Category Archives: Android

Cyanogen, Qualcomm and Alcatel OneTouch Hero 2+

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Cyanogen are making new strides in the corporate wide having agreed a new partnership with Qualcomm

Now Cyanogen have announced a device along with Alcatel OneTouch. The Hero 2+ specifications are –

– Display 6-inch Full HD (1080 x 1920) TFT 16M color display + built in stylus
– Processor MT6592 2.0 GHz octa-core ARM Cortex-A7 processor
– Camera 13MP main camera + 5MP front camera for the perfect selfie
– Video Capture Full HD 1080p 30 frame per second video capture so you never miss any of life’s moments
– Memory/Storage 2GB RAM / 16GB of storage (Expandable to 32GB via MicroSD)
– Operating System Cyanogen OS 11 on Android KitKat 4.4.4
– Dimensions 160.5mm x 81.6mm x 7.9mm

Source – androidcentral.com

Google confirms to foray as a MVNO – its called Nova – details

Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google revealed at Mobile World Congress that Google plans to bridge the gap between mobile networks and Wi-Fi, likely using its own Fiber network. The aim is to create a seamless hand-off between LTE and Wi-Fi, even during calls. As a result, the places to get access to Nova will be those that already have access to Google Fiber.

However, at this stage Sundar remained fairly tight lipped regarding its other intentions.

HTC One M9 – Everything Revealed including Specs

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HTC announced the new One M9 which features new coloured sidewalls providing a more distinctive design.

The Duo Camera setup from the One M8 has gone and now you get a single 20MP rear camera. HTC’s UltraPixel 4mp lense is now on the front for low light performance for those all important selfies.

The screen is a 1080p 5-inch, full HD display with front facing Boomsound speakers now with Dolby Audio 5.1 technology.

HTC’s includes its latest user interface Sense 7. It’s focussed on customisation, and there’s a new Themes Editor application to help you apply that personal touch to your device.

32GB of internal storage is standard and support for 128gb micro sd cards and 100GB of free Dropbox for two years.

Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 810 processor powers the phone with 3GB of RAM, battery is 2800mAh.

The HTC One M9 will be in three colour combinations, gold on silver, gun metal on grey and gold on gold, with a global release date of March 31.

So HTC have focused on the design language and pushed the specs up from the One M8. The M9 appears to be very much a social type camera with all its Sense 7 UI integration.

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Source – HTC.com/ZDnet.com (image)

HTC Grip – Full details

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HTC announced their new fitness wearable in partnership with Under Armour.

The full specifications are –

– Small Size – 51.9 x 68.2 x 22.5 mm
, Inner circumference: 145.54mm
– Medium size – 60.98 x 74.57 x 22.5 mm, 
Inner circumference: 169.76mm
– Large size – 68.92 x 85.24 x 22.5 mm, 
Inner circumference: 199.51mm
– Display 1.8-inch inch 32 x 160 PMOLED mono flexible display with capacitive touch
– Platform – RTOS
– Processor – STM32L151QDH6
– Memory – 16MB Flash, 8MB SRAM
– Battery – 100 mAh rechargeable battery
– 2.5 days battery life or 5 hours w/GPS activated
– Sensors – Sensor Hub (STM32F411), G-sensor, Gyro, Compass, GPS, Light sensor
– Connectivity – BLE (Bluetooth 3.0 and 4.0),
USB charging cable
– Other Vibration notifications, IP57 Dust & Water Resistant, Shock Resistant (compliant with MIL-STD-810G 516.6 Procedure I, IV)

HTC Vive VR – details

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HTC announcemed its Vive VR headset, created through a partnership with Valve.

With a 90hz refresh rate, Vive is designed to make its VR experience as immerseive as possible. It also has more sensors than the competition to prevent feeling sick when using it  The HTC Vive comes with a motion tracking system that can cover an entire room, along with a pair of wireless VR controllers.

Sales of a developer edition for the Vive will be available this spring. Genral availability will be by the end of the year.

Huawei Talkband B2 and Huawei Watch – details

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Huawei announced the Huawei Watch an Android Wear watch with a 286 ppi 1.4-inch AMOLED touchscreen that will be sold in gold, silver, and black.

It comes with a heart rate monitor, 4GB of storage, 512MB of RAM, a 6-axis motion sensor, and a a Qualcomm 1.2GHz processor to power it all. It will pair to any Android phone using Bluetooth LE. Huawei will sell the watch in over 20 countries.

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Huawei Talkband B2 is a dust and water resistant metal body and 0.73-inch PMOLED touchscreen display. It has a gyro and accelerometer packed inside and as well as counting your steps it’ll also track your sleep and inform you of calories burned.

The B2 has the ability to pop it out of its strap and stick it in your ear as a Bluetooth headset. Hence the name.

The Huawei Ascend P8 will get announced next month and is meant to be a flagship killer.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S 10.5 – review

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Welcome to my review of the Samsung Galaxy Tab S tablet. This review will focus on how I use this tablet versus the default setup from Samsung. Also this is not a loan device from Samsung PR, this is my preferred tablet of choice. The key specs of this tablet are –

– Android OS 4.4.2 (KitKat) – Lollipop is due in summer 2015
– 10.5in Super AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 2560 x 1600 pixels, 288 ppi
– Exynos Octa-core processor
– microSD, up to 128 GB
– 16/32 GB internal storage
– 3 GB RAM
– 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac, Wi-Fi Direct, dual-band, DLNA
– Bluetooth 4.0 LE with A2DP
– Infra Red Blaster
– Fingerprint scanner
– microUSB v2.0 (MHL 2.1)
– stereo speakers
– 3.5mm jack
– 8 Mp, 3264 x 2448 pixels, 1080p@30fps
– 2.1 Mp front camera
– Non-removable Li-Po 7900 mAh battery
– 247 x 177 x 6.6 mm
– 465 g

The Tab S is a high specification device with a number of USP’s. It is fast and powerful with a fabulous screen. All day battery life of around 10 plus hours. Storage is expandable with a micro sd card for music, photos and documents. The rear camera has a flash unit. It has a fingerprint scanner for a securer mode and an infra red blaster.

Touchwiz comes as the default launcher and that also has a magazine UI layout too. It all looks fancy but it slows down the speed of the tablet, so now I use Apex Launcher as you can probably see from the photo above. My setup with Apex Launcher includes Google Now widget, infra red button widgets, and my favourite apps on the single home screen. I have also replaced the Samsung keyboard with Swiftkey which works really well with this tablet.

The Tab S is protected by the Samsung cover that also has a typing position and movie viewing too. What is unusual about the cover is that it has 2 studs that push into the back of the tablet, and then when pushed in, click and lock. It is not the easiest of cases to connect, but at least it won’t detach now.

The tablet is typical Samsung, with all the bells and whistles included. But what I like is the micro sd card slot for storing all my photos and music, the infra red blaster than I use everyday and the good stereo speakers that also have a decent volume. The audio quality via the headphone socket is excellent. USB Audio is supported too. The 8mp camera comes with the all singing Samsung camera app. Flash is included too. Options include metering modes, touch to capture, ISO from 100 to 800, Night mode, face detection, Full HD Video recording (1080p), Video Stabilisation, effects, timer and location tagging. Shooting modes include Auto, Beauty Face, Shot & More, Panorama, HDR, Dual Camera, Sports, and there are other modes you can download. Camera quality is ok but in anything but good light, noise is present in photos captured.

As I have a Samsung Note 4, I use the Samsung Side Sync mode/app. This enables full control of my Note 4 from the Tab S. Pretty cool stuff. I use Wi-Fi Direct a lot between my Note 4 and Samsung Tab S, mainly to transfer photos taken on my Note 4, that are then edited on the Tab S.

The Tab S screen is really fantastic and makes all viewing really pleasurable. The Tab S also has Ultra Power Saving mode, 4 different screen display modes (adaptive, amoled cinema, amoled photo and basic), a reading mode, Toolbox shortcuts, motion controls for mute/pause and palm swipe to capture, blocking mode, private mode, finger scanner, users and profiles (you and setup more than one person to use the Tab S with their own profile), lock screen shortcuts and screen cards.

When it comes to multitasking, the Tab S also possesses multi window, allowing 2 apps to be on the screen at the same time.

I have had the Tab S about 3 months now and really enjoy using it. It is a powerful tablet that gets loads of use by myself and I cannot see myself changing it anytime soon.

Gav & Dave’s Tech Podcast is live – Episode 32 “Live from MWC” – Please RT

As you know, I co-host a monthly podcast with David from UKMobileTech called Gav & Dave’s Tech Podcast. It is a light hearted tech podcast broadcast.

To subscribe click here for iTunes or copy and paste this link into your favourite podcast app.

Episode 32, Live from MWC is now live for your listening pleasure.

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Oppo HA-2 Portable Headphone and DAC – review

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Welcome to my review of the Oppo HA-2. Now some of you may be thinking what is Oppo doing manufacturing a portable headphone and digital to analogue amp. Well, Oppo are well known for the blu-ray disk players, headphones and associated products. The quality and sound of their audio products are gaining many fans. The top line takeaways of this device are –

– It is a Portable Headphone Amplifier and DAC
– High-resolution USB DAC for Apple/Android/PC/Mac
– It uses an ESS Sabre32 Reference ES9018-K2M DAC chip
– Two gain settings for optimal headphone matching
– Mobile power bank for charging your phone
– It looks gorgeous!

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Before I go discuss the specifications and sound in more depth, lets take a look at the box and its contents. The Oppo packaging is top notch. Everything is neatly organised in the box which includes the Oppo HA-2 itself, a 2 pin VOCC charger, a short lightning cable, a OTG micro USB to micro USB cable, a 3.5mm to 3.5mm cable, 2 rubber bands for securing it to another device and detailed instructions. The Oppo HA-2 simply stands out as a solid, well built and gorgeous looking device (see photos). It does not need a case as it is bound in leather.

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Ok, so what makes the device really special. The Oppo HA-2 is a Hybrid Class AB Amplifier with integrated circuits and discrete transistors. Oppo uses hand-picked and matched parts for the discrete transistors. The output transistors are biased to operate in their most linear range for the critical small signal, and deliver their full potential when power is required. This was most noticeable for when I was listening to music that scaled up suddenly.

The Oppo HA-2 is “MFI” Apple certified and is compatible with the latest iPod, iPhones and iPads, meaning it can be use the digital audio output via the supplied lightning cable. The HA-2 does not need the Camera Connection Kit. I tested the HA-2 with an iPhone 5S and 6 Plus and the iPad Air and all worked as advertised.

Android – The HA-2’s micro-USB input port works with Android devices that support USB OTG (USB On-The-Go) and USB Audio Class. A special USB OTG cable is supplied with the HA-2 to facilitate the connection. When used with a compatible Android device, the HA-2 can support the device’s built-in music app, tones and notifications. Additionally, a high-resolution music playback app can use the HA-2 as its external DAC to play lossless PCM and DSD audio files eg USB Audio Player Pro app for android.

Audio-In and Line-Out – The HA-2 has a 3.5 mm Audio-In port to support portable music players that do not have a USB-compatible digital output. While the HA-2 is used with one of its USB digital input ports, the 3.5 mm jack acts as Line-Out for the USB DAC.

And now on to the crown jewels of this device. ESS Sabre32 Reference DAC – The DAC is one of the most important components for digital audio playback. The ES9018-K2M DAC chip used in the HA-2 is the mobile version of the ES9018S. Oppo use this DAC in their award-winning HA-1 desktop headphone amplifier which costs £1,100. With the ESS patented 32-bit Hyperstream™ DAC architecture and Time Domain Jitter Eliminator, the SABRE32 Reference DAC delivers an unprecedented performance for mobile applications. The performance and quality of this DAC is outstanding.

Asynchronous USB DAC – The HA-2 can bypass the smartphone’s built-in DAC and headphone amplification circuit that are often cost-constrained. The asynchronous USB DAC input of the HA-2 also works with PC and Mac computers to replace the built-in sound card and support high-resolution audio playback with PCM up to 384 kHz 24-bit and DSD up to 12 MHz (DSD256).

Clean Signal Path – There is no DSP (Digital Signal Processor) in the HA-2. Volume control is operated by a combination of the DAC chip’s internal digital volume control and an analog potentiometer (the volume knob). Bass boost is performed by pure analog audio circuits. By avoiding re-digitising the audio signal for volume adjustment or bass boost, the HA-2 provides a clean signal path for the audio. And the difference is noticeable in playback.

Bass Boost – HA-2 offers a Bass Boost function. With Bass Boost off, the HA-2 delivers a ruler-flat frequency response; with Bass Boost on, the HA-2 adds force and impact to the sub-bass region without muddling the important mid- to high-frequency bands. In reality, I found I didn’t need the bass boost, although I can’t deny it wasn’t fun to use at times.

Two Gain Settings – The HA-2 offers two gain level settings for optimal headphone matching. The High Gain mode is capable of driving large power-hungry headphones, delivering up to 300 mW into 16-Ohm headphones. The Low Gain mode is intended for sensitive In-Ear Monitor type earphones.

Rapid Charging – The HA-2 features patented VOOC rapid charging technology from OPPO. Using the supplied rapid charger, the internal battery can be quickly and safely charged to 75% capacity in about 30 minutes. It only takes approximately 90 minutes to fully charge the battery. A quick charge gives the HA-2 hours of operation time. The box came with a 2 pin adapter, but also included was a UK VOOC charger.

Mobile Power Bank – The HA-2 functions as an external battery pack to charge your mobile device.

Full specifications –

– Dimensions (W x H x D) 68 x 157 x 12 mm
– Weight 175 grams
– Frequency Response 20 Hz – 200 kHz
– Audio-in Level 1 Vrms
– Line-out Level 1 Vrms
– Recommended Headphone Impedance 16 Ohm – 300 Ohm
– Maximum Headphone Output Power 300 mW into 16 Ohm,220 mW into 32 Ohm, 30 mW into 300 Ohm
– Output Jacks 3.5 mm stereo headphone
– 3.5 mm stereo line-out
– Input Ports Analog: 3.5 mm stereo audio-in
– Digital: USB A for iPod / iPhone / iPad; USB micro-B for smartphones with USB OTG feature and computers.
– DAC Chip ESS Sabre32 Reference ES9018-K2M
– Input Format Stereo PCM, Stereo DSD (DoP v1.1 or native)
– PCM Sampling Frequencies 44.1 kHz – 384 kHz, 16 / 24 / 32-bit
– DSD Sampling Frequencies 2.8224 MHz (DSD64), 5.6448 MHz (DSD128), 11.2896 MHz (DSD256, native mode only)
– Profile USB 2.0, USB Audio 2.0
– Included Accessories Power Supply Unit (Rapid Charging Charger)
– USB A – USB micro-B data and rapid charging cable
– USB A – Lightning data cable (for Apple devices)
– USB micro-B to micro-B data cable (for Android and other smartphones)
– 3.5 mm – 3.5 mm stereo audio cable
– Silicone rubber band (2 pieces)
– User guide and warranty documents
– Battery Built-in Battery type 3000 mAh lithium polymer rechargeable battery
– Battery Operation Time Approx. 13 hours for analog source via Audio-in; approx. 7 hours for digital sources via USB
Charging Time Approx. 1 hour 30 minutes

So what really matters ultimately is how does the Oppo HA-2 sound. For this test I used the following headphones: AKG K845 (wired), Sennheiser HD518 and V-Moda Crossfade M100. Genres used – Jazz, Blues, Pop, Rock, Female Vocal. FLAC recordings via Tidal and 320mp3 bitrate songs otherwise. Below are a selection of the songs I have listened to via the HA-2 using iPad Air, iPhone and Samsung Note 4.

Sally Barker – To Love Somebody/Dear Darlin – With all 3 headphones the vocals, guitar and the extra detail extracted by the HA-2 was superb. Sally Barker’s voice sounded so delicate and emotional. I preferred the sound from my HD518, then AKG K845 and lastly V-Moda Crossfade M100. The HA-2 did wonders with the HD518 creating a sound from them that I haven’t witnessed before.

Adele – Rumour Has It/ Lovesong – vocals, drums, instruments and the beat – all so well captured and played. The musicality of the HA-2 was present in abundance. The HD518 excelled again. The V-Moda had tons of kick too. The HA-2 pushed deep bass into the AKG K845 which was pleasing.

Paloma Faith – Can’t Rely on You – punchy, musical and a superb presentation. Plenty of bass but not overkill. The bass boost is nuts and so powerful in the sub bass, I have to turn the volume down.

Yolanda B Cool & D Cup – We No Speak Americano – even without the bass boost, the AKG K845 were being supplied bass at perfect levels. Of course, I had to flip the bass boost mode too, and bass freaks will love it in this mode. Again, a detailed musical presentation. Vocals are so good. The V-Moda M100 with bass boost on were awesome with a tight in control beat.

The Louis Lester Band – Downtown Uptempo/ Sweet Mary Jane – such great musicality, beat, bass, vocals, wide soundstage, instruments clearly placed in different positions. If you get this device, you must listen to Sweet Mary Jane – you will be blown away at just how good this track sounds across all headphones.

Queen – Bohemian Rhapsody – what’s not to like. Superb presentation again.

Bastille – Weapon/ the Driver – the electronic sounds and fast beat really well delivered. Great vocals again.

Nicola Benedetti – The Lark Ascending – mesmerising delivery. Frighteningly amazing. Brought my hairs up on my arms. The music scales up as the drama unfolded too.

What I did find with all the headphones used is the HA-2 was better in high gain mode. Low gain worked better with IEM’s. Also, you will be cranking the volume knob of the HA-2 up to near full or one or two steps before it.

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I have shown the Cayin C5 which costs £110 vs the Oppo HA-2 at £259. The Cayin C5 is just a headphone amp without a DAC, so in my current setup I used the HiFiMeDIY Sabre Android USB DAC which costs £27. Links to Cayin C5 Review click here and HiFiMeDIY Sabre Android USB DAC review click here . The HiFiMeDIY uses a Sabre ES9023 DAC which is a decent DAC and hence value for money is incredible. In terms of the Cayin C5 amp this delivers an astounding 800mw at 32ohms, whereas the Oppo HA-2 delivers 220mW at 32ohms. So the Cayin C5 is capable of delivering oodles of power. However, it just does not sound as good as the HA-2. So it we adds the cost of my previous setup, that totals £137 vs £259 for the HA-2. Do you get twice the increase in quality. No. More like 30% and in a single classy looking unit, with fast charging which means it takes 1 hours 30 mins to fully recharge vs 4 hours with the Cayin C5.

So Oppo have really delivered with the HA-2 and on a number of fronts. Due to the components used inside, these will sound better after 100 or so hours. I will do another post, once I have reached above this point to update you on any of my findings.

In the meantime, if you are interested in one of these units head over to Oppo – HA-2 Deals at Amazon

Looking to buy a Phone, Smartwatch, Headphones, Smart Devices and more – read the review first – all the top devices reviewed

Tablets/Laptops/Chromebooks

Samsung Galaxy Tab S 10.5 Tablet review
Samsung Galaxy NotePro 12.2 – 9 Part Review
Sony Xperia Z Tablet – 12 Part Review
Nvidia Shield Tablet –  7 Part review
Acer V15 Nitro Windows 8.1 laptop review
Acer C720 Chromebook review

Amazon Devices

Amazon Fire Phone –  2 Part review

Apple Phones

Apple iPhone 6 Plus – 24 Part Review

BlackBerry Phones

BlackBerry Passport 10 Part Mammoth review

Android Phones

Yotaphone 2 –  4 Part review

Samsung Note Edge – 14 Part Review
Samsung Note 4 – 17 Part Review
Samsung Galaxy Alpha –  2 Part review
Samsung Galaxy K Zoom – 26 Part Review
Samsung Galaxy S5 – 17 Part Review
Samsung Note 3 – 16 Part review
Samsung Galaxy S4 Zoom – 18 Part Review
Samsung Note 2 – 8 Part review

LG G3 review – 31 Part Review
LG G Flex – 3 Part Review

HTC Desire Eye – 13 Part Review
HTC One M8 – 11 Part review
HTC One M7 – 20 Part Review

Acer S55 review – 6 Part Review

Honor Holly –  4 Part review
Honor 6 – 12 Part Review
Huawei Ascend P6 Review

Sony Xperia Z1 Compact review
Sony Z Ultra views and Camera Samples
Sony Xperia Z1 – 10 Part Review

Motorola Moto X – 4 Part review
Motorola Moto G – 8 Part review

Windows Phone

Nokia Lumia 1520 – 6 Part review
Nokia Lumia 820 – 5 Part review
Nokia Lumia 1020 – 10 Part review
Nokia Lumia 925 – 9 Part review
Nokia Lumia 620 – 7 Part review

Fitness, Watches and Wearables

FitBit Charge HR review

Acer Liquid Heap Smartband review

LG G Watch R – review
LG G Watch – 9 Part Review

Samsung Gear S – 9 Part Review
Samsung Gear Neo Impressions
Samsung Gear Fit review
Samsung Gear 5 Part review

Pebble Smartwatch review

Headphones, Speakers and Amps/DACS

V-Moda Crossfade M100 headphone review
Plantronics BackBeat Pro bluetooth headphones review
Fiio RC-HD1 Headphone cable review
Sennheiser HD518 Headphone review
Philips Fidelio M1BT Headphone review
AKG K845 Bluetooth Headphone review
Sony SBH80 Bluetooth headphones review
Sony XBA-H1 Headphone Review
Logitech UE Headphones – 3 part Master review
Audio Technica ATH-AD900x Headphone review

Oppo HA-2 Portable Amplifier and DAC review
Cayin C5 Portable Headphone amplifier review
Fiio E12 – master review
HiFiMeDIY Sabre Android USB DAC review
Little Dot MKIV Tube Headphone Amplifier review

App Enabled Accessories

Belkin WeMo Smart light Bulb starter kit review

Mipow Playbulb Rainbow review
Mipow Playbulb review

Imperihome Pro review
Netatmo Urban Weather station – 5 Part review

Camera Lenses

Shoulderpod S1 smartphone rig review
Sony QX10 and QX100 – 13 Part master review

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