Category Archives: Windows

Microsoft Lumia 535 – camera samples

My full review of the Microsoft Lumia 535 will come next week. This is a phone available for £49 plus a £10 top up on pay as you go from several places.  So how good is the camera from a £50 phone? Let me know what you think.  All the below photos are unedited. If you want to see exif data or pixel peek click on the photo to go to my Flickr account.

Random photos taken with the Microsoft Lumia 535 #Lumia535 #unedited

Random photos taken with the Microsoft Lumia 535 #Lumia535 #unedited

Random photos taken with the Microsoft Lumia 535 #Lumia535 #unedited

Random photos taken with the Microsoft Lumia 535 #Lumia535 #unedited

Random photos taken with the Microsoft Lumia 535 #Lumia535 #unedited

Random photos taken with the Microsoft Lumia 535 #Lumia535 #unedited

Introducing the new Microsoft Lumia 640 and 640 XL – plus new flagship phone details

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At Mobile World Congress 2015, Microsoft unveiled new devices, services and partner offerings to help every person and organisation on the planet achieve more.

The company announced:
– The Lumia 640 and Lumia 640 XL, affordable smartphones running Windows 8.1 with signature Microsoft experiences built-in. The 5” Lumia 640 and 5.7” Lumia 640 XL deliver powerful hardware and a year’s free Office 365 personal subscription, and will be upgradeable to the Windows 10 service when it becomes available later this year. Lumia 640 pricing is estimated at 139EUR for 3G and 159EUR for LTE; Lumia 640 XL pricing is estimated at 189EUR for 3G and 219EUR for LTE (actual market pricing may vary).

– The Microsoft Universal Foldable Keyboard, an ultra-thin and lightweight accessory that works with iPads, iPhones, Android devices and Windows tablets.

– The AT&T Mobile Office Suite, a cloud-based, mobile collaboration solution for small-to-medium sized business customers, exclusively from AT&T and Microsoft in the US.

The key bonus is the free Office 365 Subscription with 1 TB of data. For some people this will be a good deal.

With regards to a new flagship phone this will come later in the year along with the new Windows 10 release.

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.

If you have enjoyed the podcast, please leave a 5 star review in iTunes. It helps others find our podcast. Go now and leave a review !

If you have any comments, questions or feedback, please drop a line at feedback@gdtpodcast.com or in the comments below.

And finally, our thanks to Audible as today’s podcast is supported by Audible- get a FREE audiobook download and 30 day free trial at http://www.audibletrial.com/GavDave . Over 150,000 titles to choose from for your iPhone, Android, Kindle or mp3 player. No obligation.

It’s a free trial so give it a go if you haven’t already.

If you are buying anything on Amazon, please use the link below. This will help support Gavin’s Gadgets with some of the running costs and using the link won’t cost you anymore. Thanks in advance.

GavGadgets@Amazon

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

If you are buying anything on Amazon, please use the link below. This will help support Gavin’s Gadgets with all the running costs and more and won’t be any different in cost. Thanks in advance.

GavGadgets@Amazon

Tidal Hi-Fi Music Streaming service – pros and cons

Tidal Hi-Fi Music Streaming service costs £19.95 per month so it better be worth paying twice as much as other streaming services. For those not sure or haven’t heard of Tidal it streams music at 3 different bit rates. See below.

– Normal quality: 96 kbps (AAC +)

– High quality: 320 kbps (AAC)

– HiFi: Flac 1411 kbps – Lossless (16 bit/44.1 khz)

Google All Access streams at 320mp3 at its highest and Apple at 256 AAC. As you can see Tidal streams at an even higher bitrate called Flac.  This digital file is higher than that of CDs.  It normally is an uncompressed recording of the actual performance.  Tidal also offers HQ video but this is only available via a PC and not using their mobile apps.

So I downloaded their app on to my Note 4.  Signed up for free 7 day trial.  You do need to give them your credit card details. And started streaming.  My setup was Tidal app playing the music,  in to my HiFiMeDIY Sabre Android USB DAC and then into my Cayin C5 Portable Headphone amplifier.  This sounded amazing.  You could plug your headphones straight into the Note 4 itself which still offers a remarkable improvement.  The change in dynamics, clarity, instruments and nuances of each song was so much better.  After 4 hours of streaming music I thought to myself it really cannot be that much better than that of say Google All Access music.  So I selected a jazz album on Tidal played one track,  switch to Google Music and played the same track.  Nightmare scenario. Google Music now sounded distorted and muddy and lacking everything.  The difference was stark and greater than expected.

But here’s the thing.  Flac music files are huge in size.  A typical album will be in gb’s not mb’s. Fortunately,  Tidal offers offline mode and the option to store tracks to the micro SD card if you have one.  Due to Flac’s storage requirements I never bothered using them as the extra storage required was crazy.  I have a vast music collection and if it was all flac files my house would be full of hard drives.  But this is why I like Tidal.  As it streams the space issue is overcome. 

So after 2 days in to my 7 day trial I am nearly convinced to pay the monthly payment.  But not everything is rosy.  The app is not the best for finding music.  It’s buggy too.  In my offline downloads it shows I’ve downloaded 3 albums but in the queue are 5 tracks showing still to be downloaded, which they have been already.  Mid way through listening to music it sometimes just stops.  Some of the offline downloaded tracks when playing them back skip in places.  This might be down to the track not downloading properly with my wifi speed maybe being the cause. Whatever the reason it’s annoying.  And offline mode means you still need large storage if you want to hold several albums on your device.

The other aspect of Tidal is the music catalogue is not as large as say iTunes but it is broader than I imagined.  I’m listening to Imagine Dragons as I type this. One other point is Tidal only allows 3 authorised devices which should be enough. 

If there is one reason why I don’t subscribe it is due to the tracks skipping mid song.  Totally ruins the enjoyment of otherwise a special music streaming service. 

 

Fight – Acer C720 Chromebook vs Acer V15 Nitro Windows 8.1 laptop vs MacBook Pro

This post is to summarise my experiences of reviewing to different types of laptops that I would not have normally have chosen. The reason for this task, is that my 2010 MacBook Pro is too damn slow at anything and constantly runs out of steam. I am sure this is ploy by Apple with each update.

So I asked several of you for recommendations. The Acer C720 Chromebook was the number one choice. So I spoke to Acer and they agreed to send the C720 for review, but also said would I like to try their gaming performance laptop, the V15 Nitro. Whilst, the V15 Nitro is gaming ready, it is also a super powerful machine in every way with loads of storage too.

Following my time with the Acer devices, my MacBook is toast. It just cannot compete in any shape or form. Period. Some might say that a 5 year old laptop is a decent duration.

I have decided that I don’t want another MacBook. They are lovely machines, but I do not have any Apple devices, other than a work iPad. So consequently, I would not gain the full benefit of its functionality. Second, whilst the Acer V15 Nitro Windows 8.1 laptop would require a new learning curve for me, I realised that the sheer power of the processor, SSD, and graphics mean this is the machine for all my photo and video editing.

But for general day to day stuff, the Acer Chromebook would be my only choice. It has crazy good battery life and again is fast in everything it does. So maybe I need both Acer machines?? Or maybe a Chromebook/Android Tablet combined device. Wait, didn’t Google say these were coming this year…

But what would you choose if you were in my predicament?

The Internet of Things reviews

As the Internet of Things takes off,  so will my reviews of these devices.  So far I have reviewed those listed below.

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

Following my reviews of the above I still use every day the Belkin WeMo Smart light Bulb starter kit.  I have both bulbs in my lounge.  The Mipow Playbulb Rainbow is used instead of the original and this again is in my lounge in an uplight.  Sometimes changing the room colour is great for mood changing.

Both the Netatmo and Imperihone are used everyday too and have been for a year and a half. 

WOW – 30 Smartphone Cameras Shootout – Samsung, Apple, BlackBerry, Lumia, LG, Honor and More

Not sure about which phone or brand takes the best photos, then have a look at this super sized collection of photos from all the best and latest smartphones and some budget phones as a comparison.

Samsung Note 4 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157648796796660/
Samsung Note Edge – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157647404207644/
Samsung S5 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157643875623354/
Samsung Note 3 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644034132513/
Samsung Galaxy K Zoom – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644532639249/
Samsung S4 Zoom – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644039495565/

Apple iPhone 6 Plus – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157647679181549/
Apple iPhone 5S – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644035336913/

BlackBerry Passport – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157648520943848/

LG G3 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157645618979801/
LG G Flex – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644114354349/

Honor 6 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157650041826847/
Honor Holly – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157650823415601/
Huawei Ascend P6 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644028833151/

HTC Desire Eye – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157650368916456/
HTC One M8 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157643265004874/
HTC One M7 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644039700054/

Yotaphone 2 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157650816294865/

Acer Jade S55 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157648344100003/

LG Nexus 4 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644039660933/

Amazon Fire Phone – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157648220945873/

Sony Z1 Compact Z1 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644028694521/
Sony Xperia Z1 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644039246935/
Sony Z Ultra – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644083052095/

Sony QX100 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644035811453/
Sony QX10 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644035335185/

Nokia Lumia 1520 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644035105534/
Nokia Lumia 1020 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644035516523/
Nokia Lumia 925 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157634991010769/
Nokia Lumia 620 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644083348093/

To see the sets in one indexed page click here – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/

So which phone is your winner?

Blast from the Past – i-mate 9502 review

Below is the review of the i-mate 9502 that I wrote in 2008.

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Review of i-mate 9502  by Gavin Fabiani-Laymond

Date of Review – 24th April 2008



Available from – http://www.clove.co.uk



Price – £355.00 + VAT



Pros – Slide out keyboard, Excellent Touchscreen, Endless buttons, GPS integrated, TV out, Excellent ring volume, loud speakers, quick responding, compact, 3mp autofocus camera with flash



Cons – Weighs 200g, SDHC compatible, so 2gb microsd cards max



Recently, I  reviewed the i-mate 8502 which has a qwerty thumboard on the front of the device. The 8502 also comes with a 2mp camera and only a qvga screen. Well I now have the 9502, and this includes all the features and specifications of the 8502, but adds a 2.8 inch vga screen, a 3mp autofocus with flash camera, and a slide out keyboard, similar in concept to a Sidekick. There are also more buttons on this device.

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I have shown the 9502 with the new Samsung i780, HTC Touch & Vox for comparison. Ironically, the Samsung i780 even though it is about one third of the depth of the 9502, its nearly the size height and actually a few millimetres wider.

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When you open the 9502 box, it is full of extras. These include i-mate Ultimate 9502 Pouch Case, TV Audio-out Cable, USB Sync Cable, Stereo Headset with microphone, AC Adapter with UK/US/EU, 2 x Stylus Pens, Battery, Getting Started CD, Getting Started Guide, User Manual.



The included bundle is excellent value. Also worth noting is that the 9502 uses mini usb so readily connectable with standard connectors.



Some shots of the sides of the 9502.

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Below is the specifications of the device. Worth noting that the 9502 has a large capacity battery, a magical VGA screen, integrated GPS, Bluetooth profiles includes printing and the HID profile for keyboards and TV out.





Technical of i-mate Ultimate 9502

Operating System –
Microsoft Windows Mobile 6.0 Professional

Processor/ Chipset –
400 MHz Qualcomm MSM 7200

Memory –
256 MB ROM
128 MB RAM

Display –
2.8” VGA (640×480) Touch-screen
262k color TFT with backlight

Operating Frequency –
Quad Band – GSM / GPRS / EDGE/ HSDPA / HSUPA

Keyboard/ Buttons –
Slider LCD exposes 39-key Qwerty keypad
Power button
Send and End buttons
Messaging and Internet buttons
Camera button
Volume up and down
Three (3) software programmable buttons
Two (2) soft-keys
Start and OK buttons
5-way navigation
360° Jog wheel and OK / Back
Soft reset

Camera –
3.0 Megapixel auto-focus camera – LED Compensation light
VGA camera for Video Calls

Connectivity –
WiFi 802.11 b/g
Bluetooth 2.0, A2DP (Advanced Audio Distribution profile)

GPS –
NMEA 0183

Interface –
Combo port for USB, TV Audio output, Charging
MicroSD card slot
Audio jack (2.5mm)
SIM card slot

Power –
Removable 1620mAH, Lithium ion-Polymer battery
Standby up to 180 hours (UMTS)
Talk Time up to 260 minutes (UMTS)

Dimensions –
116mm(L) x 60mm(W) x 17.8mm(T)

Weight –
200g with battery pack



If only the micro sd slot supported sdhc cards, this would make this device truly unbelievable. I-mate are rumoured to be working on an update to Windows Mobile 6.1 which might include support for sdhc cards.



You must charge the device for 8 hours. It is extremely tempting to turn the phone on, but I just about resisted. While you charge the device it is a good idea to register the device at http://www.clubimate.com and login and use the Custom iq service. This allows you to create a custom installation. You can setup all your email and activesync settings, and save up to 16mb of cab files for automatic installation. When you turn the device on for the first time it notes what mobile operator you have and configures the device for use. All the data, voicemail, sms and mms settings were installed automatically. The next options included registering the device as an enterprise one and whether I wanted to use the i-mate device customization. I entered my user name and password and next I get a message asking if I want to install over the air 10mb of files. Best use wifi if you don’t have a unlimited data plan. Wonderful touch. I-mate also offer a 2 year guarantee.



Memory. The 9502 has available after its first boot 98.92 mb and 36.12 mb of program memory. The program memory could be more, especially for a VGA device. I found I had to use a good task manager like Magic Button to close the programs. However, I did not run out of memory.



Using the keyboard. The screen slides up very quickly to reveal a lovely qwerty keyboard. The soft reset hole is top right of the keyboard. I found it simple to type using two fingers, one each side. The grip is great and having the VGA screen is lovely. The screen rotates from portrait to landscape instantly.



Camera. The 3mp camera was quick to fire up. It had a quick shutter speed for a pda phone, with auto focus and led flash. The quality of the camera was impressive.

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Software. The 9502 comes with all the standard windows mobile software, including windows live. It also has all the i-mate device customisation and support options. In Pocket Internet Explorer there is an option to view web page in high definition. Lovely touch again.

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GPS. There is no included GPS software. I installed Tom Tom 6 which worked beautifully and looked great on the VGA screen.



TV Out. Like the 8502, the 9502 has a TV out feature. The TV feature shows exactly what is on the 9502 screen in real time with no lags. As the 9502 is vga the resolution on the TV screen is excellent and idea for powerpoint presentations of picture shows.



The memory card slot is under the battery cover on the side of the device.



Camera shot. Notice how sharp all the objects are despite varying distances.

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I would recommend the i-mate 9502 as the ultimate power horse. Available and with thanks to http://www.clove.co.uk for dispatching it so fast.