Sunday, October 4, 2020

Best graphics card for gamers and creatives in 2020 - CNET

Picking a new AMD or Nvidia graphics card can be overwhelming. We'll help you get started with everything you need to know.

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Best holiday gifts under $500 for 2020 - CNET

Feeling generous? Here's a handful of choices for one lucky recipient.

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Best iPad to get in 2020: iPad Air 2020 vs. iPad Pro 2020 vs. iPad 2020 vs. iPad Mini 2019 - CNET

Here's help picking out the best iPad to meet your feature and performance needs.

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Best smart speakers of 2020: Comparing Google Nest Mini, Amazon Echo Dot, and Apple HomePod - CNET

These are the best smart speakers you can buy today, no matter which voice assistant you prefer in your home.

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How the Apple Watch can be your kid's phone with Family Setup video - CNET

The setup is easy, but getting my kid to wear it wasn't

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iPhone 12 should have Touch ID like the iPad Air -- but it probably won't - CNET

Commentary: The button makes it easier to unlock the iPad Air without removing a mask for Face Unlock. It also raises questions about whether it will appear in the upcoming iPhone 12.

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Latest Tech News

Two of the best Android phones released in 2020 so far, you really couldn’t go wrong with either the OnePlus 8 Pro or the Samsung Galaxy S20.

We thought we’d get that out of the way at the start, because it’s the last time we’re going to be so magnanimous. Sharing identical review scores, similar pricing, and a nip-and-tuck spec list, we’re looking at an incredibly tight fight. These two phones are direct competitors for your hard-earned money, so it pays to know which holds the overall advantage.

And to do that we need to break things down, spec by spec, and re-examine our thoughts on each. At the end of it all, we’ll bring you our view on which is the better of the two: is it the Samsung Galaxy S20 or the OnePlus 8 Pro? Let’s find out.

Samsung Galaxy S20 vs OnePlus 8 Pro price and availability 

Let’s kick things off with some baseline numbers. Which of these two Android flagship titans is the newest, and which is the cheapest? The two phones launched in 2020 within a month and a half of one another, with the Galaxy S20 landing first on March 6 and the OnePlus 8 Pro arriving a little later on April 21.

In terms of cost, they’re very closely matched indeed. Taking the official Samsung website as our source, prices of the Galaxy S20 start from £799/AU$1,349; note that this 4G Galaxy S20 isn’t available in the US. Over on the OnePlus website, the OnePlus 8 Pro starts from £799/$899 (around AU$1,406), but it isn’t available in Australia.

Further up the price scale, the 5G-ready Samsung Galaxy S20 costs £899 / $1,000 / AU$1,499, and the OnePlus 8 Pro 12GB RAM with 256GB of storage costs £899 / $999 (about AU$1,597).

It should be noted that availability across these models and territories is pretty patchy. Also, you’ll find plenty of discounting if you shop around. Samsung’s own websites in the UK and Australia are currently selling the S20 for less than RRP, for example.

Design

Image 1 of 2

Samsung Galaxy S20

Samsung Galaxy S20 (Image credit: Future)
Image 2 of 2

The OnePlus 8 Pro

The OnePlus 8 Pro (Image credit: Aakash Jhaveri)

These are two handsome flagship phones, each sporting a modern, curvaceous glass-and-metal look. But there are some noteworthy differences.

If we were to make a choice based on aesthetic value alone, we might just be pushed to go with the Samsung Galaxy S20. The South Korean manufacturer makes some of the most attractive phones in the business, and the Galaxy S20 is no exception.

The main advantage it has over the OnePlus 8 Pro is that it’s much lighter at 163g versus 199g, and it’s also half a millimetre thinner. The Galaxy S20 is a centimetre shorter and half a centimetre narrower than the 8 Pro, which makes it a far more pocketable phone.

Beyond being easier to handle, the Samsung dramatically lessens the severity of its display edge curves in comparison to previous generation handsets. More importantly, it’s a far flatter display than that of the OnePlus 8 Pro, which leads to fewer false presses and visual distortions with landscape content.

Both phones opt for a hole-punch selfie camera, but while the OnePlus 8 Pro positions it in the top-left corner, the Galaxy S20 places it centrally. This is largely a matter of preference, but Samsung’s placement is a little more unique to our eyes, not to mention symmetrical.

Turning the two phones over, Samsung has opted to place its camera to one side, while the OnePlus positions its unit in the middle. Both phones wobble on a flat surface, but in different ways. The OnePlus 8 Pro’s camera protrudes more noticeably, however, which we found annoying.

Samsung offers its handset in a wider range of colors – 5 against 3 – and each has a glossier finish than that of the OnePlus 8 Pro. Fans who like their phones a little more understated might prefer OnePlus’s more matte finish.

Kudos to OnePlus for sticking with that physical alert slider, too. It’s a real boon.

Display

Image 1 of 2

OnePlus 8 Pro

OnePlus 8 Pro (Image credit: TechRadar)
Image 2 of 2

Samsung Galaxy S20

Samsung Galaxy S20 (Image credit: Future)

Samsung typically wins when it’s involved in any flagship display comparison, but things aren’t so simple with the OnePlus 8 Pro involved.

Both screens are excellent, and among the very best you can get in a phone today. We’re looking at a pair of vibrant AMOLEDs capable of up to QHD+ resolutions and 120Hz refresh rates.

But the OnePlus 8 Pro wins out for a couple of reasons. The most obvious is that it’s bigger at 6.78 inches next to the Samsung Galaxy S20’s 6.2-inch screen.

More significantly, the OnePlus is capable of outputting at QHD and 120Hz simultaneously. With the Samsung phone, it’s a case of either or.

This means that at any one time, if you crank up the OnePlus 8 Pro screen to the max, it’s either sharper or more fluid than its rival. We’re genuinely surprised that Samsung hasn’t introduced a ‘fix’ with a subsequent update, but we can only assume that the company couldn’t figure out the battery life implications.

It’s a notable win for OnePlus, then, but don’t let that put you off the Samsung Galaxy S20 entirely. We called its display “one of the best screens available on a smartphone right now” in our review, and that remains the case.

Camera 

Samsung Galaxy S20

The Samsung Galaxy S20 (Image credit: Future)

Just a year or two ago, a comparison between these two companies’ flagship phone cameras would have resulted in an easy win for Samsung. The South Korean company has been near the top of the mobile photography tree for years now, while OnePlus has always come up short.

Not any more. The OnePlus 8 Pro offers the first genuinely competitive flagship camera experience from the company yet. That’s largely thanks to a main 48-megapixel f/1.78 Sony IMX689 image sensor, which is one of the largest you’ll find in any phone.

A 48-megapixel ultra-wide-angle lens offers a capable zoomed-out alternative, and while we ‘d have liked a slightly sharper telephoto sensor than the 3x 8-megapixel unit provided, it’s still capable of decent shots. The 5-megapixel colour filter camera is a gimmick, though.

As you’d expect from Samsung, the Galaxy S20 is a highly capable all-round snapper. It might not have the huge main sensor of the Galaxy S20 Ultra, but it still comes up with the goods.

It’s led by a 12-megapixel f/1.8 sensor, which produces larger pixels than its rival (1.8µm versus 1.12µm). This is backed by a 64-megapixel f/2.0 3x telephoto and a 12-megapixel f/2.2 ultra-wide.

Those are the facts and figures, but in reality both are flexible, all-round capable camera systems, and the differences largely come down to variations in color science and the like. In general use, the Samsung Galaxy S20 produces shots with punchier, more vibrant colors that might better suit an Instagram post than those taken with the OnePlus.

The OnePlus 8 Pro, on the other hand, produces more muted but also more natural-looking shots. If you want to capture a moment as it looks to your naked eye, the OnePlus will probably do a better job. However, Samsung’s wide-angle camera takes in a broader field of view than OnePlus’s, which means it’s more useful at what it sets out to do.

In terms of Night mode, the OnePlus 8 Pro’s larger sensor pays off with brighter, less noisy low-light shots. It takes these low-light shots surprisingly quickly, too, which is useful.

When it comes to video, though, the Samsung Galaxy S20 gets bragging rights, with support for 8K video at 30fps. The OnePlus 8 Pro can ‘only’ manage 4K at 60 fps.

Specs and performance 

OnePlus 8 Pro

The OnePlus 8 Pro (Image credit: Aakash Jhaveri)

If we were writing this part of the comparison from the US, then it would be a straight-up tie. Both the OnePlus 8 Pro and the US model of the Samsung Galaxy S20 run on the blazing-fast Snapdragon 865 CPU.

Perhaps the OnePlus 8 Pro would gain a slight edge, thanks to the option of 12GB of LDDR5 RAM over the fixed 8GB in the Samsung Galaxy S20. But this makes minimal difference in practical terms.

As it is, we’re writing this from the UK, where the so-called global model of the Samsung Galaxy S20 is sold. And that phone runs on Samsung’s own Exynos 990 CPU.

We’ve seen this waved away as being roughly equivalent in certain quarters. However, the brutal fact is the Exynos isn’t as fast as the Snapdragon 865, as shown by benchmark tests.

In day-to-day terms, and even with most high-end games, this difference isn’t readily apparent, but it does make the OnePlus 8 Pro slightly more future-proof. We’ve also experienced the odd glitch when it comes to gaming on the Exynos 990, which suggests an inferior level of support from developers.

Another specification that runs in the OnePlus 8 Pro’s favor is 5G, which comes as standard no matter the model you opt for. With the entry-level Galaxy S20, you only get 4G connectivity.

When it comes to storage, both phones have their advantages. The OnePlus 8 Pro offers the option to double your storage to 256GB, while the Galaxy S20 offers 128GB or nothing. However, with the Samsung you also get a microSD slot for expansion purposes, which isn’t included with the OnePlus.

One final area of comparison is software. Samsung has come a long way with its own One UI, to the point where it’s now attractive and easy to use. But OnePlus tops it with its clean and fluid OxygenOS, which feels similar to stock Android but with an extra injection of customizability and speed. You don’t get as much bloatware as you do with the Galaxy S20, either.

Battery life

The OnePlus 8 Pro has a 4510mAh battery, which is much bigger than the Samsung Galaxy S20’s 4000mAh unit. That largely accounts for the difference in size and weight.

Both phones will last a day of normal use, with double figures left in the tank. However, it’s worth pointing out that the OnePlus 8 Pro is generally being asked to do a little more. Or at least it is if you set the screen to output at QHD and 120Hz.

In terms of charging technology, both phones have reversible wireless capabilities, so you can charge your wireless buds off the back of them if you wish. The OnePlus 8 Pro supports 30W wireless charging, if you buy the appropriate charger, while the Samsung supports a slower (but still quick) 15W standard.

If it’s truly the speed you’re after, though, the OnePlus 8 Pro comes out on top with its rapid 30W Warp Charge 30T system. The Galaxy S20 comes with a fast wired charger, too, but it’s a little slower at 25W.

Takeaway

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OnePlus 8 Pro

OnePlus 8 Pro (Image credit: Future)
Image 2 of 2

Samsung Galaxy S20

Samsung Galaxy S20 (Image credit: Future)

It’s tough to separate these two phones, and there are many parallels when it comes to price, design and screen technology. While it’s far from a clean sweep, though, we’d give the clear edge to the OnePlus 8 Pro.

Offering up a bigger display that can be cranked up to QHD and 120Hz simultaneously, this is something the Galaxy S20 simply can’t match. The OnePlus is also a better performer than the global Galaxy S20 model, and you get 5G connectivity regardless of the SKU you opt for.

When it comes to photography, both cameras have their strengths and foibles. The OnePlus 8 Pro’s shots are perhaps more natural-looking and more capable in low light, while the Samsung produces punchier colors and more expansive ultra-wide shots, as well as offering the potential for 8K video capture.

Finally, we’d give the OnePlus 8 Pro the nod when it comes to software. OxygenOS is simply a cleaner, faster, and less bloatware-ridden experience than Samsung’s One UI.

If you prefer smaller phones, or if you catch wind of a cut-price deal, then the Samsung Galaxy S20 is still a brilliant pick, and one of the best phones on the market right now. But if we were given a straight choice between the two, the OnePlus 8 Pro would get our money.



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Get ready for the iPhone 12. Here are 3 ways to prepare your phone now - CNET

We're getting closer to new iPhones, and that means you should take some time to get your current phone ready.

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How to watch the NASCAR playoffs at Talladega today without cable - CNET

You don't need cable TV to watch the racin' and rubbin' Sunday on NBC.

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Latest Tech News

We've not had a new Apple TV box since 2017, but it appears that a new model could be imminent – and the rumors are that it's going to come packing quite the performance upgrade when it finally does break cover.

Apple tipster @choco_bit has revealed on Twitter that new Apple TV models will come featuring the Apple A12Z Bionic chip (currently powering the 2020 iPad Pros) and an enhanced version of the Apple A14 Bionic chip (currently powering the 2020 iPad Air 4).

The reason for this significant boost in processor power is Apple Arcade: Apple is apparently keen to push more flagship games out to the service, and when that does happen the Apple TV is going to need higher-specced internals in order to run them.

As also pointed out by @choco_bit – a relatively new source of leaks, but one with a growing reputation – some games coming to Apple Arcade will require the A13 Bionic chip or higher in order to run (that's the processor inside the iPhone 11).

A new controller too

The same online tipster suggests that future titles on the Apple Arcade platform could rival Nintendo's Breath of the Wild in terms of graphics and scale. As the Nintendo Switch has been a hugely popular portable console, it would be no surprise if Apple decided to try and follow its lead.

A new controller is in the works too, apparently – you can buy third-party gamepads for the Apple TV, or even use your Xbox One or PS4 controllers, but at the moment there isn't an official option from Apple (unless you count the Siri Remote).

As far back as May we heard that a new Apple TV model was ready to go, although leaks from other sources have suggested that an updated box with new processors isn't going to be launched until 2021. When it does appear it might come with 6GB of RAM, double the amount in the current box.

While we wait for the Apple TV hardware to get updated, Apple has now rolled out the tvOS 14 update to existing boxes: the software upgrade brings with it a quick resume feature for games, as well as improvements to picture-in-picture and HomeKit support.



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When is iPhone 12 coming out? We may have guessed Apple's launch date - CNET

We've narrowed the iPhone 12 announcement date down to two potential dates in October. Here's why we think it'll happen then.

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Latest Tech News

AMD’s Radeon RX 5700 graphics cards haven’t been discontinued, the GPU maker has clarified following the suggestion that production on these models has been ceased.

As you may have seen earlier this week, the rumor was that AMD has stopped making the RX 5700 and its 5700 XT sibling ahead of the next-gen Big Navi launch which is happening on October 28, in a few weeks’ time.

However, in actual fact, this is not the case, AMD made clear in a statement to Tom’s Hardware: “We are continuing to produce the Radeon RX 5700 series graphics cards, which deliver exceptional 1440p gaming experiences. We will continue to respond to market demand.”

Stock considerations

Of course, this makes sense, given that buyers will still want options other than the new RX 6000 range post-launch as 2020 rolls on. Despite AMD’s promises that stock levels of the new graphics cards won’t be a problem, and that it won’t run into the same trouble as Nvidia, it remains to be seen how supply and demand will work with the next-gen RDNA 2 cards.

Particularly if Nvidia’s stock issues persist and Big Navi GPUs are therefore being bought by more gamers because they’re effectively the only option.

We could also – fingers crossed – see some nice price drops with the RX 5700 graphics card as time rolls on.

Expectations are running high for AMD’s flagship Big Navi GPU, which is expected to deliver performance pitched somewhere between the RTX 3070 and 3080; but obviously in terms of the battle against Nvidia, a great deal will depend on exactly how AMD prices its new graphics cards.



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Latest Tech News

The Google Pixel 5 has finally been unveiled, and as rumors predicted, it’s a slightly less powerful phone than current flagships but priced much lower to compete with handsets like the iPhone 11 and OnePlus 8. 

That means the higher-tier versions of the iPhone 12 will, in all likelihood, be the last top-tier 2020 flagship phone to come out – and could be the kind of late-year surprise that upends the top slot in our best phone rankings.

To be more specific, the higher-tiered iPhone 12 Pro and iPhone 12 Pro Max will be the last top-tier flagships: we’re expecting these to pack a new A14 Bionic chipset (first seen in the iPad Air 4), potentially more RAM, and 5G connectivity (both sub-6 and mmWave). We’re anticipating a similar trio of rear shooters that came in the iPhone 11 Pro and Pro Max refined to take better photos, and even potentially adding a LiDar depth scanner.

Assuming these Apple rumors are true, the new iPhone 12 is poised give us more features and better specs than the Google Pixel 5. That leaves one less contender for the best flagship of the year, leading the iPhone 12 Pro and Pro Max up against the Samsung Galaxy S20, Samsung Galaxy Note 20, OnePlus 8 Pro, and a few other powerful and widely-available smartphones.

(Image credit: Google)

From that perspective, Google has ceded the pricey top-tier flagship ground. But Google’s Pixel phone range didn’t always try to compete spec-for-spec with the best phones of the year, and the Pixel 5 is a return to form, focusing on great camera software with enough standard features to make it a solid value pick at its $699 / £599 / AU$999 price point.

That’s a strategic choice, of course, which will pit the Pixel 5 against ‘affordable’ flagships like the non-Pro iPhone 12 models along with the upcoming OnePlus 8T (which has been confirmed to be launching alone without a OnePlus 8T Pro version). 

More phones are arriving in this price tier, balancing good (and sometimes great) specs and giving up a few less essential features, like wireless charging/power share, or a full suite of rear cameras or a higher-resolution display, or in-screen fingerprint sensors, to cut down the pricetag. 

(Image credit: Future)

What it takes to be top-tier in 2020

But extra features are expected on top-tier flagship phones, and the iPhone 12 Pro and Pro Max are expected to pack most of these. While Apple phones haven’t used fingerprint scanners or high-resolution displays, rumors have suggested they’re getting another 2020 flagship feature: 120Hz refresh rate screens. And, of course, they’re expected to pack 5G connectivity.

It’s the camera leaks that really push the iPhone 12 Pro series into flagship territory, with one leak claiming 4K video at 120fps, another patent filing suggesting they could get time of flight (ToF) depth sensors enabling mid-air gesture controls, and even greater AR capabilities with the aforementioned LiDar scanner. Combined with rumors of an upgraded 64MP main shooter, new image stabilization tech, and a 7-element lens, the iPhone 12 Pro line is looking to get the kind of camera upgrades to compete with 2020 flagships.

That would let the iPhone 12 Pro and Pro Max compete more favorably with the Samsung Galaxy S20 line, for instance, which improved its telephoto camera to 64MP to achieve the 30x ‘Space Zoom’ feature, as well as 8K video at 24fps. Likewise, the OnePlus 8 Pro also manages a 30x zoom and has improved its ultrawide camera to 48MP, though its real leaps forward have been in battery (now 4,510mAh) and 120Hz refresh rate. 

That’s the top-tier lane the iPhone 12 Pro and Pro Max will have to compete in – and will most likely be the last phones of 2020 that will compete with the best phones on the market. We’re still excited to test out the Google Pixel 5, but it’s clear that phone is headed for a different consumer demographic. For folks who want the best of the best, stay tuned for Apple’s lineup.



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Latest Tech News

Microsoft has revealed some details surrounding what it thinks caused the recent worldwide outage of Office 365 and some of its other platforms.

Users were left high and dry after Office 365 went down across the globe, with other services including Microsoft Teams, Office.com, Power Platform, and Dynamics365 also affected.

According to Microsoft, the outage was caused by a bug in the deployment of an Azure AD service update. 

Office outage

A preliminary report by the company found that the update was released too early, having not gone through the company's usual testing regime. This typically involved progressing through five "rings" before being released, allowing Microsoft to trial any changes or upgrades with a set group of controlled testers.

However this time, a bug in Microsoft's Safe Deployment Process (SDP) caused the update to be deployed to all rings rather than the proper first test ring. 

"Azure AD is designed to be a geo-distributed service deployed in an active-active configuration with multiple partitions across multiple data centers around the world, built with isolation boundaries," Microsoft said in its preliminary post incident report.

"Normally, changes initially target a validation ring that contains no customer data, followed by an inner ring that contains Microsoft only users, and lastly our production environment. These changes are deployed in phases across five rings over several days."

"In this case, the SDP system failed to correctly target the validation test ring due to a latent defect that impacted the system’s ability to interpret deployment metadata. Consequently, all rings were targeted concurrently. The incorrect deployment caused service availability to degrade."

Following the unexpected release, Microsoft says it attempted to rollback "within minutes of impact" using its automated rollback systems which would normally have limited the duration and severity of impact. 

"However, the latent defect in our SDP system had corrupted the deployment metadata, and we had to resort to manual rollback processes. This significantly extended the time to mitigate the issue," the company's report said, explaining why the issue affected users across the globe.

Users who were already logged in to Office 365 or any of the other services were unaffected.

Via BleepingComputer



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Saturday, October 3, 2020

Latest Gadgets News

Sony Corp and memory chipmaker Kioxia Holdings have applied for US approval to continue supplying Huawei Technologies, Nikkei reported on Sunday.

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Heat Domes and Surging Grid Demand Threaten US Power Grids with Blackouts

A new report shows a sharp increase in peak electricity demand, leading to blackout concerns in multiple states. Here's how experts say ...