Thursday, May 19, 2016

Bluboo Mobile's special sales event for 10th anniversary celebration



     

                                     
Online Trading Platforms Support Bluboo Special Event for 10 th Anniversary Celebration

The date for Bluboo special event is from May 16 th to June 5 th . At present, the event is still on-

going and supported by many online trading platforms including Geekbuying, Gearbest, Tomtop,

Igogo, Coolicool, Antelife,etc.,which has lifted the wave of online shopping Spree. Let’s unveil

Bluboo’s speicial offers together.

Speaking of promotion, the first thing that might occur to us is the reduction of price. Let’s begin

with Bluboo flagship smartphone-- Xtouch which features 3D mirror back cover, front fingerprint

scanner and 5.5mm ultra-slim uniboy as well as high configuration of octa-core processor, 8MP

and 13MP camera and larger menory of 3GB RAM and 32GB ROM. Now XTouch is only $129.99

and it’s really amzaing for a smartphone that’s powerful enough to be useful yet cheap enough.

Something cheaper wanted? Bluboo X9 may meet your needs,the price of which drops from

original $149.99 to $129.99. With octa-core processor, 3GB of RAM and 16GB of ROM storage,

5MP+13MP cam and rear fingerprint identification and 5.0’’ FHD screen, it’s really a bargain.

Besides,the original $79.99 Picasso and Xfire2 is quite affordable, and they both sells at $64.99.

Both of them with decent configuration and fabulous appearance are unlocked and can be used

globally, and at these rates you can’t find a better discount anywhere else.

Apart from smartphones, Bluboo smart wear Uwatch also lowers its price from $39.99 to $28.99.

It contains multiple functions, for instance,call & answer, SMS reminding, phone book

synchronize, sleep monitoring, sedentary reminder, pedometer, bluetooth music playing, etc.

Moreover, Uwatch goes perfectly with both android and IOS smart devices.

After the deadline of the special event, all the prices will go up. If you are in need of smart

devices, what are you waiting for? Check the following links for further details.











Monday, May 16, 2016

HTC 10 review

HTC 10 review



If there's one thing you can say about HTC, it's that it's been a victim of its own success.
The One M8 was one of the greatest phones ever made, one that I'll still dust off from 

time to time now just to get a feel for it once more. It was design perfection, filled with 
genuine innovation and offered a great identity too, standing out well from the Android crowd.

The trouble was, that phone was already building on the great HTC One, which started the 'amazing design' trajectory in flagship smartphones that HTC is now famed for. So where did HTC go next? What was the next big innovation, the next great thing that this underdog in the smartphone world was going to bring?

Well, it didn't happen on the One M9, that's for sure. The brand panicked, stuffed the best components into an all-too-familiar shell and hoped the big numbers would make it a success. It wasn't.


                                                                 



This time around, things were going to be different. For the all-new HTC 10 I was told that the brand took things back to basics, made the changes it needed to and focused heavily on making the phone useable and a pleasure to mess around with as before.

But does the HTC 10 impress? Is this the return to true innovation from a company that used to be unafraid to take risks, a reboot back to the winning ways?

Before we get into that, let's take a look at what the phone looks like on paper. It's got an all-metal body, thankfully doesn't go down the same iPhone-a-like design as the One A9 from 2015, and doesn't just stuff in tech for the sake of having a higher spec.


Key features

One of the most irksome features of the HTC One M9 was…well, there weren't really any features to talk about. The same BoomSound speakers were back, firing audio forwards into your face, and the camera was just a 20MP effort that took some okay pictures; not terrible, but nothing you'd tell your friends about down the local watering hole.

In fact, it was just the design that made it worth checking out at all, that combined with HTC's special sauce.

This year, thankfully, there's a lot more to talk about, starting with the efforts made to improve how the phone feels to use. It's got a much lower latency compared to the earlier models, which means the response under the finger is a lot more impressive.

In fact, the constant chat in our briefing about the phone was about 'tuning', that HTC had gone further than any other brand in making the HTC 10 a phone that will impress the second you glide a finger across the screen.

Let's drop out for a second and talk about the name: it's not the HTC One M10, but simply the HTC 10. Apparently, this represents the best ever, the top of the pile, the maximum score you can get in gymnastics.

To me, that sounds like this is HTC's last ever phone. But you can bet there'll be some 'turn it up to 11' tag lines next year when the HTC 11 pops up.



Samsung Galaxy S7 review

Samsung Galaxy S7 review





The Samsung Galaxy S7 finds itself in a slightly tricky situation. Samsung needed a big win from the Galaxy S6 in 2015, which it got after reinventing the design of its flagship smartphone, but you're not going to get the same degree of evolution again just a year later.

This means the Galaxy S7 falls firmly into the iterative camp, building on the solid foundations laid by its predecessor without fiddling with the winning formula too much.

Some will argue this phone should be called the Galaxy S6S, but are they right? I've put the Samsung Galaxy S7 through its paces to see if it's a worthy seventh-generation flagship, or a just cheeky six-point-five instalment.

There's initial good news in the fact that the S7 isn't competing as closely with the Galaxy S7 Edge as the S6 was with the S6 Edge last year, with the curved display variant getting a bump in screen size this time round, taking it more into phablet territory.





That leaves the way clear for the 5.1-inch Galaxy S7 to make its mark as the core flagship handset, and it commands a price tag which places it at the top of the mobile tree. Yet, unlike its predecessor it only comes in one variant (32GB of storage), making pricing more straightforward.
In the UK you're looking at £529 SIM-free, while those in the US will have to part with $199 upfront as part of a two-year contract. In Australia the SIM-free price is set at AU$1,149.
Those prices pretty much match up with the 32GB Galaxy S6, so at least Samsung isn't trying to short-change us, but it's still a considerable amount to part with for a device which isn't exactly reinventing the smartphone wheel.




Design

At first glance you'd be forgiven for thinking the Samsung Galaxy S7 looks almost identical to the Galaxy S6. And that's because it is.
Samsung has reused the premium glass and metal finished it employed on the S6, which finally saw the manufacturer move away from its reliance on plastic to materials which better reflected the flagship price tag it was slapping on its top phones.
On closer inspection though, you'll begin to notice the subtle differences that make the Samsung Galaxy S7 the best looking, and feeling, Galaxy ever.
Samsung has dropped the metallic rim around its iconic physical home key, enabling it to blend a little more seamlessly into the overall aesthetic of the S7, almost masking its existence.