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Redmi K20 Pro available on Amazon India now

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Buy here: https://amzn.to/35OVZFl

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Smartphones Technology

BSNL, Jio, Vodafone Idea and Bharti Airtel to raise mobile phone calls and data prices from December.

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Vodafone Idea reported a consolidated net loss of Rs 50,921 crore for Quarter 2 which is the highest ever quarterly loss reported by an Indian company. Bharti Airtel, on the other hand, posted a quarterly loss of Rs 28,450 crore.

Image result for airtel vodafone idea jio"

The main reason for this is the ruling Supreme Court ordering telcos to pay government dues in the AGR case.

“The telecom sector is highly capital intensive with fast-changing technology cycles that require continuing investments. It is, therefore, extremely important that the industry remains viable to support the vision of Digital India, Accordingly, Airtel will appropriately increase price offerings in the month beginning December ” Bharti Airtel said in a statement.


Vodafone Idea limited had also said it would “suitably increase the prices of its tariffs” effective from December 1.

The exact details of the hike are not yet available. It will also be interesting to see if Jio too increases its prices or would still keep the same pricing. Jio had recently come under criticism for making calls to other networks chargeable even with unlimited calling plans.

Jio on Tuesday said in a statement said it would carry out an “appropriate” increase in tariffs which “does not adversely impact data consumption or growth in digital adoption and sustains investments”.

“Like other operators, we will also work with the government and comply with the regulatory regime to strengthen the industry to benefit Indian consumers and take measures including appropriate increase in tariffs in next few weeks in a manner that does not adversely impact data consumption or growth in digital adoption and sustains investments,” it said.

“We are presently examining our voice and data tariff and will increase it from December 1, 2019,” said a senior BSNL official who did not wish to be named.

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Smartphones Technology

Jio, Vodafone Idea and Bharti Airtel to raise mobile phone calls and data charges from December.

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Read Time:1 Minute, 21 Second

Vodafone Idea reported a consolidated net loss of Rs 50,921 crore for Quarter 2 which is the highest ever quarterly loss reported by an Indian company. Bharti Airtel, on the other hand, posted a quarterly loss of Rs 28,450 crore.

Image result for airtel vodafone idea jio"

The main reason for this is the ruling Supreme Court ordering telcos to pay government dues in the AGR case.

“The telecom sector is highly capital intensive with fast-changing technology cycles that require continuing investments. It is, therefore, extremely important that the industry remains viable to support the vision of Digital India, Accordingly, Airtel will appropriately increase price offerings in the month beginning December ” Bharti Airtel said in a statement.


Vodafone Idea limited had also said it would “suitably increase the prices of its tariffs” effective from December 1.

The exact details of the hike are not yet available. It will also be interesting to see if Jio too increases its prices or would still keep the same pricing. Jio had recently come under criticism for making calls to other networks chargeable even with unlimited calling plans.

Jio on Tuesday said in a statement said it would carry out an “appropriate” increase in tariffs which “does not adversely impact data consumption or growth in digital adoption and sustains investments”.

“Like other operators, we will also work with the government and comply with the regulatory regime to strengthen the industry to benefit Indian consumers and take measures including appropriate increase in tariffs in next few weeks in a manner that does not adversely impact data consumption or growth in digital adoption and sustains investments,” it said.

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Smartphones Technology

Guide on LG V30 AOSP ROMs, troubleshooting & recommendations

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NOTE: I have stopped using LG V30 actively. So while many things below will be still useful, the guide does not have the list of bugs for Android 13 and above AOSP ROMs for now. Though I will update it once I get time to test Android 14 ROMs. #LGV30forever

On this page, I’ll basically talk about AOSP ROMs, their bugs, possible solutions, suggested Mods to use etc.

LG V30 Custom ROM reviews: https://aakashverma.com/lg-v30-all-custom-rom-video-reviews/

General Tips

1. All Pie AOSP ROMs except LOS16 Beta need Oreo Blobs i.e. Oreo Firmware
2. All Android 10 and 11 AOSP ROMs need Pie Blobs i.e. Stock Pie Firmware. Just use any pie firmware compatible with your variant.
3. If the ROM doesn’t boot for you or you have issue of camera & Flashlight not working then try using permissive SElinux. Flash this in TWRP and select permissive: https://zackptg5.com/downloads/Kernel-Sepolicy-Patcher.zip
4. Recommended Gapps: https://nikgapps.github.io/
5. If SafetyNet does not pass then apps like netflix, google pay may detect root and refuse to work. This be easily resolved by this module: https://github.com/kdrag0n/safetynet-fix . Enable zygisk and also add the apps you want to hide root from to the denylist.
6. LG camera(and other LG apps) does not and will never work on AOSP. Use Gcam from here: https://t.me/Lgcam (Much better pictures than stock camera). Instead of LG music player you may try AIMP, UAPP or Neutron.

Kernel and ROM compatibility

1. Kernels made for Android 11 will disable wifi on stock pie and Android 10

2. Android 10 kernels will work on stock pie but will break wifi on A11.

3. Android 9 AOSP kernels can be used on Stock Oreo but not on Stock Pie, Android 10 and Android 11.

AOSP Pie ROMs after Stock Pie

If you flash pie KDZ then AOSP ROMs like LOS, RR, havoc won’t work properly.(might not boot or things like camera may not work).

Even if you flash Oreo KDZ and then flash AOSP ROMs, the camera and flashlight won’t work on enforcing but will work on permissive selinux.
But even on permissive a few sensors may not work(e.g. pocketmode). Still ROMs work decently if you downgrade to oreo firmware.
There is no workaround for this.

Note: Los17, Liquid Q and any other Android 10 ROMs need Pie firmware.

Stock Pie after Android 10 or 11 AOSP ROMs

If Camera and flashlight doesn’t work for you on stock pie after AOSP ROMs then do this:-
1) Restore persist in TWRP that you backed up from stock Pie
2) Dirty flash twrp zip of the stock ROM
3) If 1 doesn’t work then Flash this in TWRP and select permissive: https://zackptg5.com/downloads/Kernel-Sepolicy-Patcher.zip . This will definitely fix the camera for you.

Bugs on Android 12 ROMs (Work in progress/ not a definitive list)

  1. No VoLTE or VoWifi.
  2. USB debugging issue of some ROMs.

Bugs on Android 11 ROMs

  1. No VoLTE or VoWifi
  2. AOD brightness can’t changed. OLED Saver app can be used to change it.
  3. If you have GPS issues then do this fix: https://t.me/LGV30U/1187
  4. Chrome freezes and does not work for some people. Use chrome v74 or another browser.
  5. FM radio does not work.
  6. Most Gcams have trouble recording videos.

Bugs on Android 10 ROMs
1. Wifi may or May not work for you
If it doesn’t work then try: https://t.me/LGV30U/914
2. If wifi is unstable try Flashing oreo modem(using img file in twrp)
a) H930 Modem: https://t.me/LGV30U/128
b) US998 Modem: https://t.me/LGV30U/124
3. AOD brightness can’t changed. OLED Saver app can be used to change

4. Android Auto doesn’t work (Solved on Resurrection Remix 8.6.7)
5. No VoLTE or VoWifi
6. Turn off wifi scanning under location settings otherwise you’ll have soft reboots while turning on/off Wifi.
If you are having sim issues after a soft reboot because of this, turn airplane mode on and off!
7. Sprint has some issues: https://forum.xda-developers.com/lg-v30/help/sprint-lte-data-issues-aosp-roms-t3927841
8. Screencast doesn’t work too well.
9. While on call, touchscreen still takes input even when display is turned off via proximity sensor.

Bugs on Pie ROMs

1. No VoLTE or VoWifi
2. AVC reset bug when you pause and play music.
3. Have to say ‘Ok Google’ twice to launch google assistant.
4. Static sound on loudspeaker on video calls, PUBG etc. Use earphones and it will work fine.
5. Sprint has some issues: https://forum.xda-developers.com/lg-v30/help/sprint-lte-data-issues-aosp-roms-t3927841
6. U.S. Verizon carrier users have to make a phone call after any reboots to receive texts.
7. Screencast broken.

Warning: These are from my experience. Using customs ROMs can cause you issues. I am not responsible for anything that goes wrong with your device so proceed with caution.

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UPSC

Sociology Syllabus for UPSC Mains Examination

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Paper-I

Fundamentals of sociology

1. Sociology – The Discipline:

(a) Modernity and social changes in Europe and emergence of Sociology.

(b) Scope of the subject and comparison with other social sciences.

(c) Sociology and common sense.

2. Sociology as Science:

(a) Science, scientific method and critique.

(b) Major theoretical strands of research methodology.

(c) Positivism and its critique.

(d) Fact value and objectivity.

(e) Non-positivist methodologies.

3. Research Methods and Analysis:

(a) Qualitative and quantitative methods.

(b) Techniques of data collection.

(c ) Variables, sampling, hypothesis, reliability and validity.

4. Sociological Thinkers:

(a) Karl Marx – Historical materialism, mode of production, alienation, class struggle.

(b) Emile Durkheim – Division of labour, social fact, suicide, religion and society.

(c) Max Weber – Social action, ideal types, authority, bureaucracy, protestant ethic and the spirit of capitalism.

(d) Talcott Parsons – Social system, pattern variables.

(e) Robert K. Merton – Latent and manifest functions, conformity and deviance, reference groups.

(f) Mead – Self and identity.

5. Stratification and Mobility :

(a) Concepts – equality, inequality, hierarchy, exclusion,poverty and deprivation.

(b) Theories of social stratification – Structural functionalist theory, Marxist theory, Weberian theory.

(c) Dimensions – Social stratification of class, status groups, gender, ethnicity and race.

(d) Social mobility – open and closed systems, types of mobility, sources and causes of mobility.

6. Works and Economic Life :

(a) Social organization of work in different types of society – slave society, feudal society, industrial capitalist society

(b) Formal and informal organization of work.

(c) Labour and society.

7. Politics and Society:

(a) Sociological theories of power.

(b) Power elite, bureaucracy, pressure groups and political parties.

(c) Nation, state, citizenship, democracy, civil society,ideology.

(d) Protest, agitation, social movements, collective action, revolution.

8. Religion and Society :

(a) Sociological theories of religion.

(b) Types of religious practices: animism, monism, pluralism, sects, cults.

(c) Religion in modern society: religion and science, secularization, religious revivalism, fundamentalism.

9. Systems of Kinship:

(a) Family, household, marriage.

(b) Types and forms of family.

(c) Lineage and descent.

(d) Patriarchy and sexual division of labour.

(e) Contemporary trends.

10. Social Change in Modern Society :

(a) Sociological theories of social change.

(b) Development and dependency.

(c) Agents of social change.

(d) Education and social change.

(e) Science, technology and social change.

Paper-II

Indian Society : Structure And Change

A. Introducing Indian Society :

(i) Perspectives on the Study of Indian Society :

   (a) Indology (G.S. Ghurye).

   (b) Structural functionalism (M. N. Srinivas).

   (c) Marxist sociology (A. R. Desai).

(ii) Impact of colonial rule on Indian society :

   (a) Social background of Indian nationalism.

   (b) Modernization of Indian tradition.

   (c) Protests and movements during the colonial period.

   (d) Social reforms.

B. Social Structure:

(i) Rural and Agrarian Social Structure:

   (a) The idea of Indian village and village studies.

   (b) Agrarian social structure— evolution of land tenure system, land reforms.

(ii) Caste System:

   (a) Perspectives on the study of caste systems: G. S. Ghurye, M. N. Srinivas, Louis Dumont, Andre Beteille.

   (b) Features of caste system.

   (c) Untouchability-forms and perspectives

(iii) Tribal Communities in India:

   (a) Definitional problems.

   (b) Geographical spread.

   (c) Colonial policies and tribes.

   (d) Issues of integration and autonomy.

(iv) Social Classes in India:

   (a) Agrarian class structure.

   (b) Industrial class structure.

   (c) Middle classes in India.

(v) Systems of Kinship in India:

   (a) Lineage and descent in India.

   (b) Types of kinship systems.

   (c) Family and marriage in India.

   (d) Household dimensions of the family.

   (e) Patriarchy, entitlements and sexual division of labour.

(vi) Religion and Society :

   (a) Religious communities in India.

   (b) Problems of religious minorities.

C. Social Changes in India:

(i) Visions of Social Change in India:

   (a) Idea of development planning and mixed economy.

   (b) Constitution, law and social change.

   (c) Education and social change.

(ii) Rural and Agrarian Transformation in India:

   (a) Programmes of rural development, Community Development Programme, cooperatives, poverty alleviation schemes.

   (b) Green revolution and social change.

   (c) Changing modes of production in Indian agriculture.

   (d) Problems of rural labour, bondage, migration.

(iii) Industrialization and Urbanisation in India:

   (a) Evolution of modern industry in India.

   (b) Growth of urban settlements in India.

   (c) Working class: structure, growth, class mobilization.

   (d) Informal sector, child labour.

   (e) Slums and deprivation in urban areas.

(iv) Politics and Society :

   (a) Nation, democracy and citizenship.

   (b) Political parties, pressure groups, social and political elite.

   (c) Regionalism and decentralization of power.

   (d) Secularization.

(v) Social Movements in Modern India :

   (a) Peasants and farmers movements.

   (b) Women’s movement.

   (c) Backward classes & Dalit movements.

   (d) Environmental movements.

   (e) Ethnicity and Identity movements.

(vi) Population Dynamics :

   (a) Population size, growth, composition and distribution.

   (b) Components of population growth: birth, death, migration.

   (c) Population Policy and family planning.

   (d) Emerging issues: ageing, sex ratios, child and infant mortality, reproductive health.

(vii) Challenges of Social Transformation :

   (a) Crisis of development : displacement, environmental problems and sustainability.

   (b) Poverty, deprivation and inequalities.

   (c) Violence against women.

   (d) Caste conflicts.

   (e) Ethnic conflicts, communalism, religious revivalism.

   (f) Illiteracy and disparities in education.

The syllabus must be on your tips if you want to score well on the examination.

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Motorola Razr 2019 Foldable Phone expected to Launch at November 13 Los Angeles Event

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Motorola’s foldable smartphone has been leaking all over the internet for the past year. We finally have a official word on when it might actually launch. Motorola has chosen to play on people’s nostalgic side by launching it under the iconic Razr brand which was once known for offering premium-looking clamshell phones and form factor of a flip phone. Motorola Razr will be directly competing against the likes of Huawei Mate X and Samsung Galaxy Fold with its foldable design. VP of Global Product Dan Dery in a media interview back in February had said “We started to work on foldables a long time ago,”teasing the launch of a foldable phone.

Suggesting the comeback of the Razr brand, the invite reads, “An original unlike any other.” and also mentions “You’re going to flip.”

The specifications will be:-

  • Qualcomm Snapdragon 710 SoC
  • 6GB of RAM and 128GB of onboard storage
  • 6.2-inch (876×2142 pixels) folding display alongside a secondary display of 600×800 pixels resolution.

Motorola will take a different approach of putting a single flexible display that folds twice and comes with a dual-hinge design. It will carry a price tag of around EUR 1,500 (Rs. 1,20,000) and will be unveiled at November 13 Los Angeles Event.

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Self Development

How to be happy- The pursuit of Happiness.

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What is your goal? What is it that drives you? After achieving your goal how do you feel? You feel happy, right? So does that mean your eventual goal is to be happy?

What is happiness? We can find a lot of different definitions for Happiness, but we know it when we feel it, and we often use the term to describe a range of positive emotions, including joy, pride, contentment, and gratitude. Happiness is a state of mind.

Many people associate success with happiness and they feel that they can be happy only if they are successful which shouldn’t be the case because success is circumstantial and happiness is not. You can stay happy even if you don’t own a big bungalow, fast car or a large bank balance. But the important thing is that you must first identify what makes you happy?

1. Change the way you think: Glass half full. Occupy your mind with positive thoughts. Look for the positive in all your experiences. The old saying that you find what you look for is true. Start. Because of this, make it a habit to actively seek out the positive in any experience.

Focusing on your experiences in the present moment without worrying too about the future. If you have 10 tasks, break it down. Set a goal that you have to complete 2 of those tasks by tomorrow and don’t worry about the other 8. Accept harsh experiences and problems as learning opportunities. It can be tempting to let challenges or roadblocks keep us from feeling happy. Sometimes, it looks like there’s nothing good about a particular situation or experience. However, it’s important to think about even the greatest setbacks as experiences we can learn from for great results in the future tomorrow.

Cultivate optimism. Why does winning the lottery not make people happy? In the 1970s, researchers followed people who’d won the lottery and found that a year afterward, they were no happier than people who hadn’t. This is called hedonic adaptation,which suggests that we each have a “baseline” of happiness to which we return. No matter what events occur, good or bad, the effect on our happiness is temporary, and happiness tends to quickly revert to the baseline level. Some people have a higher baseline happiness level than others, and that is due in part to genetics, but it’s also largely influenced by how you think

 “I’m terrible at math. I’m going to fail that test tomorrow. I might as well just watch TV.” This statement suggests that your math skills are inherent and unchangeable, rather than a skill you can develop with work. Such an outlook could lead you to study less because you feel like there’s no point to it — you’re just an inherently bad mathematics student. This isn’t helpful.

An optimistic outlook would say something like “I’m concerned about doing well on that test tomorrow, but I’m going to study as well as I can and do my best.” Optimism doesn’t deny the reality of challenges, but it interprets how you approach them differently.

Show yourself self-compassion. Beating yourself up or giving in to negative thoughts can leave you feeling weak and unhappy. Dwelling on negative thoughts or feelings of guilt doesn’t promote improvement; it actually hoslds you back from growing and learning. Instead, show yourself the same kindness and generosity you should show to a friend

Make friends, happiness can be contagious. But stay away to from depressing people.


Meditate:

In one study, a research team from Massachusetts General Hospital looked at the brain scans of 16 people before and after they participated in an eight-week course in mindfulness meditation. Neuroimaging concluded that after completing the course, parts of the participants’ brains associated with compassion and self-awareness grew, and parts associated with stress shrank.

9. Move Closer to Work: A Short Commute is Worth More Than a Big House

If you do what you love, you’ll never work a day in your life.

Happiness is Not A Final Destination but it’s a journey!

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Smartphones

The most dangerous creature in the world is …. the Smartphone? Your smartphone addiction could be fatal.

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Which is the deadliest creature on earth according to you? Sharks are considered one of the most deadly creatures on earth. But the surprising fact according to CNtraveller is that selfies are more dangerous. Yes, you read it right. More people have died while taking selfies (11) than those killed by sharks(8) in the previous year.

The number of mobile phone users globally are 4.8 billion according to a study released by GSM Association (GSMA) 

The average user checks his/her smartphone at least 46 times a day and in the United States, people collectively do this 8 billion times in 24 hours (App Annie). According to emarketer the average time spent by people in USA is 2 hours 54 mins screen on time. Several researchers have raised concerns about health problems due to the excessive use of smartphones.

An interesting thing that I’ve noticed is children throwing tantrums to play on smartphones. Well giving them your phone to play may save from a lot of headaches, but it could prove to be damaging to kids. According to researchers, a smartphone is harmful to a child’s ability to learn because it distracts their attention and thus affects their mental health. According to Jenny Radesky, MD, clinical instructor in Developmental-Behavioral Pediatrics at Boston University: “These devices also may replace the hands-on activities important for the development of sensorimotor and visual-motor skills, which are important for the learning and application of math and science,” Nowadays I rarely see kids playing the park, all I see kids wanting to use their parents’ phones.

Another problem is the rise in Cyberbullying. The perfect example of this is the Blue whale challenge to which more than 130 deaths have been linked to in Russia and is rapidly spreading across India. In this challenge the so-called admins target emotionally unstable youngsters. Initially they give them challenges like taking selfie at 4 AM. The later tasks are much more devious, like cutting yourself or harming others. And the 50th and final task is to kill yourself. And if at any stage you refuse cooperate, the admins blackmail and bully you into doing tasks. Take the case of a grade 10 student from Madhya Pradesh who had completed 49 tasks and was being forced to commit suicide.

You save money whole month to buy those nice pair of shoes you’ve been eyeing for weeks. And bam, a pop up to buy items within a game pops up and you accidentally click on buy. Congrats you just got a 100 gems for 2000 rupees in a game rarely play to pass time. Luckily Amazon customers, a court ruling directed Amazon to start refunding $70 million that kids and adults accidentally spent in apps and games. However all parents aren’t so lucky.

There can be more direct threats too. The National Safety Council reports that cell phone use while driving leads to 1.6 million crashes each year. Nearly 330,000 injuries occur each year from accidents caused by texting while driving.1 out of every 4 car accidents in the United States is caused by texting and driving. Texting while driving is 6x more likely to cause an accident than driving drunk. According to 2012 National survey on distracted driving attitude and behaviours nearly half (48%) of drivers admit to answering their cell phones while driving.

Famous tech reviewer Marques Brownlee often says good smartphones are getting cheaper and cheap smartphones are getting are better. The decrease in prices of smartphones has resulted in an exponential growth in the adoption of smartphones. Which unlike computers are harder to monitor for parents. The decrease in prices of Internet data has also increased the uptake of smartphones. According to Forrester, a global research firm, mobile device usage is expected to reach more than 5.5 billion users by 2022 worldwide. India currently has a smartphone user base of over 300 million.

Cell phones and handheld mobile devices have diverse capabilities. The more diverse the functions of the cell phone the stronger are the attachment of the user to the device.

Ours is the first generation that’s using smartphones for a major part of our lives. We’ve already seen what kind of damage the influx of this technology is capable of doing. We cannot even begin to fathom the effects of long term usage of smartphones on our health. A life without smartphones seems unthinkable There could be some solutions:-

Internet is the soul of smartphones. Cut off the Internet once the user reaches the maximum data allotment. The ideal solution is to limit access to the Internet for teenagers. Parents can adjust settings and apply limitations when the data reached the maximum.

There are even some apps like “Break free” that monitor your smartphone usage and notify whenever your usage gets close to an unhealthy amount. With that I would like to close with a quote by Aldous Huxley: Technological progress has merely provided us with more efficient means for going backward. Even Google has introduced digital well- being in most recent Android smartphones to help you monitor your smartphone usage.

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Smartphones

OnePlus 7T launched with 90Hz Fluid Display, Triple Rear Cameras, Snapdragon 855+ SoC, Price in India

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Read Time:2 Minute, 25 Second

The OnePlus 7T price in India starts at Rs. 37,999 for the 8GB + 128GB option, whereas its 8GB + 256GB variant will retail at Rs. 39,999. The smartphone will be offered in Frosted Silver and Glacier Blue color options in a new matte frosted glass look. It will go on sale via Amazon India, OnePlus India website, and OnePlus Experience Stores starting September 28.

OnePlus 7T runs on OxygenOS 10.0, based on Android 10. The OnePlus 7T sports a 6.55-inch full-HD+ (1080×2400 pixels) Fluid AMOLED display with a 20:9 aspect ratio, 90Hz refresh rate, HDR10+ support, a pixel density of 402ppi, a peak brightness of 1,000 nits, as well as support for sRGB and DCI-P3 color gamuts. The display is also said to feature new tech to block 40 percent of blue light. It also bears Corning Gorilla Glass on both the front and back panels. The OnePlus 7 had a 19.5:9 aspect ratio on its 6.41-inch, 60Hz, and HDR10+ display. It is powered by the octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 855+ SoC, coupled with the Adreno 640 GPU and up to 8GB of LPDDR4x RAM.

The OnePlus 7T features a triple rear camera setup, in a horizontal layout – compared to the dual rear camera in a vertical layout on the OnePlus 7:-
-48-megapixel Sony IMX586 sensor as its primary camera, with an f/1.6 aperture, 1.6-micron pixels (4-in-1), optical image stabilization (OIS), electronic image stabilization (EIS), and phase detection autofocus (PDAF).
-Secondary camera features a 2x telephoto lens with a 12-megapixel sensor, an f/2.2 aperture, and 1.0-micron pixels.
-The third camera is an ultra-wide-angle lens with a 16-megapixel sensor, an f/2.2 aperture, and 117-degree field of view.
-The rear camera setup is accompanied by a dual-LED flash module. Rear camera features include 4K video at up to 60fps, 1080p video at up to 60fps, and 720p video at up to 960fps, with the last two being Super Slow Motion modes. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ughRPl2mCbo

The OnePlus 7T packs a 3,800mAh battery and it supports Warp Charge 30T fast charging technology which delivers 30W (5V/ 6A) power. OnePlus says that Warp Charge 30T is 18 percent faster than Warp Charge 30 (found on OnePlus 7 Pro), and it can charge a 3,800mAh battery to 70 percent in just half an hour.

Connectivity options on the OnePlus 7T include 4G VoLTE, Wi-Fi 802.11ac, Bluetooth v5.0, NFC, GPS/ A-GPS, and a USB Type-C (v3.1 Gen 1) port. Sensors include an accelerometer, ambient light sensor, gyroscope, electronic compass, sensor core, and a proximity sensor.

It has dimensions of 160.94×74.4×8.13mm, weighs 190 grams, and integrates an in-display fingerprint scanner as well.

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Smartphones

LG V30 H930DS finally gets Android Pie Update in India

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LG is now rolling out the Android 9.0 Pie Update for the LG V30 H930DS in India. You can have a look at new features in this video:-


OTA may take some time to come so if you want the update quickly you can download the update via LG Bridge or use kdz file from here on XDA including instructions by ChazzMatt.

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