Thursday, April 11, 2013

Harga HP Samsung

Saat mendengar kata Samsung, pastilah yang teringat di benak kita adalah sebuah merk smartphone dan gadget nomor satu di dunia. Yup, itu karena Samsung sejak memakai Android terbukti berhasil menundukkan Nokia sebagai manufaktur smartphone terbesar di dunia, dan berhasil menggeser posisi BlackBerry beberapa waktu lalu.

Begitulah sekilas tentang vendor Samsung yang terkenal akan produk ponsel maupun tablet Androidnya. Baiklah tanpa perlu banyak kata-kata, kali ini bog info ponsel akan membantu anda menemukan info seputar harga handphone merk Samsung baru dan bekas di bawah ini:

Daftar Harga HP Samsung Terbaru

Monday, February 25, 2013

HTC One X+ for AT&T

We just love HTC's One X here at Engadget -- it's quite possibly our favorite smartphone of 2012. Three devices have crossed our desks over the past year -- the original with HSPA+, AT&T's model with LTE and, more recently, the global One X+ with HSPA+. Now the saga continues with AT&T selling its own version of the One X+ with LTE on board. What's different between these handsets? How does AT&T's $200 variant stack up against its global counterpart? Is it worth spending an additional $100 (or more) for AT&T's One X+ versus the original One X? Does the bump in storage (64GB vs. 16GB) make up for the lack of color options? Find out after the break.

Put AT&T's One X+ face-up alongside its international cousin, and you'll notice the carrier's familiar globe replacing HTC's logo on the glass just below the earpiece and the capacitive buttons, which are now white instead of red. Flip the phones over and the global One X+'s red accents give way to a completely black design -- the red circle around the camera lens is gone and the Beats logo is now gray. What's more subtle is how the docking contacts on the back of AT&T's handset are offset a few millimeters from its foreign sibling, just like we saw on the One X. Compared to the original, which is available in white or gray, you can have the One X+ in any color, as long as it's black.

While the One X packed either NVIDIA's quad-core Tegra 3 with 32GB of storage or Qualcomm's dual-core Snapdragon S4 (for LTE support) with only 16GB of built-in flash, the One X+ features a faster Tegra 3 AP37 (1.7GHz vs. 1.5GHz) with a whopping 64GB of storage across the board. There's still no microSD card slot, but the 1GB LPDDR2 RAM carries over from the One X along with the gorgeous 4.7-inch, 1,280-by-720-pixel Super LCD 2 display (now covered in Gorilla Glass 2) and the excellent 8-megapixel autofocus camera (with BSI sensor, 28mm f/2.0 lens, ImageChip and LED flash). The front-facing shooter gets updated (1.6MP BSI vs. 1.3MP) and the sealed battery grows from 1,800mAh to 2,100mAh.

Clearly, the One X+ is an improvement over the original, but this time around AT&T's model is almost identical to the international version. The only major difference is in the radio chipset. Unlike the global One X+, which features Intel's X-Gold XMM6260 for quad-band DC-HSPA+ (850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100MHz) support, AT&T's variant uses Qualcomm's MDM9215 for dual-band LTE (700 / 1700MHz) and tri-band HSPA+ (850 / 1900 / 2100MHz) access. Of course, both devices also provide quad-band GSM / EDGE connectivity, 802.11a/b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0, GPS / GLONASS and NFC.

As documented in the benchmarks below, there's very little difference in terms of performance between AT&T's One X+ and its international sibling. The carrier's model scores slightly lower in most tests, but both phones feel snappy enough. We noticed a little sluggishness during initial setup when navigating the UI while updating a dozen apps, but it's been smooth sailing ever since. In our usual battery rundown test (endlessly looping a video with the brightness set to half, and with push email and social networks polling enabled) AT&T's One X+ ran for seven hours and 23 minutes -- just shy of what we measured on the global version. LTE networks speeds in San Francisco averaged about 12 Mbps down and 8 Mbps up with peaks of 20 Mbps down and 14 Mbps up -- no surprises here.

HTC Windows Phone 8X

This may come as no surprise to anyone, but the internal specs on the Verizon 8X are the same as its global counterpart, with the exception of carrier-specific radios. There's a 1.5GHz dual-core Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 MSM8960 processor running the show behind the scenes, which is complemented by 1GB of RAM, an Adreno 225 GPU and 16GB of internal storage. It also offers a 4.3-inch display with 720p resolution (342ppi, for those pixel counters out there) and a 1,800mAh battery. For imaging, you'll have the same 8-megapixel rear camera with f/2.0 aperture, BSI sensor and autofocus, as well as a 2.1MP front module with a wide-angle lens.

Regardless of how you feel about the Windows Phone ecosystem, there are two areas in which the platform has always excelled: performance and battery life. As we expected, the Verizon 8X does great in both categories. We enjoyed incredibly smooth performance with no visible lag, speedy internet browsing and no indication that this particular unit suffers from the random reboot problem we've experienced on 8X devices in the past. Here's how it fares in the cold hard metrics

Don't get too nervous about the two-hour battery life, as the number above represents how long it lasts on WPBench's CPU-intensive drain test. While it's a little shorter than its WP8 competition, we didn't find any reason to be terribly concerned -- the 8X got us through a full day of solid use with plenty of life to spare, and light users will likely get a day and a half. Phone calls sounded perfectly clear and static-free, and our LTE tests yielded average speeds of 18 Mbps down and 5 Mbps up.

Folks who are interested in getting a Windows Phone and are loyal to Verizon have but two choices: the HTC Windows Phone 8X ($200) and the Nokia Lumia 822 ($100). (Samsung is planning to release its WP8 device, the ATIV Odyssey, sometime this month.) You likely won't see a large enough difference in performance between the two devices, but the extra hundred bucks will get you a better-looking display and Beats-enabled sound. Additionally, we're much more fond of the 8X's fit, feel and design. Still, the less expensive Lumia 822 offers the same amount of storage and has a microSD slot, whereas the 8X does not. As you can see, there are quite a few pros and cons to juggle, but suffice to say, this is the best iteration we've seen of HTC's signature Windows Phone so far.