This year, as always, many new phones have come onto the market, making a purchase decision a tough task. It has been an especially hard year to make a choice, as there are many more high-quality offerings than usual, from manufacturers new and old.
Posts published by “David Horowitz”
Over the past week, Razer and HTC have both shown off their newest smartphones and, surprisingly, both have very large batteries.
The iPhone 8 and 8 Plus are being overshadowed by the imminent launch of the iPhone X. While the iPhone X introduces a new and exciting design, it also costs $1,000 and lacks a Touch ID sensor, which it replaces with new facial recognition technology.
Smartphones have undergone massive evolutions over the last 10 years. Screen tech has improved massively, from resolution to panel type. Phone cameras have improved to the point where they can replace point and shoot cameras.
Photography is a hard hobby to get into. To get great photos, you have to purchase one of many different camera bodies, with one of many different expensive lenses to produce a winning combo.
Last year, Google introduced their new smartphone line: Pixel, and they released the Pixel and Pixel XL at premium prices in hopes of competing in the high-end market.
I love smartphones. If you’ve read my column before, this probably does not come as a surprise. To help my addiction, I utilize T-Mobile’s original JUMP plan, which I’ve had since 2013.
Last week, we looked at the fall of Motorola. Google’s purchase of Motorola gave Android fans hope that Google would be implementing vertical integration in an Apple-like manner.
It’s 2005. Your mother’s Motorola RAZR is state of the art in the world of pink engineering. By 2007, 130 million RAZR phones had been sold.
On Tuesday, Sept. 12, Apple showed the iPhone X off to the world. It has lots of neat features and improvements, including a cool 4-digit price tag.