Pro Review: Conclusion

Summing up this review, the OPPO Reno 7 Pro is most definitely a head-turner of a phone in terms of its design—while its display, speakers, and battery life are pretty solid too. However, I feel like the company could have optimized the cameras better in terms of portraits. Also, I found its lack of better video recording capability and the fact that it still runs on Android 11 to be a sore spot for me.

And not to forget, like with most OPPO phones, the Reno 7 Pro is priced slightly higher for the specs it offers as well. Yes, you can get some discounts in the offline market, so it’s not exactly a bad choice in its price range.

  • Watch our video review of the OPPO Reno 7 Pro.

OPPO Reno 7 Pro Review: Pros & Cons

Pros:

  • Great design, hands-on feel
  • The glowing notification LED looks cool
  • Doesn’t oversaturate the shots
  • Selfie camera takes decent photos
  • Decent gaming, everyday performance
  • Above-average battery life

Cons:

  • Not the best value for money
  • Non-adaptive 90Hz refresh rate
  • Not a great phone for shooting videos
  • Boots on Android 11 out-of-the-box
  • No guaranteed software update

POCO X4 Pro 5G Impressions: Pro, No Mo’

POCO has recently announced the POCO X4 Pro as the successor to the last year’s POCO X3 Pro—which if you remember was the best gaming phone in the mid-range segment. And naturally, we would expect this year’s X4 Pro to be a gaming-centric phone as well, right? But this isn’t a gaming phone by any means. Having used the POCO X4 Pro 5G for about a day, this is my early impression of the phone.

In terms of pricing, the 6/128GB and 8/256GB variants of the device go for EUR 299 and EUR 349. So, yeah, it’s definitely priced higher than the last year’s POCO X3 Pro.

POCO X4 Pro 5G Specifications:

  • Body (W x H x D): 76.1 x 164.19 x 8.12mm, 205 gm
  • Display: 6.67-inches AMOLED, 120Hz refresh rate, up to 360Hz touch sampling, 1200 nits (peak), DCI-P3 Gorilla Glass 5
  • Resolution: FHD+ (2400 x 1080 pixels), 20:9 aspect ratio
  • Chipset: Snapdragon 695 (6nm Mobile Platform)
  • Memory: 6/8GB LPDDR4X RAM, 128/256GB UFS 2.2 storage (expandable)
  • Software & UI: MIUI 13 for POCO on top of Android 11
  • Rear Camera: Triple (108MP f/1.9 primary, 8MP f/2.2 ultrawide, 2MP macro)
  • Front Camera: 16MP f/2.4 sensor (punch-hole)
  • Audio: Stereo speakers, 3.5mm headphone jack
  • Security: Side-mounted fingerprint sensor, Face unlock
  • Connectivity: 5G, Dual-band WiFi, Bluetooth 5.1
  • Battery: 5000mAh with 67W fast charge
  • Color Options: POCO Yellow, Laser Black, Laser Blue
  • Price in Nepal: N/A (not launched yet)

POCO X4 Pro 5G Impressions:

If you look at the overall specs sheet of the POCO X4 Pro, it looks pretty much identical to that of the Redmi Note 11 Pro 5G. It has the same 6.7-inch AMOLED screen with a 120Hz refresh rate, the same 108MP triple camera setup, and the same Snapdragon 695 5G chipset.

Poco X4 Pro 5G Display -1

The only difference you’ll find here is the design on the back. While the Note 11 Pro brings a matte finish, the X4 Pro settles for a glossy look that reflects lights from the bottom. The camera layout is also quite different here with such an unnecessarily big and wide module, which to be honest, I am not a big fan of. But I can certainly see people liking such design choices.

Nothing new

And that’s about it! The POCO X4 Pro, which I expected to be a gaming phone, to begin with, is basically a rebranded Redmi Note 11 Pro 5G. As Anupam Mittal from Shark Tank India says, “Mujhe valuation sunkay chakkar aaraha hai”. And that’s what’s exactly happened with this phone.

I just don’t get why POCO, which is now an independent brand, decided to copy everything from its ex-parent company Xiaomi and launch it as a new phone of its own. Besides, POCO’s X-series is supposed to be home to ultra-competitive gaming phones for the OG gamer community.

Poco X4 Pro 5G Design

And speaking on their behalf, it’s fair to say that they just don’t care if the X4 Pro has a flagship 108MP camera sensor or a design that shines. Heck, they don’t even want an AMOLED screen, as long as the display has a high refresh rate and a fast touch sampling rate.

So yeah, I would have liked it if POCO had launched this phone in a different series or maybe simply named it the POCO X4, and then launched the X4 Pro with a beefier chipset instead.

Still considerable—but not for gamers

Then again, if you are not a gamer, the X4 Pro is actually not a bad phone by any means. I can say that because I’ve been using the Redmi Note 11 Pro myself for the past couple of days, and there is definitely some quality of life improvements over last year’s Note 10 Pro here.

Poco X4 Pro Display

For instance, you get a very good AMOLED display on the POCO X4 Pro with a fast 120Hz refresh rate, while the touch sampling rate has been bumped from 240Hz on last year’s X3 Pro to 360Hz as well.

As a result, typing up stuff here is a satisfying experience and more importantly, the faster touch sampling rate is also a big plus when playing fast-paced games. Yet, POCO has downgraded the display protection from Gorilla Glass 6 to Gorilla Glass 5 this time—whereas this OLED display still doesn’t integrate an in-display fingerprint reader.

On the other hand, its stereo speakers are pretty loud and you will certainly enjoy watching videos on this phone. And despite featuring a big 5000mAh battery, POCO has maintained the overall design aesthetics of the phone pretty well. At 205 grams, it has the right heft to it and the phone doesn’t end up feeling cheap or anything.

Faster charging, better cameras

Additionally, the X4 Pro supports a faster 67W charging that takes it from 0 to 100% in just 41 minutes according to POCO.

In my preliminary tests, I’ve found its camera to be fairly good enough as well. From what I can tell, it’s definitely better than the POCO X3 Pro and even the more expensive POCO F3.

But since they have included such expensive hardware in the display, camera, and design department, POCO had to compromise somewhere else to keep the price low. And yes, that’s in the chipset itself.

The Snapdragon 695 that’s powering the X4 Pro is a fairly capable 5G chipset, but it is nowhere near what Snapdragon 860 on the POCO X3 Pro offered. It can’t hit 60fps in most games including PUBG Mobile and Genshin Impact even when lowering the graphics quality.

POCO X4 Pro 5G Impressions: Final Words

So yes, this is absolutely not the affordable gaming phone that many of us were hoping for, but is rather a balanced midrange device that should appeal to the mainstream consumers. Having said that, I would certainly love to see the true successor of the POCO X3 Pro in the coming months! I hope you will make that happen, POCO!

  • Check out our unboxing and impression video of the POCO X4 Pro 5G. 

Redmi Note 11 Pro Impressions: A Decent Iterative Upgrade

In this article, I will share my early impression of the newly launched Redmi Note 11 Pro. The smartphone is launching soon here in the South Asian market starting with India—and it will be followed by other markets shortly. If you recall, last year’s Note 10 Pro was an incredible all-rounder phone, probably even the midrange phone of the year. And naturally, the expectation from this year’s Note 11 Pro is quite high!

Redmi Note 11 Pro Specifications:

  • Body: 164.19 x 76.1 x 8.12mm; 202 grams
  • Display: 6.67” FHD+ AMOLED DotDisplay, 120Hz refresh rate, 360Hz touch sampling rate
  • Chipset: MediaTek Helio G96 (12nm Mobile Platform)
  • Memory: 6/8GB LPDDR4X RAM, 64GB/128GB UFS 2.2 storage
  • Software & UI: Android 11 with MIUI 13
  • Rear Camera: Quad (108MP primary, 8MP Ultrawide, 2MP macro, 2MP depth)
  • Front Camera: 16MP f/2.4 sensor (punch-hole cutout)
  • Audio: Stereo speaker setup, 3.5mm headphone jack
  • Security: Side-mounted fingerprint sensor, Face unlock
  • Sensors: Accelerometer, Ambient Light, Gyro, Electronic Compass, IR Blaster
  • Battery: 5000mAh with 67W fast charging
  • Color Options: Atlantic Blue, Graphite Gray, Polar White
  • Price in Nepal: N/A (not launched yet)

Redmi Note 11 Pro Impressions:

By the way, Xiaomi has released 2 variants of the phone so far. One is the 4G variant with a modest Helio G96 chipset while the 5G-ready model comes with Snapdragon 695. Besides this, the rest of the specs are pretty identical on these phones. I, for one, have been using the 4G variant for a couple of days alongside the Poco X4 Pro, which is technically the 5G variant of the Note 11 Pro.

Now as for the pricing, the base 6/64GB variant of the Note 11 Pro goes for USD 299, while its higher variant (8/128GB) costs USD 349.

Design

If you compare this phone with last year’s Note 10 Pro Max—features by features—the Note 11 Pro might seem a little underwhelming and not much of an upgrade. But after using it for a couple of days, I have found a bunch of major quality of life improvements here.

Redmi Note 11 Pro Design

First off, I think this design looks relatively modern and more robust than its predecessor. It has this flat design language with sharp edges that looks pretty similar to the more expensive Xiaomi 11i Hypercharge.

The back also has gorilla glass protection while it’s not glossy too—just the way I like it. As a result, fingerprints and smudges are much less prominent here. It retains the right amount of heft and isn’t too heavy or too light as well.

So, design-wise, I see the Note 11 Pro as a great quality of life upgrade and I think most of you will like what Xiaomi has done on this front.

In terms of port selection, it doesn’t skip on the 3.5mm headphone jack, an IR blaster, or stereo speakers either. Its audio output gets quite loud, to be honest. And while it obviously struggles in terms of low frequencies, it’s still good enough for watching movies and listening to songs.

Display

Likewise, the display is another area where the company has fine-tuned it over last year’s Note 10 Pro. On paper, their 6.7-inch Full HD AMOLED screen with a 120Hz refresh rate sounds identical, but the Note 11 Pro brings a brighter screen: 700 nits vs 450 nits. It can still reach up to 1200 nits under HDR contents though.

Redmi Note 11 Pro Display

Plus, it is also more responsive now, since Xiaomi has bumped the touch response rate from 180Hz to 360Hz. With this, I could instantly notice just how responsive the touch is here, which feels like something you’d find on a more expensive mid-range phone.

Not only that, it seems that the company has even optimized the fluidity of the 120Hz refresh rate. Last year’s Note 10 Pro was plagued with a lot of micro stutters and jitters. But this time around, I haven’t faced such issues yet.

Helio G96

Then again, Note 11 Pro’s overall performance isn’t much of an upgrade over its predecessor—especially the 4G variant. In all fairness, the Helio G96 chipset inside this phone is perfectly fine for your day-to-day tasks as I didn’t notice any lags or even a hint of sluggishness here. Apps open up quick enough and the multitasking experience has been decent too.

But, the G96 doesn’t deliver the most stable experience or the highest fps numbers if you play a lot of games. Here, PUBG mobile can only hit Smooth graphics and Ultra-frame rates, which is strictly average gaming performance. I’ll definitely be testing out more games for the full review but even now, I can confidently recommend you get the 5G variant if gaming’s a priority for you. On top of faster performance, it is well… 5G compatible as well.

Still Android 11

Sadly, both the 4G and 5G models of the Redmi Note 11 Pro boot on last year’s Android 11 out of the box. It does bring the latest MIUI 13, but Android 11 in 2022 is a bit concerning on a mid-range phone like this if you ask me. And that’s because, unlike flagship or semi-flagship phones, they don’t have the luxury of getting 3 or 4 years of updates. Even if Xiaomi says; “hey, this phone will receive 2 years of OS upgrades”, the reality is that it’s only going to be updated up to Android 13.

Cameras

Anyway, there’s a quad-camera setup at the back with a 108MP primary, an 8MP ultra-wide, and 2MP depth and macro lenses. Funnily enough, the 5G variant skips a 2MP depth sensor and comes with a triple camera setup instead.

During my initial tests, I am not that impressed with the photos that I have captured so far, to be honest. Still, I do think its color optimization is slightly better as compared to last year’s Note 10 Pro.

Here, the photos aren’t that oversaturated—neither are they contrast heavy. It can take some good images from the main as well as the selfie camera under good lighting conditions. But I still think that this camera—especially the 108MP primary lens—is behind what Samsung or even Realme is offering at this price segment.

Plus, I am pretty surprised to see the lack of 4K as well as 60fps recording option here—both of which were present on the Redmi Note 10 Pro. As things stand, you can only record videos in 1080p 30fps on this phone. The Helio G96 does support 4K 30fps recording but I think since Snapdragon 695 on the more expensive 5G variant maxes out at 1080p videos, Xiaomi has hesitated on enabling the 4K option here.

Battery

Getting to the battery, it’s the same 5000mAh cell as last year. And I’ve managed to get similar endurance with it—which is around 5 hours of onscreen time. Not that great, but still good enough considering this 5-hour SOT is under heavy usage that includes gaming for an hour or so, taking photos and videos, and watching movies as well. So, if you are a comparatively moderate class of users, it should easily provide a day worth of usage.

Moreover, charging up the phone is pretty fast with the provided 67W brick. It only takes 30 minutes to go from 0 to 75%, while a full charge takes less than 50 minutes.

Redmi Note 11 Pro Impressions: Final Words

So, as I mentioned at the beginning, the Redmi Note 11 Pro is all about the quality of life improvements. It’s like what Apple did going from iPhone 12 to the iPhone 13. And Xiaomi’s philosophy here is basically “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it”. On top of that, they have definitely offered a better design, a better display, superior camera optimization, as well as faster charging speed this time around.

  • Check out our unboxing and impression video of the Redmi Note 11 Pro.

Samsung Galaxy F23 5G with Snapdragon 750G official in India; won’t launch in Nepal

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Samsung has just announced the successor to last year’s Galaxy F22 smartphone—the Galaxy F23 5G. It’s the first F-series phone to feature a 120Hz display with Gorilla Glass 5 protection. Now, let’s go through the specs, features, availability, and expected price of the Samsung Galaxy F23 5G in Nepal.

Samsung Galaxy F23 5G Overview:

Design and Display

Starting off with the design, like its predecessor, the Galaxy F23 5G still has a waterdrop style notch on the front. However, the rear camera island is now rectangular in shape while the back panel has a clean matte finish. The smartphone is available in two colors options— Aqua Blue and Forest Green.Samsung Galaxy F23 5G Design and Display

Over on the front, the device boasts a 6.6-inch screen. It’s not an AMOLED panel, yet the device now has Full HD+ resolution—up from HD+ screen on the F22. Also, as aforementioned, it’s the first F-series phone to feature a 120Hz refresh rate with Gorilla Glass 5 protection. 

Performance

Moving on, the phone will ship with Qualcomm Snapdragon 750G processor. It’s an octa-core chipset with two Cortex-A77 cores and six Cortex-A55 cores. It’s coupled with up to 6GB of RAM and 128GB of internal storage. The device also supports a RAM expansion feature of up to 12GB while the storage is also expandable via a microSD card up to 1TB.

Furthermore, it comes with power-cool technology to keep the smartphone cool. Over on the software front, it boots on Android 12 based OneUI 4.1. Additionally, Samsung has promised to provide 2 years of major OS upgrades and 4 years of security patches. Fueling the smartphone is a 5000mAh battery that supports 25W of fast charging. 

Cameras

Samsung Galaxy F23 5G Cameras

Talking about the cameras, the Galaxy F23 5G has three of them at the back. This includes a 50MP primary sensor, an 8MP ultra-wide lens with 123° FOV, and a 2MP macro lens. There’s an 8MP sensor on the aforementioned water-drop notch for selfies and video calls. 

Rest of the specs

The device has a loudspeaker at the bottom, while it also retains the good ol’ 3.5mm headphone jack. The connectivity options include Bluetooth 5, dual-band WiFi, and 5G. Speaking of the latter, you will get support for a total of 12 different 5G bands. Moreover, the biometric option includes a side-mounted fingerprint sensor. 

Samsung Galaxy F23 5G Specifications:

  • Display: 6.6-inches FHD+ “Infinity-U” IPS, 120Hz refresh rate, Gorilla Glass 5 protection
  • Chipset: Qualcomm Snapdragon 750G (8nm Mobile Platform)
  • CPU: Octa-core (2×2.2 GHz Kryo 570 & 6×1.8 GHz Kryo 570)
  • GPU: Adreno 619
  • Memory: 4/6GB RAM, 128GB storage (expandable)
  • Software & UI: Android 12 with One UI 4.1 on top
  • Rear Camera: Triple-camera;
    – 50MP primary sensor
    – 8MP ultra-wide camera, 123º FOV
    – 2MP macro lens
  • Front Camera: 8MP sensor (notch)
  • Audio: Loudspeaker, 3.5mm headphone jack
  • Security: Side-mounted fingerprint sensor, Face unlock
  • Battery: 5000mAh with 25W fast charging

Samsung Galaxy F23 5G Price in Nepal and Availability

The Galaxy F23 5G is launched in India at an asking price of INR 17,499 for the 4/128GB variant while the higher 6/128GB model costs INR 18,499. Yet, it’s currently available at an introductory price of just INR 14,999 for the base and INR 15,999 for the higher variant. Unfortunately, as it stands, Samsung Nepal has no plans of launching the Galaxy F23 5G in Nepal.  

Samsung Galaxy F23 5G Price in India (Official)
4/128GB INR 17,499
6/128GB INR 18,499
  • Meanwhile, check out our review of the Samsung Galaxy F22.

AI startup co-founded by Nepali data scientist raises $3.5 million in seed capital

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Docsumo, an AI startup, co-founded by a Nepali entrepreneur has successfully raised $3.5 million in seed capital. The company has developed an OCR solution that helps businesses read financial documents. In this article, we will be learning more about the AI startup and how it’s utilizing Nepalese talent.

Docsumo Overview:

Docsumo is an AI startup co-founded by Mr. Bikram Dahal (Nepal) and Mr. Rushabh Sheth (India) in January of 2019. The startup is automating the accounting process with its AI-backed Optical Character Recognition software. It eliminates the need for manual data entry, saving valuable time. In addition, it frees accountants from boredom.

Docsumo can read and extract information from invoices, work orders, purchase orders, delivery notes, contracts, and even applications. Likewise, it can also present the data in a tabular form and help in decision-making.

Docsumo Founders

The startup claims that its OCR technology can reduce the processing by 70% and increase efficiency by 50%.

Docsumo OCR

Docsumo’s core technology is fueled by Nepal’s homegrown data scientists and engineers. Currently, there are 25 data scientists and engineers in Docsumo. Based in Kathmandu, the team serves clients from the US, EU, and Asia. Over the last 12 months, Docsumo has reported a 6x revenue increase.

Seed Fund

Docsumo was part of Techstars London Accelerator in 2020, where it was able to secure a pre-seed round from Barclays, Sequoia, Jiten Group of Jupiter Money, and Amrish Rau of Pine Labs.

It has now raised USD 3.5 million in seed capital from Common Ocean, Fifth Wall, Arbor Realty Trust, and Better Capital. The fund will now go into the startup’s expansion into the North American market.

  • Meanwhile, check out our review of the Oppo Reno 7 Pro.