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HD Media Players: Up to 60% OFF and Low to $5.95 The Asus ZenFone 2 is the Taiwanese manufacturer’s newest smartphone lineup. Aside from the initial $199 and $299 versions with a 5.5-inch display, the company just announced 5-inch and 6-inch models at Computex this week, which are sure to broaden its appeal. But let’s step back for a moment and look at that original $299 handset, which matches up with the perennial-favorite OnePlus One in a number of ways.Both devices have 5.5-inch, in-plane switching (IPS) liquid crystal displays (LCD) with Corning Gorilla Glass 3 panels, full HD screen resolution (1920 x 1080p), front and back cameras with the same camera apertures (5MP and 13MP with f/2.0 apertures, respectively), 16GB and 64GB versions, and 802.11ac Wi-Fi. So on the surface, there are few differences between the two phones. But we’ll find them once we look a little closer. The OnePlus One is slightly lighter — 5.7 versus 6.0 ounces for the ZenFone 2. While both phones have the same screen resolution, the ZenFone 2 ever-so-slightly edges out the OnePlus One in pixel density (403 ppi vs. 401 ppi). You’ll never see that in real life, of course, but it’s there. Both front and back cameras of these two devices have the same megapixel count (5MP front, 13MP back). But the ZenFone 2 dwarfs the OnePlus One in camera features and settings; the ZenFone 2 has face detection, smile detection, touch to focus, geotagging, and a High Dynamic Range (HDR) mode. For its part, the OnePlus One supports 4K video recording and can record in HD up to 120fps. Laptop motherboard, ausu max. Max battery price, 2 amazon. 5 accessories, 32gb. Max price 2016, update. 2 laser ze551kl 32gb, max prezzo. S7 edge lifeproof, 2 zd551kl. Zoovd zc500tg, 2 16gb. Cellphone latest, 3 selfie. Laptop review india, 5 lte 16gb. Black case iphone 6, smartfone. Processador 2, 2 india. Under the hood, the ZenFone 2 is powered by a quad-core, 2.3GHz, 64-bit, 22nm Intel Atom Z3580 processor with a PowerVR G6430 GPU and 4GB RAM. The OnePlus One contains a 2.5GHz, quad-core, 28nm Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 processor with an Adreno 330 GPU and 3GB RAM. On paper, the OnePlus One has a slightly faster clock speed (2.5GHz vs. 2.3GHz), and the ZenFone 2 has an additional 1GB of DDR3 (not DDR4) RAM over the OnePlus One. Both the ZenFone 2 and OnePlus One have less-expensive 16GB models available: the 16GB ZenFone 2 has 2GB of DDR3 RAM, while the 16GB OnePlus One has the same 3GB of DDR3 RAM.How does that all translate in real life? The ZenFone 2 tends to beat the OnePlusOne in benchmarks, but not by much. You shouldn’t notice much difference in day-to-day usage with these two phones. The ZenFone 2 and OnePlus One both run Android 5.0 Lollipop, Google’s most recent major Android update. The ZenFone 2 comes laden with a heavy Zen UI layer, which may bother some enthusiasts, while the OnePlus One runs Cyanogen OS (although that will change on future OnePlus handsets); the OPO’s bootloader is unlockable and root is easy to get. There’s also a new official ROM from OnePlus called OxygenOS that users can install instead. The battery sizes are similar, though the OnePlus One slightly surpasses the ZenFone 2’s (3,100mAh vs. 3,000mAh, respectively). Unlike the OnePlus One, the ZenFone 2 has a microSD card slot, so you can boost its existing 16GB and 64GB of onboard storage. The ZenFone 2 costs $299 for the 64GB model and $199 for the 16GB model; the OnePlus One costs the same $299 for 64GB and a higher $249 for 16GB. The ZenFone 2 has two SIM card slots, which you may find helpful if you travel often. Both phones make a compelling case. Asus and OnePlus One have shown that you don’t have to “spec-settle” to get a great phone for a great price. With these two, storage options and OS flexibility will most likely determine which one you prefer. RH Battery isn’t big enough. I have a 4,000mAH battery. Don’t have to charge it but 2-3 times a week. Bri 4000 mAh stock battery? I’m guessing there’s no way. davidcianorris Motorola’s Moto maxx has a stock non removable 3900 mAh battery… I guess you can call that a “4000mAh class” battery. tha bloke Lenovo also has several models boasting 4000 mAh battery. Matt Menezes Between the $300 Asus ZenFone 2 smartphone and $700 Asus ZenBook UX305 ultrabook, Asus is making some awesome products at great prices. I’m honestly considering buying one or both… Skywax9016 True, they’re trying to recapture back the market with competitively priced products. Ivor O’Connor Waterproof? Exchangeable batteries? Battery life? Visibility in sunlight? Nice price. I think I’ll buy one if my Nexus 6 ever dies. BtotheT Saygus V2 Ivor, those features and much more, and sturdier(teflon back). (2)microSD WiHD 3200mah.. https://www.youtube. com/watch? v=VB8gplrkXqg Ivor O’Connor Thanks. I put my name on the waiting list. The “V Squared Superphone” keeps slipping its release date though. I’ll be watching closely. I want to see if the IPX7 goal becomes a real IP7 rating or just BS. And these pundits who say things like “a hardware camera shutter button and it’s rated IPX7 waterproof” really need to do their homework and read http://en.wikipedia. org/wiki/IP_Code Mathew Binkley I have the ZenFone 2 ($200 version). The hardware is pretty nice for what you pay. But ZenFone’s Android makes me want to beat my head against the wall. It comes with a bunch of crapware, has an entire suite of Asus software that you can’t uninstall, keeps begging you via notifications to install even more (two different ones in the past two days for me), and has a bad habit of “forgetting” that I was using the Google Hangouts for SMS instead of Asus’s text messaging app, or “forgetting” that I was using Google Chrome instead of Acer’s browser. It’s bad enough that I spent $100 on parts to repair my old Nexus 4, just so I can get back to stock Android. The hardware itself is nice for what you get, but I would put off buying one until someone releases a stock Android ROM for the thing. Emmanuel Florac My OnePlus One camera definitely has face recognition, touch to focus and HDR. So the differences are even less than stated :) AD1980 I noticed those errors in the article as well. Sir Chester of Game Rant Yeah, I’d like to see the features each phone offers over the other to be included. Might I also say that these processors, as anyone familiar with the game would say, are different designs. One is Intel, while the other is Snapdragon. We shall see how they truly compare in the benchmarks. Sir Chester of Game Rant I find the “Battle of the consoles/phones/graphics cards” or “console/phone/graphics card war” titles a bit repetitive. Something new would be appreciated, something more humorous, preferably. Also, I felt a bit thrown in when reading. While I like how it doesn’t dilly dally, I still feels as if it goes “Okay, so the display of the 199.99 and 249.99 phones… ” right at the start. Overall, still a good read. Shall be interesting to see these products launch and see how they compare when in the hands of reviewers. Ivor O’Connor Good point on being more humorous. Many of these articles could be made way way more interesting with a dab of humor. Amit_07 My vote goes to One plus One. Their are also rumors that One Plus Two is on the way. Read top upcoming smartphones http://outfresh. com/technology-news/top-5-of-the-best-upcoming-smartphones-2015/ Technobro What’s better about it? Amit_07 Everything. But most importantly PRICE, my friend. Truly, One of best budgeted smartphone available with top end specification under that price Technobro Isn’t the zenfone 2 cheaper? And phonearena says the oneplus one got 37599.6 on antutu, but the zenfone 2 got over 50000. BtotheT Left out again, Saygus V2.. Beginning to think it intentional. It’s coming, and it’s better than both those(in my opinion). Production underway photos https://twitter. com/Saygus/status/606843683627859970 Specs https://www.saygus. com/v2-2/ Ivor O’Connor When do you think it will actually be out? BtotheT I personally think they’ll announce shipping in 4-6weeks. I’d guess on receiving mine ≈ early August, just before the Intel Developer Forum, which’ll announce the Skylake GT4e for my next laptop, been waiting well over a year for Q4 2015 :D Kenneth How can it be left out if it isn’t even out yet? BtotheT The title states ‘Battle of the unlocked smartphones’ What’s more unlocked than a phone that can do a simple reboot for multiple OSs on a single device. Just because it’s not yet in the battle doesn’t mean it’s not a competitor. If people talk Amd vs intel, it’s all skylake and zen for example. The specs are lain out and it’s a month or 2 off(if even). If a consumer is in the market, it’s good to know the proximate market competition/opportunity . Kenneth I know you are either a fanboy or a Saygus employe, but you are doing a very poor job at either. That phone should have been out a long time ago, has an old CPU in it and is supposed to cost $600. CLEARLY it has not been left out, if anything that thing will be lucky to see the light of day and not become vaporware. BtotheT Don’t be a Hater. Where else am I gonna get 320-464gb in a phone with that amalgamtion of hardware? Also yeah, a Sdragon 805 or Exynos 7420 would be a nice step up, but the world isn’t perfect and the 800 should still be functional. I’m neither a emp or Fboy, just excited about having an unmatched phone with so much going for it. Alot of ppl won’t utilize it like I will in the media sense but for me it’s gold. I can WiHD or USB- HDMI my latest digital movies instead of hulking around my media player/usb power hard drive. I can have all my 56GBs of music, my 70GBs book/encyclopedia collection, my latest ~80Gbs of films/series, apps to control the world around me/ir blast devices. To me not is it just better than any tablet on the market, it makes it possible for me to eliminate the need for a bunch of what will be redundant devices. What would be stored in half a backpack, media player, book tablet, house remotes, router/wifi as opposed to LTE/network, bulky phone case everywhere I go adding 1/4 volume to the space my phone takes up.. I may come off as a fanboy but that’s cause I see and will potentiate all it has to offer for a mobile media guy like me. Also as to the Sdragon, I’d like the company to have success so they have a next iteration with even beefier hardware. No one else on the market goes all out like that, I want phones to be like that so the erase replace culture can swap the battery from time to time and not need anything further from a device(outmoding) every 3 years. Anyways, that’s my vantage, I’m hopeful and somewhat excited, have been since it’s specs video at CES, looks like the one for me ;P Thought I’d cheese it up with that last line since you wanna think of me as a fanboy zealot. On another note, I noticed your comment prior to me was expressing the LG G3 is your current consideration. It’s a decent phone for sure, but really all it has over Saygus is 2k vs 1080p, and an 801 vs 800 snapdragon, there is a lengthy list of features difference inversely while it’s 32gb internal model for 498.99(without a plan) doesn’t exactly put the V2 to shame. You may not need all the bells and whistles the V2 provides but I value them. Kyle I actually bought the Zenfone 2 as my first smartphone a few weeks ago. It comes with a lot of Asus apps, which is annoying, but they aren’t bloatware at least. They’re just ‘mostly’ useless utilities. It gets a bit too hot when charging, but aside from that, it stays cool even under heavy loads. Staying cool is a big selling point for a phone, at least as far as I’m concerned. Ivor O’Connor My nexus 6 is always hot. Sometimes I use it as a heater. Probably something to do with using bluetooth, gps, wifi hotspot, etc.. The battery is suppose to last two days or something but if I don’t keep it plugged in I’ll get two hours. AllSeasonRadial I own the OPO, and it is the best phone I have ever owned (it really puts the budget Samsung it replaced to shame), but the ZenFone appeals to me because of the thinner processor, the external storage and less so, because of the extra RAM. The downside is the software (I’m trying to be polite and not call it bloatware) Asus installs. Can’t you root the phone and remove that crap? Like, say, remove the Asus operating system and install, say, Cyanogen? http://a-gnu-hope.blogspot. com Ploni Almoni No, they use a locked bootloader. Even if it gets unlocked by hackers some day, to make custom ROMs possible, it’s Intel, which is less familiar to Android hackers and has few other devices that have custom ROMs that are similar to develop ROMs from. Maybe a root will be found or has been found for it so you could remove some of the bloat apps, however. It is a nice phone though. wilo108 unlocked bootloader has been released, and the first customized ROMS are available (essentially just stock minus bloat, but the journey has now begun ;)) Pesobill Very uninformative article ,we could have read the specs ourselves or already have .. I think both good phones but I have ‘heard’ the 1Plus has sound and phone issues .. Sad as it is a “phone” and with not enough volume in the ear piece or if it sounds junk to the other person is kinda junky.. Think 1Plus lost a lot of people with the stupidest marketing on the planet … I would go buy a Zenfone ,unless I wait for the new Nexus or the new 2Plus coming soon. pebear I was looking at the one plus one but I settled on the Zen Phone 2 64GB. I think the 4GB of RAM makes a ton of difference in speed. You can have several apps open and this thing does not get bogged down. I was worried with the Intel Atom being able to keep up with the snap dragon. I can say this thing is fast. The only two things I don’t like are 1. The battery is not replaceable. and 2. No Fingerprint reader. Beyond that it’s my absolute favorite phone. I bought it to replace my Note 3 whose batter life just sucks since the Lollipop upgrade. I think I’ll root the Note 3 and put a good and latest build of Cynogen on it. The Note 3 only has 2GB of ram and it bogs down after 3 or 4 apps. One last thing, the battery seems to last the whole day and that is all I ask of the battery. It comes with a huge charger that will put back 60% in like 1/2 hour so it will complete charge in little over an hour. Technobro I was going to buy the oneplus one, but then I caught a wiff of the touch issues… And I’d much rather have a phone made by an established company. With 4 gb ram :D Use of this site is governed by our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Copyright 1996-2017 Ziff Davis, LLC.PCMag Digital Group All Rights Reserved. ExtremeTech is a registered trademark of Ziff Davis, LLC. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of Ziff Davis, LLC. is prohibited.


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