ASUS Z53H Battery
- fasophiafrance
- 2016年12月16日
- 讀畢需時 7 分鐘
The thing is that it all looks in proportion. The strap lugs provide a natural transition between the watch casing and the 22mm steel link bracelet. Despite its size, it isn’t overbearing, even on my skinny wrist. Its sheer bulk means it won’t be for everyone, but it doesn’t look daft – and the weight very quickly becomes a non-issue.I also like the more traditional look that the crown on the right side of the watch’s casing imparts. The crown doesn’t rotate, as it does on the Apple Watch, but pressing it does unlock a handful of useful shortcuts: a single press wakes the watch from sleep, a long press brings up the apps screen, while a double press puts the watch into Android Wear’s “do not disturb” Cinema mode.The one thing that Fossil gets wrong, and it isn’t the plain black plastic rear (maybe the designers thought it would be just too heavy with a stainless steel rear panel), is the flat-tyre watch face. Look at the front and you’ll see a small black segment cutting into the base of the otherwise perfectly circular screen.
It’s used to house the Q Founder's light sensor, which allows the Fossil to adjust the brightness of its display depending on the ambient conditions. There is an upside, then, but it isn’t attractive at all.I’m also none too keen on the white inductive charging station. This strange contraption cleverly forms part of the watch’s original packaging, but otherwise it isn’t brilliantly designed.It’s bulkier than it needs to be, meaning it’s not the easiest thing to stow in a small compartment in your bag. Moreover, because the plastic charging plate is on an angle, the watch is prone to becoming dislodged at the slightest of nudges. And its red and blue indicator LEDs are simply too bright. I usually charge my smartwatch on the bedside table overnight, but I had to cover the Fossil Q Founder with a pillowcase to prevent it lighting up the room and interrupting my sleep.It's just as well the watch supports the Qi charging standard – a nice touch – but the steel bracelet means you’ll need to find one that it wraps around rather than sitting on top.
What do you do when your home or office is situated in a mobile reception blank spot, or in a place where receiving a signal involves standing on the washing machine with one leg on the fridge and your head pressed against the ceiling?Read Paul's latest advice on how to boost your mobile reception here Either situation is an impossible way to run your business life, and with the advent of mobile clients for social networks, such a lack of signal may adversely affect your social life too. Of course, you could simply change network, selecting the one that offers the best signal for your location, but for people with a company-supplied mobile phone that isn’t even an option, since you usually have to take what you’re given.Perhaps you live or work in a location where there isn’t the faintest signal from any of the mobile networks: such places do exist, especially in remote coastal valleys. Changing networks wouldn’t make a jot of difference there, so what do you do in a situation like that?
Actually, there’s a host of things you can try, but the one I urge you not to try is installing a cheap mobile phone booster or repeater. You’ll find several UK companies selling these on eBay or Google, but none of them mention that using such devices is totally illegal. It’s one of those peculiarly British law mess-ups that makes it legal to sell repeaters, legal to own them, but not legal to use them!Ofcom says “Mobile repeaters are classed as radio apparatus and their use in the UK is regulated by the Wireless Telegraphy Act 2006. It is unlawful to install or use this type of radio apparatus unless that is done under and in accordance with a specific wireless telegraphy licence granted by Ofcom; or Ofcom has made regulations exempting the installation or use from the requirement for a licence. Ofcom has not granted any licences for the installation or use of repeaters nor made any exemption regulations. The unlicensed installation and use of a repeater would put the user at risk of prosecution under the 2006 Act. If found guilty users can face a fine of up to £5,000 and up to a year in prison.”
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Given this clear and unambiguous prohibition, I find it amazing that various forums are littered with people discussing their use of repeaters within their homes and small offices, some even posting photos of how they’ve installed the kit. They might as well post a picture of a £5,000 cheque made payable to HM Court Services.Luckily, you have several legal options, the first being to use Voice over IP (VoIP) services to make and receive calls from your black spot, which of course involves having a wireless network, a smartphone or Wi-Fi connected device (a tablet or laptop would also do at a pinch), and some kind of VoIP app such as Skype, Truphone, Vonage, WePhone or Viber.
Where you once had to worry whether your phone had VoIP built in and properly integrated into its operating system, the proliferation of these services means that you can now take calls from pretty much any Wi-Fi connected device – as long as it has speakers and a microphone. If Wi-Fi coverage is an issue, simply shelling out for a Wi-Fi extender may be a relatively cheap remedy As an alternative, forget VoIP and use one of the “find me” single-number providers that ring round a programmed sequence of numbers to locate you – mobile, office, home and so on. The problem is that unless you regularly update them to try your current location first, they give a shifty and, frankly, unprofessional impression to callers as they ring around all your different numbers. (Some VoIP providers offer a similar system.)Luckily, not all black-spot remedies are clunky or illegal. Probably the most mature of these is UMA (Unlicensed Mobile Access) over Wi-Fi, and the only network that currently offers it in the UK is EE.
Formula E is arguably the most innovative motorsport in the world. Featuring a grid of all-electric cars driven by some of the world’s top drivers, it’s already attracting car makers such as Audi, Renault and Citroen. Now into its second season, Formula E has continued to push boundaries in our understanding of electric cars.Although Formula E racers might look like Formula One cars on the surface, inside they're a very different beast – and probably have more in common with your laptop than your road car. Confused? We don't blame you. Luckily, Formula E has released this video to show you exactly how they work.Microsoft took its precious time over Windows 10 Mobile, but now, only a month or so after it first appeared on the screens of the Lumias 950 and 950 XL, we already have the next instalment in the series: the Microsoft Lumia 650. It’s a very different phone, though, to the first pair. Where those two phones targeted consumers looking to spend high-end handset money, the Microsoft Lumia 650 is a budget device through-and-through.
Not that you’d know it by simply looking at it, though, because Microsoft has done a stand-up job on the design. In fact, you could argue the Lumia 650 is a better-looking device than either the 950 and the 950 XL, which says as much about the cheap design of those devices as it does about the good looks of the 650.Nonetheless, the Microsoft Lumia is an uncommonly handsome device for one so cheap. Its gunmetal grey aluminium frame and exposed chamfered edges (machined at an angle of 38.5 degrees to maximise the gleam) cut a business-class dash, and its slim lines and understated detailing break with budget phone conventions.If you don’t get on with the bright colours and plastic feel of the third-generation Motorola Moto G, this phone is the perfect antidote. Even though the back is made from thin, matte-black plastic, there’s a bonus: it can be removed to give access to a removable battery and microSD card slot beneath.
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A close look around the edges of the Lumia 650 reveals more than just pretty machining. Along the bottom edge, you’ll find not a next-generation USB Type-C socket like on the first two Windows 10 Mobile handsets, but a bog-standard micro-USB socket.Why is this important? Because it means the Microsoft Lumia 650 does not support Windows 10 Mobile's marquee feature, Continuum. You can’t plug it into the Microsoft DisplayDock and use it as a desktop PC as you can with the 950 and 950 XL.There’s also no iris recognition or fingerprint reader, either, but these aren’t the biggest of the disappointments. The major let-down is that the Lumia 650 is powered by a lowly Qualcomm Snapdragon 210 – a quad-core SoC running at 1.3GHz – and it has a meagre 1GB of RAM. Those are the sorts of specs I’d expect to see on an ultra-budget smartphone costing under £100, not a phone expecting to compete with the likes of the Moto G and Honor 5X.
At first, you probably won't notice. Menus scroll up and down smoothly enough, even moderately data-heavy web pages do the same, but as soon as you load up something more demanding – a game or the Maps app, for example – the Lumia 650 starts to stutter and slow down. In the benchmarks, its scores lag significantly behind the majority of rival phones at a similar price.And it isn’t helped by Windows 10 Mobile’s many bugs, which the Lumia 650’s slowness throw into stark relief. Zoom into a photo in the Photos app and you’ll see irritating glitching as you pinch in and out, fire up navigation in the Maps app and it disappears from the multitasking menu, seemingly at random. The included voice memo app won’t run in the background – it pauses when you switch to another app – so you can’t take notes while recording audio. I could go on.Battery life is better, outlasting the Moto G 3rd generation in our video rundown test by a handful of minutes. It lasted 11hrs 36mins to the Motorola’s 11hrs 12mins, which translates to around a day of moderate use. It still isn't anything special, though.
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