This Samsung T7 Shield portable SSD makes me want to do laundry with it

This Samsung T7 Shield portable SSD makes me want to do laundry with it

Rugged devices often look like tanks, but the design of this portable SSD might make you think of something completely unrelated.

Our modern world revolves around data, particularly those stored in digital form. More and more jobs revolve around digital objects, not to mention how we live every day with photos taken by phones and digital cameras. It is not enough to store data on our laptops or desktops. We find ourselves constantly moving files between devices and lugging around additional storage devices. That has given rise to a breed of rugged hard drives and SSDs, and Samsung’s latest portable solution almost makes you want to test its mettle in the laundry.

Designer: Samsung


binary comment

Let’s move on. The portable SSD fits comfortably in your palm and can be used as a laundry soap bar. Despite not being familiar with the object, there are still laundry detergent capsules and liquid detergents. Admittedly, one can also associate the ridged surface of the Samsung T7 Shield with the treads of a tank, but the bar-like form of the portable SSD makes that idea less sticky.

That almost comical design choice does have some benefit to the drive’s rugged nature. The thicker elastomer material and the ridges offer the best protection against impacts. They are more effective than drives that have smoother or flatter surfaces. And, yes, the T7 Shield is also IP65 (not IP68) rated against minute particles like dust and a few splashes of water. Despite its looks, it definitely won’t survive washing your clothes.


The Samsung T7 Shield is no larger than a credit card, at least in length and width, making it easy to slip into your pocket on the go. It is not just for work but can also be used as an extra storage space for photos, games, and other data. Of course, you won’t be able to carry your console with you everywhere, but the SSD’s speed will shave off a few minutes when you start copying games to the machine.

Of course, the portable SSD isn’t just all looks and tough talk. It naturally boasts some fast data transfer speeds, which is the main point of expensive SSDs, and high storage capacities of up to 2TB. Although the SSD is not made of sustainable materials, Samsung tried to reduce its environmental impact by using smaller tray packaging. Unsurprisingly, the Samsung T7 Shield rugged portable SSD isn’t exactly inexpensive, which is typical for SSDs, even more for portable SSDs. If you are in the market for a portable and fast storage solution, however, you might as well invest in something that can protect your data digitally and physically. Just try not to mistake this for a bar of soap.

binary comment

binary comment

https://www.yankodesign.com/images/design_news/2022/04/this-samsung-t7-shield-portable-ssd-makes-me-want-to-do-laundry-with-it/samsung-t7-shield-8.jpg

Sniper Elite 5 preview: Cult hit highlights the best things fans love

Sniper Elite 5 preview: Cult hit highlights the best things fans love

Sniper Elite first visited me in a dream. Seriously. In the summer of 2014, my subconscious was rinsing out whatever I’d read on the internet that day, and I woke up with a compulsion I have never felt before. Where Richard Dreyfus sculpted a mountain out of mashed potatoes, I would buy Sniper Elite 3.

I think about that premonition every time I have played the game, from 2014 to 2017’s Sniper Elite 4, and in a two-and-a-half-hour preview of Sniper Elite 5 that Rebellion Entertainment organized two weeks ago. Such gut feeling, that You-will-go-to-the-Dagobah-system imperative, is absolutely necessary to enjoy a game that demands the player meet it on its terms, and play at its pace. It took all 150 minutes I had with Sniper Elite 5 to blunder through the second chapter mission and complete only its core objectives — not even the optional kill that usually represents a level’s greatest tension and action. But I loved every second.

In Sniper Elite 5, the one-man surgical strike known as Karl Fairburne is inside France in 1944, pressing the Allied liberation onward from Italy (Sniper Elite 4) and North Africa (Sniper Elite 3). The Allies have broken the Nazis’ Atlantikwall at Normandy and elsewhere, with Karl among the invasion force. But he’s trapped behind enemy lines and regrouping with French resistance fighters. Naturally, the Nazis have some spectacular doomsday idea cooking, and it’s called Operation Kraken. Fairburne, grimacing manfully, is here to shut it down.

Sniper Elite 5, launching at the end of May, follows its predecessor by almost five years, and the gameplay systems I saw spoke of an effort to refine visual information to its most necessary components. Details like Fairiburne’s heart rate (critical for scope-shot sniping) and the noise he creates (running versus sneaking) are now centralized and consistently located in the UI, giving the player a more immediate and natural understanding of how their movement might draw attention. Bigger picture, I felt more aware of where Karl Fairburne was in his world.

This is important, because the level I played in Sniper Elite 5 gave practically no assistance in the form of sound-masked shots. Previous games littered the playing space with generous sound cover, in the form of malfunctioning gasoline-powered generators, or aircraft passing overhead. With sound cover, you can remain where you are and fire without the enemy AI triangulating your position and flushing you out, with gunfire or, worse, grenades.


Sniper Elite 5, it seems, puts the focus back on shooting and relocating. In other words, observing, actually planning, and knowing your escape route ahead of time, and using it whenever you take a big shot, no matter how far away. It’s going back to the slow-burn gameplay that has made the series such a cult hit going back a decade. There are, of course, options to stealth-melee a troublesome sentry, or use the primitive Welrod silenced pistol, or other sub-sonic ammunition to quietly remove an enemy. But this isn’t Far Cry stealth. If you’re going to use silent takedown tactics, Sniper Elite 5 expects you to be closer and faster than its predecessors.

There are menu options to dumb down the enemy AI’s awareness and aggression, or make Karl a straight-up bullet sponge. But played at any respectable level, the order of business is clear: sneak, shoot, and leave. Sniper Elite 5 is also a very iterative game, as indicated by the generous auto-saves and checkpoints throughout the level. If the checkpoints aren’t generous enough, there’s always the means of saving right before you take a big, risky shot. The level I played, which took me into the vineyards of France’s Loire valley, had three paths to the objective, a chateau now serving as a senior Nazi officer’s command post.

It felt as though, true to the older Sniper Elite games, multiple playthroughs of a level were expected, so that the player could determine the best way to the objective. After tangling with an unexpectedly tenacious patrol hanging out at a countryside church along the westernmost path, I restarted and opted for the eastern approach to the castle, even though resistance intel told me it was more heavily guarded. That way still offered more cover, and thus a better opportunity to improve my position step-to-step.

It also unlocked a new infiltration point, the stables by the western gate, for future replays if I wanted to go back and clean up any missed objectives or unclaimed unlockables. Sniper Elite 5 will lean further into weapon customization than previous entries, too, with workbenches placed in appropriate locations to allow players to tune weapons to their playing style.

I didn’t see much of this in my playthrough, focused as I was on reaching the main objective without drawing a hornet’s nest of Nazis down on me. But a preview briefing from Rebellion Entertainment assured us that players can tune their loadouts to support their play style, from pure stealth, to speed, to “control” (meaning using long range shots to move the enemy AI), and then just straight up power, getting inside an enemy position and using the full magazine of a submachine gun to take everyone out.

Throughout this, players will be exploring a richly illustrated world that keeps pace with 60 frames per second animation, even if the dialogue cutscenes look robotic and last-gen. Sniper Elite 5 is not a purely open-world game (ask Sniper: Ghost Warrior 3 how well that idea went for a military sniper game), and invisible boundaries exist, even within the playable space, in the form of walls you can’t mantle or rows of crops you can’t disappear into.

But a multi-pronged solution to the level, a hallmark of Sniper Elite’s design, is still evident. At its heart, the Sniper Elite series is more of a puzzle game than a shooter, whose pieces are manipulated in a third-person perspective at gunpoint. Like chess, it requires planning and patience, both of which seem inimical to the modern shooter genre. If you are willing to make that investment, the game will open up into a beautiful, tense narrative, where you own the decisions and mistakes of Karl Fairburne in a way you just don’t with any other hero in video game shooters.

Sniper Elite 5 launches May 26 on PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows PC, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X.

https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/13YMpLiaqU3P5greiYBRCBuJI40=/0x75:3840×2085/fit-in/1200×630/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/23419515/SE5_Screenshots_WIP_Reveal_Hotshot.jpg

iPhone production in India grows by 50% as iPhone 13 joins lineup

iPhone production in India grows by 50% as iPhone 13 joins lineup

iPhone production in India grew by 50% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2022, according to new market intelligence data. Sales within the country are also growing, despite the fact that average selling prices are increasing through the sale of more premium models.

While Apple initially limited Made in India iPhones to older models, the company confirmed earlier this month that the iPhone 13 has joined the lineup of locally produced devices …

Business Standard reports.

Apple shipped nearly 1 million ‘make-in-India’ iPhones in the country in the first quarter of 2022, a massive jump of 50 per cent (year-on-year) in iPhone shipments from within the country, data showed on Tuesday […]

“The contribution of newer generation iPhones, such as iPhone 13, is almost equal to iPhone 12,” Prabhu Ram, Head- Industry Intelligence Group at CMR, told IANS.

Apple’s enhanced and diversified iPhone production capabilities in India, along with aggressive retail initiatives, continue to contribute to its strong growth momentum in India.

Earlier this month, the tech giant confirmed it has started manufacturing its top-selling iPhone 13 smartphone in India.

Foxconn is Apple’s lead supplier in the country, responsible for all of the iPhone 13 production, while Wistron makes the iPhone SE and iPhone 12.

iPhone 13 production in India was delayed by horrendous revelations about working conditions at one Foxconn plant, resulting in Apple ordering the facility to be closed until the issues were addressed.

A Foxconn plant was shutdown after Apple acted on complaints about working conditions. The details made truly gruesome reading. 

It was at this plant that iPhone 13 production was due to start in January – plans which had to be delayed after Apple put the plant on probation until the problems were resolved.

On the sales side, Apple used to rely on steep discounting to sell iPhones in the price-sensitive market, but CMR says that this has now changed, with the company increasingly relying on premium product appeal.

Photo: Sudip Saha/Unsplash

https://i0.wp.com/9to5mac.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/2022/04/iPhone-production-in-India-grows-by-50.jpg?resize=1200%2C628&quality=82&strip=all&ssl=1

ZTE Axon 40 arriving on May 9 with new under-display camera

ZTE Axon 40 arriving on May 9 with new under-display camera

The Axon 40 smartphone will follow its predecessors on the path of introducing a new version of the under-display camera technology. It will make its official debut on May 9, ZTE now reveals. A previous leak already mentioned we should expect the screen density over the camera to be indistiguishable from the rest of the panel and we now get confirmation it will reach 400 ppi.

ZTE Axon 40 arriving on May 9 with new under-display camera

The under-display camera is likely to be the key feature of the ZTE Axon 40 yet again. Reports are the panel will have 1440p resolution.

A phone called A2023H was certified on TENAA last month, and it might be the Axon 40 Pro, given its top-tier CPU with 3GHz frequency, most likely part of a Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 chipset. There are almost two weeks until the official launch, and we expect to learn more from official teasers in the days leading to the event.

Source (in Chinese)

https://fdn.gsmarena.com/imgroot/news/22/04/zte-axon-40-ofic-date/-952x498w6/gsmarena_001.jpg
Categories
Uncategorized Uncategorized Uncategorized Uncategorized Uncategorized Uncategorized Uncategorized Uncategorized Uncategorized

Motorola Edge 30 goes official with 6.5″ 144Hz OLED display, SD778G+

Motorola Edge 30 goes official with 6.5″ 144Hz OLED display, SD778G+

Want a phone with a 144Hz OLED display, high quality stereo speakers, dual 50MP cameras, mostly clean Android? Motorola’s Edge 30 Pro ticks those boxes, though the €800 price tag (while not as pricey as some flagships) may be a bit much for some. So, how about a phone that costs around half that?

Meet the Motorola Edge 30. It has a starting price of €450 and is coming soon to select markets in Europe, Asia, Australia, India, Latin America and the Middle East. We’ve already hinted at the basics, but let’s go over them in more detail.


Motorola Edge 30
Motorola Edge 30
Motorola Edge 30
Motorola Edge 30

Motorola Edge 30

The vanilla phone has a 6.5” FHD+ AMOLED display, slightly smaller than the 6.7” FHD+ display of the Pro. However, it is still a 10-bit panel with HDR10+ and 144Hz refresh rate. And you get stereo speakers with Dolby Atmos. We’re not seeing any mention of toughened glass, however.

Motorola Edge 30 goes official with 6.5'' 144Hz OLED display, Snapdragon 778G+ chipset

The Edge 30 is powered by the Snapdragon 778G+, an overclocked version of the popular 778G – 0.1 GHz boost to the prime Cortex-A78 based core and a 20% speed-up for the Adreno 642L GPU. On this phone it is paired with 8 GB of RAM and 128 GB or 256 GB storage (no expansion).

The software is Android 12 in a form that is as close to the Pixel experience as it gets outside of Google, plus some Moto modifications (a few extras tucked into the Moto app). The phone is also equipped with Motorola’s desktop environment, Ready For. As usual, Motorola doesn’t make big commitments about OS updates, so keep that in mind.

Moving on to the cameras, the phone has a 50 MP main module, which boasts All-Pixel Autofocus and OIS. Next to it is a 50MP ultrawide-angle camera (118°) that also doubles as a macro camera. Both the main and the ultrawide cams can record 4K video at 30 fps and 1080p at up to 60 fps.

There is no telephoto lens like on the Edge 20, however. Instead, the final camera on the back is a 2MP depth sensor. Continuing on the front, there is a 32MP selfie camera (with pixel binning available).

Motorola Edge 30 goes official with 6.5'' 144Hz OLED display, Snapdragon 778G+ chipset

The Edge 30 is smaller than the Pro, so it’s battery isn’t as big either – the 4,020 mAh capacity should still last a day and a half, by Motorola’s reckoning. And you get a 33W TurboPower charger in the box.

The phone has a decent connectivity package with some omissions. It has a dual-SIM slot and 5G connectivity (sub-6 GHz). The company advertises as the thinnest 5G phone – at 6.79 mm, this may just be true (by a hair and not counting the main camera bump). There is basic dust and splash resistance with an IP52 rating.

Motorola Edge 30 goes official with 6.5'' 144Hz OLED display, Snapdragon 778G+ chipset

Anyway, there is also Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.2 and NFC on board. Note that the USB-C cable is wired only for 2.0 speeds, so the Ready For feature will have to be used wirelessly (Miracast for TVs, Wi-Fi for PCs). Also, there is no 3.5 mm headphone jack.


Motorola Edge 30 in Aurora Green
Motorola Edge 30 in Meteor Grey
Motorola Edge 30 in Supermoon Silver

Motorola Edge 30 in Aurora Green, Meteor Grey and Supermoon Silver

The Motorola Edge 30 has an MSRP of €450 and will be launching in multiple regions around the world soon, more on that as it happens.

https://fdn.gsmarena.com/imgroot/news/22/04/motorola-edge-30-announcement/-952x498w6/gsmarena_000.jpg

Sony to announce new Xperia phones on May 11

Sony to announce new Xperia phones on May 11

Sony is ready to bring its next generation of Xperia phones. The company’s mobile division announced it will hold an event on May 11 where we’ll see the next chapter in the Xperia lineup. The accompanying teaser video linked below makes it pretty clear we’re in for an Xperia 1 IV (mark four) though we could also get new Xperia 5 and Xperia 10 phones.

We’ve already seen renders of the Xperia 1 IV which show out a familiar design language with flatter sides than last year’s Xperia III. The phone is also expected to offer the very latest Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 chipset alongside a 6.5-inch display and a quad-camera with what looks like a dedicated periscope module.

The rumored Xperia 5 IV on the other hand is also said to use a TSMC-sourced Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 chipset. Rumors also suggest a 6.1-inch OLED screen and a triple camera setup on the back.

Xperia 10 IV leaks suggest the phone will look mostly like the Xperia 10 III with a 6-inch OLED display upfront and a triple camera setup on the back.

https://fdn.gsmarena.com/imgroot/news/22/04/sony-xperia-event-may-11/-952x498w6/gsmarena_000.jpg
Categories
Uncategorized

Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 Earbuds will let you live and breathe audio

Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 Earbuds will let you live and breathe audio

Sennheiser continues to redefine the limits of possibility. The brand has just introduced a new pair of wireless earbuds ready to make an impression if we are talking about the audio listening experience.

The company’s MOMENTUM series has been recognized as one of the best, and it now has a new entry in the form of the Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 Earbuds. The brand has raised the standards in wearing comfort, adaptive noise cancellation, and sound quality. This pair takes your audio listening experience to a whole new level.

Designer: Sennheiser


Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 Earbuds

Starting with the design, it’s clear that the pair of earbuds have been made with premium workmanship, remarkable details, and top-quality materials. The tech specs and technology are also designed to deliver the best possible experience. For example, the case of the earbuds looks like a mini speaker because of the fabric used on the outside.

The rounded rectangle box that opens to expose the futuristic-looking earbuds is The stylish pair won a 2022 Red Dot Design Award, so we know this won’t disappoint. It offers a comfortable fit that can last for hours. The pair can fit most ear shapes and sizes with silicone pads.

Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 Design


Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 Earbuds

The MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 is ready for most workouts or adventures. It comes with an IPX4 splash-resistant casing to work out even when you’re sweating or in the rain. The battery can last for seven hours, but the charging case can extend the power up to 28 hours. That’s more than a day of listening with wireless earbuds.

The Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 will be sold for $329. 95 CAD ($258 in the US). The pair will come in graphite or white and black colors. The pair will be released in the market by May 10 but you may now place your pre-order.

Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 Earbuds

Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 Earbuds

Sennheiser knows audio and the brand is something true audiophiles love. The excellence of its products offers audio solutions other companies can’t deliver. Sennheiser knows the consumer audio business, and the Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 will definitely perform as expected.

Durability is already a given because it’s one of the many things Sennheiser is known for. It looks rugged, and the waterproof rating of this pair proves it. It is comfortable and easy to wear. On the technical side, it takes advantage of Sennheiser’s True Response transducer as made possible by the dynamic 7mm drivers. For a better sound experience, the pair comes equipped with Sound Personalization. The Smart Control App also includes presets and an equalizer that users can select from.

Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 Earbuds

Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 Earbuds

Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 Earbuds

Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 Earbuds

https://www.yankodesign.com/images/design_news/2022/04/sennheiser-momentum-true-wireless-3-earbuds-will-let-you-live-and-breathe-audio/Sennheiser-MOMENTUM-earbuds.jpg

iQOO announces Z6 Pro and Z6 44W

iQOO announces Z6 Pro and Z6 44W

Today, the Indian division of IQOO held an event introducing two phones – iQOO Z6 Pro and iQOO Z6 44W. They are entirely new devices with Snapdragon chipsets and AMOLED screens with Schott Xensation protection.

The iQOO Z6 44W is different from the original iQOO Z6 (also sold as vivo T1 5G) and it goes beyond the headlining charging speed. It has an LTE-only Snapdragon 680 chipset with 4GB, 6GB or 8GB RAM and 128GB storage.

iQOO Z6 Pro 5G is official, iQOO Z6 44W also arrives

The Z6 44W is built around a 6. 44″ AMOLED screen of Full HD+ resolution. The refresh rate is limited to 60Hz, though.

iQOO Z6 Pro 5G is official, iQOO Z6 44W also arrives

Around the back is a 50MP main shooter. The other two modules are for macro and depth data and while their resolution isn’t confirmed it’s more than likely 2MP.

What iQOO also does not say is what the software is running on this Z6 44W. Given that the cheaper iQOO Z6 already has Android 12 and Funtouch 12 out of the box, we assume this is the situation here.


vivo iQOO Z6 44W
vivo iQOO Z6 44W

vivo iQOO Z6 44W

The iQOO Z6 44W comes with an ample 5,000 mAh cell with 44W charging support. You can also reverse-wire it.

The iQOO Z6 44W is offered in Lumina Blue and Raven Black starting at INR14,499 ($190) for the 4/128GB version and reaching INR16,999 ($222) for the top 8/128GB model.

iQOO Z6 Pro 5G is official, iQOO Z6 44W also arrives

The iQOO Z6 Pro is advertised as the highest-performing phone in the sub-25K segment in India, based on AnTuTu results. This is achieved thanks to the Snapdragon 778G chipset and 12GB RAM. That’s the top version with 256GB storage, but there are also cheaper 6/128GB and 8/128GB models.

The rear camera setup has 64MP main shooter and an 8MP ultra-wide-angle snapper with 117-degree FoV. The third cam is a 2MP macro shooter.

The front is the same as the iQOO Z6 44W – a 6. 44″ AMOLED with Full HD+ resolution and a waterdrop notch for the selfie camera.

iQOO Z6 Pro 5G is official, iQOO Z6 44W also arrives

iQOO Z6 Pro packs advanced vapor chamber liquid cooling with 32,993 sq.mm total surface area to keep the internals cool and safe.

iQOO Z6 Pro 5G is official, iQOO Z6 44W also arrives

The 4,700 mAh battery inside the Z6 Pro comes with 66W fast-charging capabilities.

The colors are Phantom Dusk and Legion Sky, and prices are INR23,999 ($315/EUR295) for the 6/128GB version, INR24,999 ($325/EUR310) for the 8/128GB version, and INR28,999 ($380/EUR355) for the top 12/256GB edition.

Officials promised us two years of Android updates and three years of security updates once the phones launch during the Amazon Summer Sale, the date of which is yet to be announced.

Source 1 * Source 2

https://fdn.gsmarena.com/imgroot/news/22/04/vivo-iqoo-z6-pro-44w-ofic/-952x498w6/gsmarena_001.jpg

Infinix announces Note 12, Hot 12 and Smart 6 HD

Infinix announces Note 12, Hot 12 and Smart 6 HD

A trio of new Infinix phones was announced today. Infinix Note 12 brings a 6. 7-inch AMOLED display and Helio G88 chipset. Inifinx Hot 12 gets an even larger 6. 82-inch IPS LCD with HD+ resolution as well as a 90Hz refresh rate. Infinix Smart 6 HD is the budget-friendly option in with its 6. 6-inch HD+ LCD and Android 11 (Go Edition) interface.

Infinix Note 12 gets a 50MP main cam on its back alongside a 2MP macro lens and a QVGA auxiliary module. The 16MP selfie cam is housed in a waterdrop notch. MediaTek’s Helio G88 is paired with 4/6GB RAM and up to 128GB built-in storage which is expandable via microSD. The software side is covered by Infinix’s XOS 10. 6 on top of Android 11. Note 12 also gets a 5,000 mAh battery with 33W fast charging.


Infinix Note 12

Infinix Note 12

Infinix Hot 12 is powered by MediaTek’s Helio G85 chipset with 6GB RAM and 128GB storage which is further expandable via microSD. There’s a 13MP main cam around the back next to a 2MP auxiliary module as well as an AI lens. The device packs a 5,000mAh battery with 18W charging. The phone also boots Android 12 with XOS 10. 6 on top.


Infinix Hot 12

Infinix Hot 12

Infinix Smart 6 HD gets an 8MP main cam and AI lens on the back and a 5MP selfie cam housed in a punch-hole cutout. The software side is covered by XOS 7. 6 based on Android 11 Go. You also get a 5,000 mAh battery with 10W charging. There’s an unnamed chipset running at 1. 6Ghz paired with 2GB RAM and 32GB storage.


Infinix Smart 6 HD

Infinix Smart 6 HD

Pricing and availability for the three new phones are yet to be confirmed.

https://fdn.gsmarena.com/imgroot/news/22/04/infinix-note12-hot12-smart-6-ofic/-952x498w6/gsmarena_00.jpg

Inifinix announces Note 12, Hot 12 and Smart 6 HD

Inifinix announces Note 12, Hot 12 and Smart 6 HD

A trio of new Infinix phones was announced today. Infinix Note 12 brings a 6. 7-inch AMOLED display and Helio G88 chipset. Inifinx Hot 12 gets an even larger 6. 82-inch IPS LCD with HD+ resolution as well as a 90Hz refresh rate. Infinix Smart 6 HD is the budget-friendly option in with its 6. 6-inch HD+ LCD and Android 11 (Go Edition) interface.

Infinix Note 12 gets a 50MP main cam on its back alongside a 2MP macro lens and a QVGA auxiliary module. The 16MP selfie cam is housed in a waterdrop notch. MediaTek’s Helio G88 is paired with 4/6GB RAM and up to 128GB built-in storage which is expandable via microSD. The software side is covered by Infinix’s XOS 10. 6 on top of Android 11. Note 12 also gets a 5,000 mAh battery with 33W fast charging.


Infinix Note 12

Infinix Note 12

Infinix Hot 12 is powered by MediaTek’s Helio G85 chipset with 6GB RAM and 128GB storage which is further expandable via microSD. There’s a 13MP main cam around the back next to a 2MP auxiliary module as well as an AI lens. The device packs a 5,000mAh battery with 18W charging. The phone also boots Android 12 with XOS 10. 6 on top.


Infinix Hot 12

Infinix Hot 12

Infinix Smart 6 HD gets an 8MP main cam and AI lens on the back and a 5MP selfie cam housed in a punch-hole cutout. The software side is covered by XOS 7. 6 based on Android 11 Go. You also get a 5,000 mAh battery with 10W charging. There’s an unnamed chipset running at 1. 6Ghz paired with 2GB RAM and 32GB storage.


Infinix Smart 6 HD

Infinix Smart 6 HD

Pricing and availability for the three new phones are yet to be confirmed.

https://fdn.gsmarena.com/imgroot/news/22/04/infinix-note12-hot12-smart-6-ofic/-952x498w6/gsmarena_00.jpg