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Showing posts from September, 2018

Why you should buy an INFINIX HOT 6

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TODAY WE ARE GONNA BE REVIEWING THE EXTRA ORDINARY INFINIX HOT 6 PRO Key features of the Hot 6 Pro 4G LTE. 6″ 720p HD+ 18:9 Infinity Display. Dual 13MP AF + 2MP FF rear camera with dual LED flash. 5MP FF front camera with LED flash. Quad-core Snapdragon 425, 1.4GHz. 16GB ROM/2GB RAM or 32GB ROM/3GB RAM. 4,000mAh battery. Android 8.0 with XOS 3.2 Hummingbird. Dual nano SIM. MicroSD Support. FM radio. Standard 3.5mm audio jack. In the box. The Infinix Hot 6 Pro’s retail package is virtually identical to that of the Infinix S3, except for the colour. Our review device came in a City Blue box, yours could be different. The box is generously filled with extra accessories – well above the average smartphone bundle.  So, the retail box of the Hot 6 Pro contains the mandatory charger and a microUSB cable, as well as a pair of nice-looking white in-ear headset. A SIM ejector is provided as well. You also get a screen protector – not tempered glass, but it can get yo

iPhone X was simply the forerunner for what we should expect from Apple for the next several years

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It’s not really a ‘budget’ phone, but the iPhone XR is still a great value. when Apple announced pricing for its new iPhone XS and XS Max, which both broke the $1,000 mark, I didn’t think much of it. Carrier payment plans tend to make every smartphone look less expensive, but then I did the math. Mobile The $750 price tag on the iPhone XR has other tech journalists referring to it as the “budget” option of the new iPhone X lineup, which could easily be misconstrued as translating to mediocre features. In reality, the XR offers a beautiful design, top-tier specs, and most importantly — isn’t all that different from its expensive companions. It’s also the iPhone I’m probably going to buy, and I’m not mad about it. Following last year’s Apple event in September, I preached that customers should splurge for the $1,000 iPhone X because the iPhone 8 and 8 Plus brought nothing new to the table. Apple simply recycled its old, outdated design to produce an iPhone with the exact

MSU scientists have a new proof of concept for a biofuel production platform

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MSU scientists have a new proof of concept for a biofuel production platform that uses two species of marine algae and soil fungi. It lowers cultivation and harvesting costs and increases productivity, factors that currently hold back biofuels from being widely adopted. The species of alga, Nannochloropsis oceanica, and fungus, Mortierella elongate, both produce oils that we can harvest for human use. With these oils, we could make products like biofuels to power our cars or omega-3 fatty acids that are good for heart health. When scientists place the two organisms in the same environment, the tiny algae attach to the fungi to form big masses that are visible to the naked eye. This aggregation method is called bio-flocculation. When harvested together, the organisms yield more oil than if they were cultivated and harvested each on their own. "We used natural organisms with high affinity for each other," says Zhi-Yan (Rock) Du, the study's first author. "