BLU Studio G Mini - User opinions and reviews
The AnTuTu benchmarks of the Helio P90 chipset has surfaced today. It reveals that it is powerful enough to rival with the Snapdragon 710 chipset. The AnTuTu benchmarks shown below seems to belong to a testing unit. It features a display that supports full HD+ resolution of 1080 x 2160 pixels. The handset includes 6 GB of RAM and it is equipped with an inbuilt storage of 128 GB. The testing device has acquired an average benchmarking score of 162,861 on AnTuTu. The Snapdragon 710 that powers the OPPO R17 Pro offers slightly better performance than the Helio P90. The 12nm Helio P90 is an octa-core processor that includes two 2.2 GHz Cortex A75 CPU cores and six 2.0 GHz Cortex A55 cores.
Smartphones powered with Helio P90 can feature up to 8 GB of RAM. The chipset includes PowerVR GM 9446 graphics. It supports full HD+ resolution of up 1080 x 2520 pixels, up to 48-megapixel single camera sensor or 24-megapixel + 16-megapixel dual cameras. The enhanced AI on Helio P90 promises four times better AI capabilities than Helio P60 and Helio P70 chipsets.
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Other features of the Helio P90 are support for Wi-Fi 802.11ac, Bluetooth 5.0, GPS, GLONASS, Beidou, Galileo, FM Radio, 4G Cat. 12 / 13 LTE modem, dual 4G VoLTE, ViLTE, 4×4 MIMO and 3CA. It remains to be seen whether the upcoming OPPO R19 will be featuring the Helio P90 chipset. Lesser known Chinese smartphone brand Blackview has claimed that it will be the smartphone maker to launch the first Helio P90 chipset. "HOW TO WATCH LIVE ONLINE AS CHINA ATTEMPTS TO LAND ON THE MOON" How to watch live online as China attempts to land on the Moon Picture credit: CNSA China is orbiting the moon – and is about to (try to) land on it. Almost exactly 50 years after NASA’s Apollo 8 mission successfully put astronauts in orbit of our satellite for the first time, a Chinese probe called Chang’e-4 (CH-4) now circling the moon is about to send a lander to the moon’s far side. That’s a destination no space agency has visited before, and it will be a huge test of China’s space technology – and a massive source of national pride if it comes off. Could it be the beginning of another space race to get back to the Moon?
BLU Studio G Mini - User opinions and reviews - An Analysis Of Vital Factors For mobile phones
China’s CH-4 lander will touch down in the South Pole-Aitken Basin on the Moon’s far side. Picture credit: CNSA How to watch China’s moon landing live on TV There’s a belief that the China National Space Administration (CNSA, the national space agency of China), is quasi-military and keeps everything under wraps, but in reality, it’s little different to NASA. A few years ago it broadcast the landing of its Chang’e-3 (CH-3) moon probe live on Chinese state broadcaster China Central Television’s English language channel. You can watch it all live online at CGTN.
It’s due to land December 31, but that could very easily (and most probably will) slip to the first few days of January. The moon’s far side, as photographed by the Apollo 16 astronauts. Picture credit: NASA What is the ‘dark side of the moon’? There is no such place. The phrase was popularised by prog-rock band Pink Floyd’s concept album Dark Side of the Moon in 1973, which became one of the best selling albums of all time.
Some think that the “I’ll see you on the dark side of the moon” refrain is something about insanity, and perhaps a metaphor for humanity’s dark side. It’s definitely not about our satellite, which has no ‘dark’ side. Yes, it’s tidally locked to Earth, so shows us only one face.
It takes as long to rotate on its own axis as it takes to complete one orbit of Earth, which is also the length of one day on the moon – 29 days. Its face wobbles a bit, but essentially when you look at a Full Moon it always looks the same.
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