OnePlus 12r, Buds 3 go on open sale with introductory offers: Price, specs

OnePlus 12r, Buds 3 go on open sale with introductory offers: Price, specs



The OnePlus 12r and the Buds 3 wireless earbuds are now available for purchase in India. The smartphone is an affordable model in the dual-flagship OnePlus 12 series. It is offered in up to 16GB RAM and up to 256GB on-board storage configuration at Rs 39,999 onwards. The smartphone boasts Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 system-on-chip, 5,500 mAh battery, and Android 14-based OxygenOS 14 interface. Below are the details:


OnePlus 12r: Variants and pricing  


  • 8GB RAM + 128GB storage: Rs 39,999  

  • 16GB RAM + 256GB storage: Rs 45,999  


OnePlus Buds 3: Pricing  


OnePlus 12r: Availability and offers  

The OnePlus 12r smartphone and the Buds 3 will be available on OnePlus India website, OnePlus store mobile app and e-commerce platform Amazon. Offline, both devices will be available at OnePlus Experience stores, Reliance Digital, Croma, and select other retail stores.  


As for the Introductory offers, the company is offering discounts of up to Rs 1,000 to ICICI Bank customers. Besides, there is no-interest equated monthly instalment scheme for up to 6 months. OnePlus is also offering Buds Z2 worth Rs 4,999 with the purchase of OnePlus 12r smartphone for no cost. On the OnePlus Buds 3, customers can get discounts up to Rs 1,000 on select bank cards.


OnePlus 12r: Specifications  


  • Display: 6.78-inch 1.5K 10-bit AMOLED 120Hz ProXDR with LTPO 4, HDR10+  

  • Cover Glass: Corning Gorilla Glass Victus  

  • Operating System: OxygenOS 14 based on Android 14  

  • Chip: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2  

  • RAM: 8GB and 16GB (LPDDR5X)  

  • Storage: 128GB (UFS3.1) and 256GB (UFS 4)  

  • Battery: 5,500mAh, 100W SUPERVOOC (wired)  

  • Rear camera: 50MP main AF with OIS (Sony IMX89) + 8MP ultra-wide-angle + 2MP macro  

  • Front: 16MP  

  • Port: USB 2.0, Type-C  

  • Audio: Dolby Atmos  

  • Width: 75.3mm  

  • Thickness: 8.8mm  

  • Weight: 207g  


OnePlus Buds 3: Details  


  • Colours: Metallic Gray and Splendid Blue  

  • Weight: Earbuds (4.8g each) Case (40.8g)  

  • Audio: Dual driver – 10.4mm woofer + 6mm tweeter  

  • Certification: JAS Hi-Res Audio Wireless  

  • Microphones: 3-mic per earbud  

  • ANC: Yes, up to 49db  

  • Codec: AAC, SBC, LHDC 5.0  

  • Bluetooth: v5.3  

  • Transmission: Multi-point connectivity, Google Fast Pair, Low Latency  

  • Protection: IP55  

  • Battery: Earbuds – 58mAh | Charging case – 520mAh 


First Published: Feb 06 2024 | 11:45 AM IST





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Samsung leads smartphone market in India with 18% share in 2023: Report

Samsung leads smartphone market in India with 18% share in 2023: Report


The feature phone market recorded a 52 per cent y-o-y growth, primarily driven by 4G feature phone models, while shipments of older 2G phones declined 12 per cent


Korean mobile devices maker Samsung led the Indian smartphone market with an 18 per cent share in 2023, market research firm CyberMedia Research said in a report on Monday.


In the December quarter, however, Chinese company Xiaomi had the highest market share, the report said.


According to CyberMedia Research (CMR) estimates, the India smartphone market grew 19 per cent on a year-over-year (y-o-y) basis and the share of 5G smartphone shipments increased to 65 per cent with a 122 per cent growth.


“Samsung maintained its leadership in the smartphone market with an 18 per cent market share, followed by Vivo at 16 per cent in calendar year 2023. In the 5G smartphone segment also, Samsung topped the leaderboard with 23 per cent followed by Vivo at 15 per cent and OnePlus at 13 per cent,” CMR’s India Mobile Handset Market Review Report said.


In the December quarter, the overall mobile market shipments recorded a growth of 29 per cent.


“Xiaomi (19 per cent), Samsung (18.9 per cent), and Vivo (16 per cent) captured the top three spots in the smartphone leaderboard in the fourth quarter of 2023, followed by Realme (12 per cent) and OPPO (8 per cent),” the report said.


Shipments of premium smartphones — priced over Rs 25,000 per unit — recorded a 71 per cent growth y-o-y.


“Apple captured a 6 per cent market share in the smartphone market in the fourth quarter of 2023 (calendar year). The Apple iPhone 15 series constituted more than 50 per cent of its total shipments,” the report said.


CMR Industry Intelligence Group analyst Shipra Sinha said 58 per cent of 5G smartphones were shipped under the value-for-money segment in the price range of Rs 7,000-Rs 25,000 apiece, up from 47 per cent in December quarter in 2022.


“The over Rs 50,000 priced super premium smartphone segment experienced a remarkable 65 per cent y-o-y growth. There was a noteworthy growth in the 4G feature phone market, primarily catalysed by Jio,” Sinha said.


The feature phone market recorded a 52 per cent y-o-y growth, primarily driven by 4G feature phone models, while shipments of older 2G phones declined 12 per cent.


“Jio dominated the feature phone market with a 38 per cent share, followed by Itel Mobile (23 per cent) and Lava (15 per cent),” the report said.


POCO, Xiaomi’s sub-brand, shipments grew 148 per cent in smartphone shipments. Vivo’s 5G smartphone shipments recorded a 300 per cent jump on a y-o-y basis.


CMR estimates India’s smartphone market to grow 7-8 per cent in 2024, driven by a strong demand for 5G smartphones.


“5G smartphone shipments are expected to surge by over 40 per cent. 4G feature phones are anticipated to grow by over 10 per cent in 2024,” the report said.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Feb 05 2024 | 11:26 PM IST



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Oversight board of Meta warns rules on fake posts incoherent, too narrow

Oversight board of Meta warns rules on fake posts incoherent, too narrow



By Alex Barinka


Meta Platforms Inc.’s independent Oversight Board agreed with the company’s recent decision to leave up a misleading video of US President Joe Biden, but criticized its policies on content generated by artificial intelligence as “incoherent” and too narrow.

 


The board, which was set up in 2020 by management to independently review some of the company’s most significant content moderation decisions, on Monday urged Meta to update its policies quickly ahead of the 2024 U.S. general election. 


“The Board is concerned about the manipulated media policy in its current form, finding it to be incoherent, lacking in persuasive justification and inappropriately focused on how content has been created, rather than on which specific harms it aims to prevent, such as disrupting electoral processes,” the organization said in a statement.


The criticism from the board came after reviewing Meta’s decision to leave up a manipulated video of Biden, which was edited to make it look like he was inappropriately touching his adult granddaughter’s chest. The video included a caption that referred to Biden as a “pedophile.”


The Oversight Board agreed that the video didn’t violate Meta’s manipulated media policies, but said those policies are far too narrow and insufficient. The board also recommended that Meta stop removing altered media that doesn’t violate any other policy against harmful content, but instead start to label it and leave it up. 


“We are reviewing the Oversight Board’s guidance and will respond publicly to their recommendations within 60 days in accordance with the bylaws,” a Meta spokesperson said. The company isn’t obligated to take the board’s recommendations, and at times has ignored its advice.


In January, an influx of deepfake content of high-profile individuals showed the public and lawmakers the pace at which manipulated content can appear online with the help of new AI tools. Explicit images of Taylor Swift inundated social platform X, formerly known as Twitter, while fake robocalls of Biden’s voice were sent to voters ahead of the New Hampshire primary, urging them not to vote.


Meta’s current policy only blocks fake videos of people saying things they didn’t say. It doesn’t cover portrayals of people doing things they didn’t do – like the Biden post – and explicitly only applies to videos created with artificial intelligence tools. Content that’s been edited without using AI, like looping or reversing a video clip, could be misleading to the average user but isn’t prohibited.


The board recommended that Meta expand its policies to cover manipulated media that portrays an action a person didn’t actually take and to address fake audio. It also urged the company to make clear what harms it’s aiming to prevent, like interfering with the voting process, and focus more on those harms rather than whether content was created using AI tools or not. 


“As it stands, the policy makes little sense,” Michael McConnell, the board’s co-chair, said in a statement. “It bans altered videos that show people saying things they do not say, but does not prohibit posts depicting an individual doing something they did not do. It only applies to video created through AI, but lets other fake content off the hook.”


Meta, along with peers like X and ByteDance Ltd.’s TikTok, will find itself dealing with more and more manipulated media as AI technology improves and the election inches closer. Meta first rolled out its policy ahead of the 2020 election, part of a broader effort by the company to crack down on election-related misinformation after the 2016 US campaign exposed how social networks could be gamed.


In many ways, this type of situation is exactly why the Oversight Board was created. The independent body, which is made up of academics and others with public policy backgrounds, is funded by Meta, but is meant to serve as a check on the company’s power over content. In the past, the board has reviewed issues across Facebook and Instagram regarding election misinformation and drug-related posts. It upheld Meta’s suspension of Donald Trump following the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021, while simultaneously criticizing the company’s implementation of the suspension. 

First Published: Feb 05 2024 | 8:14 PM IST



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Samsung Chief Lee Jae-yong acquitted of financial crimes related to merger

Samsung Chief Lee Jae-yong acquitted of financial crimes related to merger



A South Korean court on Monday acquitted Samsung Electronics Chairman Lee Jae-yong of financial crimes involving a contentious merger between Samsung affiliates in 2015 that tightened his grip over South Korea’s biggest company.


The ruling by the Seoul Central District Court could ease the legal troubles surrounding the Samsung heir less than two years after he was pardoned of a separate conviction of bribery in a corruption scandal that toppled a previous South Korean government.


The court said the prosecution failed to sufficiently prove the merger between Samsung C&T and Cheil Industries was unlawfully conducted with an aim to strengthen Lee’s control over Samsung Electronics.


Prosecutors had sought a five-year jail term for Lee, who was accused of stock price manipulation and accounting fraud. It wasn’t immediately clear whether they would appeal. Lee had denied wrongdoing in the current case, describing the 2015 merger as normal business activity.


Lee, 56, did not answer questions from reporters as left the court. You Jin Kim, Lee’s lawyer, praised the court for confirming that the merger was legal.


Lee, a third-generation corporate heir who was officially appointed as the chairman of Samsung Electronics in October 2022, has led the Samsung group of companies since 2014, when his late father, former chairman Lee Kun-hee, suffered a heart attack.


Lee Jae-yong served 18 months in prison after being convicted in 2017 over separate bribery charges related to the 2015 deal. He was originally sentenced for five years in prison for offering 8.6 billion won ($6.4 million) worth of bribes to then-President Park Geun-hye and her close confidante to win government support for the 2015 merger, which was key to strengthening his control over the Samsung business empire and solidifying the father-to-son leadership succession.


Lee was released on parole in 2021 and pardoned by South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol in August 2022, in moves that extended a history of leniency toward major white-collar crime in South Korea and preferential treatment for convicted tycoons.


Some shareholders had opposed the 2015 merger, saying that it unfairly benefited the Lee family while hurting minority shareholders. There was also public anger over how the national pension fund’s stake in Samsung C&T, the merged entity, fell by an estimated hundreds of millions of dollars, after Park had pressured the National Pension Service to support the deal.


Park and her confidante were also convicted in the scandal and enraged South Koreans staged massive protests for months demanding an end to the shady ties between business and politics. The demonstrations eventually led to Park’s ouster from office.


Lee has been navigating one of his toughest stretches as the leader of one of the world’s largest makers of computer chips and smartphones, with Russia’s war on Ukraine and other geopolitical turmoil hurting the world economy and deflating technology spending.


The company last week reported an annual 34% decline in operating profit for October-December quarter as sluggish demands for its TVs and other consumer electronics products offset hard-won gains from a slowly revering memory chip market.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Feb 05 2024 | 12:49 PM IST



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Best yet to come: Zuckerberg recaps Facebook journey on its 20th birthday

Best yet to come: Zuckerberg recaps Facebook journey on its 20th birthday


Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg in an old photo. (Photo: IG/@zuck)

Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg, on Sunday, celebrated the social media giant’s 20th launch anniversary by posting a throwback video on Meta-owned Instagram.


“20 years ago, I launched a thing. Along the way, lots of amazing people joined and we built some more awesome things. We’re still at it, and the best is yet to come,” the Meta CEO captioned the nearly 25-second Instagram short video, also known as a ‘Reel’.

The video featured Zuckerberg from his younger days when Facebook was launched on February 4, 2004.



Following the video, he also shared two photos, one from two decades ago and another clicked recently, captioned “20 years in. Still at it.”


With over 600,000 likes on both posts combined, Zuckerberg’s fans extended congratulations on the feat as many hoped for improved services on the platform.


Launch of Facebook in 2004


Following its launch, Facebook was a hit in ushering in a new era of communication methods. The social media platform was established by Zuckerberg and co-founders Dustin Moskovitz and Eduardo Saverin.


On December 1 that year, the platform hit 1 million active users, marking a key milestone. Gradually, more features were added to the platform, including adding photos in 2005 and a news feed, in a bid to increase user engagement.


Notably, the popular ‘like button’ on the platform was launched in 2009, and by 2010, the portal had garnered 500 million active users. Features such as groups, messenger, and timelines followed in the subsequent years, making Facebook the most sought-after digital platform to connect, share and communicate with friends and family.


Facebook on decline recently


However, the platform has seen a decline in growth in recent years. With increased competition from popular apps like TikTok and Instagram, Facebook has now turned into a hangout platform for the “older” generations, according to experts, though the company refuses the claim.


In February 2022, Facebook’s total number of users declined for the first time to 1.9 billion in the December quarter, a half-a-million drop from the previous September quarter.


According to recent reports, the platform hosts nearly 3 billion monthly users but it is struggling to remain relevant among the “tech-savvy” youngsters.

Notably, Meta’s Instagram which hosts ‘Reels’, is the company’s competition to ByteDance’s TikTok. According to Zuckerberg himself, Reels are the fastest-growing form of content consumption and the biggest contributor to engagement growth on Instagram.

(With Reuters’ inputs)

First Published: Feb 05 2024 | 12:44 PM IST





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Google to rename AI chatbot Bard to Gemini, introduce paid tier: Report

Google to rename AI chatbot Bard to Gemini, introduce paid tier: Report


Google is reportedly planning to rename its artificial intelligence (AI) assistant Bard to Gemini. According to a news report on 9to5Google, the software giant would call Bard AI as Gemini, matching the name of the foundation model powering the assistant.


According to the report, a new changelog from Google published on February 7 mentions “Bard is now Gemini”. The report also stated that Bard Advanced, announced in December last year, will be available on February 7 as “Gemini Advanced”. The Advanced model essentially provide users access to Gemini Ultra. It is likely to be introduced as a pair tier.


After getting rebranded from Bard to Gemini, Google’s AI chatbot will also likely get an Android app. The report stated that the app would essentially be similar to the Google assistant app. However, the app is expected to be available only in the US on select devices, including Pixel devices and the Galaxy S24 series.


9to5Google reported that the app will soon expand to more regions and in more languages after the initial roll-out phase.


Last week, Google added new capabilities to Bard, including image generation powered by the Imagen 2 model. Additionally, the company expanded the availability of the AI chat assistant, powered by Gemini Pro model in more regions and with support for over 40 languages including Hindi, Bengali, Gujarati, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, and more.

First Published: Feb 05 2024 | 11:51 AM IST



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