Samsung's New Triple-Lens Smartphone Is Surprisingly Affordable

collected by :John Smith

Surprise, surprise; it's not the Galaxy S10 - and normal people will be able to afford it. The Samsung Galaxy A7 a a mid-range Android phone with a seriously cool trick up its sleeve. As you can see from the above image, the Samsung Galaxy A7 packs no fewer than three lenses into the rear chassis in a vertical alignment. Samsung's intelligent Scene Optimiser - which debuted on the Samsung Galaxy S9 - is also back for another go around. One thing's for sure: the price tag will be nowhere near the Samsung Galaxy Note 9 or Apple iPhone XS.


CUBOT's New 6000 mAh Smartphones: Who Calls a Smartphone King Kong?

This builds on their first generation King Kong (for some reason there isn't a King Kong 2), with a ruggedized design focusing on the ability for construction workers to drop the phone and for it still to work, hence the King Kong name. Here are some images of the King Kong (1), as they did have that on display. The King Kong 3 is expected to have a similar design. If we head on over to the Cubot website, you'll notice that the webpage for the King Kong line is full of standard King Kong imagery – in actual fact, what looks like direct imagery from the King Kong movie from 2005, just flipped left to right. It uses the same MT6763T SoC as the King Kong 3, but it offers a 6 GB DRAM and 128 GB storage.

CUBOT's New 6000 mAh Smartphones: Who Calls a Smartphone King Kong?

Why HTC's New Cheap High-End Smartphone Won't Revitalize The Company

as informed in Now tech media outlets and industry analysts are tipping the Taiwanese company to release a new smartphone called the U12 Life. "There is little to differentiate the U12 Life from the sea of other Android smartphones out there," Mawston says. "The U12 Life is unlikely to stand out on crowded store shelves."HTC declined to answer a request for comment on the U12 Life. He calls the U12 Life a "flagship" model with "conservative" pricing. HTC Chairwoman Cher Wang had previously said her company would focus on developing new products in a shift toward the mid-tier smartphone market.

Tell Your Smartphone Where It Hurts: New App Intuitively Tracks Pain

LISTEN UP: Add the new Michigan Medicine News Break to your Alexa-enabled device, or subscribe to our daily audio updates on iTunes, Google Play and Stitcher. By providing a 3D image of the body, the app lets users "paint" their pain on anatomically accurate models to help identify the location and intensity of discomfort — and provide a more objective measurement of pain. The aim: to track, analyze and communicate details that might be lost or misinterpreted with existing pain assessment methods. "Whether the patient has a migraine, fibromyalgia or dental pain, we can measure whether a particular medication or clinical procedure is effective for each localized or spread pain condition," DaSilva adds. "GeoPain is a GPS for pain health care."The free app can be downloaded via Google Play or Apple's App Store and at GeoPain.com.

Tell Your Smartphone Where It Hurts: New App Intuitively Tracks Pain




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