Friday, June 5, 2020

Telegram adds new video editing tools, easier ways to find GIFs, and more

Telegram adds new video editing tools, easier ways to find GIFs, and more
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Motorola has a peristyle of new upkeep smartphones: the entry-level $149.99 Motorola E and the $199.99 Moto G Fast. The two new phones help coalesce Motorola's lineup boundlessness the upkeep and midrange space, with the Moto E and the Moto G Fast juxtapositional the already reported Moto G Reach ($249.99) and G Stylus ($299.99).

For comparisons to meanest year's lineup, the new Moto E replaces the old Moto E6, while the G Fast replaces the G7 Play. As with the other G-series phones launched beforehand this year, Motorola appears to be genuinely abolishing the numbering system it had previously used.

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The Moto G Fast
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The G Fast bears a unregulated resemblance to the Moto G Reach and G Stylus, with a agnate design and a 19:9 hole-punch display. Except nearly all the specs on the new G Fast are downgraded compared to its pricier siblings: while it shares the same Snapdragon 665 processor, it personally offers 3GB of RAM (instead of 4GB), just 32GB of centralized accumulator (versus 64GB and 128GB on the G Reach and Stylus, respectively), and the flamboyance is a 720p panel, instead of the 1080p console found on the other G-series phones.

The cameras on the G Fast are around identical to the G Power, too: a 16-megapixel main camera, an 8-megapixel 118-degree ultrawide camera, and a 2-megapixel macro camera. There's moreover an 8-megapixel front-facing camera for selfies. It has the same 4,000mAh nestle that the G Stylus has -- except not really as good as the 5,000mAh nestle that gives the pricier G Reach its name. Rounding out the specifications venue is a rear fingerprint scanner, USB-C charging, a 3.5mm headphone jack, and an IP52 "water repellant" design for the occasional chastise or rain shower.

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The Moto E (2020)
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The Moto E, on the other hand, is a increasingly teeming upholding compared to meanest year's E6. The phone has jumped up in admeasurement from a 5.5-inch screen to a 6.2-inch console (although still at 720p) with a teardrop cleft (although there's still a humungous button for a overriding bezel). There's moreover a rear fingerprint sensor, which is a first for the E lineup.

Motorola has moreover put in a beefier processor, innervation from the Snapdragon 435 to a Snapdragon 632. RAM is still the same 2GB as the E6, although centralized accumulator has been drooping to 32GB. The rear camera has moreover been upgraded to a dual-lens system, with a 13-megapixel main lens that's joined by a 2-megapixel depth sensor. There's moreover a 3,550mAh battery, a 3.5mm headphone jack, and an IPX2 rating for water and dust (which, again, is good for a burst at best).

Bafflingly, Motorola has still incontrovertible to use a Micro USB quay for charging instead of USB-C. That's a eligibility that was already gassy in 2019 on the E6 and rises to the level of asymmetrical a year later for its successor.

Both phones run Android 10, which features the wonted apartment of improvements communal to Motorola's other recent phones, like the Edge Plus, including a gaming mode, customizable icons and colors, and various gestures to do things like pelting the camera or unharmoniousness on the flashlight. Motorola is promising that the Moto G Fast will get one Android OS update fuzz the line, except it has no such provisos for the Moto E.

Both phones will be awaited on June 12th as unlocked devices. The Moto E will moreover be awaited through several carriers, including T-Mobile, Metro by T-Mobile, Conferee Mobile, US Cellular, Consumer Cellular, Xfinity Mobile, Republic Wireless, and certified prepaid on Verizon. The Moto G Fast will be thronged through Conferee Moldable as well.

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