Trending December 2023 # Huawei P30 Pro Sneaky Videos Leak, Release Dates In Tow # Suggested January 2024 # Top 18 Popular

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Huawei P30 Pro sneaky videos leak, release dates in tow

If the Huawei P30 Pro was meant to be a surprise, someone messed up. Huawei’s next massive thriller of a smartphone’s been leaked today in the form of a couple videos and photos, too. The Huawei P30 Pro looks to confirm rumored specifications like a 6.47-inch display, or for the non-Pro model a 6.1-inch display. Both devices have Android 9 Pie, almost certainly, and HuSilicon Kirin 980 7nm processors with Octa-core (2×2.6 GHz Cortex-A76 & 2×1.92 GHz Cortex-A76 & 4×1.8 GHz Cortex-A55) CPU and Mali-G76 MP10 GPU.

The differences between the Huawei P30 and P30 Pro, as rumored thus far, are actually pretty significant. It’s been tipped that the P30 has a flatter display with a bezel around the edge, while the Pro has a display similar to that of a Galaxy S8 or Note, with cascading left and right sides. Both devices have a single front-facing camera with a half-circle notch.

The new Huawei P30 Pro was tipped to come with a 6.47-inch display, which is larger than the Samsung Galaxy S10 Plus, which has a 6.4-inch display. The Galaxy S10 Plus has an AMOLED display with more pixels than its new competitor, with 1440 x 3040 pixels on its panel making a 522 PPI pixel density. The Huawei P30 Pro has just 1080 x 2340 pixels giving it a 398 PPI pixel density.

The Huawei P30 was shown in a video and tipped to come with a set of three cameras on its back, including a 40 MP camera with f/1.8 aperture and 27mm (wide) lens, a 16 MP camera with f/2.2 aperture and 16mm (ultrawide) lens, and a 8 MP camera with f/2.4 aperture and 80mm (telephoto) lens. The Pro model is said to come with a sort-of similar setup, but with better bits on every lens, plus TOF.

The Huawei P30 Pro was tipped to have the following cameras:

• 40 MP, f/1.6, (wide), 1/1.7″, PDAF/Laser AF, OIS

• 20 MP, f/2.2, 16mm (ultrawide), 1/2.7″, PDAF/Laser AF

• 8 MP (Periscopic), f/3.4, 80mm (telephoto), 1/4″, 5x optical zoom, OIS, PDAF/Laser AF

• TOF 3D scanner camera

Both models are tipped to come with 32MP cameras up front with f/2.0 aperture and HDR video capture at 1080p at 30fps. Headphone jack business is a little strange – the non-pro is tipped to come with a headphone jack, but the Pro model is NOT sporting a headphone jack, as the leaked video tips – though that seems overly strange, don’t you think?

Pricing on the Huawei P30 Pro was rumored in recent weeks to be almost exactly that of the Samsung Galaxy S10 Plus – give or take a hundred dollars. That means approximately $1000 or $1100 in total. The Pro model is likely coming in Black, Ice White, Aurora Blue, and Sunrise Red. The non-pro model was tipped to roll in Twilight, Black, Midnight Blue, and Pink Gold.

The reveal date for these devices is almost certainly March 26, 2023. There’s an event set for Paris, France, the most fanciest of locations to reveal a new smartphone. The release date for the Huawei P30 and P30 Pro is rumored to be Friday, April 5th, 2023, inside the UK. We’ll likely see this set of phones released internationally soon thereafter.

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Amd Bulldozer And Llano Release Dates Unveiled – Report

Expected by many hardware enthusiasts, AMD’s first Zambezi FX processors based on the Bulldozer architecture are scheduled to be unveiled at the E3 games conference while the company’s Llano APUs should be officially launched just a couple of days earlier at Computex 2011. According to a slide published by the Donanim Haber publication, AMD’s summer launch calendar should start on June 1, when the company plans to introduce the Sabine platform. This platform includes the mobile version of the Llano APUs as well as the Hudson-M2 and Hudson-M3 notebook chipsets. Together with Sabine, the Computex 2011 fair will also mark the introduction of AMD’s new Vision brand and of the 900-series chipsets that target Zambezi FX processors. The next date in AMD’s launch calendar is June 7 when the company plans to make official the AM3+ platform as well as the FX brand and logo. According to previous report, this launch will include four Zambezi FX CPUs, two featuring an eight-core design, while the other two will pack six and four processing cores respectively, and additional chips are expected in the October-November timeframe. The Bulldozer architecture has been in the making for five years now and is based on a modular design, with each module being comprised out of dual processing cores. Finally, on June 14, the Sunnyvale-based company will introduce the Lynx platform that features the Llano desktop APUs and the Hudson D2 and Hudson D3 fusion controller hubs. For starters, AMD will only announce five Llano desktop APUs, four packing a quad-core design while the fifth chip will feature only two processing cores. No additional details are available at this time, but both Llano and especially Bulldozer are expected to bring AMD back on par with Intel in terms of processing power.

Expected by many hardware enthusiasts, AMD’s first Zambezi FX processors based on the Bulldozer architecture are scheduled to be unveiled at the E3 games conference while the company’s Llano APUs should be officially launched just a couple of days earlier at Computex 2011. According to a slide published by the Donanim Haber publication, AMD’s summer launch calendar should start on June 1, when the company plans to introduce the Sabine platform. This platform includes the mobile version of the Llano APUs as well as the Hudson-M2 and Hudson-M3 notebook chipsets. Together with Sabine, the Computex 2011 fair will also mark the introduction of AMD’s new Vision brand and of the 900-series chipsets that target Zambezi FX processors. The next date in AMD’s launch calendar is June 7 when the company plans to make official the AM3+ platform as well as the FX brand and logo. According to previous report, this launch will include four Zambezi FX CPUs, two featuring an eight-core design, while the other two will pack six and four processing cores respectively, and additional chips are expected in the October-November timeframe. The Bulldozer architecture has been in the making for five years now and is based on a modular design, with each module being comprised out of dual processing cores. Finally, on June 14, the Sunnyvale-based company will introduce the Lynx platform that features the Llano desktop APUs and the Hudson D2 and Hudson D3 fusion controller hubs. For starters, AMD will only announce five Llano desktop APUs, four packing a quad-core design while the fifth chip will feature only two processing cores. No additional details are available at this time, but both Llano and especially Bulldozer are expected to bring AMD back on par with Intel in terms of processing power.

Iphone 7 Release Level Leak Is Apple’S Biggest Yet

iPhone 7 release level leak is Apple’s biggest yet

The biggest leak of the iPhone 7 appears this week in a hands-on and first impressions video from the UK. Both the iPhone 7 and the iPhone 7 Plus appear to be here side-by-side, both in Rose Gold to boot. This is just one of a set of hands-on videos – there’s also a comparison between the iPhone 6s and the iPhone 7 as it exists in prototype stage hardware. While these products may look like final release-day hardware, there’s know knowing for certain before that release day actually comes.

The first video you’re going to see shows two prototypes. Filming this video is SuperSaf TV from the UK – they have no illusions about these being prototypes, and say as much throughout the video. What’s important here is SuperSaf TV’s link to Sonny Dickson, notorious leakster of Apple products and one that’s been relatively on-point for the past several years.

Notice the distinctive lack of “Smart Connector” on this iPhone 7 Plus. Previous leaks suggested that such a connector would be in place on this device rather than on the supposed iPhone 7 Pro (or just iPhone Pro) rumored for release inside 2023. That’d be the 10th anniversary of the release of the original iPhone, and a perfect place to put such a monster.

Both of the devices above are Rose Gold – or a reasonable facsimile as such. Next you’re going to see SuperSaf TV use another prototype to compare to the iPhone 6s. This comparison should give you an OK idea of what the upgrade may be like.

Specifications for the iPhone 6s are here – as the phone’s been out for a while. Below you’ll see the specs for the iPhone 6s, then the rumored specs for the iPhone 7.

iPhone 6s Specifications

• Display: 4.7-inch 1334 x 750 pixel LED backlit 3D

• CPU and RAM: Apple A9 processor, 2GB RAM

• Storage: 16, 64, and 128GB

• Front Camera: 5MP

• Rear Camera: 12MP, 4K video recording

• Ports: headphone jack, Lightning port

iPhone 7 Specifications (rumored)

• Display: 4.7-inch 2K display (probably not quite that sharp)

• CPU and RAM: Apple A10 processor, 3GB RAM

• Storage: 32, 64, and 128GB

• Front Camera: 5MP with wider angle lens than 6s

• Rear Camera: 12MP, 4K video recording, OIS, improved image processing

• Ports: Lightning Port (that’s it)

ALSO SEE: iPhone 7 detailed in black, looks gorgeous

You’ll notice that the display is said to get a fairly large upgrade – though that’s probably the least likely change of all. Apple could well just stick with the display they have now and they’d still sell millions of units.

The processor will have to get a bit more powerful – a next-generation A10 chip, with another GB of RAM for good measure. Internal storage sizes likely won’t change, and the frontside camera will likely stay similar, but get a bit wider a lens.

The back-facing camera will also likely remain a similar size (megapixels) but will have optical image stabilization and improved image processing with the new A10 chip. The headphone jack will be axed – more than likely.

Stick around SlashGear’s @SlashGearApple Twitter portal for Apple content exclusively. There you’ll find tips, news, and leaks galore!

Huawei Mate 10 Pro Review

Anyone who has been reading GizChina for some time will know that once I’ve fallen for a phone I just continue to use it no matter what else launches. Eventually, I do move to a new device, but that new phone needs to be something special to get me to switch.

A few weeks ago Huawei sent over the flagship Mate 10 Pro for me to review, it’s a great phone with stunning photography features, amazing battery life and a quality look and feel, but is it all enough?

Huawei Mate 10 Pro Review – Design

We’re at the peak of phone design and while that might sound exciting it actually isn’t really. Don’t get me wrong, the Huawei Mate 10 Pro is a good looking phone and is made of some of the best materials around and to a standard other phone makers could only dream of, but it’s hardly a unique looking phone is it.

In addition to the rear fingerprint scanner, the glossy rear of the phone is home to dual Leica cameras, LED flash and laser focus module. Those components are highlighted on the rear of the phone and sit on a slightly lighter colored band to the rest of the phone.

The highly polished finish continues on to the metal frame of the Huawei Mate 10 Pro making up the smooth chassis where a power button, volume control, SIM tray, IR remote and USB Type C plug are all found. You keen-eyed readers will have noticed that I missed the 3.5mm headphone jack. Well, that’s because there isn’t one on the Mate 10 Pro. What you do get though are some of Huawei’s own Type C in-ear headphones (they’re rather good too!).

Huawei has made sure that the Mate 10 Pro looks and feels premium while ensuring that the all screen phone is comfortable to hold, and they’ve succeeded, but be warned that the glossy finish is susceptible to attracting fingerprints and greasy marks, and the smooth finish means that losing your grip or your phone sliding off a table is more likely to happen. Within the first hour of owning the Huawei Mate 10 Pro, I’d already managed to lose grip and it also managed to slide off a table, luckily both times I was able to catch the phone before it hit the ground.

Not that I would be all that concerned if the phone had hit the ground as I’m confident that the high-quality nature of the phone would ensure it survived. Using the Mate 10 Pro after using the OnePlus 5 as my personal phone for months is a revelation, the Huawei is leagues ahead in material and finish.

Huawei Mate 10 Pro Review – Hardware

Huawei has built a phone that looks and feels like a flagship, and the specs follow this trend.

A 6-inch display in a phone measuring 154.2 x 74.5 x 7.9mm would have been a feat of magic this time last year, but with phone makers going for “full-display” (Huawei call it FullView Display) many smartphones are leveling up in screen size. Huawei has also pushed up the resolution with a 2160 x 1080 OLED display offering a pixel density of 402ppi.

Using a phone with 18:9 display might not sound like much of an upgrade over a standard phone, but you just try to use a 2023 flagship for a few days then move back to your regular screen phone. Chances are that old phone will feel just that, old!

Another nod to this phones flagship intentions is the Huawei Kirin 970 chipset. This is a self-developed octa-core CPU made up of 4 x Cortex A73 2.36GHz + 4 x Cortex A53 1.8GHz cores. The GPU is a Mali-G72 MP12 GP. It’s all good stuff and ensures that Huawei’s Android 8.0 based EMUI runs buttery smooth in every situation.

Speaking of EMUI, from my time using the phone I can say that Huawei has done a great job of creating a super stable ROM with some very nice features. The Mate 10 Pro comes with a ‘tips’ app that teaches you some of the neat gestures that EMUI supports, my favorite being a knuckle tap to capture a screenshot. EMUI also has a killer camera app, but I’ll tell you more about that below.

While I’ve enjoyed EMUI I do find that sometimes I get a notification dot (on an app icon or in the settings) but I’m unsure as to what I’m being notified too.

Again, only last year a sub 8mm phone with 4000mAh battery would be a pretty rare sight but Huawei has managed this with the Mate 10 Pro. The battery is enough to give the Mate 10 Pro a full 2 days of battery life on a single charge and thanks to the fast charge feature can be topped up in no time at all.

While the battery life is very impressive I’m still not sure if this is due to the fact Huawei has made a great job of optimisation or if it has something to do with the data connection. Like all modern Android phones, the Mate 10 Pro is an LTE smartphone, but it also has the worst signal strength of any phone I have ever owned! Compared to any other phone I have tested the Mate 10 Pro is the only phone that has ever left me with no signal what-so-ever in areas where I usually have full bars. On the other hand, the WIFI signal is very good and while I’m not usually able to receive WIFI in my bedroom the Mate 10 Pro manages too just grab the backend of the signal.

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WIFI phone calls are supported on the Mate 10 Pro too, but I found the quality to be patchy when testing this out, but this could have been down to our office WIFI. Another feature that Huawei has built in is a WIFI assistant that is meant to be smart enough to help you switch between networks or even between WIFI and DATA on the fly. Due to the poor LTE (and 3G and 2G) performance of the Mate 10, I ended up turning this feature off.

Beneath the dual Leica rear cameras is a fingerprint scanner. There’s not much to say about this other than it is fast and accurate.

If you check out the photos of the Mate 10 Pro you’ll see that Huawei has added a built-in IR remote but there is no 3.5mm headphone jack. Instead, you have to use the USB Type C plug in the base along with the supplied USB Type C headphones. And for those of you wondering, audio is amazing!

Other notable features include NFC, dual SIM support and options for either 4GB RAM + 64GB ROM or 6GB RAM + 128GB ROM.

Huawei Mate 10 Pro Review – Camera

IF you’re looking at the Huawei Mate 10 Pro as your next phone then the chances are you are drawn to this phone for the stunning camera specifications.

Huawei has teamed up with Leica once again on the Mate 10 Pro with the main cameras being a 20-megapixel monochrome sensor with secondary 12-megapixel RGB sensor both with F1.6 apertures.

Other phone brands might leave the camera specs there and call it good, but Huawei has taken the cameras to the next level with OIS, PDAF, Laser focus and Depth Auto Focus! The dual cameras will let you take native black and white photos (a feature I’ve played with very little) and also gives the phone 2 x optical zoom.

The front camera is a fixed focus F2.0 8 megapixel sensor. I prefer the fact that the rear camera is the main focus of the Huawei Mate 10 Pro, other phone makers have been adding better front sensors to their devices but I’ve found performance to be lacking. Huawei has got it the right way around with both the front and rear cameras offering great performance in all situations.

In addition to the hardware, the Mate 10 Pro also has a feature-packed camera application that uses AI to assist you to take the perfect shot.

In auto mode, the Mate 10 Pro will use its dedicated AI chip to determine what you’re about to shoot and adjust the settings to suit. Pointing the Mate 10 Pro at flowers means the camera app switches to a ‘nature’ setting and shows a small leaf icon. Point the camera at food and the setting switch automatically to food mode. Other modes include pet, person, text and night. If the app doesn’t recognize the subject no icon will show and you’ll be shooting in a regular auto mode.

You can trick the AI, for example, a stuffed toy shows up as a pet, and photos of food will also get the food setting to show up. I’ve still not been able to get the pet setting to show when taking photos of my brother though, but I continue to try.

As for performance, the Huawei Mate 10 Pro is the best camera phone I have ever used! The photos are simply stunning in all situations and the amount of detail the camera picks up is truly unbelievable. Check out some photos samples below.

Huawei Mate 10 Pro Review – Photo Gallery What I love about the Huawei Mate 10 Pro

The dual Leica camera, F1.6 aperture and clever camera AI are incredible!

Battery life is a solid 2 days of heavy use.

Audio is sublime.

What I don’t like about the Huawei Mate 10 Pro

Data connectivity is dreadful.

Smart WIFI/Data switching isn’t all that smart.

Odd notifications that don’t seem to notify me of anything.

Huawei Mate 10 Pro Review – Conclusion

Huawei has made a top of the line phone that boasts features that everyone will love and appreciate. The cameras are incredible and for the first time, I feel that a phone is getting to DSLR beating levels of performance. Battery life is surprisingly good too, although they did take out the 3.5mm headphone jack to get a larger battery in the phone.

What is annoying though is the very poor data connectivity. While a strong WIFI signal is much appreciated, the fact that I’m more surprised to have a signal rather than not is a very bad sign. There are times I simply cannot use my phone, and while the camera, audio, and screen are stunning, a phone isn’t all that much use if you can’t call anyone or connect to the web.

I’m hoping with all my heart that an update will pop up to resolve the poor data issue, but as of the time of writing that has yet to come.

Huawei Mate 50 Pro Vs Iphone 14 Pro – Camera Performance Comparison

Of course, many smartphone enthusiasts will want to know the daily performance of these devices. Thus, this comprehensive review looks at the performance of these smartphones. It considers the camera, gaming and battery life as well as design.

Huawei Mate 50 Pro Vs iPhone 14 Pro Camera

When it comes to mobile phone images, both Huawei and Apple are difficult to defeat. Both have their own unique image styles and their own audiences. Therefore, for consumers, choosing a style that you can accept is often more important than looking at hardware parameters. Therefore, we will not say too much about the parameters.

Huawei Mate 50 Pro is equipped with a 13-megapixel ultra-wide-angle camera, a 64-megapixel periscope telephoto camera, and a 50-megapixel super-optical camera. It also supports proximity light sensors, laser focus sensors, 10-channel multi-spectral sensors, XMAGE Huawei images, etc. The iPhone 14 Pro comes with a 48-megapixel main camera, a 12-megapixel telephoto camera, a 12-megapixel ultrawide and a TOF 3D LiDAR scanner. This smartphone also comes with a new ProRAW mode. This mode gives images that are much better and also much larger in size.

Simply put, the highlights of the Huawei Mate 50 Pro are variable aperture, F1.4 large aperture, Huawei XMAGE image style and a 200x zoom range. As for the iPhone 14 Pro, it has a better 48MP main camera, supports ProRAW mode, and the sensor size also improves.

Daytime Images

First of all, in the daytime with good light, you can clearly see the difference between the two. The iPhone 14 Pro is still in the “high-saturation style”, the sky is bluer, and the building tone is relatively simple. However, when the photo was taken, the sun was almost setting, but the iPhone 14 Pro did not restore this scene.

Ultra-wide-angle proofs

In terms of ultra-wide-angle, the control of colour temperature by the two basically continues the style of the main camera. The iPhone 14 Pro is still more beautiful, and the Huawei Mate 50 Pro is generally warmer, but the colours are richer, especially since the colour reproduction of the sky is very good.

In addition to different styles of colours, the resolution of the ultra-wide-angle of the two is quite satisfactory. Although, the edge details have some declines, but the overall performance is acceptable. In addition, the control of ultra-wide-angle distortion should be praised. Both are excellent.

Main camera images

This time, the iPhone 14 Pro adds a new mode called ProRAW. When this mode is active, the details of the proofs will rise sharply. Of course, RAW photos store more information. They are often used for photo creation, professional photographers, or photography enthusiasts who like to retouch their own pictures.

Generally, they will be used more. If you also have an iPhone 14 Pro in your hand, then try to adjust some photos you like. However, it is important to note that ProRAW images are quite large. A single image could be 75MB minimum. Have this in mind while using this mode

Night main camera proof

In the night scene, both flagships show a very good night scene purity, and the picture is full of details. Although the overall colour style is very different, each has its own flavour. We can’t tell which one you will prefer.

In addition, the overall performance of the Huawei Mate 50 Pro is better in the processing of highlights and shadows. For example, in the lower-left corner of the screen, the iPhone 14 Pro is already black. It is difficult to see the appearance of the building without zooming in. However, the details of the Huawei Mate 50 Pro are very clear and the brightness is higher.

It is important to note that this situation does not mean that the night scene of the Huawei Mate 50 Pro is necessarily better. Of course, if you prefer bright and colourful night scenes, the Huawei Mate 50 Pro is obviously more in line with your needs.

Conclusion

In conclusion, all the ideas above are simply those of the tester after using the camera of both smartphones. Both the Mate 50 Pro and the iPhone 14 Pro perform very well in day and night photography. However, the camera output style of both smartphones are unique. The Huawei Mate 50 Pro pursues the details of the picture, whether it is the brightness, colour or light and shade of the picture. Compared with the iPhone 14 Pro, it is different. Therefore, in most scenarios, the look and feel of the Huawei Mate 50 Pro is actually better.

Redsn0W Update Released, New Features In Tow

On Saturday, we reported that there was a major RedSn0w update on the way. Dev Team frontman MuscleNerd told the Twitter nation that a new version of the popular jailbreak tool would be hitting the web in the very near future.

As promised, the team once again made Sunday ‘Funday’ by releasing the software late last night. While the update doesn’t add support for new firmware, it does come with a host of new features. Hit the jump to see the change log…

• uses DFU mode to try to automatically determine which device and FW you have

• fetches pieces of public IPSWs from Apple (once). Non-public IPSWs must be provided manually (once).  It then caches those pieces for future use.

• “Just boot” is a tethered boot.  Uses whatever “Preferences” you’ve set for boot logo and kernel boot-args

• “Pwned DFU” puts your device in a pwned DFU state for some of the iTunes stuff detailed below

• “Recovery fix” gets past 1015 types of errors (when baseband portion of restore fails).  Should work on iOS5 beta too

• “Select IPSW” is for picking non-public IPSWs, or overriding auto-detection

•“SHSH blobs” has a bunch of options…

• “Fetch” – fetch current PARTIAL blobs on device.  Should complete in under 10 or 15 seconds.  Puts the set of PARTIAL of blobs on your computer as a plist.  Checks if Cydia already has a full set for this device and build.  If not, it submits this PARTIAL set and returns Cydia’s acknowledgement or rejection

• ”Verify”  – cryptographically verifies existing blob files from either redsn0w, TinyUmbrella, or Cydia server.  You can select a whole bunch of blobs to verify at once if you want (like the TinyUmbrella directory)

• “Submit”  – both verifies and submits one or more blob files to Cydia.  This lets you copy your entire TinyUmbrella cache of blobs up to the Cydia server

• ”Query” – queries the Cydia server for all available FULL or PARTIAL blobs for a given set of ECIDs

• “Stitch” – stitches either FULL or PARTIAL blobs to a STOCK or CUSTOM IPSW

1. FULL blobs stitched to a STOCK IPSW gives you a completely self-contained signed IPSW that iTunes will accept without any tricks (no need to go into pwned DFU mode, no need to start TinyUmbrella TSS server, no need to redirect to Cydia server for blobs).

2. PARTIAL blobs stitched to any IPSW requires you to go into pwned DFU mode before running iTunes.  No need to start TU or use Cydia though.

3. stitching either FULL or PARTIAL blobs to a CUSTOM IPSW also requires a pwned DFU start before iTunes restores.  No need to start TU or use Cydia though.

4. stitching is NOT yet supported on iPhones (well, at least not tested).  Need to work out the baseband part of the restore process.

5. will eventually support fetching the blobs directly from Cydia instead of a file on your computer.

Confused? Head on over to our RedSn0w page for a step-by-step guide on how to jailbreak your iDevice using this software (hint: it’s easy).

Have you tried out the new RedSn0w? How did it work for you?

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