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Android Hardware

OnePlus 5T Featuring 6-inch AMOLED Display, 3.5mm Headphone Jack Launched (wired.com) 54

Chinese smartphone maker OnePlus, which has been lauded by consumers for offering phones with top-of-the-line specs at a reasonably affordable price range, on Thursday at an event in New York announced its newest flagship smartphone. Called the OnePlus 5T, the handset sports a 6.01-inch AMOLED screen (screen resolution 1080 x 2160) manufactured by Samsung in a body that is roughly of the same size as the 5.5-inch display-clad predecessor OnePlus 5. The secret sauce is, much like Samsung, LG and Apple, OnePlus has moved to a near bezel-less design. The company is not getting rid of the fingerprint scanner though, which it has pushed to the back side. The front-facing camera, additionally, OnePlus says, can be used to unlock the device. Other features include a 3,300mAh battery with the company's proprietary Dash Charge fast-charging tech (no wireless charging support -- the company says at present wireless charging doesn't really add much value to the device), top-of-the-line Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 processor with Adreno 540, 6GB of RAM with 64GB of storage (there is another variant of the phone which offers 8GB of RAM with 128GB of space). As for camera, we are looking at a dual 16-megapixel and 20-megapixel setup in the back. One more thing: the phone has a headphone jack and it runs Android 7.1 out of the box. The OnePlus 5T will go on sale in Europe, India, and the United States starting November 21st, with the base model priced at Euro 499, INR 32,999, and $499, respectively. The high-end variant is priced at Euro 559, INR 37,999, and $559. Wired has more details.
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OnePlus 5T Featuring 6-inch AMOLED Display, 3.5mm Headphone Jack Launched

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  • by wooppp ( 921578 ) on Thursday November 16, 2017 @01:43PM (#55563875) Journal
    While OnePlus will provide fix for security issues, you have to play cat and mouse all the time... https://www.tomsguide.com/us/o... [tomsguide.com]
    • Just install Resurrection Remix.

  • by Joao Cordeiro ( 3780295 ) on Thursday November 16, 2017 @01:56PM (#55563999)
    The new way to make publicity: make a article showing your product and present it like it is news....
    • ...and write it poorly at that.
    • by sd4f ( 1891894 )

      But that's because tech journalism is largely fulfilled by people who have no technical experience, and are more interested in looking the part (i.e. hipster/geeks) than actually dealing with technical information, and since a lot of people are fairly lazy to begin with (i'm guilty of that) why write something, when someone else has already done that for you.

      A part of it also, and this goes more broadly, the review industry loves being subjective, because it allows them to be vague and not particularly trut

      • I'm not against tech news. I'm against them being on slashdot. Those don't strike me as "stuff that matters".
        • by sd4f ( 1891894 )
          Well, I agree, but if there were some innovative development in the oneplus phone, I certainly would think it would matter if someone had the expertise to explain it in some detail, but fact of the matter is, most tech journalists are just unable, unless it's prepared for them in a media release.
  • Headphone Courage (Score:5, Insightful)

    by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Thursday November 16, 2017 @02:05PM (#55564081)

    (Circa 2014)

    Manufacturer - "Our phone comes with a headphone jack."

    Customer - "Uhhh, no shit. Why are you even telling me this?"

    (Circa 2017)

    Manufacturer - "Our phone comes with a headphone jack."

    Customer - "Ballsy move man. I'm impressed by your courage."

  • by trawg ( 308495 ) on Thursday November 16, 2017 @02:21PM (#55564211) Homepage

    Doesn't that just mean it's obsolete out of the box given the current version of Android is 8 (Oreo)?

    Pretty much the only thing I ever want to know about new Android phones is whether or not I'm going to get the latest updates. These days unless it's a Pixel the answer is 'no' (maybe that will change with this Project Treble thing) but for some reason we still get breathless Android phone announcements like this Wired one that are all about how many megapixels or bezels it has.

    • by guacamole ( 24270 ) on Thursday November 16, 2017 @02:31PM (#55564283)

      I think it's fair to say that 99% of all phones that already run Oreo are Google's own Pixel and Nexus phones. Oneplus historically hasn't been bad about updating its phones. For example, they promised the Oneplus 3 and 3T should get Android 8 eventually. Their update cycle is actually faster because they don't sell any carrier branded phones. Marshmallow and Nougat are the most popular Android versions (each taking around 30 percent of market), so either of those is hardly obsolete.

      • by trawg ( 308495 )

        Marshmallow and Nougat are the most popular Android versions (each taking around 30 percent of market), so either of those is hardly obsolete.

        I guess their obsoleteness depends on the exact state of their software. I can't remember when Android started doing the security patch version (Marshmallow?) but I suspect many of them are running M or N but at a minor version number that does not include the latest security updates.

        My partner is a big OPO fan & almost certainly will get this new version. She's not at all interested in the security issues I raise. If I can't convince her, I can't convince anyone - so I don't know what chance the avera

      • OnePlus has historically been a DISASTER for updates.

        One: Abandoned Cyanogen business relationship, in parallel released test Oxygen released, also abandoned
        Two: Promised upgrade to Nougat, never happened
        X: Abandonware
        3/3T: Getting Oreo "eventually", still in beta. Shipped with Marshmallow way into the Nougat release cycle, took nearly a year beyond that to get Nougat.

        Only get a OnePlus phone if you are comfortable with and intend on running a custom ROM, and also hope the hardware is defect free because th

  • by guacamole ( 24270 ) on Thursday November 16, 2017 @02:26PM (#55564241)

    There is no denying that Oneplus 5T is a good value considering you get top shelf hardware spec for 500-something USD. However, this is no longer a budget "flagship killer" phone the way the original 300/350USD Oneplus One (16/64GB) used to be in 2014. At this +500 price, you can find mainstream brand phones, such as LG G6. I was able to score a Galaxy S8 for under 500USD with a trade-in phone. Other things being equal, I still prefer Oneplus to LG, but a lot of brand loyal who were originally attracted by low pricing will start wondering what happened.

  • Take a look at this: - Another Shadt App Found Pre-Installed on OnePlus phones https://thehackernews.com/2017... [thehackernews.com] Quote: "A security researcher just found another secret app that records tons of information about your phone"....
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Who buy's a OnePlus phone and leaves the OnePlus software on it? It's easy enough to remove it and install a new ROM, kernel, and recovery?

      The most important question is will the screen be installed right side up this time. Or will it still have the same jelly effect that the OnePlus 5 had. Until someone does a tear down, or we see the kernel source code, we won't know (and I won't order one).

    • by Kamien ( 1561193 )
      "Since OnePlusLogKit is disabled by default, the attacker would require access to the victim's smartphone to enable it." So what is the problem exactly?
  • Continuing the cheaper EIS, which is way inferior to the optical stabilization found on their previous phones. Along with backdoor spy programs that are known, and what isn't known, it's not a bad phone, but, I'd wait a few months for them to get the kinks worked out. All of their phones have had out the door bugs. Going from the 3 to the 3T, wasn't as bad, and since the 5 & 5T are pretty similar, it probably won't have as many bugs, but the lack of OIS is a problem, unless you just don't care about th

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