This is the BlackBerry Motion, an upcoming Android smartphone with no keyboard in sight
Since BlackBerry got out of the hardware game, and TCL started building phones for the firm previously known for its physical keyboard-carrying business phones, we've seen a couple of new BlackBerry-branded devices. There was the modest Aurora (sans keyboard), specifically for the Indonesian market, and then there was the flagship KEYone, that was supposed to invoke memories of BlackBerry roots with its physical keyboard. The following smartphone to be released under the BlackBerry name could this time be seen in full, thanks to serial leaker Evan Blass (@evleaks). The smartphone has been referred to as "Krypton" in previous rumors, that may have just been a codename as Blass seems to think it going to formally be called the BlackBerry Motion, a nod to the company's previous name, study In Motion, perhaps. We could see from the image that the new device going to not have the famous BlackBerry keyboard like the KEYone, opting instead for a complete touchmonitor display, that is flanked with rather sizable bezels with today's increasingly strict standards.Which Nokia smartphone Android smartphone should I buy?
as informed in If you're keen on reliving your Nokia smartphone dreams of yore or you're just looking for something Android beyond Samsung, read out of my proof to the whole range to see which smartphone is better for you. On the outside, its lovely metal body makes it comfortable to hold and makes the Nokia smartphone three smartphone look like a further premium device. Andrew Hoyle/CNETPrice: £500, AU$899 (not formally obtainable in the US, however we've seen it for $679 online)The Nokia smartphone eight is the company's premier true flagship Android smartphone and as such, it's packed with great kit. Buy it if: You want a high-performance Android smartphone that'll power out of anything you'll throw at it. Buy it if: You're heading out on a rough-and-tumble trip and do not want to risk damaging your major phone.Best way to move from an Android smartphone to an iPhone
Microsoft's new Android launcher lets you connect your smartphone and PC
Microsoft quietly released its own Android launcher further than two years ago. It was the basic, functional Arrow Launcher for Android devices, built with an employee as fraction of the company's Garage experiment. That experiment is getting a large upgrade today with the launch of MSFT Launcher. Microsoft Launcher going to allow Android users still viewing photos, editing documents, or reading websites from a mobile to a PC. Microsoft Launcher alextremely has a feed of data from calendar appointments and reminders, to recent photos and news.collected by :Maya Tony
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