Toshiba Portege R500 Battery new-laptopbattery.com
- fasophiafrance
- 2015年11月8日
- 讀畢需時 6 分鐘
The most notable addition is fingerprint security, which has been featured on Samsung's phones for well over a year now. However, Google has now baked it into Android itself, so you can use it to pay for items on the Google Play store or - when it eventually launches in the UK - make contactless payments in shops with Android Pay. Dubbed "Nexus Imprint", the fingerprint recognition in Android 6.0 is arguably the best available right now, effortlessly outpacing Apple's TouchID when it comes to speed and even bettering Samsung's latest take on the tech, which impressed so much on the Galaxy S6.
Setting up a fingerprint is a breeze - the software even asks you to adjust your finger during the setup process so it can be read from different angles - and once it's done, the scanner "learns" and gets better at detecting your print. During our review period it worked fantastically, certainly much better than the already-brilliant scanner on the Galaxy S6. The only issue is that the scanner itself is located on the back of the device, so you can't use it to unlock the phone when it's resting on a flat surface. However, because of the placement, it means it's easier to unlock the device when you pull it out of your pocket. It's personal preference, but after a week we found we were more comfortable using the scanner on the Nexus 5X than the front-facing scanners on other phones.
Elsewhere, Android's new "Doze" feature helps conserve battery life when the phone is idle, only allowing priority notifications to come through and shutting down all the other unnecessary processes that sip away at your battery. The best time to test this feature is when you set your phone down at night; we noticed that the battery level only dropped a few percent, whereas previous Android phones would have shaved off around 10 to 20 percent of their stamina during the same time period.
Another big change is how Google Now works. It's not just consigned to the left of your home screen anymore - it can be activated from anywhere in the UI, bringing up pertinent information instantly. Get an email which contains a famous person or place you're not familiar with? Hold down the 'Home' command and you'll trigger Google Now On Tap, which searches the page for keywords and suggests possible weblinks or apps. It's a genuinely useful addition which we've used more times than we can count.
While the Nexus 5X isn't packing the most powerful specs in Android history, it's worth pointing out that the user experience is rarely less than fantastic. Everything is (generally) buttery-smooth, with pauses and stutters being rarer than they've ever been on Android - in fact, we found that in terms of moving around the UI, opening apps and performing general tasks, the Nexus 5X feels smoother and faster than the Galaxy S6 - a phone which, according to benchmark results, is much more powerful. This is almost certainly down to the lack of bloatware on the device; you're getting pure Android here, with no third-party UI skin over the top or duplicate processes performing the same tasks as Google's own suite of apps. That means a faster, more pleasurable experience overall, and that's precisely why Android fans gravitate towards Nexus phones despite the lack of bleeding-edge internal tech.
Nexus 5X Review: Camera One area where the Nexus range has always struggled is photography - the hardware has always been decent enough but Google's software leaves a lot to be desired. The story isn't quite the same this year, but there are some caveats to consider. On the plus side, the 12.3 megapixel sensor boasts 1.55-micron pixels which allow more light to enter, meaning the camera performs better in low-light situations. As standard, Google's camera app offers HDR support, panoramic shooting, lens blur and Photosphere, and in terms of video there's a 4K recording mode and slow-motion, which allows you to capture footage at 120 frames per second.Its face is 38.5mm across, which is slightly larger than the smaller Apple Watch. It comes in silver, black, and rose gold, and you can buy 10 different styles of 14mm or 20mm bands. Small watch, plus small bands, plus lots of options, equals a watch most people can comfortably wear. If I were buying one, I’d get the silver case with the nubuck brown leather band, but to each their own.
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You could almost argue that the get-in-get-out mentality excuses the dim, low-res 1.25-inch screen on the Time Round. Almost. It’s great that Pebble found a way to make an always-on display that doesn’t crush the battery, but I want more than the jagged text. More than the dim screen you can hardly see without turning the light on. More than the light that turns on every time you get a notification, so the whole world can see, and then goes off way too quickly. I’m in on e-paper, slow refresh rate and everything, but it’s hardly glance-and-go when you have to squint at the screen three inches from your face just to see it.
Photo quality is decent enough, with snaps displaying a large amount of detail and faithful colour replication. The laser auto-focus also means that unlike previous Nexus phones, the 5X can lock onto your subject quickly, ensuring that you don't miss a shot. That's the idea, at least - we found that blurry images were commonplace (there's no Optical Image Stabilization included here either, which surely contributes to this issue), and sometimes the camera wouldn't actually take the shot until a second or so after we'd tapped the button.
Having seen how amazing a camera on an Android device can be thanks to Samsung's amazing snapper on the Galaxy S6, it's disappointing to discover that Google can't make the same leaps and bounds with its own handset. The Nexus 5X is an improvement for sure, but a bit more work is required to make it truly satisfactory from a photographic perspective - the bare-bones camera app in vanilla Android being the prime candidate for an overhaul.
Nexus 5X Review: Memory and Battery Life Shockingly for a phone launching in 2015, the entry-level Nexus 5X has just 16G of storage, with the 32GB model costing a little more. While the iPhone's recent refresh also begins with 16GB, this amount of space on a leading phone is quite stingy in this day and age. 32GB is the entry level for other phones - the Galaxy S6 included - and even some of the cheap and cheerful handsets coming over from China from the likes of Xiaomi are shipping with 32GB as the perceived norm.
It's annoying - especially as there's no way of adding in more storage via MicroSD cards - but it's not a deal-breaker, especially if you choose to fully embrace the many cloud-storage options available to you. Google Music can store tens of thousands of tracks free of charge, and Google Drive comes with loads of space for gratis. Third-party alternatives can also be used - such as Dropbox and Box - should you find yourself running out of room.
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The 2700mAh battery inside the Nexus 5X is another example of LG cutting cost to keep the price low - a 3000mAh power cell would have been welcome, but we still managed to get a full day of moderate use out of the device before it required charging. The Doze feature in Android 6.0 certainly helps stamina - if your set you phone down for large portions of the day you can expect the battery life to extend by quite a bit. The inclusion of a USB Type C connector means that it doesn't take long to top up the battery - you can get around 5 hours of stamina from a 10 minute charge, and to totally fill the battery you're looking at around an hour and a half on the wall socket - not as fast as the Turbo Charging on last year's Nexus 6, but still decent enough.
One thing worth noting is that wireless charging - something that was present in both the Nexus 5 and the Nexus 6 - is absent from this device. It's an odd choice given how much Google pushed the feature over the past two years, but not a disaster - the USB Type C connection charges much faster anyway.
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