Monthly Archives: April 2017

Audi S4 v Mercedes-AMG C43 sedan comparison

The old adage ‘speed costs, so how fast to do you want to go?’ applies more eloquently to its more-is-more motorsport origins than it does to the more complicated prospect that is premium road car ownership.

It’s sometimes easy to forget the a circa-$150k upfront investment for a low-four-second 0-100km/h return – not to mention ongoing mid-teen-per-hundred average fuel consumption expenditure – appeases the wants and means of only some buyers, though not all, when it comes to go-fast four-doors.

For some, the nameplates C63 S and RS4 aren’t merely a stretch too far financially but, realistically, a lunge unnecessarily high in useable performance.

Audi S4 v Mercedes-AMG C43 sedan comparison

The Audi S4 3.0 TFSI quattro Tiptronic Sedan and Mercedes-AMG C43 4Matic Sedan – to use their full names, just once – might seem the undercooked missing links between the have and have-not-quite-as-much, but let’s be realistic here: there’s less a link and more a canyon between the (currently wagon only) RS4 and an A4, and between a C63 S and a C250.

Read full post here:
https://www.caradvice.com.au/531963/audi-s4-v-mercedes-amg-c43-sedan-comparison/

Top 26 Best Pentax Lenses 2017

Here, we round up the 10 best scoring Pentax lenses to date that we’ve reviewed:

1. Pentax SMC DA* 200mm f/2.8 ED (IF) SDM – 

Pentax 200mm Da Star Smc

This lens scored an excellent 5 out of 5 star rating. It’s a weather sealed professional quality super telephoto lens that has a silent focusing motor and full time manual focus override. It has almost no distortion, low CA levels, is light weight and features fantastic build quality, making it a great lens for anyone who wants the best quality in a longer reach lens.

Read full post here:
https://www.ephotozine.com/article/top-28-best-pentax-lenses-2018–25685

Garmin Vivosmart 3 Hands-on Review : A tracker that’s concerned for your wellbeing

Now that it’s unleashed its army of new Fenix 5 watches, Garmin is turning back to the fitness tracker with the Garmin Vivosmart 3. “But where is the Vivosmart 2?” we hear you cry. Well, the Vivosmart HR+ kind of filled that role, but its new tracker is also a bit of a step-change.

Fitness is still very much on the agenda, with Garmin debuting VO2 Maxtracking alongside exercise detection, rep counting, and of course a heart rate monitor, but there’s also more of a focus on day-to-day wellness with stress tracking, guided breathing exercises, and sleep monitoring too.

It does drop the GPS as a result, a feature of the Vivosmart HR+, limiting its potential as a running device in our eyes. It also comes in at $139.99, so Garmin is targeting the lower end of the fitness tracking market with Fitbit squarely in its sights.

Read full post here:
https://www.wareable.com/garmin/garmin-vivosmart-3-review

KEF R500 Floorstanding Speaker Review : It’s unquestionably elegant but does the R500 deliver?

What is the KEF R500?

The KEF R500 is a three-way floorstanding speaker and the smallest floorstanding member of the R Series. In keeping with being a KEF product, it incorporates many key features of KEF speaker design including the Uni-Q driver and trickle down technology from some of the more sophisticated members of the KEF range, including the mighty Blade – a no holds barred take on the principles of a speaker that dispenses with many pieces of received wisdom. As you might expect, at a fifteenth the price of a Blade, the R500 is a more conventional looking device but the DNA is there.

The KEF also occupies an interesting price point. At £1,500, it sits between the tiny but staggeringly capable Neat IOTA Alpha and the physics defying PMC twenty5.21. Does the KEF do enough to stand out between these two outstanding speakers and be a worthwhile choice for someone looking for some serious stereo?

Read full post here:
https://www.avforums.com/review/kef-r500-floorstanding-speaker-review.13513

Best & Worst Laptop Brands 2017

When you’re shopping for a laptop, the brand matters as much as the specs and features. That’s why, each year, we evaluate the top notebook manufacturers and publish our Best and Worst Laptop Brands rankings. For 2017, Lenovo has knocked Apple out of its long-held top position. Asus and Dell take second and third place.

LTP_BWB_2017-bar-chart_v2.1

To pick the winners, losers and also-rans, we evaluated the 10 biggest laptop brands to determine which offer the best combination of quality products, cutting-edge innovation, helpful support, sleek designs and strong value. Because of its modest review scores, expensive products and lack of ports, Apple fell all the way down to fifth place after receiving top honors every year since the Best and Worst Brands debuted in 2010.

Read full post here:
https://www.topspeed.com/motorcycles/motorcycle-reviews/yamaha/2015-2017-yamaha-fjr1300-ar166013.html

2015 – 2017 Yamaha FJR1300 Review

The biggest sport-tourer in Yamaha ’s lineup just got better. In 2016, the FJR1300A and its stablemate the FJR1300ES saw some evolutionary changes that brought just enough tweaks to make it a smoother, more comfortable ride. Probably the biggest change last year was in the transmission, giving it a smoother ride, as well as a sixth gear, and the addition of a slipper clutch to reduce hand fatigue at the clutch lever.

Design

Yamaha FJR1300

A stylish revamp of the lights gets a thumbs up with LEDs all around. The headlight throws a sharp beam that pierces the darkness for good visibility, both to see and be seen. LED taillights tuck unobtrusively under the tail, and for the ES, you get cornering lights. The cornering lights, mounted above the headlights, come on when the bike detects lean. The harder the lean, the more LEDs come on to illuminate what is in the turn. This feature is very useful in urban and suburban settings, but only marginally useful on the open road. Still, it’s a nice feature and there when you need it.

Read full post here:
https://www.topspeed.com/motorcycles/motorcycle-reviews/yamaha/2015-2017-yamaha-fjr1300-ar166013.html

Head-to-Head : Samsung Galaxy C9 Pro VS Samsung Galaxy A9 Pro

Samsung’s new Galaxy C9 Pro phablet is now available in the Philippines. Samsung already has a similarly-specced 6-incher in the local market right now, though, and that’s the Galaxy A9 Pro (2016) which launched in August last year. It’s only natural to compare the two phabs and find out which is the better buy, so here’s our take.

The C9 Pro outplays the A9 Pro, except in battery capacity

The C9 Pro’s Snapdragon 653 octa-core CPU is the latest iteration of Qualcomm’s top mid-range SoC. According to the company, the SD653 boasts up to 10% higher performance over the last-gen SD652 found in the A9 Pro. 10% more isn’t exactly a big leap, but it’s still an improvement, nonetheless. The C9 Pro and A9 Pro both have the same GPU, but the former’s is a little faster, thanks to frequency tweaks.

Read full post here:
https://www.unbox.ph/gadget/head-to-head-samsung-galaxy-c9-pro-vs-samsung-galaxy-a9-pro/

​Garmin Fenix 5 tips and tricks : 10 hidden features to make your Fenix 5 even more powerful

The Garmin Fenix 5 is one of the most advanced sports watches you can buy, and it’s jam-packed with features for running, cycling, swimming, golf and even skydiving. But so many of the Fenix 5’s best features are buried within sub-menus and can be a little complex find.

After using the Fenix 5 for a month, we’ve uncovered some of our favourite features, tips and little tricks that really elevate it to the upper echelons of fitness tech.

Garmin Fenix 5 tips and tricks

Customise the sports screen

When you first set up your Fenix you’ll be given a serious of sports to choose from, which will make up your main menu, accessed by pressing the Start button (at 2 o’clock).

But what’s that? You forgot to add urban paddleboarding? No worries, just head to the menu and choose the +Add option. You can then access the full list of sports. Say again? You can’t find Extreme Ironing? Try Garmin Connect IQ. Head to your Garmin Connect app and go to settings > Connect IQ. From there you browse apps including new sports including sailing and basketball.

Read full post here:
https://www.wareable.com/garmin/garmin-fenix-5-tips-and-tricks-868

Nikon D7500 vs D500 vs D7200 Comparison

Let’s see the comparison between the Nikon D7500 vs D500 vs D7200 mid-range DSLR cameras.

The Nikon D7500 is a 20.9 MP DSLR with the same high ISO, fast image proccessing and energy efficiency of the D500 in an enthusiast-level camera. It also offers a number of improvements over its predecessor, the D7200.

The D7500 has a burst speed of 8fps with full AF/AE, with an expanded buffer of up to 50 raw/NEF (14-bit lossless compressed) or 100 JPEG images. The camera can shoot 4K UHD (3840 × 2160/30p) video and also offers 3-axis built-in e-VR image stabilization when shooting 1080p Full HD videos.

Read full post here:
https://www.dailycameranews.com/2017/04/nikon-d7500-vs-d500-vs-d7200/

Head-to-Head : Samsung Galaxy C9 Pro VS Huawei Mate 9

Here’s an interesting match-up – Samsung’s soon-to-be-launched 6-inch Galaxy C9 Pro pitted against Huawei’s dual-Leica-toting 6-incher, the Mate 9. It’s a mid-ranged phablet versus a flagship tier 6-incher. Obviously, the mid-tier C9 Pro falters when compared to the flagship Mate 9, but it’s still very much a competitive device, especially when you factor in the price difference between the two. Let’s play it out and see which is better at what.

Samsung Galaxy C9 Pro

2015 – 2017 Yamaha V Star 1300 Tourer Review

Introduced in 2007, Star— now folded back under the Yamaha umbrella — has been offering essentially the same bike spec-wise since 2012, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing. The V Star 1300 Tourer is a mid-size touring bike— not a full dresser — but with plenty of storage. It’s not a small bike, but the V Star 1300 Tourer is small enough that you don’t have to wrestle with it. A low seat height and low center of gravity makes it easy to handle, and the 80-cubic-inch engine is big enough to be respectable but not so big it intimidates.

Design

Two details I especially like on the V Star Tourer are the extra wide clutch and brake levers that give you a sure-grip feel, and the remote adjustment feature on the headlight. I just hate having to monkey with a wrench trying to aim the headlight so remote adjustment is a small, but welcome, feature.

Read full post here:
https://www.topspeed.com/motorcycles/motorcycle-reviews/star-motorcycles/2015-2017-yamaha-v-star-1300-tourer-ar166847.html

iPhone 8 vs Galaxy Note 8 : release of Apple’s beast

Android devices of all sorts are coming up in the world, rallying these last couple of years with features that rival even the iPhone. That’s a strange thing to say as someone who’s supposed to be unbiased about which smartphone is best – but looking at sales numbers, it’s clear Apple’s been quite dominant since 2007, while devices like Samsung’s Galaxy S and Note series as well as Google’s Pixel lines are coming to take a piece of the action. With the iPhone 8, otherwise known as or code-named iPhone X, Apple may show that they’re not simply holding back features from power users – they’ve just been lying in wait.

Apple Pencil

This smartphone might be the first to incorporate Apple’s Pencil device. This might – possibly – happen even though the Apple Pencil is clearly a size meant for larger devices. Apple has seen the image Samsung has made with the Galaxy Note series – the S Pen included with the Galaxy Note is an integral part of what makes it look and feel like a premium work-friendly device.

Read full post here:
https://www.slashgear.com/iphone-8-vs-galaxy-note-8-release-of-apples-beast-12481775/

2015 – 2017 Yamaha Raider Review

The Raider from the Star cruiser line— now folded back into the Yamaha stable — and its chromed-out sibling, the Raider S, haven’t changed much spec-wise since 2008 (though the “S” didn’t appear for 2016). Red or black was the choice — the 2015 Raider in Liquid Graphite, the 2015 “S” in Crimson Red or the 2016 Raider in Candy Red — choices I like better than the Galaxy Blue offered in 2014. For 2017, we have basic black. With a 39-degree rake, low seat height, a fat rear tire and a tall front tire, it has just enough stretch to give that bad-boy chopper look that gets attention. It takes more than looks to impress buyers, though.

Design

Yamaha Raider

The low 27.4-inch seat height and an almost 71-inch wheelbase give the Raider a long, low profile. The tank-mounted instrumentation includes analog speedometer and fuel gauge, along with twin digital tripmeters, odometer and self-diagnostics.

Read full post here:
https://www.topspeed.com/motorcycles/motorcycle-reviews/yamaha/2015-2017-yamaha-raider-ar165933.html

RCA Voyager III review

Aquintessential bottom-of-the-barrel tablet with barebones features, the simple 7-inch RCA Voyager III is sold exclusively through Wal-Mart for only $50. That’s a helluva bargain when compared to, well, any tablet other than the Amazon Fire.

Amazon caused quite a frenzy in 2015 when it released the $50 Fire tablet. For a (then unheard of) jaw-droppingly low price, the Fire turned out to be a pretty decent tablet — for its price. (The Fire retails for $50, but you can currently find it on sale for $40.)

It’s hard to be disappointed in a cheap tablet, because, really, what do you expect for $50? Aside from checking email, light reading, casual web surfing and maybe streaming a movie or two, a $50 tablet can’t do much. (And anyone who thinks a budget tablet can be used as an everyday laptop replacement or a great video-watching device is highly delusional.)

Read full post here:
https://www.cnet.com/reviews/rca-voyager-iii-review/

to use Ginger
Limited mode
A quintessential bottom-of-the-barrel tablet with bare-bones features

×

2016 – 2017 Christini AWD 450 Explorer Review

Add the Street Legal package to Christini’s AWD 450 Military Edition bike and you have the AWD 450 Explorer. Based in Philadelphia, Christini has been pursuing AWD for two wheels since 1995. What started as AWD mountain bikes turned to AWD motorcycles in 2002.

It was in 2008 when a Christini-upgraded KTM bike took second place in the inaugural Extreme Enduro Race that AWD was established as competitively viable technology. Considering that folks have raced Christini AWD bikes in every EnduroCross event since 2006 speaks to their capability as competition rides. In fact, Christini bikes are race-tested and proved reliable in World Enduro, GNCC, Endurocross, Red Bull Last Man Standing, and Hare scrambles.

Read full post here:
https://www.topspeed.com/motorcycles/motorcycle-reviews/christini/2016-2017-christini-awd-450-explorer-ar170836.html

LG OLED65E7V review

This year is shaping up to be the most exciting year for TVs in a long time. Not just because The Crystal Maze is returning, but also because of the new sets you’ll be able to watch it on.

In 2017, there are going to be more OLEDs available than ever before, with Sony and others joining Panasonic and Philips in buying LG panels for its own models. At the same time, Samsung believes it has a serious challenger to the army of OLEDs with its new QLED range – and on early evidence it might be right.

LG, the progenitor of the current OLED craze, is taking its own approach, with five models, each available in two sizes, all sharing panels, picture processing features and tech. The idea here is that you choose which LG OLED to buy based on its styling, speaker solution and, of course, price.

Read full post here:
https://www.whathifi.com/lg/oled65e7v/review

 

2017 Nissan Rogue Trail Warrior Project Review

Introduced in 2013 and revised for the 2017 model year, the second-generation Rogue has evolved into one of Nissan’s best-selling vehicles in the United States. As a result, the SUV is getting a lot of attention from the brand, including a few special-edition models like the Midnight Edition. For the 2017 New York Auto Show, the Japanese firm transformed the Rogue into a snow bank and sand dune fighter. This go-anywhere Rogue is called the Trail Warrior Project and uses tracks instead of wheels.

As cool as it may sound, this isn’t the first Rogue on tracks. In early 2016, Nissan unveiled a similar Rogue that was build by Motorsports in Action in Quebec, Canada. Also fitted with tracks, it was demonstrated on snow and created quite a lot of buzz on the Internet. However, it wasn’t as spectacular as the Trail Warrior Project, as it lacked the military look and most of the gear. Before the Rogue, Nissan built the Juke Nismo RSnow, a Juke Nismo on track that was developed and showcased in Europe. So Nissan has a lot of experience with corssovers on tracks and could build a production model. Unfortunately, is appears that the Trail Warrior Project will remain a New York Auto Show exclusive concept only.

Read full post here:
https://www.topspeed.com/cars/nissan/2017-nissan-rogue-trail-warrior-project-ar176349.html

 

 

AsusPro B9440 Review

A lot of business notebooks are thick beasts with extended batteries and wide bezels. The $999 AsusPro B9440 offers a more minimal approach, with a slim, 0.6-inch frame and a nearly bezel-less screen, akin to the Dell XPS 13. But in doing so, Asus has abandoned not just ports but also a webcam, which is quite a head-scratcher if not an outright deal breaker.

Design: Ready to Travel

At first glance, the AsusPro isn’t much to look at. It’s a gunmetal-gray, magnesium-alloy computer with Asus’ logo in silver on the lid. But when you open the laptop, you see a bit of ingenuity: The lid is slightly longer than the base of the laptop, which causes the keyboard to be slanted up a few degrees when it’s open. You’ll also find the 14-inch, 1080p nearly bezel-less display, as well as a Chiclet-style keyboard.

Read full post here:
https://www.laptopmag.com/reviews/laptops/asus-pro-b9440

Nikon D7500 Hands-on Review : What you need to know

The Nikon D7200 was, and still is, an extremely capable camera. So for Nikon to truly make its successor worth its salt, something other than a granular update was needed. Fortunately, the new Nikon D7500 features enough improvements, including a lot of tech pulled from the APS-C flagship D500, that all signs point to it being the successor we’d hoped for.

After all, it uses the same 20.9MP sensor with no optical low pass filter as the D500, as well as its Expeed 5 image processor. This new processor is 30% faster than the Expeed 4 processor in the D7200, a speed advantage that gives the D7500 a leg up in a few key areas like: burst speed, buffer depth, video capability and native ISO sensitivity.

Nikon D7500: What you need to know

Before we jump into tech specs, let’s talk about the body of the D7500, because some minor changes should add up to an improved user experience, including a 3.2” 922k-dot tilting touch LCD. Sure it’s slightly lower resolution than the 1.2M-dot LCD of the D7200, but the touch capabilities are a welcomed inclusion. They can be used for selecting an AF point in live view, or navigating the camera menus.

Read full post here:
https://www.dpreview.com/news/2885741290/nikon-d7500-what-you-need-to-know

Head-to-Head : Huawei GR3 2017 VS Zenfone 3 Max 5.5

Huawei Philippines recently stealth-launched the 5.2-inch GR3 2017 mid-ranger in local shelves. The GR3 2017, as is Huawei tradition, is branded with different names depending on the region. It’s also known as the Nova Lite in European markets, and as the P8 Lite (2017) in different territories.

Looking at its pricing and specifications, the GR3 2017 is Huawei’s answer to ASUS’s popular Zenfone 3 Max 5.5. Let’s see which of the two is the better buy with an on-paper comparative analysis.

Huawei GR3 2017

to use Ginger
Limited mode
HiSilicon Kirin 655 octa

×

Apple Watch Series 2 v Fitbit Charge 2 : Which device should you choose?

We put these wearable elites head to head

When it comes to the big hitters in the wearable game, there’s no doubt that Apple and Fitbit sit at the very top of the tree. But that doesn’t mean both compete in the exactly the same areas, with Apple looking to take over your wrist with its smartwatch and Fitbit instead dominating fitness trackers.

The latter is expected to drop its first truly dedicated smartwatch later this year, but for now Fitbit fans are forced to look into its existing stable and pick out the device that best mimics a connected timepiece.

Read full post here:
https://www.wareable.com/apple/apple-watch-series-2-vs-fitbit-charge-2

UMIDIGI C NOTE HANDS-ON REVIEW : STYLISH SMARTPHONE, BUY LITTLE KNOWN

Manufacturers from China are very difficult to break into the market. There are a lot of competitors, and each of them gives the user interesting device at low price. Especially it concerns the entry and middle level of smartphones. Everyone wants to get a smartphone at a minimum cost, but also they need to have many features, stylish design and good camera.

Review UMIDIGI C NOTE: STYLISH SMARTPHONE, BUY LITTLE KNOWN

New smartphone UMIDIGI C NOTE has all of this. Of course, it will not be able to compete with flagship products. However, if you want an inexpensive device and the logo on the rear panel is not as important to you as the price, then UMIDIGI C NOTE will be good option for you. In our quick review UMIDIGI C NOTE we find out the main features, look at the specs and tell you where to buy cheaper.

Read full post here:
https://www.wovow.org/review-umidigi-c-note-smartphone/

2015 – 2017 Suzuki Boulevard C90T Review

Cruisers and touring bikes go hand in hand for that relaxed, comfortable ride you get. The Boulevard C90T from Suzuki— absent for 2014, but back in 2015 – is the touring version of the C90 that was dropped after the 2013 model year, though the C90 B.O.S.S. is still going strong in 2017.

Leather-look — not real leather, just leather textured — hard saddlebags and an ample windscreen give the C90T that “I’m ready for the road” look. Is it ready for the road? I wanted to see if, in fact, the “T” in C90T really does mean Cruisers  “touring.” and touring bikes go hand in hand for that relaxed, comfortable ride you get. The Boulevard C90T from Suzuki— absent for 2014, but back in 2015 – is the touring version of the C90 that was dropped after the 2013 model year, though the C90 B.O.S.S. is still going strong in 2017.

Leather-look — not real leather, just leather textured — hard saddlebags and an ample windscreen give the C90T that “I’m ready for the road” look. Is it ready for the road? I wanted to see if, in fact, the “T” in C90T really does mean “touring.”

Read full post here:
https://www.topspeed.com/motorcycles/motorcycle-reviews/suzuki/2015-2017-suzuki-boulevard-c90t-ar171293.html

New Apple iPad (2017) vs Samsung Galaxy Tab S3: What’s the difference?

Samsung announced the Galaxy Tab S3 at the beginning of March, while Apple announced its newest and cheapest iPad towards the end of March, bringing another two premium tablets to the party.

The Tab S3 is designed to be an entertainment powerhouse, while the new iPad cuts a couple of corners in order to bring its price down. We’ve compared the Tab S3 to the iPad Pro 9.7 in a separate feature, but here we are looking at how Apple’s latest slab compares to Samsung’s latest. Which is the right one for you?

new-ipad-2020

JBL Reflect Mini BT review

With smartphones shedding headphone jacks as if they’re less fashionable than a fox fur scarf, wireless headphones have never been more popular than they are right now.

At £80, JBL Reflect Mini BTs let you stay on trend without spending a fortune.

Build and comfort

The Reflect Mini BTs are the most practical kind of wireless in-ear headphone going. They use Bluetooth to stream music from your tablet or smartphone, and have a wire connecting the earpieces.

They might be wireless earphones with a wire, but it’s a pretty handy wire, letting you wear the JBL Reflect Mini BT around your neck should you need to talk to someone at the gym, for example.

Read full post here:
https://www.whathifi.com/jbl/reflect-mini-bt/review

 

2015 – 2017 Suzuki DR650S Review

With a glance at the DR 650S from Suzuki and you might just dismiss it as an enduro bike. That would be doing it an injustice. It’s really a basic adventure bike that will get you off the pavement and into the woods with perhaps more gumption than a real adventure bike.

It’s not the most attractive bike in the stable, though it’s small and scrappy and so much fun to ride. With it priced so affordably, dropping it isn’t a tragic as it would be otherwise and it’s lightweight enough that you can pick it up and keep going.

Design

 I would say the DR650S joined the Suzuki dual-sport lineup in 2015, replacing the DR650SE, but the truth is, the only real change was dropping the “E” from the name. It’s still a DR650SE; the “E” stands for electric start, but honestly, that designation is meaningless anymore.

Read full post here:
https://www.topspeed.com/motorcycles/motorcycle-reviews/suzuki/2015-2017-suzuki-dr650s-ar165341.html

 

LG Gram (2017) Review

The Pros

Thin design; Long battery life

The Cons

Lid feels flimsy; Flat keyboard; Dimmer than average display; Poorly placed webcam

Verdict

The LG Gram is lightweight and offers long battery life, but its keyboard is flat, its webcam is poorly placed and its lid doesn’t feel sturdy enough.

It seems that every laptop maker is trying to push out thinner and sleeker notebooks, but the LG Gram ($999 to start, $1,099 as tested) is the picture of what happens when you take things too far. The laptop has over 10 hours of battery life, and its Core i5 CPU produces fine performance. However, the webcam is in the worst possible spot and the keyboard is flat. To top it off, I could feel the lid bending when I opened the notebook. I’d gladly add a fraction of an inch to my laptop for better build quality and a comfortable keyboard, and, if the Gram is any indication, you should, too.

Design: Thin, But Feels Frail

The LG Gram is very plain. From afar, it’s a rectangle with rounded corners in what LG calls “dark silver,” but is really aping the space-gray hue seen on MacBooks in a poor attempt at imitation.

Say what you will about MacBooks, hey have a rather sturdy build quality — something the Gram does not. When I opened the Gram, I could feel the magnesium-alloy lid bending. It feels flimsy around the 13.3-inch, 1080p touch screen. The base, with the island-style keyboard, is sturdier.

The point of the Gram is to be light and portable, and it sure is. It’s just 2 pounds and 12.1 x 8.3 x 0.6 inches. The Acer Swift 7 is 2.5 pounds and 12.8 x 9 x 0.3 inches;  the Dell XPS 13 is the thickest and heaviest, at 2.7 pounds and 12 x 7.9 x 0.6 inches. The Gram is still slightly thicker than the 12-inch MacBook, which also weighs 2 pounds and is 11 x 8.8 x 0.5 inches.

Despite its slenderness, the Gram still has room for a full set of ports. On the left, there is a USB Type-C port, an HDMI output, a USB 3.0 port and a traditional barrel power jack. On the right, you have a microSD card slot, a headphone jack, another USB 3.0 port and a Kensington lock slot.

Display: Darker Than Average

The LG Gram’s 1080p, 13-inch display produces vivid colors, but it’s too dark to truly appreciate them. When I watched an FHD trailer for The Fate of the Furious, I could barely make out Ludacris in an interior shot of him driving a tank, and Jason Statham’s black suit got lost in a dark room. However, when explosions occurred, I appreciated the vivid balls of orange and red.

The screen reproduces an excellent 135 percent of the sRGB color gamut, easily overtaking the ultraportable average (96 percent), the MacBook (107 percent), the Swift 7 (105 percent) and the XPS 13 (94 percent).

But those colors aren’t accurate. The Gram’s panel has a Delta-E score of 4.4 (the ideal is 0), which is higher than the ultraportable average (2.4), the MacBook (1), the XPS 13 (1) and the Swift 7 (4.1).

The panel is also not bright enough. It measured just 271 nits on our light meter, falling below the average (300 nits) and far below the XPS 13 (302 nits), the Swift 7 (319 nits) and the MacBook (327 nits).

If you’re reading late at night, you may be interested in LG’s “Reader Mode,” which cuts down on blue light and makes the screen easier on the eyes.

Keyboard and Touchpad: Flat as a Pancake

With a shallow 1.3 millimeters of travel and 70 grams of force required to press, the keyboard on the LG Gram feels flat. I bottomed out with just about every stroke of a key when I took the 10FastFingers.com typing test. I reached 102 words per minute, falling below my 107-wpm average, and my error rate jumped from 2 to 4 percent.

The function keys are even worse than the rest of the keyboard due to their spongy feedback. Whether I was turning down the brightness or bumping up the volume, using these keys felt like a chore.

The 4 x 2.7-inch touchpad is large enough to navigate and perform Windows 10 gestures like pinching-to-zoom and two-finger scrolling, but it feels cheaply made when you click. I wasn’t a fan of the placement of the fingerprint reader on the top left corner. I love being able to log in with Windows Hello, but I wish it was placed to the side of the touchpad..

Audio: Get Headphones Instead

Get some good headphones with the Gram, because the speakers are pretty weak. For starters, they’re quiet. When I listened to Passenger’s “Let Her Go,” it barely filled a small conference room, and the sound was tinny. While the vocals were clear, the keys and guitar were underwhelming, and I could barely make out the drums at all. Using the 3D FX option in the DTS Audio App helped bring up the guitars and piano, but drowned out the vocals. When I tried manually adjusting the equalizer, nothing changed.

Performance: Stronger Than It Looks

The Gram might look puny, but it’s strong enough to multitask on, thanks to its Intel Core i5-7200U CPU, 8GB of RAM and  256GB SSD. I had 35 tabs open in Google Chrome, one of which streamed an episode of Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, with only a split second of lag while switching between tabs.

On the Geekbench 4 overall performance test, the Gram earned a score of 6,767, falling below the ultraportable average (6,925) and the Dell XPS 13 (Core i5-7200U, 7,159), but it’s better than the Swift 7 (Intel Core i5-7Y54, 5,277).

The Gram transferred 4.97GB of mixed-media files in 24 seconds, a rate of 212MBps. That’s speedier than the 186 MBps average and the Swift 7 (115.7MBps), though the XPS 13 (339.3 MBps) and the MacBook (355.9 MBps) were both faster.

It took 4 minutes and 1 second for the Gram to pair 20,000 names and addresses in our OpenOffice Spreadsheet macro. Again, this was faster than the average (5:57) and the Swift (4:45), though the XPS 13 (3:44) and the MacBook (3:11) completed the task more quickly.

This isn’t a system you’ll be using for heavy image manipulation or intense gaming. Its integrated Intel HD Graphics 620 notched a score of 57,428 on the 3DMark Ice Storm Unlimited Benchmark. While that’s higher than the average (54,115) and the Swift 7 (HD Graphics 615, 46,622), it’s lower than the XPS 13 (HD Graphics 620, 62,754).

Battery Life: Lasts All Day

I don’t quite know where they managed to cram the battery in the Gram, but it’s long-lasting. This system survived for 10 hours and 15 minutes on the Laptop Mag Battery Test, which consists of continuous web browsing over Wi-Fi. The average is 8:16, and the Swift 7 fizzled out after 7:25. The MacBook endured for 9:38, but the XPS 13 lasted the longest at 13:49.

Webcam: Worst I’ve Ever Seen

LG’s 720p webcam is easily the least flattering webcam on the market — even worse than the nose cam on the XPS 13. The Gram’s camera is on its hinge, and a shot that I took looked straight up my neck and up my chin. Who cares if it’s sharp or colorful when it looks farther up your nostril than any other webcam on the market?

Heat

Despite its small size, the Gram stays pretty cool. After streaming 15 minutes of HD video from YouTube, it measured 81 degrees Fahrenheit on the bottom, 83 degrees between the G and H keys, and 77 degrees on the touchpad. All of these temperatures fall below our 95-degree comfort threshold.

Software and Warranty

LG has a fairly comprehensive suite of software on the Gram, though quite a bit of it is redundant.

The LG Control Center provides easy access to system settings, power management, Windows security and information about your laptop. The LG PC Help app is a list of FAQs and answers (strangely, we had two different versions of this app, each with its own logo). The LG Power Manager lets you customize your battery settings, and Update Center checks for the latest update. Since Control Center does almost all of this, it would’ve made more sense to have one comprehensive app.

Otherwise, you get your standard Windows 10 bloat, including Gameloft’s March of Empires, Twitter, Facebook, Candy Crush: Soda Saga and Minecraft: Windows 10 Edition.

LG sells the Gram with a one-year warranty.

Configurations

The LG Gram we reviewed costs $1,099 and comes with Intel Core i5-7200U CPU, 8GB of RAM, a 256GB SSD and a fingerprint reader. The $999 base model has the same specs, minus the fingerprint reader, and comes in white, instead of the gunmetal of the more expensive model.

Bottom Line

The LG Gram is a superthin PC with a flat keyboard, dark screen and webcam that focuses on your chin. Sure, you get 10 hours of battery life, but why power such a miserable experience for 10 hours?

Your best bet in this price range is the Dell XPS 13, our overall top pick, which starts at $799.99 (but you should spring for the $1,100 model if you can afford it). It’s got an astonishing screen, long battery life and a comfortable keyboard, though the camera is still in an odd spot and it’s bulkier than the Gram.

The Gram’s slender build doesn’t make up for its weaknesses, and we can’t recommend it.

(laptopmag.com, https://goo.gl/8bbpQ9)

Fujifilm GFX 50S vs Pentax 645Z vs Hasselblad X1D : MEDIUM-FORMAT COMPARED

Introduction

Introduction

Digital medium format has previously been the preserve of professional photographic businesses; commercial concerns that can justify investing tens of thousands of dollars on a tool that offers resolution and image quality beyond the capabilities of consumer cameras (or, at least, those that can recoup the rental cost). These cameras have tended to have 54 x 40mm (essentially the 645 film format) or 44 x 33mm sensors: considerably larger than used in most DSLRs. They were also often based on CCD chips, since these are easier to build on large scales and small volumes and cleaner at low ISO settings (though with limited dynamic range by modern standards).

As full frame cameras have become less expensive, this has put pressure on the medium format market (particularly the smaller variant) but has also seen CMOS technology filter upwards. This has led to us starting to see the first sub-$10,000 medium format cameras. The first that a dedicated hobbyist might consider, as well as wider professional market. So, as we keep being asked, which of these cameras is best?

Read full post here:
https://www.dpreview.com/articles/9372980153/fujifilm-gfx-50s-vs-pentax-645z-vs-hasselblad-x1d

Epson EH-TW9300 Projector Review : Yet another best buy for Epson

Hình ảnh có liên quan

What is the Epson EH-TW9300?

The EH-TW9300 is the top-of-the-range bulb-based home cinema projector from Epson for 2017. It sits above the recently reviewed EH-TW7300 and adds a claimed higher contrast ratio, with 200 more lumens, better black levels and it retails for £2,999/$4,498. But in every other way the TW9300 is identical to the TW7300. As such the chassis design, motorised lens cover and 4K HDR compatibility are all present and correct. The fact that the EH-TW9300 can accept 4K UHD signals and display them in a faux 3840 x 2160 image is a key feature at this price point.

The Epson is also available in a TW9300W varient that, for an extra £300/$450, adds MHL connectivity for smartphone and tablet content along with WirelessHD for sending HD signals without long HDMI cable runs and it comes in white. We are reviewing the black coloured TW9300 unit without those features.

Read full post here:
https://www.avforums.com/review/epson-eh-tw9300-projector-review.13460

Vivo Y53 Unboxing, Hands-on Initial Review : A Notch Below the Y55?

Affordable Alternatives

While you may know Vivo more for their selfie-centric, V series smartphones, the Chinese company has a beefy array of mid-ranged smartphones that won’t break the bank. Towards the end of 2016, they released the Y55; a smartphone sporting a Snapdragon 430, paired with 2GB of RAM and 16GB of storage. Hoping to offer another smartphone for those on a tighter budget, the company’s local arm brought over the Vivo Y53 that arrived last March. Today, we’re going to take it out of its packaging to give it you our initial impressions of this mid-ranged phone.

Vivo Y53 Specifications