Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
2024
Sale has
brought
several
deals
on
laptops
under
Rs.
50,000,
making
these
devices
a
lot
more
accessible
to
customers
who
want
to
increase
their
savings.
These
laptops
are
powered
by
Intel
and
AMD
processors,
and
buyers
can
pick
from
laptops
made
by
Asus,
Acer,
HP,
Dell,
and
Lenovo,
based
on
their
budget.
The
e-commerce
platform
is
also
offering
an
instant
cashback
on
these
laptops,
along
with
the
ability
to
pay
a
lower
price
by
exchanging
an
eligible
laptop.
Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
Sale
Bank
Offers
on
Laptops
While
there
are
several
deals
on
laptops
under
Rs.
50,000,
customers
shouldn’t
rush
while
making
a
purchase
and
check
the
listing
for
each
product
carefully.
This
is
because
Amazon
has
partnered
with
SBI
to
offer
an
instant
discount
of
up
to
Rs.
4,000,
depending
on
the
price
of
the
product.
Customers
who
can’t
avail
of
the
cashback
offer
can
trade
in
their
older
laptop
for
an
additional
exchange
bonus
of
up
to
Rs.
11,900.
This
can
help
them
lower
the
price
of
their
purchase,
making
it
even
more
affordable.
However,
you’ll
need
to
trade
in
an
eligible
device
in
order
to
avail
of
the
maximum
discount.
Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
Sale:
Top
Laptops
Under
Rs.
50,000
The
Motorola
Razr
series
has
been
one
of
the
most
recognisable
phones
in
human
history.
It
also
sold
well
and
made
much
money
for
the
now
Lenovo-owned
Motorola.
The
flip
phones
took
the
foldable
flip
route
in
late
2020
and
are
currently
in
their
5th
generation.
We
got
two
phones
this
year,
the
Razr
50
Ultra
and
Razr
50.
While
the
latter
looks
similar
to
last
year’s
model,
the
new
Razr
50
is
a
big
upgrade
in
terms
of
design
when
compared
to
the
Razr
40.
Motorola’s
Razr
50
is
like
the
Razr
40
Ultra
in
many
ways,
but
cheaper.
The
phone
is
priced
at
Rs.
64,999
in
India
and
is
only
available
with
8GB
RAM
and
256GB
storage.
Is
this
a
phone
you
should
consider
instead
of
the
more
expensive
Ultra
or
something
from
Samsung?
Should
you
upgrade
from
the
Razr
40?
I
answer
all
that
and
more
in
the
review.
Motorola
Razr
50
Design:
Really
good
and
functional
Dimensions
(Closed)
–
73.99
x
88.08
x
15.85mm
Dimensions
(Open)
–
73.99
x
171.30
x
7.25mm
Weight
–
189g
Colours
–
Beach
Sand,
Koala
Grey,
Spritz
Orange
The
new
Motorola
Razr
50
looks
very
different
compared
to
the
Razr
40
from
the
front.
You
still
get
the
rounded
corners,
curved
sides,
the
flat
hinge
design
at
the
back,
and
the
vegan
leather
finish
on
the
lower
part
of
the
phone.
There’s
a
vegan
leather
finish
on
the
lower
half
of
the
back
panel
and
a
thin
strip
of
vegan
leather
on
the
top
part.
The
vegan
leather
finish
offers
a
good
grip.
We
received
the
Spritz
Orange
unit
for
review,
and
it
is
a
unique
colour
option
that
will
grab
attention.
The
bottom
half
of
the
phone
looks
similar
to
last
year’s
Razr
40
Button
placements
are
similar
to
last
year’s
model.
The
right
edge
of
the
top
half
houses
the
volume
and
the
power
keys.
The
power
button
also
doubles
as
a
fingerprint
scanner
and
works
well.
You’ll
find
the
SIM
tray
tool
on
the
left
side
of
the
top
half.
The
top
edge
houses
a
microphone.
Finally,
the
USB
Type-C
port,
speaker,
and
microphone
are
placed
on
the
bottom
edge
of
the
lower
half.
One
of
the
most
important
aspects
of
the
Razr
50
design
is
obviously
the
hinge
and
its
mechanism.
Motorola
claims
that
it
has
redesigned
the
hinge
to
be
more
durable,
all
while
reducing
its
volume
by
about
30
percent
compared
to
the
previous
model.
The
hinge
is
also
said
to
offer
better
dust
protection
with
an
IPX8
rating,
and
I
found
it
very
effective.
However,
you
also
need
to
be
careful
not
to
leave
any
dust
on
the
inner
panel
when
closing
it
shut,
as
it
may
damage
the
display.
The
hinge
cover
is
made
from
stainless
steel,
whereas
the
phone’s
frame
is
made
using
6000
series
aluminium.
All
surfaces
get
a
smooth
satin
finish
that
makes
the
phone
feel
premium.
The
vegan
leather
finish
and
the
curved
frame
make
the
phone
easy
to
hold
The
hinge
also
has
a
short
range,
which
means
that
you
can
keep
the
display
open
only
at
certain
angles.
Cross
this
angle,
and
the
phone
will
automatically
close
or
open,
which
is
excellent
as
the
hinge
makes
it
easier
to
open
the
phone
with
one
hand.
However,
opening
the
phone
in
one
hand
is
still
a
task.
The
hinge
allows
for
certain
use
cases,
such
as
a
tent,
camcorder,
and
table
stand
modes.
A
new
floating
plate
in
the
hinge
is
claimed
to
be
less
stressful
on
the
folding
panel
and
helps
reduce
the
crease.
Although
Motorola
advertises
the
Razr
50
as
nearly
creaseless,
it’s
not
the
case.
There’s
a
visible
crease,
but
you
don’t
really
notice
it
when
viewing
videos
of
scrolling
through
Instagram.
You’ll
only
feel
its
presence
when
sliding
your
finger
over
the
inner
display
or
when
looking
at
the
screen
at
certain
angles.
Motorola
Razr
50
Display:
Big
upgrade
Outer
screen
–
3.63-inch
OLED,
1056
x
1066
pixels,
90Hz
The
Motorola
Razr
50
gets
a
massive
upgrade
in
the
display
department,
but
only
on
the
outside.
Instead
of
the
smaller,
not
very
useful
display
that
was
present
in
the
Razr
40,
you
now
get
a
3.63-inch
10-bit
OLED
panel
that
offers
a
90
Hz
refresh
rate,
up
to
1,700
nits
of
peak
brightness,
and
HDR
10
support.
The
panel
features
cutouts
for
the
cameras
and
the
LED
flash.
You
can
watch
videos
on
this
screen,
but
I’d
not
recommend
it.
It’s
suitable
for
playing
some
of
the
pre-installed
cover
screen
games,
though.
The
screen
also
gets
plenty
of
bright
outdoors
and
is
easy
to
read.
The
Razr
50’s
outer
display
is
super
useful
Opening
the
phone
reveals
a
taller-than-usual
flexible
plastic
10-bit
OLED
display
that
offers
a
120Hz
refresh
rate,
up
to
3,000
nits
of
peak
brightness,
and
HDR
10+
support.
You
get
three
colour
modes
on
the
panel
–
Natural,
Radiant,
and
Vivid.
Sticking
to
the
Natural
option
is
best,
as
the
other
modes
tend
to
boost
the
colours
a
bit
too
much.
The
inner
display
offers
a
22:9
aspect
ratio,
which
is
excellent
for
watching
movies
but
isn’t
the
best
when
watching
16:9
content
on
YouTube.
The
panel
is
easy
to
read
under
direct
sunlight
but
is
a
bit
more.
Both
displays
offer
Widevine
L1
support,
so
you
can
enjoy
viewing
content
in
full
HD
across
Netflix
and
other
streaming
apps.
Motorola
Razr
50
Software:
There’s
plenty
to
keep
you
flipping
OS
–
Android
14
UI
–
Hello
UI
Latest
security
patch
–
August
1st
Software
is
another
crucial
part
of
foldable
phones,
and
Motorola
has
done
a
great
job
with
its
Hello
UI.
While
it
still
looks
close
to
stock
Android,
some
design
elements
and
added
Moto
features
set
it
apart.
You
get
a
couple
of
preinstalled
apps,
but
these
are
not
really
bloatware
and
can
be
uninstalled.
There
are
also
several
Moto
apps
and
features,
such
as
Moto
Secure,
Family
Space,
Moto
Unplugged,
Smart
Connect,
and
a
few
others.
There’s
no
bloatware
on
the
phone
Motorola
has
also
included
a
couple
of
AI
tools
to
help
you
create
wallpapers.
There’s
Style
Sync
and
Magic
Canvas,
but
the
latter
requires
you
to
have
a
Moto
account.
Style
sync
lets
you
create
wallpapers
from
captured
photos,
whereas
Magic
Canvas
lets
you
create
images
using
text
prompts.
You
can
run
pretty
much
any
app
on
the
outer
screen.
There
are
several
pre-installed
games
that
run
great
on
the
cover
display
and
can
be
fun
to
use.
Apart
from
using
apps
and
playing
games,
Motorola
also
supports
the
use
of
Google
Gemini
on
the
cover
display,
and
you
get
three
months
of
free
Gemini
Advanced
when
you
purchase
the
Razr
50
phones.
The
interface
has
been
optimised
for
the
outer
screen,
and
it’s
easy
to
have
conversations
with
Gemini.
The
cover
display
offers
various
modes
and
supports
most
apps
As
for
software
support,
Motorola
has
promised
3
years
of
Android
OS
and
4
years
of
security
updates
for
the
Razr
50.
Motorola
Razr
50
Performance:
Could’ve
been
better
Processor
–
MediaTek
Dimensity
7300X
RAM
–
8GB
LPDDR4X
Storage
–
256GB
UFS
2.2
I
feel
like
the
only
downside
of
the
Motorola
Razr
50
is
the
chipset
and,
consequently,
the
performance
it
offers.
It’s
very
strange
that
the
company
decided
to
go
with
a
MediaTek
chipset
for
the
Razr
50,
whereas
the
Ultra
option
gets
a
Snapdragon
SoC.
The
Dimensity
7300X
on
the
phone
is
coupled
with
8GB
LPDDR4X
RAM.
I
ran
a
couple
of
synthetic
benchmarks
on
the
phone,
and
it
delivered
okayish
results.
Older
phones,
such
as
the
Tecno
Phantom
V
Flip,
scored
better
in
the
tests.
Benchmark
Motorola
Razr
50
Tecno
Phantom
V
Flip
Oppo
Find
N3
Flip
AnTuTu
v10
647,833
706,648
1,027,655
PCMark
Work
3.0
12,932
14,392
15,150
Geekbench
6
Single
902
1,106
1,998
Geekbench
6
Multi
2,675
3,220
5,176
GFXB
T-rex
91
60
120
GFXB
Manhattan
3.1
47
51
111
GFXB
Car
Chase
26
35
94
3DM
Slingshot
Extreme
OpenGL
5,037
Maxed
Out
Maxed
Out
3DM
Slingshot
5,762
6,820
Maxed
Out
3DM
Wild
Life
3,142
4,421
Maxed
Out
3DM
Wild
Life
Unlimited
3,152
4,536
12,923
The
performance
offered
by
the
Dimensity
7300X,
an
octa-core
4nm
processor,
is
enough
for
daily
tasks
like
messaging,
calls,
using
the
browser,
watching
videos,
and
so
on,
but
you
will
notice
some
leg
when
launching
apps
or
multitasking
on
both
the
outer
as
well
as
the
inner
screen.
App
transitions
from
cover
to
primary
to
main
and
vice
versa
were
also
primarily
smooth.
You
can
play
games
on
the
phone.
I
tried
titles
such
as
BGMI
and
Asphalt
9,
and
both
worked
well.
There
are
plenty
of
games
available
for
the
front
display
as
well,
and
they
work
quite
well
without
any
lag.
The
phone
didn’t
run
very
hot
while
gaming,
either.
The
display
is
readable
under
direct
sunlight
The
phone
did
lag
at
times
when
using
the
Camera
app
to
take
photos
or
even
switching
between
the
cameras.
In
some
cases,
the
camera
viewfinder
would
go
blank
for
several
seconds.
Motorola
has
offered
a
hybrid
dual
speaker
setup
with
Dolby
Atmos
on
the
Razr
50,
and
they
work
well.
There’s
some
bass
here,
and
the
speakers
can
get
loud.
They’re
good
for
indoor
use,
but
it’s
best
to
carry
a
pair
of
earphones
for
outdoor
use.
Call
quality
and
connectivity
on
the
phone
are
pretty
good
and
I
didn’t
encounter
any
dropped
calls.
I
did,
however,
notice
some
WiFi
connectivity
issues
while
playing
games,
but
it
only
happened
once
to
call
it
a
problem.
The
main
camera
is
shared
with
the
Ultra,
along
with
the
inner
32-megapixel
unit.
However,
unlike
the
Ultra’s
telephoto,
the
standard
Razr
50
gets
a
13-megapixel
ultrawide
with
autofocus.
The
cover
screen
lets
you
use
the
primary
and
ultrawide
to
take
selfies,
and
there’s
also
a
split
screen
interface
that
lets
you
shoot
with
ease.
As
if
the
nostalgia
of
the
flip
form
factor
wasn’t
enough,
Motorola
has
gone
ahead
and
included
a
camcorder
mode
that’s
more
form
than
function.
Photos
from
the
main
camera
are
pretty
good
Photos
coming
out
of
the
main
camera
in
daylight
conditions
have
good
detail
and
dynamic
range
with
very
little
to
no
noise,
but
there’s
plenty
of
sharpening
and
over-saturation.
The
greens
look
greener,
and
the
sky
looks
bluer.
Samples
from
the
primary
50-megapixel
camera
[Tap
to
expand]
Switching
to
the
ultrawide
camera,
the
results
look
very
different,
with
less
detail,
darker
shadows,
and
colour
inconsistency.
The
ultrawide
also
doesn’t
do
dynamic
range
and
white
balance
well.
Photos
are
usable,
but
nothing
great.
Samples
from
the
Ultrawide
camera
[Tap
to
Expand]
There’s
also
a
2x
digital
zoom
option
and
a
Macro
mode
available.
The
2x
zoom
produces
good
photos
in
daylight,
but
you
will
find
plenty
of
noise
if
you
zoom
in.
Meanwhile,
the
macro
photo
can
produce
good
results.
Macro
photos
come
out
good
when
there’s
plenty
of
light
[Tap
to
Expand]
In
low
light
conditions,
the
main
camera
still
does
a
good
job
of
preserving
details
and
shadows,
but
the
white
balance
can
be
off.
Saturation
and
exposures
are
handled
well,
though.
The
ultrawide
doesn’t
really
do
well
in
low
light
conditions
unless
you
give
it
a
lot
of
light.
A
Night
mode
is
available,
but
that
works
better
with
the
main
camera.
Lowlight
samples:
Top
–
Main
camera;
Bottom
–
Ultrawide
[Tap
to
Expand]
The
selfie
camera
on
the
inner
display
produces
good
results
in
daylight
conditions
with
pretty
realistic
skin
tones,
good
colours,
and
a
wide
dynamic
range.
There’s
a
good
amount
of
detail
as
well.
However,
it’s
just
better
to
use
the
main
external
camera
for
selfies,
which
produces
better
details.
Coming
to
video
performance,
the
Razr
50
can
shoot
4k
30fps
on
all
cameras
with
stabilisation.
The
primary
camera
takes
good
daylight
videos
with
lots
of
detail
and
slightly
saturated
colours.
Stabilisation
is
decent,
but
you’ll
notice
the
shakes
if
you’re
walking
or
running.
Motorola
claims
it
uses
AI
to
reduce
the
shakiness,
but
it
doesn’t
really
work
that
well
most
of
the
time.
The
ultrawide
camera
doesn’t
do
that
well
in
videos.
Motorola
Razr
50
Battery:
You
can
flip
it
all
day
Capacity
–
4,200mAh
Charging
–
30W
Charger
–
33W
included
in-box
The
Motorola
Razr
50
offers
impressive
battery
life
for
a
flip
phone
even
though
it
receives
the
same
battery
capacity
as
last
year.
I
constantly
got
over
7
hours
of
screen
time
on
the
phone,
and
this
is
probably
because
I
did
most
of
the
messaging
on
the
outer
display.
Thanks
to
this,
the
phone
easily
lasted
over
a
day
of
usage.
I’d
flip
open
the
screen
only
for
using
the
camera,
some
gaming,
checking
emails,
watching
videos,
and
scrolling
Instagram.
Gaming
continuously
drains
the
battery
a
lot,
though.
The
battery
life
on
the
phone
is
impressive
In
our
battery
test,
the
phone
lasted
over
25
hours
on
a
single
charge.
Talking
about
charging,
the
Razr
50
supports
30W
fast
charging
and
takes
about
1
hour
and
10
minutes
to
go
from
10
percent
to
full.
There’s
also
support
for
wireless
charging
at
15W.
Motorola
Razr
50
Verdict
At
Rs.
64,999,
there
are
not
a
lot
of
other
options
in
the
market.
You
can
check
out
the
Oppo
Find
N3
Flip
(Review),
which
offers
much
better
performance
and
a
better
pair
of
cameras.
Unfortunately,
it
does
have
a
less
usable
outer
screen.
You
also
have
the
Tecno
Phantom
V
Flip
(Review)
from
last
year,
but
that’s
not
really
better
in
any
way.
It’s
also
an
excellent
alternative
to
the
Samsung
Galaxy
Z
Flip
6
if
performance
isn’t
your
main
concern.
The
Motorola
Razr
50
is
a
great-looking
phone
with
a
lot
of
nostalgia
and
features
that
are
somewhat
let
down
by
its
processor.
The
outer
display
is
great,
you
get
a
nice
camera
setup,
excellent
battery
life
for
a
phone
with
two
screens,
fast
charging,
an
IPX8
rating,
a
super
compact
form
factor,
AI
features,
good
software,
and
9,999
style
points.
If
you
don’t
want
to
spend
much
money
but
want
a
flip-style
foldable,
the
Motorola
Razr
50
is
mostly
excellent.
It’s
also
a
worthy
upgrade
from
the
Razr
40.
Thrive
Capital
is
investing
more
than
$1
billion
of
OpenAI’s
current
$6.5
billion
fundraising
round,
and
it
has
a
sweetener
no
other
investors
are
getting:
the
potential
to
invest
another
$1
billion
next
year
at
the
same
valuation
if
the
AI
firm
hits
a
revenue
goal,
people
familiar
with
the
matter
said
on
Friday.
OpenAI
is
predicting
its
revenue
will
skyrocket
to
$11.6
billion
next
year
from
an
estimated
$3.7
billion
in
2024,
the
sources
said,
speaking
on
condition
of
anonymity.
Losses
are
expected
to
be
as
much
as
$5
billion
this
year,
depending
largely
on
their
spending
for
computing
power
that
could
change,
one
of
the
sources
added.
The
current
funding
round,
which
comes
in
the
form
of
convertible
debt,
is
expected
to
close
by
the
end
of
next
week
and
could
value
OpenAI
at
$150
billion,
cementing
its
status
as
one
of
the
most
valuable
private
companies
in
the
world.
That
valuation
depends
on
pulling
off
a
complicated
restructuring
to
remove
the
control
of
its
non-profit
board
and
also
remove
cap
on
investment
return
to
investors,
a
plan
first
reported
by
Reuters.
There
is
no
specific
timeline
when
the
conversion
could
be
completed.
Thrive
Capital,
which
also
led
OpenAI’s
previous
funding
round,
is
offering
$1.2
billion
from
a
combination
of
its
own
fund
and
a
special
purpose
vehicle
for
smaller
investors.
Other
investors
on
the
new
round
include
Microsoft,
Apple,
Nvidia
and
Khosla
Ventures.
The
others
were
not
given
the
option
for
future
investment
at
current
price,
sources
said.
OpenAI’s
valuation
has
soared
quickly,
and
if
it
continues
to
do
so,
Thrive
could
find
itself
increasing
its
stake
next
year
at
a
discounted
price.
Reuters
was
not
able
to
determine
the
revenue
target
associated
with
the
option
for
Thrive,
which
was
founded
by
Joshua
Kushner.
Thrive
and
OpenAI
declined
to
comment.
OpenAI’s
revenue
expectations
far
exceed
CEO
Sam
Altman’s
earlier
projection
of
$1
billion
in
revenue
this
year.
The
main
revenue
sources
are
sales
of
its
services
to
corporations
and
subscriptions
to
its
chatbot.
Its
flagship
product,
ChatGPT,
is
expected
to
bring
in
$2.7
billion
in
revenue
this
year,
jumping
from
$700
million
in
2023.
The
chatbot
service,
which
charges
a
$20
fee
every
month,
has
about
10
million
paying
users.
The
financials
and
details
about
Thrive’s
additional
option
were
first
reported
by
the
New
York
Times
on
Friday.
The
lead
European
Union
privacy
regulator
fined
social
media
giant
Meta
91
million
euros
($101.5
million)
on
Friday
for
inadvertently
storing
some
users’
passwords
without
protection
or
encryption.
The
inquiry
was
opened
five
years
ago
after
Meta
notified
Ireland’s
Data
Protection
Commission
(DPC)
that
it
had
stored
some
passwords
in
‘plaintext’.
Meta
publicly
acknowledged
the
incident
at
the
time
and
the
DPC
said
the
passwords
were
not
made
available
to
external
parties.
“It
is
widely
accepted
that
user
passwords
should
not
be
stored
in
plaintext,
considering
the
risks
of
abuse
that
arise
from
persons
accessing
such
data,”
Irish
DPC
Deputy
Commissioner
Graham
Doyle
said
in
a
statement.
A
Meta
spokesperson
said
the
company
took
immediate
action
to
fix
the
error
after
identifying
it
during
a
security
review
in
2019,
and
that
there
is
no
evidence
the
passwords
were
abused
or
accessed
improperly.
Meta
engaged
constructively
with
the
DPC
throughout
the
inquiry,
the
spokesperson
added
in
a
statement
on
Friday.
The
DPC
is
the
lead
EU
regulator
for
most
of
the
top
U.S.
internet
firms
due
to
the
location
of
their
EU
operations
in
the
country.
It
has
so
far
fined
Meta
a
total
of
2.5
billion
euros
for
breaches
under
the
bloc’s
General
Data
Protection
Regulation’s
(GDPR),
introduced
in
2018,
including
a
record
1.2
billion
euro
fine
in
2023
that
Meta
is
appealing.
OnePlus
Ace
5
Pro
and
Ace
5
are
expected
to
launch
as
successors
to
the OnePlus
Ace
3
Pro and Ace
3,
respectively.
Details
about
the
handsets
have
surfaced
online
over
the
past
few
weeks.
Previous
leaks
have
suggested
the
base
and
Pro
variants
could
come
with Snapdragon
8
Gen
3
and
Gen
4
chipsets,
respectively.
A
new
leak
hints
at
the
battery,
charging
and
camera
details
of
the
purported
phones. The
company
has
yet
to
officially
confirm
the
launch
of
the
phones.
They
are
expected
to
be
introduced
in
early
2025.
OnePlus
Ace
5
Series
Features
(Expected)
According
to
a
Weibo
post
by
tipster
Digital
Chat
Station
(translated
from
Chinese),
the
OnePlus
Ace
5
series
phones
may
carry
6,500mAh
batteries.
The
OnePlus Ace
5
and Ace
5
Pro
are
tipped
to
support
100W
wired
charging
as
well.
The
tipster
adds
that
the
OnePlus
Ace
5
Pro
could
carry
a
50-megapixel
Samsung JN1
sensor
paired
with
a
telephoto
lens.
The
handsets
in
the
rumoured
lineup
are
also
expected
to
get ceramic
builds
and
flat
displays.
Previously,
the
same
tipster
suggested
the OnePlus
Ace
5
and
Ace
5
Pro
may
sport
BOE
X2
OLED
flat
screens
with
1.5K
resolution.
The
base
option
is
expected
to
get
a
Snapdragon
8
Gen
3
chipset,
while
the
Pro
version
is
tipped
to
be
powered
by
the
yet
unreleased
Snapdragon
8
Gen
4
SoC.
The
phones
will
likely
be
equipped
with
1/1.56-inch
50-megapixel
Sony
IMX9-series
sensors
as
well.
An
earlier
leak
claimed
the OnePlus
Ace
5
series
handsets
will
likely
have
a
triple
rear
camera
unit.
They
could
come
with right-angled
metal
middle
frames.
For
security,
the
phones
are
expected
to
support ultra-thin
optical
fingerprint
sensors.
The
displays
of
the OnePlus
Ace
5
and
Ace
5
Pro
variants
are
tipped
to
have
ultra-slim
bezels
on
all
four
sides.
Affiliate
links
may
be
automatically
generated
–
see
our
ethics
statement
for
details.
Samsung’s
upcoming
Z
Flip
clamshell-style
foldable
may
have
a
different
kind
of
ear
speaker
to
help
users
answer
calls
privately
even
when
folded.
Currently,
users
can
only
answer
calls
on
the
Galaxy
Z
Flip
6
using
the
phone’s
speaker
when
closed,
which
does
not
allow
a
call
to
be
private,
requiring
the
user
to
flip
open
the
foldable
in
order
to
answer
the
call
privately.
Samsung
and
LG
are
reportedly
working
on
a
new
solution
which
will
hopefully
circumvent
this
hindrance
and
help
create
more
space
for
other
smartphone
components.
According
to
Korean
news
outlet,
Sisa
Journal,
Samsung
is
working
with
LG
to
develop
a
new
kind
of
display
which
will
replace
the
usual
ear
speaker
found
on
all
types
of
smartphones.
However,
the
development
is
mainly
aimed
at
foldable
devices,
especially
clamshell-style
models
which
currently
need
to
be
opened
up
fully
in
order
to
answer
calls
privately.
The
new
display
which
is
currently
in
development
will
reportedly
use
piezoelectric
technology
to
vibrate
the
screen
in
order
to
produce
sound.
The
tech
should
ideally
work
well
enough
to
replace
the
ear
speaker
which
is
present
behind
the
hole-punch
displays
on
all
smartphones
today.
This
piezoelectric
speaker,
according
to
the
report,
will
be
embedded
into
the
display
in
layers
and
thus
will
not
require
any
additional
equipment.
As
the
two
components
are
fused
together,
it
is
said
to
reduce
the
need
for
a
dedicated
ear
speaker
that
can
take
up
space
behind
the
display
at
the
top
of
the
smartphone.
This
would
make
room
for
other
components
which
is
always
good
to
have
given
the
space
restrictions
inside
most
clamshell
foldables.
Researchers
explain
that
integrating
this
speaker
technology
into
the
cover
display
enables
two
distinct
audio
sources,
allowing
users
to
place
their
ear
directly
on
the
cover
display
and
answer
calls
privately
for
the
first
time.
The
use
of
piezoelectric
technology
isn’t
new.
Xiaomi’s
Mi
Mix
was
the
first
brand
to
introduce
the
technology
in
a
production
smartphone
back
in
2016.
The
device
(which
only
went
on
sale
in
China)
used
a
piezoelectric
acoustic
ceramic
earpiece
speaker,
as
well
as
the
ultrasonic
proximity
sensor
rather
than
the
traditional
front-facing
infrared
sensor
in
its
quest
to
go
bezel-less
(at
least
around
the
top
of
the
smartphone).
The
selfie
camera
was
oddly
placed
into
a
thick
bezel
at
the
bottom
to
provide
a
distraction-free
viewing
experience
up
top.
The
phone
also
had
a
ceramic
rear
panel.
The
phone
finally
made
it
to
India
in
the
form
of
the
Mi
Mix
2,
which
sadly
skipped
on
the
new
speaker
technology
and
went
with
a
traditional
one.
Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
2024
Sale is
underway,
and
customers
can
now purchase
various
products
at
discounted
prices,
while
also
availing
of
eligible
bank
discounts. If
you’re
not
happy
with
the
sound
output
from
your
smart
TV,
you
can
connect
a
soundbar
(preferably
with
a
subwoofer).
During
the
ongoing
sale
event,
soundbars
from
brands
like
Samsung,
JBL,
Sony,
Zebronics
Boat,
and
Bose
are
available
at
discounted
prices.
We’ve
prepared
a
list
of
some
of
the
best
deals
on
soundbars
for
your
smart
TV
during
the
ongoing
Great
Indian
Festival
sale.
Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
Sale
2024:
Bank
Discounts
and
Card
Offers
on
Soundbars
Don’t
to
add
your
SBI
credit
or
debit
cards
to
your
Amazon
account
before
you
make
a
purchase
during
the
Great
Indian
Festival
sale,
if
you
haven’t
previously
used
them
on
the
e-commerce
platform.
This
will
help
you
check
out
quickly,
while
also
comparing
discounts
with
other
payment
methods.
Amazon
is
also
offering
coupons
on
some
products
during
the
Great
Indian
Festival
Sale,
which
must
be
applied
manually
when
you’re
making
your
purchase.
You
can
also
use
an
Amazon
Pay
ICICI
Bank
credit
card
to
avail
of
no
cost
EMI
to
purchase
some
of
these
soundbar
models.
Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
Sale
2024:
Top
Deals
on Soundbars
for
Your
Smart
TV
The
Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
sale
is
now
live
for
all
customers
after
its
early
access
period
for
Prime
members.
The
festival
season
sale
brings
a
ton
of
offers
across
different
product
categories.
Smartphone
deals
are
of
course
the
big
draw,
but
the
sale
features
deep
discounts
on
laptops,
tablets,
smartwatches,
TWS
earphones,
and
more.
The
Amazon
sale
also
brings
lucrative
deals
for
gamers,
be
it
gaming
consoles
or
accessories.
Here,
we’ll
look
at
some
of
the
best
gaming
accessories
and
peripherals,
from
controllers
and
keyboards
to
mice
and
headphones.
On
top
of
discounted
prices,
the
Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
sale
also
adds
an
additional
10
percent
discount
on
purchases
made
via
SBI
debit
and
credit
cards.
There’s
a
five
percent
instant
cashback
on
Amazon
Pay
ICICI
Bank
credit
card
transactions,
as
well.
The
sale
brins
deals
on
gaming
accessories
from
top
brands
like
Logitech,
Sony,
Razer
and
more.
Here
are
our
picks
for
some
of
the
best
deals
on
gaming
peripherals
during
the
Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
sale.
Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
2024
sale
has
started
for
everyone,
24
hours
after
an
early
access
was
offered
to
Prime
members.
The
festive
season
special
sale
event
promises
exciting
discounts
and
bundled
offers
on
a
large
selection
of
popular
mobile
phones,
laptops,
TVs,
Amazon
devices,
and
other
electronics.
We’re
scanning
through
hundreds
of
deals
on
Amazon
to
bring
you
the
best
ones
that
are
worth
your
time
and
money.
Please
note
that
all
the
prices
are
subject
to
change
during
the
sale.
Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
2024
sale:
Best
offers
on
mobile
phones
Apple
iPhone
13 Older
iPhone
models
are
known
to
get
deep
discounts
during
festive
season
sales.
This
year,
the
iPhone
13
has
dropped
to
one
of
its
lowest
prices
ever.
Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
2024
sale
includes
the
iPhone
13
at
a
discounted
price
of
Rs.
39,999
(MRP
Rs.
59,600).
You
can
swap
an
older
smartphone
to
receive
an
additional
instant
discount
worth
up
to
Rs.
36,700.
Paying
with
an
SBI
credit
or
debit
card
can
fetch
you
another
instant
discount
worth
up
to
Rs.
1,500
and
Rs.
1,250
respectively.
Samsung
Galaxy
S23
Ultra
5G Samsung
Galaxy
S23
Ultra
5G
is
also
available
at
a
discounted
price
during
the
ongoing
Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
2024
sale.
Galaxy
S23
Ultra
5G
is
selling
at
a
discounted
price
of
Rs.
74,999
during
Amazon’s
sale,
and
you
can
grab
a
coupon-based
discount
worth
Rs.
3,750.
In
addition,
SBI
credit
card
users
can
avail
an
additional
Rs.
1,500
instant
discount
on
the
purchase.
The
bundled
exchange
offer
is
capped
at
Rs.
65,000.
After
you
consider
all
the
available
bundled
offers,
the
Galaxy
S23
Ultra
5G
comes
down
to
a
rather
sweet
effective
price.
OnePlus
12R
5G OnePlus
12R
5G
is
now
selling
at
Rs.
37,999
(MRP
Rs.
42,999)
during
Amazon’s
Great
Indian
Festival
sale
this
week.
You
can
exchange
an
older
smartphone
to
receive
another
instant
discount
worth
up
to
Rs.
35,000.
The
OnePlus
12R
5G
is
powered
by
the
Snapdragon
8
Gen
2
SoC,
supported
by
8GB
of
RAM,
and
comes
with
256GB
of
storage.
It
features
a
large
5,500mAh
battery
with
support
for
100W
SuperVooc
fast
charging.
iQoo
Z9x
5G If
you’re
looking
for
something
more
affordable,
the
iQoo
Z9x
5G
is
available
with
a
coupon-based
discount
on
Amazon
during
the
Great
Indian
Festival
2024
sale.
The
smartphone
is
currently
selling
at
Rs.
13,999,
and
you
can
grab
a
discount
worth
Rs.
500
on
the
product
listing
page.
On
exchanging
an
old
smartphone
you
can
receive
an
additional
discount
worth
up
to
Rs.
13,250.
iQoo
Z9x
5G
is
powered
by
Snapdragon
6
Gen
1
SoC,
supported
by
6GB
of
RAM,
and
it
comes
with
128GB
of
storage.
Samsung
Galaxy
M35
5G Samsung’s
Galaxy
M35
5G
is
selling
at
Rs.
14,999
(MRP
Rs.
24,499)
during
the
ongoing
Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
sale
this
week.
You
can
swap
an
older
phone
to
receive
an
instant
discount
worth
up
to
Rs.
14,150.
The
smartphone
comes
with
a
large
6,000mAh
battery
but
ships
without
a
charger.
Amazon
Great
Indian
Festival
2024
sale:
Best
offers
on
electronics
Apple
MacBook
Air
M1 Apple’s
MacBook
Air
M1
13.3-inch
model
is
down
to
Rs.
52,990
(MRP
Rs.
92,900)
on
Amazon
during
the
ongoing
Great
Indian
Festival
2024
sale.
You
can
exchange
an
old
laptop
to
receive
an
instant
discount
worth
up
to
Rs.
11,900.
Clubbing
the
SBI
credit
card
payment
offer
can
fetch
you
another
instant
discount
worth
up
to
Rs.
4,000
on
the
purchase.
Amazon
is
also
offering
no-cost
EMI
payment
option
with
select
payment
methods.
Buy
now
at:
Rs.
52,990
(MRP
Rs.
92,900)
Samsung
Galaxy
Tab
S9
FE Looking
for
an
Android
tablet?
The
Samsung
Galaxy
Tab
S9
FE
is
down
to
Rs.
26,999
(MRP
Rs.
44,999)
during
Amazon’s
Great
Indian
Festival
2024
sale.
You
can
exchange
an
old
tablet
or
a
mobile
phone
to
receive
another
instant
discount
worth
up
to
Rs.
24,150.
The
Galaxy
Tab
S9
FE
comes
with
a
10.9-inch
display,
and
an
S
Pen
in
the
box.
The
tablet
is
powered
by
Samsung’s
Exynos
1380
chipset,
and
includes
a
dual
speaker
setup.
Buy
now
at:
Rs.
26,999
(MRP
Rs.
44,999)
Sony
Bravia
55-inch
4K
Google
TV Sony’s
Bravia
KD-55X74L
55-inch
4K
Google
TV
is
down
to
Rs.
54,990
(MRP
Rs.
99,900)
during
Amazon’s
Great
Indian
Festival
sale.
You
can
save
an
additional
Rs.
4,000
(maximum)
by
making
a
payment
using
an
SBI
credit
card.
Amazon
is
also
offering
no-cost
EMI
payment
options
with
select
payment
methods.
The
TV
includes
3
HDMI
ports,
and
two
USB
ports.
Fire
TV
Stick Got
a
regular
TV
at
home?
A
Fire
TV
Stick
is
an
affordable
way
to
turn
it
into
a
smart
TV.
Currently,
down
to
Rs.
2,199
(MRP
Rs.
4,999),
the
Amazon
Fire
TV
Stick
is
one
of
the
easiest
ways
to
stream
content
on
a
regular
TV.
This
model
comes
with
the
all-new
Alexa
Voice
remote
(third
generation)
that
lets
you
search
for
content
across
apps
using
voice
commands.
Intel recently
unveiled
new
hardware
focused
at
improving
artificial
intelligence
(AI)
workflows.
The
company
introduced
the
Xeon
6
processor
with
new
Performance-cores
(P-cores)
and
Gaudi
3
AI
Accelerator
for
enterprise
customers
and
data
centres
on
Tuesday.
The
chipmaker
claims
that
the
new
hardware
will
offer
both
higher
throughput
and
better
cost
optimisation
to
enable
optimal
performance
per
watt
and
lower
total
cost
of
ownership.
These
devices
were
launched
to
enable
enterprises
to
handle
the
continuously
increasing
workload
demands
from
more
advanced
AI
models,
according
to
the
chipmaker.
Intel
Xeon
6
Processor
Launched
The
chipmaker
says that
its
new
Intel
Xeon
6
is
equipped
with
Performance-cores.
These
processors
are
not
meant
for
retail
consumers
and
instead
will
power
data
centres
for
enterprises
to
help
them
run
cloud
servers.
Intel
claims
the
Xeon
6
processor
offers
twice
the
performance
of
its
predecessor
due
to
increased
core
count.
It
also
offers
double
the
memory
bandwidth
and
AI
acceleration
capabilities.
Since
it
is
hardware-based
acceleration,
it
can
run
support
very
large
language
models
(LLMs)
with
ease.
It
can
“meet
the
performance
demands
of
AI
from
edge
to
data
centre
and
cloud
environments,”
according
to
Intel.
Intel
Unveils Gaudi
3
AI
Accelerators
Gaudi
3
is
a
new-generation
AI
Accelerator
from
Intel.
These
are
specialised
hardware
chips
designed
to
help
machines
in
speeding
up
AI
tasks,
especially
those
related
to
deep
learning,
machine
learning,
and
neural
networks.
These
include
GPUs,
Application-Specific
Integrated
Circuits
(ASICs),
Field-Programmable
Gate
Arrays
(FPGAs),
and
Neural
Processing
Units
(NPUs).
The
Gaudi
3
AI
Accelerator
features
64
Tensor
processor
cores
and
eight
matrix
multiplication
engines
(MMEs)
which
are
designed
to
accelerate
deep
neural
network
computations.
It
sports
128GB
of
HBM2e
memory
for
training
and
inference,
and
24
200GB
Ethernet
ports
that
enable
scaling
up
the
servers.
Intel’s
new
AI
Accelerator
is
compatible
with
the
PyTorch
framework
and
advanced
Hugging
Face
transformer
and
diffuser
models.
The
company
has
already
tied
up
with
IBM
to
deploy
Gaudi
3
for
IBM
Clouds.
Dell
Technologies
is
also
using
the
infrastructure
for
its
data
centres.