Month: February 2023
Honor’s Magic VS foldable will get a global release starting at €1599
Honor’s Magic VS, partially folded.
We finally have global pricing for the Honor Magic VS, which is the first foldable from the company that it’ll sell outside of China. During its presentation at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, the company said it’ll be available to buy in global markets starting at €1,599 (around $1,690) for a model with 12GB of RAM and 512GB of storage. It’ll be available in the UK in June, but release dates in other global markets are yet to be announced. For reference, at €1,799 (£1,649 / $1,799), Samsung’s competing Galaxy Z Fold 4 cost a little more at launch last year.
Alongside it, the company announced a more traditional flagship smartphone series headed up by the Honor Magic5 Pro, which will cost €1,199 (around $1,267) for a model with 12GB of RAM and 512GB of storage and which will be available in the UK in May and in the second quarter of this year in other global markets. There’s also a non-Pro Magic5, which will start at €899 (around $950) for a model with 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage.
Given the Honor Magic VS was released in China last year, there aren’t many hardware surprises. In fact, I had a chance to try out the Chinese version of the handset, and you can read my hands-on impressions of it right here.
The Magic VS boasts three rear cameras.
Like other foldables, the Magic VS can be used while partially folded.
But here are the highlights. Much like Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 4, the Honor Magic VS is a small tablet that can be folded in half to resemble a more traditional smartphone. Its internal screen is 7.9 inches in size with an almost square 10.3:9 aspect ratio and a 90Hz refresh rate, while its external cover display is 6.45 inches with a 21:9 aspect ratio and a 120Hz refresh rate.
Honor thinks its Magic VS has a couple of key advantages over Samsung’s comparable foldable. First is that, at 12.9mm thick while folded, it’s a hair thinner than the Z Fold 4, even at the latter’s thinnest point of 14.2mm. Second is that the Magic VS “folds tightly” with less of a perceived gap than the Z Fold 4, Honor says. And finally, Honor’s foldable is rated for 400,000 folds, double what Samsung has advertised for its devices. Honor says that’s enough folds to survive 10 years of use, even if you’re opening and closing the phone 100 times a day (assuming you’re the kind of early adopter who would actually hold onto a phone for that long).
In terms of more traditional phone specs, the Magic VS is powered by last year’s Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 processor with a 5,000mAh battery that can be fast-charged at up to 66W. There are three rear cameras (a 54-megapixel main, a 50-megapixel ultrawide, and an eight-megapixel telephoto) and a 16-megapixel front-facing camera. There’s no mention of an IP rating in Honor’s press materials, which would be a disadvantage compared to the Samsung Z Fold 4’s IPX8 rating for dust and water resistance.
The Magic5 Pro and its large rear camera bump.
The Honor Magic5 Pro’s large 6.81-inch screen.
Alongside its foldable, Honor is also announcing the Magic5 Pro today. The successor to last year’s Magic4 Pro, the phone has a similarly large circular rear camera bump. This year’s phone ships with a trio of rear cameras, all 50 megapixels in resolution. There’s a main, an ultrawide, and a periscope telephoto with a 3.5x optical zoom. For comparison, last year’s phone had similar rear cameras but a slightly higher resolution 64-megapixel periscope telephoto. Software features include an “AI Motion sensing capture” tool that’s designed to automatically take a photo when your subject is at the highest point in a jump.
There’s a 6.81-inch display with a resolution of 1312 x 2848 and a maximum refresh rate of 120Hz around front, and internally, the phone is powered by Qualcomm’s latest flagship processor, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2. It’s got a big 5,100mAh battery that can be fast-charged at 66W with a cable or 50W wirelessly. It has an IP68 rating for dust and water resistance and is available in five colors: black, blue, green, purple, and orange.
Stay tuned for our full review of the Magic VS as it approaches release.
Photography by Jon Porter / The Verge
Update February 27th, 9:15AM ET: Updated with UK-specific release dates.
Honor’s Magic VS, partially folded.
We finally have global pricing for the Honor Magic VS, which is the first foldable from the company that it’ll sell outside of China. During its presentation at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, the company said it’ll be available to buy in global markets starting at €1,599 (around $1,690) for a model with 12GB of RAM and 512GB of storage. It’ll be available in the UK in June, but release dates in other global markets are yet to be announced. For reference, at €1,799 (£1,649 / $1,799), Samsung’s competing Galaxy Z Fold 4 cost a little more at launch last year.
Alongside it, the company announced a more traditional flagship smartphone series headed up by the Honor Magic5 Pro, which will cost €1,199 (around $1,267) for a model with 12GB of RAM and 512GB of storage and which will be available in the UK in May and in the second quarter of this year in other global markets. There’s also a non-Pro Magic5, which will start at €899 (around $950) for a model with 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage.
Given the Honor Magic VS was released in China last year, there aren’t many hardware surprises. In fact, I had a chance to try out the Chinese version of the handset, and you can read my hands-on impressions of it right here.
The Magic VS boasts three rear cameras.
Like other foldables, the Magic VS can be used while partially folded.
But here are the highlights. Much like Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 4, the Honor Magic VS is a small tablet that can be folded in half to resemble a more traditional smartphone. Its internal screen is 7.9 inches in size with an almost square 10.3:9 aspect ratio and a 90Hz refresh rate, while its external cover display is 6.45 inches with a 21:9 aspect ratio and a 120Hz refresh rate.
Honor thinks its Magic VS has a couple of key advantages over Samsung’s comparable foldable. First is that, at 12.9mm thick while folded, it’s a hair thinner than the Z Fold 4, even at the latter’s thinnest point of 14.2mm. Second is that the Magic VS “folds tightly” with less of a perceived gap than the Z Fold 4, Honor says. And finally, Honor’s foldable is rated for 400,000 folds, double what Samsung has advertised for its devices. Honor says that’s enough folds to survive 10 years of use, even if you’re opening and closing the phone 100 times a day (assuming you’re the kind of early adopter who would actually hold onto a phone for that long).
In terms of more traditional phone specs, the Magic VS is powered by last year’s Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 processor with a 5,000mAh battery that can be fast-charged at up to 66W. There are three rear cameras (a 54-megapixel main, a 50-megapixel ultrawide, and an eight-megapixel telephoto) and a 16-megapixel front-facing camera. There’s no mention of an IP rating in Honor’s press materials, which would be a disadvantage compared to the Samsung Z Fold 4’s IPX8 rating for dust and water resistance.
The Magic5 Pro and its large rear camera bump.
The Honor Magic5 Pro’s large 6.81-inch screen.
Alongside its foldable, Honor is also announcing the Magic5 Pro today. The successor to last year’s Magic4 Pro, the phone has a similarly large circular rear camera bump. This year’s phone ships with a trio of rear cameras, all 50 megapixels in resolution. There’s a main, an ultrawide, and a periscope telephoto with a 3.5x optical zoom. For comparison, last year’s phone had similar rear cameras but a slightly higher resolution 64-megapixel periscope telephoto. Software features include an “AI Motion sensing capture” tool that’s designed to automatically take a photo when your subject is at the highest point in a jump.
There’s a 6.81-inch display with a resolution of 1312 x 2848 and a maximum refresh rate of 120Hz around front, and internally, the phone is powered by Qualcomm’s latest flagship processor, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2. It’s got a big 5,100mAh battery that can be fast-charged at 66W with a cable or 50W wirelessly. It has an IP68 rating for dust and water resistance and is available in five colors: black, blue, green, purple, and orange.
Stay tuned for our full review of the Magic VS as it approaches release.
Photography by Jon Porter / The Verge
Update February 27th, 9:15AM ET: Updated with UK-specific release dates.
The McRib Locator continues to live on after the sandwich’s farewell tour
Image: McRib Locator
The McDonald’s McRib’s last seasonal appearance in 2022 was said to be its last. McDonald’s marketed last fall’s release as its “farewell tour,” encouraging customers to get it before it was gone forever. Despite this, Alan Klein, creator of the McRib Locator, will continue to keep up his self-made website that reports and tracks McRib sightings. “I’m helping a larger community,” Klein says. “It’s fellow fans like myself, and that really is what keeps me driven to keep doing it.”
Since McDonald’s introduced the McRib in 1981, an avid fan base has developed around the sandwich — and dealt with its inconsistent availability ever since. Despite its popularity, McDonald’s has removed the McRib from its menu numerous times over the past 40 years, frustrating the McRib enthusiasts who clamor for it.
In 2009, Klein decided to take matters into his own hands and create the McRib Locator, a website where anyone can report when they see the McRib available at a McDonald’s and share where it was spotted. The Vergecast talked with Klein about the project and what inspired him to spin it up all on his own.
“I was looking to make a product that was something to help find storm chasers,” Klein explains. “And while I was at work one day, the McRib was back somewhere nearby, and it turned out there were a few other avid fans at my workplace, and we talked about how, ‘Boy, it’s been a really long time since I’ve been able to get one, and it’s always such a pain to find it.’ So this idea sparked, well, instead of a storm locator, why couldn’t it just be a McRib locator?”
The McRib Locator had about 200,000 unique users in October 2022
The McRib Locator caught a lot of attention a few months after its release, with people around the world eventually joining in to report McRib locations. The website was popular enough that, in 2016, McDonald’s developed its own “McRib Finder” app, which was almost identical to what Klein was doing but using McDonald’s slow-updating store data. Klein’s McRib Locator has outlasted McDonald’s official version, which didn’t last much longer than the McRib did on the menu that year. The website continues to be used by a large number of people — when the McRib returned in October 2022, Klein’s locator received about 200,000 unique users.
Klein is skeptical of the McRib’s official “retired” status. “We’ve done this before,” he says. “This isn’t new for McRib fans. That’s sort of part of the allure for some, right? Will it or won’t it be back. Every year McDonald’s reports how much revenues they’ve had in the quarters, and we’ve seen whenever the McRib has been back, those quarters seem to do better for them. So it’s an interesting idea [that] it’s retired in the United States.” He also reminds us that the McRib is still available in Germany year-round.
For now, Klein will be monitoring the website for any misinformation and maintaining the page by himself. If you or someone you know spots a McDonald’s McRib in the wild, you can still report it here at mcriblocator.com.
Hear more about why Klein spent so much of his free time making the website, what he does with all the McRib location data, and the future of his work on The Vergecast today. This episode is the second in a five-part series we’re calling Solo Acts. Each episode focuses on someone going it (largely) alone to create something really cool on the internet. Episodes will air on Mondays, in addition to our usual Wednesday and Friday shows.
Image: McRib Locator
The McDonald’s McRib’s last seasonal appearance in 2022 was said to be its last. McDonald’s marketed last fall’s release as its “farewell tour,” encouraging customers to get it before it was gone forever. Despite this, Alan Klein, creator of the McRib Locator, will continue to keep up his self-made website that reports and tracks McRib sightings. “I’m helping a larger community,” Klein says. “It’s fellow fans like myself, and that really is what keeps me driven to keep doing it.”
Since McDonald’s introduced the McRib in 1981, an avid fan base has developed around the sandwich — and dealt with its inconsistent availability ever since. Despite its popularity, McDonald’s has removed the McRib from its menu numerous times over the past 40 years, frustrating the McRib enthusiasts who clamor for it.
In 2009, Klein decided to take matters into his own hands and create the McRib Locator, a website where anyone can report when they see the McRib available at a McDonald’s and share where it was spotted. The Vergecast talked with Klein about the project and what inspired him to spin it up all on his own.
“I was looking to make a product that was something to help find storm chasers,” Klein explains. “And while I was at work one day, the McRib was back somewhere nearby, and it turned out there were a few other avid fans at my workplace, and we talked about how, ‘Boy, it’s been a really long time since I’ve been able to get one, and it’s always such a pain to find it.’ So this idea sparked, well, instead of a storm locator, why couldn’t it just be a McRib locator?”
The McRib Locator caught a lot of attention a few months after its release, with people around the world eventually joining in to report McRib locations. The website was popular enough that, in 2016, McDonald’s developed its own “McRib Finder” app, which was almost identical to what Klein was doing but using McDonald’s slow-updating store data. Klein’s McRib Locator has outlasted McDonald’s official version, which didn’t last much longer than the McRib did on the menu that year. The website continues to be used by a large number of people — when the McRib returned in October 2022, Klein’s locator received about 200,000 unique users.
Klein is skeptical of the McRib’s official “retired” status. “We’ve done this before,” he says. “This isn’t new for McRib fans. That’s sort of part of the allure for some, right? Will it or won’t it be back. Every year McDonald’s reports how much revenues they’ve had in the quarters, and we’ve seen whenever the McRib has been back, those quarters seem to do better for them. So it’s an interesting idea [that] it’s retired in the United States.” He also reminds us that the McRib is still available in Germany year-round.
For now, Klein will be monitoring the website for any misinformation and maintaining the page by himself. If you or someone you know spots a McDonald’s McRib in the wild, you can still report it here at mcriblocator.com.
Hear more about why Klein spent so much of his free time making the website, what he does with all the McRib location data, and the future of his work on The Vergecast today. This episode is the second in a five-part series we’re calling Solo Acts. Each episode focuses on someone going it (largely) alone to create something really cool on the internet. Episodes will air on Mondays, in addition to our usual Wednesday and Friday shows.
Pokemon Presents Livestream Coming Monday: How to Watch Online – CNET
The Pokemon Company brings 20 minutes of news as the game series turns 27.
The Pokemon Company brings 20 minutes of news as the game series turns 27.
Honor’s exciting folding phone finally makes it to Europe
Back in December, I got to play with Honor’s second foldable, the Magic VS, but the first one it will sell in the West. It was a Chinese-market prototype with several rough edges, but even so, it made a fairly compelling case for its own existence. Now, three months later, the company has rocked up to MWC with the finished version that’s intended to be sold on this side of the equator. The big news is the price, which is pegged at €1,599 (around $1,690) for the one model, with 12GB RAM and 512GB storage, the same as Samsung’s Z Flip 4. The only difference is that, with Samsung’s handset, you’ll get 12GB RAM but only 256GB storage.
When I spent a few days with the handset, I found plenty of features that merited praise, like the fact it folds flat. Certainly, Honor feels that its second-generation hinge, which keeps the handset tidy in your pocket, is worthy of shouting about. And it has promised that the hinge will withstand 400,000 folds before conking out, and you’ll find yourself gravitating towards that internal screen more than you might expect. While not as well-equipped as the 6.45-inch exterior screen, the 7.9-inch foldable OLED is good enough to sit back and enjoy a movie, or your emails, with. And it’s fast enough to run pretty much anything you’d want to throw at it without breaking much of a sweat.
If there’s one wrinkle, it’s that these devices may not be the future of foldables as much as the narrower, more fashionable clamshells. Devices like Oppo’s Find N2 and Samsung’s latest Z Flip are both more pocket-and-wallet-friendly than their swole counterparts. And that counts for a lot for folks who don’t feel the need to whip out a small tablet when they’re scrolling Instagram. But for the sort of people who, like me, are nerdy enough to want a machine they could theoretically do some work from while on the go, the meatier versions are still king.
Back in December, I got to play with Honor’s second foldable, the Magic VS, but the first one it will sell in the West. It was a Chinese-market prototype with several rough edges, but even so, it made a fairly compelling case for its own existence. Now, three months later, the company has rocked up to MWC with the finished version that’s intended to be sold on this side of the equator. The big news is the price, which is pegged at €1,599 (around $1,690) for the one model, with 12GB RAM and 512GB storage, the same as Samsung’s Z Flip 4. The only difference is that, with Samsung’s handset, you’ll get 12GB RAM but only 256GB storage.
When I spent a few days with the handset, I found plenty of features that merited praise, like the fact it folds flat. Certainly, Honor feels that its second-generation hinge, which keeps the handset tidy in your pocket, is worthy of shouting about. And it has promised that the hinge will withstand 400,000 folds before conking out, and you’ll find yourself gravitating towards that internal screen more than you might expect. While not as well-equipped as the 6.45-inch exterior screen, the 7.9-inch foldable OLED is good enough to sit back and enjoy a movie, or your emails, with. And it’s fast enough to run pretty much anything you’d want to throw at it without breaking much of a sweat.
If there’s one wrinkle, it’s that these devices may not be the future of foldables as much as the narrower, more fashionable clamshells. Devices like Oppo’s Find N2 and Samsung’s latest Z Flip are both more pocket-and-wallet-friendly than their swole counterparts. And that counts for a lot for folks who don’t feel the need to whip out a small tablet when they’re scrolling Instagram. But for the sort of people who, like me, are nerdy enough to want a machine they could theoretically do some work from while on the go, the meatier versions are still king.
EU uses key telco stage to press the case for rethinking network funding
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Dish Network down following suspected cyberattack
Numerous Dish sites and apps knocked offline, call center rendered unavailable.
Dish Network has reportedly suffered over a highly disruptive ransomware attack that took the company’s websites and apps offline, as well as rendering its call centers unavailable, and cutting off remote workers from access to internal systems.
Customers have also been affected by the incident, as signing into certain Dish TV channel apps wasn’t possible.
At press time, the company’s main website was still showing a notification saying “we are experiencing a system issue that our teams are working hard to resolve.” Other websites are completely unavailable.
VPN issue?
There was little information coming from the company itself. Even some of its own employees are being kept in the dark, it seems. The company’s Twitter support account posted of “an internal systems issue is impacting some of our customer service operations.”
The Verge obtained an internal email the company sent to its employees, saying there’s a “VPN issue” it’s trying to resolve. Employees are asked to “stand by”.
“They say it hasn’t even been made clear whether they’ll be paid,” The Verge’s report states. “Employees have also been told that they won’t be able to connect to their VPN, keeping remote workers from logging in to work.”
But speaking to BleepingComputer, a different source confirmed the company was hit with a cyberattack in which employees were met with “blank icons” on their desktops. According to the publication, this is a typical occurrence in a ransomware attack.
Soon after, an employee reached out to the publication to say they were briefed by a manager that an “outside bad actor, a known threat actor” launched a cyberattack against the firm. They’re not yet certain how the attackers obtained access.
The story is developing and new details are likely to emerge in the coming hours and days, namely the identity of the group behind the attack, the ransom demand, and if any malware was used in the attack.
These are the best firewalls right now
Via: BleepingComputer
Honor’s Magic 5 Pro offers a polished alternative for Android connoisseurs
After breaking from Huawei, Honor has made the case that, in Europe at least, it is Samsung’s true rival in the Android space. In the last three years, it has offered flagship phones that are spec-for-spec the equal of whatever that year’s S-series is packing. Sadly, it’s also doing this at a time when the spec arms race is all but done, and it’s harder than ever to actually stand out amongst the crowd. The Magic 5 Pro doesn’t deviate from the template laid down by its two predecessors, so Honor can’t play on your neophilia as a reason to buy it. But there might be something in the sheer muscularity of its offering that could tempt you into making the switch.
The Magic 5 Pro is making its debut at MWC in Barcelona, and will be sold in both Europe and China. Design-wise, it’s close to its predecessor, but Honor says the new handset apes the sweeping, organic curves favored by Catalan architect Antoni Gaudí. Where the Magic 4 Pro had a fairly hard line around its camera hump – sorry, Eye of Muse – here the back cover pours itself into the bump quite seamlessly. It’s comfortable enough in your hand and light enough to hold, but you’ll need the case to keep things pristine. It’s available in fingerprint-magnet piano Black and Meadow Green, which looks nicer in person than it does in photos.
HonorA sense of evolution, rather than revolution, continues along the rest of the spec list, with little major difference between the Magic 4 and its replacement. The “Quad Curved Floating Screen” is, like the Magic 4, a 6.81-inch, 120Hz, LTPO OLED display with a 2,848 x 1,312 resolution that curves into the frame. Honor says that the enhancements are mostly behind the scenes, with a new discrete display chipset for better video quality and better brightness. Whereas the Magic 4 could muster up 1,000 nits, its successor can crank out 1,300 nits, or 1,800 nits at peak.
Nestled inside is a Snapdragon 8 Gen 2, up from the Gen 1 found on the Magic 4, matching the silicon inside the S23, which is paired with 12GB RAM and 512GB storage. Although Honor can’t call upon the same overclocking magic found in Samsung’s handset, it does say its AI-infused performance software will do a similar job. Sadly, I had all of ten minutes to spend with the handset and so there wasn’t the chance to do any serious stress testing. But history tells us that a handset this chock-full of gear is hardly going to be a slouch.
A 5,100mAh battery is powering the show here, a significantly bigger battery than the 4,500 found on the 4. This, I suspect, is the reason this handset is four grams heavier than the last one, but what’s a couple of grams between friends, eh? That cell will accept 66W wired or 50W wireless charging, if you have the necessary Honor SuperCharge stand in your home. As I said above, this is more or less what you’d expect with any Android flagship these days.
The major selling point for a handset like this is the camera, and Honor is doing its usual job here. Magic 5 Pro comes with a “Star Wheel” version of its “Eye of Muse” camera ring, packed with three beefy lenses jutting out from the back. First is a 50-megapixel, f/1.6 lens with a custom 1/1.12-inch sensor, the manufacturer of which I don’t yet know. That’s paired with a 50-megapixel, f/2.0 ultra-wide camera with a 122-degree field of view and a 50-megapixel, f/3.0 periscope telephoto with a 3.5x optical zoom and 100x digital zoom connected to Sony’s IMX858 image sensor. Less attention is given to the forward facing camera, which is probably the same 12-megapixel, f/2.4 unit paired with a 3D depth camera as found in the Magic 4 Pro.
(Those with long memories, or access to Google, will recall that the Magic 4 Pro’s telephoto lens had a quoted resolution of 64-megapixels. An Honor spokesperson said that the switch is down to an improvement in sensor size, and the new image engine will offer “far better light sensing.”)
Daniel CooperSupporting the headline trio is, again, an 8×8 Direct Time of Flight Sensor for laser focusing, a multi-spectrum color temperature and flicker sensor. Those will all add muscle to the handset’s upgraded image engine, promising faster capture, better HDR and higher quality computational photography. The company hinted about further improvements to the stills shooting, and while the video-shooting abilities garnered nary a mention, it’ll still output (compressed) “Log” footage using Honor’s proprietary Magic-Log format.
As for what you can do with those lenses, Honor is making the same noises it’s always made about its class-leading imaging. As well as a Dxomark score of 152, the company — before the handset was even announced – bragged that the Magic 5 Pro’s camera was good enough to capture a Guinness World Record in the making. And that its AI smarts were capable of plucking a single, perfect frame of a basketballer mid-dunk that was worthy of sharing.
Congrats @HONORGlobal! The #HONORMagic5 Pro captures a record-breaking moment with its AI technology 🏀📱#UnleashThePowerofMagic#MWC23#adpic.twitter.com/dz95wMTfNE— Guinness World Records (@GWR) February 13, 2023
Now, we must always treat these pledges as they’re intended, knowing that they mean nothing until we’ve tried to replicate those results ourselves. As we learned last year when we really tested the Magic 4 Pro’s promise of 4K video shooting, promises are cheaper than delivering.
One thing that’s clear about so many handsets these days is that companies are looking for marginal gains all over the package. For instance, Honor says the Magic 5 Pro has discrete Bluetooth and WiFi antennas which should boost download speeds and improve the reliability of your Bluetooth connection. It’s hard to see if those are current gripes with a wide number of users, but it’s good to see some thought put to improving matters.
And Honor has also revived a much-ballyhooed, rarely-loved gimmick feature in the form of air gestures. Now, you can control elements of your phone’s UI from a foot over the top of the front facing camera, when you’re trying to browse recipes with messy hands. Honor says that their return is thanks to the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2’s additional power, which is capable of watching your hand movements without putting too much pressure on the system-on-chip.
Now, I only had about ten minutes of time with the handset, and there wasn’t a whole lot of stuff I could do to put it through its paces. I will say that I’m expecting the imaging performance to be a lot snappier than what was available on the demo unit, which felt a little sluggish. And that while nobody’s expecting any smartphone maker to reinvent the wheel, there’s fewer marks on offer for polish. As I said at the top, my initial impression of Honor’s Magic 5 Pro is of a handset that doesn’t deviate from the template laid down by its two immediate predecessors, but one that’s been polished to a very high shine.
As well as the Magic 5 Pro, the company also announced the European arrival of the Magic 5, a less expansive version of the same handset. Both will be available at some point in the second quarter of the year, with the Magic 5 — with 8GB RAM and 256GB storage, priced at €899 ($950), while the Magic 5 Pro with 12GB RAM and 512GB storage will set you back €1,199 ($1,267). But I suspect that Honor might need to trim that asking price down a little if it really wants to tempt away folks who, right now, have sworn their brand allegiance to Samsung.
After breaking from Huawei, Honor has made the case that, in Europe at least, it is Samsung’s true rival in the Android space. In the last three years, it has offered flagship phones that are spec-for-spec the equal of whatever that year’s S-series is packing. Sadly, it’s also doing this at a time when the spec arms race is all but done, and it’s harder than ever to actually stand out amongst the crowd. The Magic 5 Pro doesn’t deviate from the template laid down by its two predecessors, so Honor can’t play on your neophilia as a reason to buy it. But there might be something in the sheer muscularity of its offering that could tempt you into making the switch.
The Magic 5 Pro is making its debut at MWC in Barcelona, and will be sold in both Europe and China. Design-wise, it’s close to its predecessor, but Honor says the new handset apes the sweeping, organic curves favored by Catalan architect Antoni Gaudí. Where the Magic 4 Pro had a fairly hard line around its camera hump – sorry, Eye of Muse – here the back cover pours itself into the bump quite seamlessly. It’s comfortable enough in your hand and light enough to hold, but you’ll need the case to keep things pristine. It’s available in fingerprint-magnet piano Black and Meadow Green, which looks nicer in person than it does in photos.
A sense of evolution, rather than revolution, continues along the rest of the spec list, with little major difference between the Magic 4 and its replacement. The “Quad Curved Floating Screen” is, like the Magic 4, a 6.81-inch, 120Hz, LTPO OLED display with a 2,848 x 1,312 resolution that curves into the frame. Honor says that the enhancements are mostly behind the scenes, with a new discrete display chipset for better video quality and better brightness. Whereas the Magic 4 could muster up 1,000 nits, its successor can crank out 1,300 nits, or 1,800 nits at peak.
Nestled inside is a Snapdragon 8 Gen 2, up from the Gen 1 found on the Magic 4, matching the silicon inside the S23, which is paired with 12GB RAM and 512GB storage. Although Honor can’t call upon the same overclocking magic found in Samsung’s handset, it does say its AI-infused performance software will do a similar job. Sadly, I had all of ten minutes to spend with the handset and so there wasn’t the chance to do any serious stress testing. But history tells us that a handset this chock-full of gear is hardly going to be a slouch.
A 5,100mAh battery is powering the show here, a significantly bigger battery than the 4,500 found on the 4. This, I suspect, is the reason this handset is four grams heavier than the last one, but what’s a couple of grams between friends, eh? That cell will accept 66W wired or 50W wireless charging, if you have the necessary Honor SuperCharge stand in your home. As I said above, this is more or less what you’d expect with any Android flagship these days.
The major selling point for a handset like this is the camera, and Honor is doing its usual job here. Magic 5 Pro comes with a “Star Wheel” version of its “Eye of Muse” camera ring, packed with three beefy lenses jutting out from the back. First is a 50-megapixel, f/1.6 lens with a custom 1/1.12-inch sensor, the manufacturer of which I don’t yet know. That’s paired with a 50-megapixel, f/2.0 ultra-wide camera with a 122-degree field of view and a 50-megapixel, f/3.0 periscope telephoto with a 3.5x optical zoom and 100x digital zoom connected to Sony’s IMX858 image sensor. Less attention is given to the forward facing camera, which is probably the same 12-megapixel, f/2.4 unit paired with a 3D depth camera as found in the Magic 4 Pro.
(Those with long memories, or access to Google, will recall that the Magic 4 Pro’s telephoto lens had a quoted resolution of 64-megapixels. An Honor spokesperson said that the switch is down to an improvement in sensor size, and the new image engine will offer “far better light sensing.”)
Supporting the headline trio is, again, an 8×8 Direct Time of Flight Sensor for laser focusing, a multi-spectrum color temperature and flicker sensor. Those will all add muscle to the handset’s upgraded image engine, promising faster capture, better HDR and higher quality computational photography. The company hinted about further improvements to the stills shooting, and while the video-shooting abilities garnered nary a mention, it’ll still output (compressed) “Log” footage using Honor’s proprietary Magic-Log format.
As for what you can do with those lenses, Honor is making the same noises it’s always made about its class-leading imaging. As well as a Dxomark score of 152, the company — before the handset was even announced – bragged that the Magic 5 Pro’s camera was good enough to capture a Guinness World Record in the making. And that its AI smarts were capable of plucking a single, perfect frame of a basketballer mid-dunk that was worthy of sharing.
Congrats @HONORGlobal! The #HONORMagic5 Pro captures a record-breaking moment with its AI technology 🏀📱#UnleashThePowerofMagic#MWC23#adpic.twitter.com/dz95wMTfNE
— Guinness World Records (@GWR) February 13, 2023
Now, we must always treat these pledges as they’re intended, knowing that they mean nothing until we’ve tried to replicate those results ourselves. As we learned last year when we really tested the Magic 4 Pro’s promise of 4K video shooting, promises are cheaper than delivering.
One thing that’s clear about so many handsets these days is that companies are looking for marginal gains all over the package. For instance, Honor says the Magic 5 Pro has discrete Bluetooth and WiFi antennas which should boost download speeds and improve the reliability of your Bluetooth connection. It’s hard to see if those are current gripes with a wide number of users, but it’s good to see some thought put to improving matters.
And Honor has also revived a much-ballyhooed, rarely-loved gimmick feature in the form of air gestures. Now, you can control elements of your phone’s UI from a foot over the top of the front facing camera, when you’re trying to browse recipes with messy hands. Honor says that their return is thanks to the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2’s additional power, which is capable of watching your hand movements without putting too much pressure on the system-on-chip.
Now, I only had about ten minutes of time with the handset, and there wasn’t a whole lot of stuff I could do to put it through its paces. I will say that I’m expecting the imaging performance to be a lot snappier than what was available on the demo unit, which felt a little sluggish. And that while nobody’s expecting any smartphone maker to reinvent the wheel, there’s fewer marks on offer for polish. As I said at the top, my initial impression of Honor’s Magic 5 Pro is of a handset that doesn’t deviate from the template laid down by its two immediate predecessors, but one that’s been polished to a very high shine.
As well as the Magic 5 Pro, the company also announced the European arrival of the Magic 5, a less expansive version of the same handset. Both will be available at some point in the second quarter of the year, with the Magic 5 — with 8GB RAM and 256GB storage, priced at €899 ($950), while the Magic 5 Pro with 12GB RAM and 512GB storage will set you back €1,199 ($1,267). But I suspect that Honor might need to trim that asking price down a little if it really wants to tempt away folks who, right now, have sworn their brand allegiance to Samsung.
Honor Magic 5 Pro Packs Meaty Camera Specs and a High Price – CNET
Over $1,100 is a lot to ask for a phone these days.
Over $1,100 is a lot to ask for a phone these days.
The Dream of Mini Nuclear Plants Hangs in the Balance
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