Pinterest now lets you find things you can’t describe

Pinterest – which recently announced that it now has over 100 million monthly active users – is rolling out a new search tool that will allow you search for stuff that the company says “you don’t have the words to describe.” The tool will be available on both mobile as well as the Web.

“Sometimes you spot something you really love on Pinterest, but you don’t know how to find it in real life, or what it’s even called,” the company said in a blog post. “There’s that perfect lamp hiding in a Pin of someone’s living room, or maybe a random street style shot with the exact shoes you’re looking for.”

As you can see in the image above, the new search tool is located at the top-right corner of a pin, and lets you select the part of the Pin you’re interested in. This will lead to the service displaying visually similar pins, letting you know what that particular item is called and where you can find it – you can even filter the results based on topic to narrow down your…

from GSMArena.com – Latest articles http://ift.tt/1kjWP4V
via IFTTT

Daily video views on Snapchat triple to 6 billion

Snapchat’s daily video views figure now stands at over 6 billion, tripling since the month of May. The latest figure was first reported by the Financial Times and has been since confirmed by the ephemeral messaging app company.

To put the figure into perspective, the number of videos viewed on the world’s largest social network Facebook now stands at 8 billion, doubling since April this year. However, what’s worth mentioning here is that Facebook’s audience is both on desktop and mobile, while Snapchat is a mobile-only service.

A couple of months ago, Snapchat rolled out a new feature, dubbed Lenses, that allowed users to add real-time special effects and sounds to their Snaps. And just last month, the company launched Sponsored Lenses as an option for advertisers to put their brand alongside people’s selfies.

For those who aren’t aware, back in 2013, Facebook tried to acquire Snapchat for a total of 3 billion in cash, but the offer was turned down by the…

from GSMArena.com – Latest articles http://ift.tt/1GSdp6d
via IFTTT

Upgraded Xiaomi Redmi 2A gets a price cut, to cost same as standard model

Shortly after it was revealed that Xiaomi managed to ship an impressive 11 million Redmi 2A units till now, the company has given the upgraded version of the device a price cut, which will be effective starting November 11.

For those who aren’t in the know, the upgraded model differs from the standard model in terms of RAM and internal memory – while the latter comes with 1GB/8GB memory, the former doubles the amount and comes with 2GB/16GB memory.

As for the price cut, the upgraded model will be available for RMB 499 ($78), which is the same price tag that the standard model carries. This means you will be able to get double the RAM and internal memory without having to shell out any extra…

from GSMArena.com – Latest articles http://ift.tt/1Mu63pA
via IFTTT

Alleged Samsung Galaxy Golden 3 receives TENAA certification

The Samsung SM-W2016 – which was spotted listed on GFXBench last month and is alleged to be the Golden Galaxy 3 flip phone – has been certified by China’s Telecommunication Equipment Certification Center (TENAA), revealing most of its key specs, although no images were included.

Galaxy Golden (2013)

The TENAA listing reveals that the device is powered by an octa-core 2.1GHz processor, and sports 3.9-inch internal and external (768×1280 pixel) displays – it’s worth mentioning that the GFXBench listing suggested a 4.6-inch HD screen instead, although we told you that benchmarks have got this wrong quite a few times in the past.

Moving on, it has 3GB RAM and 64GB non-expandable internal memory. In terms of camera, the device features 16MP rear unit and a 5MP front shooter. Weighing in at 204 gms and measuring 120.4 × 61 × 15.1 (mm), the handset runs Android 5.1.1 Lollipop out-of-the-box, and will be available in golden color…

from GSMArena.com – Latest articles http://ift.tt/1Hp1T1T
via IFTTT

Best Apps and Games of the Week

Signal

Signal is yet another instant messaging app that lets you do one on one chats, group messaging and even voice calls. Signal’s main focus is on privacy, with end-to-end encryption in place for single and group messaging. Signal is also open source, so anyone can take a peek at the source code and see what the app is up to. If that’s something that interests you, Signal is available on iOS and Android.

Price: Free

Download: iOS • Android

Unroll.Me

Unroll.Me goes through your email and lists all the mails you get from subscription services. It then lets you unsubscribe from the ones you don’t want by a left swipe, or keep them in your inbox with a right swipe. Or you can swipe up to add them to Rollup, where those particular subscriptions will appear in a daily digest instead of in your inbox. The app supports multiple email accounts.

Price: Free

Download: iOS

Google Indic Keyboard

Google’s Hindi Keyboard is now Indic Keyboard and supports 12 different languages, including Assamese, Bengali, English, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Oriya, Punjabi, Tamil, and Telugu. You can either type in the native script or use the transliteration feature to type in English and then have it converted to the selected language.

Price: Free

Download: Android

Room Three

Following the excellent The Room and Room Two comes the new Room Three. The puzzles are a lot longer and more elaborate this time around and more challenging but not punishingly so. If you ever get stuck, the game still has the hint system to gently guide you alone. The game introduces some new mechanics and continues with the creepy tone of the previous games. Unfortunately, it doesn’t look particularly better and some assets are noticeably low resolution on the iPad, but other than that this is bigger and better than both the first two games. It’s only available on iOS but will probably show up on Android later like the previous games.

Price: $4.99

Download: iOS

Asphalt Nitro

Asphalt Nitro is the latest in the Asphalt series, although oddly only available on Android. The game doesn’t seem much like a sequel to Asphalt 8 but more like Asphalt 8 Lite, with more of the same. The Lite part refers to the size, the game prides itself in being only 25MB in size, whereas Asphalt is over one and a half gigabyte. The game really though is more of the same, but somehow less. Other than a handful of new tracks it doesn’t seem like you are playing a different game. But if you liked Asphalt 8 then you’d like this as well. The small size is just a bonus.

Price: Free

Download: Android

Starific

Starific is a fast-paced arcade game where you rotate the walls of a grid to keep the bouncing stars within the grid and collect. things and earn multipliers. The game has an easy control system where you just turn your thumb around in a circle to move the walls around. Your job is to keep at least one of the bouncy stars within the walls, which is easier said than done. Starific has flashy, attractive visuals and a pretty awesome soundtrack. Definitely worth a try.

Price: Free

Download: iOS •…

from GSMArena.com – Latest articles http://ift.tt/1L4UDDA
via IFTTT

LG V10 battery life test

The LG V10 garnered a very positive response from our readers and it is indeed an excellent phone. It has two potential drawbacks – the Snapdragon 808 doesn’t have the best GPU for 3D gaming and the 3,000mAh battery is a bit too small for a phone of this size and weight.

Indeed, the LG G2 – a noticeably smaller and lighter phone from 2013 – had a 3,000mAh battery and it didn’t have a huge, high-res 5.7″ QHD display to feed.

And then there’s the second screen. LG could have gone with AMOLED, but chose a more complicated engineering solution to keep the second screen always on in a power efficient way. We ran a standby test with the screen on and off and found that it leads to a 70% increase in standby power draw.

Still, the impact on the endurance rating isn’t huge, it goes down from 56h when the second screen is off to 46 hours. You’ll get around two days of moderate usage in either case. There’s an option to enable the second screen only when the main display is on, if you want to stretch out the battery.

The talk time of under 17 hours was a little disappointing. The LG G Flex2 lasted an hour longer and the Galaxy S6 edge+ almost doubled the result, both have the same 3,000mAh capacity.

JRGRAPH_EXPANDABLE_VERSION = true;.jrGraphContainer { background: none !important; border-bottom: 1px solid #eee !important;}.jrGraph { padding-left: 0 !important; left: 96px !important;}

Talk time

Samsung Galaxy Tab Pro 10.1 LTE
46:44h

Lenovo Vibe Z2 Pro
33:20h

Huawei Ascend Mate2 4G
33:19h

Oppo R7 Plus
30:46h

OnePlus 2
30:29h

Samsung Galaxy S6 edge+
30:29h

Motorola DROID Turbo
30:09h

Microsoft Lumia 640 XL LTE Dual SIM
29:46h

Microsoft Lumia 640 XL
29:46h

Microsoft Lumia 640 XL Dual SIM
29:46h

Microsoft Lumia 640 XL LTE
29:46h

HTC One (M8) for Windows
28:34h

Samsung Galaxy Note5
28:34h

Nokia Lumia 1520
28:34h

Samsung Galaxy Note 4
28:31h

Sony Xperia Z4 Tablet LTE
28:25h

Sony Xperia Z5 Compact
28:23h

Samsung Galaxy S5
27:37h

Sony Xperia Z1
26:53h

Samsung Galaxy S6 active
26:29h

Motorola Moto X Play
26:28h

Samsung P6800 Galaxy Tab 7.7
25:45h

LG G3
25:38h

LG G Pro 2
25:37h

LG G Flex
25:19h

Sony Xperia T2 Ultra
25:16h

LG G2
25:15h

Huawei Ascend Mate
25:12h

BlackBerry Passport
25:12h

Samsung Galaxy A7 Duos
25:12h

Motorola Nexus 6
25:03h

Samsung Galaxy A8
25:02h

Samsung Galaxy A8 Duos
25:02h

Alcatel Hero
25:02h

Oppo N1
25:01h

Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
24:52h

Sony Xperia Z Ultra
24:23h

Apple iPhone 6 Plus
23:49h

LG AKA
23:20h

Sony Xperia Z3
23:13h

Microsoft Lumia 640 LTE Dual SIM
23:09h

Microsoft Lumia 640 LTE
23:09h

Microsoft Lumia 640 Dual SIM
23:09h

Oppo R7
22:58h

Samsung P6200 Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus
22:42h

Motorola Moto E (2nd gen)
22:36h

Motorola Moto X Style
22:23h

ZTE Nubia Z9
22:20h

Huawei MediaPad 7 Vogue
22:16h

Sony Xperia Z2
22:13h

Samsung Galaxy Core LTE
22:13h

HTC One Max
22:13h

Lenovo ZUK Z1
22:13h

Nokia Lumia 1020
22:13h

Nokia Lumia 1320
22:13h

Sony Xperia C3 Dual
22:11h

Meizu MX4 Pro
22:09h

Yota YotaPhone 2
22:09h

Samsung ATIV SE
22:05h

Xiaomi Redmi Note
21:41h

Samsung Galaxy Note Edge
21:39h

Motorola RAZR MAXX
21:18h

Xiaomi Mi 4i
21:02h

Meizu m2 note
20:55h

LG Optimus G Pro E985
20:45h

HTC One M9
20:44h

Sony Xperia Z1 Compact

from GSMArena.com – Latest articles http://ift.tt/1SBBeAb
via IFTTT

Top 10 trending phones of week 45

The Samsung Galaxy J series continues to triumph in our weekly Top 10 trending phones, but this week the top trio was disrupted by a newcomer. The Galaxy J7 keeps the #1 spot where it has been for ages (well, many weeks anyway), but at #2 is the new OnePlus X.

The long-awaited compact OnePlus boasts a metal frame and 5″ AMOLED screen, though sharper than what the Galaxy J5 offers (1080p vs. 720p). The J5, by the way, dropped down to #3.

The J-series continues to dominate overall, with the affordable Galaxy J2 rising through the ranks going from 7th to 4th. If you want a Super AMOLED on a budget, the J2 seems to the popular pick. The OnePlux X is $250/€200 though, so we’ll see how things develop next week.

The popularity of the Apple iPhone 6s dropped, after two weeks in 5th it now resides just above the last place in the Top 10.

That place is occupied by a newcomer – the Samsung Galaxy On7. While the Js are already pretty affordable, On series pushes things even further. The Galaxy On7 packs a 5.5″ 720p screen, a modest quad-core 1.2GHz processor and a surprisingly decent camera department: 13MP/1080p main shooter and a 5MP selfie cam.

.news-item .n-left {
float: left;
width: 25%;
text-align: center;
}
.news-item .n-right {
float: left;
width: 75%;
}
.news-item a { padding-bottom: 0; padding-left: 0; }
#review-body .news-item .n-right h2,
.reviews-item .n-right h2 {
clear: both;
padding: 0 0 3px 0px;
font: 400 19px Google-Oswald, Arial;
margin-top: -4px;
}
.n-right p {
margin-top: 25px; line-height: 155%;
}
.news-item {
padding-top: 10px;
padding-bottom: 0px;
border-top: 1px solid #ccc;
}
.news-item p { margin-left: 0; }
.n-right h2 .phone-name {
display: inline-block;
width: 325px;
overflow: hidden;
vertical-align: text-bottom;
}
.n-right h2 a {
text-decoration: none;
color: #000;
}
.flat-button{
text-align:center;
text-decoration: none !important;
font: 400 22px Google-Oswald,Arial !important;
-webkit-font-smoothing: antialiased;
font-size: 150%;
padding: 20px 60px !important;
display: inline-block;
white-space: nowrap;
-webkit-border-radius: 5px;
-moz-border-radius: 5px;
border-radius: 5px;
margin: 10px 0;
-webkit-transition: all 0.2s ease-in-out;
-ms-transition: all 0.2s ease-in-out;
-moz-transition: all 0.2s ease-in-out;
-o-transition: all 0.2s ease-in-out;
transition: all 0.2s ease-in-out;
color: #fff !important;
}
.flat-button-1 {
background: #0CADA7;
}
.flat-button-1:hover {
background: #0A948F;
color: #666666 !important;
}
.flat-button-2 {
background: #FF7E47;
}
.flat-button-2:hover {
background: #EE7440;
color: #666666 !important;
}
.n-right .rank-info {
display: inline-block;
font-family: “Google-Oswald”,​Arial,​sans-serif;
font-size: 18px;
font-weight: 100;
}
.n-right .rank-info .current-rank {
font-size: 23px;
}
.circle {
background: none repeat scroll 0 0 #8fb28f;
border-radius: 50%;
height: 23px;
width: 23px;
display: inline-block;
margin: 0px 10px -1px 10px;
}
.arrow {
width: 0;
height: 0;
border-style: solid;
display: inline-block;
margin: 0px 10px -1px 10px;
}
.arrow-up {
border-width: 0 15px 25px 15px;
border-color: transparent transparent #0cada7 transparent;
}
.arrow-down {
border-width: 25px 15px 0 15px;
border-color: #ff7e47 transparent transparent transparent;
}

Samsung Galaxy J7
RANK: 1WAS: 1

specs review

OnePlus X
RANK: 2NEW IN

specs review

Samsung Galaxy J5
RANK: 3WAS: 2

specs review

Samsung Galaxy J2
RANK: 4WAS: 7

specs gallery

Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime
RANK: 5WAS: 3

specs review

Samsung Galaxy Note5
RANK: 6WAS: 4

specs review

Sony Xperia Z5
RANK: 7WAS: 9

specs review

Samsung Galaxy S6
RANK: 8WAS: 8

specs review

Apple iPhone 6s
RANK: 9WAS: 5

specs…

from GSMArena.com – Latest articles http://ift.tt/1PiSNXg
via IFTTT

LG V10 camera – the GSMArena video review

Smartphones have all but made useless the dedicated point-and-shoots and are now starting to venture into DSLR territory when it comes to features. Of course, there’s no substitute for a large sensor and there’s only so much you can do with a tiny smartphone imager as physics is pretty impossible to find a way around.

That said, the LG V10 has what is likely the best all-round camera setup on a smartphone today. 16MP resolution, optically stabilized fast f/1.8 lens, laser autofocus, and an LED flash can hardly leave you wanting on the hardware end. And when others have been upping megapixel count on their front cams, LG went all out and installed not one but two units – one for regular shots, one for super-wide selfies.

An area, which can use some improvement with most smartphone manufacturers is manual control, but it’s hard to find fault with the LG V10 in this respect. Sure it has a full Auto mode, but if you want you can take over and adjust every bit of the exposure, have manual focus and white balance, all the while looking at a live histogram.

But where the V10 stands without competition is manual video control. Frame and bit rate adjustment, precise tuning of the volume of all three mics, a gain slider – plenty of exclusive features.

We tried not to miss anything in our detailed look at how the camera operates and we’ve focused on image quality and manual video controls in our video review of the LG V10’s camera. Enjoy it, and be sure to check out the old-fashioned written review as…

from GSMArena.com – Latest articles http://ift.tt/1Nk393c
via IFTTT

Weekly poll: LG V10, hot or not?

LG’s late year flagship, the LG V10, boasts rare and unique features and an elegant, rugged design. The second screen kicks notifications into overdrive, so much more informative than a notification light. It also boosts multitasking, but only if you hold the large, 192g phone with both hands.

The main screen is pretty impressive too, a refinement of the LG G4 screen with improved contrast. The battery life was nothing spectacular though, on the plus side keeping the second screen always on didn’t have a major impact.

The LG V10 has the most advanced photography department we’ve seen yet. We’ve played with our fair share of PureViews, but the manual controls – especially for video – available on the V10 are unmatched. The mic directionality and ability to use a wireless Bluetooth mic are a boon for budding videographers.

The selfie craze is reaching fever pitch with dual selfie cams. Instead of 3D or refocus fads, these are for the social aspects – the second 120° lens lets you get so many more of your friends in the shot.

LG’s latest heavy hitter has numerous hardware protections against shocks, enough to earn it a military-grade certification. It has a rigid stainless steel frame with silicone bumpers to absorb shocks and a dual glass solution on the front.

Like HTC recent offering (the One A9), the LG V10 picks the more modest chipset – Snapdragon 808. Having seen water cooling solutions for the S810 from Microsoft, there are no excuses from LG for using the lesser-powered chipset.

Still, the pricing is great – cheaper than the Galaxy S6 edge+ and if you snag an LG V10 in the US by the November 15 you get a 200GB microSD card (the V10 has a slot for it, yay!), a second battery plus a charging cradle for it.

So, what say you: LG V10, hot or not?

You can check out our video review of the LG V10 camera for more info and yes, you can change your vote after…

from GSMArena.com – Latest articles http://ift.tt/1PvHlGn
via IFTTT

Week 45 in review: Huawei Kirin 950 and Galaxy S7 rumors

Yet another week is behind us and it’s time to recap the major events from it in case you’ve missed any of them. Huawei released its new Kirin 950 chipset – despite widespread criticism, the Chinese OEM never gave up on its ambitions to deliver custom chipsets and its latest looks ready to compete with the best out there. All that remains now is to really see it in action, hopefully in the eagerly-anticipated Huawei Mate 8, said to arrive on November 26.

But, don’t be too quick to bet it all on Huawei, as the Samsung Galaxy S7 is already on its way, with rumors of an early 2016 launch and also, apparently, a brand new 12MP sensor. Sources suggest that it will be a type 1/2″ sensor and be dubbed “BRITECELL”. This contradicts previous speculations that Samsung will be utilizing the Sony Xperia Z5 sensor for its next flagship, but nothing is confirmed yet. You can also watch out for the upcoming Meizu Pro 5 mini, the Galaxy J3 and the Vivo X6.

But, enough about rumors, there were quite a few interesting device announcements during the week as well, like the Micromax Canvas 5, with an octa-core Mediatek SoC and an undoubtedly competitive price tag. Gionee also has a new addition to its ranks – the powerful Elife S Plus. Also, there is yet another Zenfone 2 now available in the US. It is dubbed “Laser”, so you can start from there when trying to explain which one you want exactly.

In other news, you probably shouldn’t leave the Nexus 6P in a back pocket, unless you fancy a quick LG G Flex-style curve redesign. And if you are looking to save a few bucks on iPhone or iPad storage, a repair shop in China can allegedly do some chip-swapping surgery for a fraction of the price.

.news-item .n-left {
float: left;
width: 28%;
text-align: center;
}
.news-item .n-right {
float: left;
width: 70%;
}
.news-item a { padding-bottom: 0; padding-left: 0; }
.news-item .n-right h2,
.reviews-item .n-right h2 {
clear: both;
padding: 0 0 3px 0px !important;
font: 400 19px Google-Oswald, Arial;
margin-top: -4px;
}
.n-right p {
line-height: 155%;
}
.news-item {
padding-top: 10px;
padding-bottom: 0px;
border-top: 1px solid #ccc;
}
.news-item p { margin-left: 0; }
.n-right h2 a {
text-decoration: none;
color: #000;
}

Micromax launches Canvas 5 with octa-core 1.3GHz MediaTek CPU and 5.2-inch display
This comes over a couple of years after the company launched the Canvas 4 smartphone.

Nexus 6P fails the bend test, again
A couple of weeks ago, JerryRigEverything.com made a video where they put the new Nexus 6P through a series of tests, including scratch tests for the glass, a heat test for the display, and finally a …

Huawei Kirin 950 SoC beats Exynos 7420 in leaked GeekBench score
The result lists the same device model as an earlier GFXBench score and could be from the upcoming Huawei Mate 8

Asus unveils a new Zenfone 2 Laser for the US, out today for $199
The handset is part of the company’s expanding Zenfone-branded line of Android smartphones.

Repair shop in China can upgrade the storage on your iPhone, iPad
A complicated procedure that involves soldering the chips at 300°C and bypassing software blocks.

LeTV receives over 11 million Le 1s pre-orders in a week
Carrying a price tag of around $173, the smartphone features a MediaTek Helio X10 chipset and sports a 5.5″ IPS LCD display of 1080p resolution.

Analyst: Apple will bring back the 4” iPhone in next year
iPhone mini rumors are almost as old as the iPhone itself. However, the iPhone 5s can’t last another year.

The Kirin 950 SoC goes official, posts a record AnTuTu score
Now that the specs of the HiSilicon chip are clear, all that remains is to see if it debuts inside the eagerly-anticipated Huawei Mate 8.

New powerful Huawei handset pops up on GFXBench, could it be the Mate 8
The leaked specs could very well be of the Mate 8, but there are a few discrepancies with past rumors.

Gionee Elife S Plus goes official with AMOLED screen, USB Type-C port
Gionee…

from GSMArena.com – Latest articles http://ift.tt/1PvHjye
via IFTTT