September 24, 2016

Batterie Toshiba PABAS228

Trois ans après avoir lancé la page "Info contrôle de police 38”, Romain relaie, chaque jour, une vingtaine de messages. Des contrôles routiers, mais également des accidents, des chiens errants, des animaux perdus. « Je pense que quand Pokémon Go va débarquer en France, j’aurai des regroupements de personnes à annoncer », prédit Romain, qui confie devoir modérer sérieusement les commentaires qui suivent, dans le sillage de ses publications. « J’essaye d’éviter tout débat politique ou religieux », souligne le jeune homme, qui affirme avoir ses douze points sur son permis de conduire.Romain a bien pensé créer une application pour prendre le relais de sa page Facebook. Mais faute de financement, il a abandonné l’idée. Alors, avec deux autres bénévoles, il continue de partager les messages, « que je recoupe », signalant la présence des forces de l’ordre sur sa page. « Ce qui marche le mieux, ce sont les intempéries », glisse-t-il. « Quand il neige », précise l’Isérois.

En attendant la neige, Romain poursuit sa "mission”. Avec deux impératifs : avoir de la batterie et du réseau…Dans la famille Spectre 13, nous appelons « le plus fin du monde » ! Cousin du Spectre 13 x360, cet ultraportable au format 13,3 pouces n’a, pour sa part, pas vocation à se transformer en tablette ou à être disposé la tête en bas sur un bureau. Il mise plus sur son design ultrafin et son moteur ultrapuissant pour convaincre ceux qui hésiteraient entre lui et la version la plus haut de gamme du MacBook 12 pouces d’Apple, tous deux vendus 1800 euros. Voyons s’il parvient à ses fins. Copyright © GentsideBY ALEX ROTH Pokemon Go is an absolute blast, but it can drain your phone's battery like a rampaging Electabuzz. If you want to go out on an all-day Poke-venture, you're going to need to keep charged, so we've rounded a bevy of portable smartphone batteries that'll have your phone humming like handful of happy Voltorbs.

The JBL Sound Boost mod will have a bit more mainstream appeal than the projector, especially at a much more affordable $80. When snapped onto your phone, it pumps out loud and crisp-sounding audio: If you'd rather snap on a speaker like this than pair over Bluetooth with an external one, its price is similar to portable speakers with inferior audio quality. The JBL mod's big advantage is that it has a built-in battery, so it won't drain your phone's battery while it's playing music or showing a movie (though, unlike the power packs, you can't use it to charge your phone).

The speaker has a kickstand on the back too: That's handy for watching videos, but less ideal if you're pumping out tunes, since it angles the speakers downward, so the vibrations will bounce off of whatever surface the phone is sitting on top of. The audio sounds best with the speakers aimed directly towards your face, but you'll have to either hold it or lean it against something else to do that.

We love the idea and implementation of the Moto Z's modularity. While we're only completely smitten with the power packs and Style Shells at launch, this is a starting point for what could grow into a large collection of accessories for this flagship. And in the meantime, even if you don't have any interest in the speaker or projector, you still have the ultra-useful battery pack, which just about anyone can find use for, along with the cosmetic Style Shells: backings that come in a variety of different materials and colors, so you can customize the phone's look and feel (a natural wooden Style Shell is included with both phones).

We'll eventually see modular phones that let you upgrade the technical stuff, like processor, RAM, storage, internal battery, display panel and so on (see Google's Project Ara). That isn't what the Moto Z is about. But the simplicity, versatility and long-term potential of Lenovo's snap-on approach is a breath of fresh air in a smartphone industry full of minor iterations paired with over-the-top hyperbole. Here's something that's truly different, with at least one incredibly useful accessory. Those are the Moto Mods, but what about the phones themselves? First, the two are nearly identical, with a few key differences:

The Moto Z is the standard flagship, the one that will launch not just on Verizon, but also in an unlocked version (and likely on other carriers) starting in September, after a period of Big Red exclusivity. It's razor-thin, with a very good camera and good battery life.Motorola tells us that the Moto Z Force, meanwhile, is going to remain a "Droid Edition" Verizon exclusive throughout its lifespan – though it does ship unlocked, so you could still buy it at full retail price from VZW and pop in a SIM to use it on other carriers. The Z Force also differs in that it's 35 percent thicker and 20 percent heavier than the standard Z, thanks to its 35 percent bigger battery. It also adds a better camera and "shatter-proof" display (like last year's Droid Turbo 2).

Battery life in the Moto Z Force, even without using the Incipio Power Pack, is very good. Today, for example, I've had it off the charger for 12 hours, including some browsing and music streaming, and it's still at 70 percent. That's with pretty light use and plenty of standby time, mind you, but I rarely get those kinds of numbers from other flagships, no matter how light the workload. Use the Moto Z Force along with the battery pack mod, and you have a phone with a flippin' 5,720 mAh battery. That's 59 percent more capacity than the Galaxy S7 edge, 91 percent more than the HTC 10 and 108 percent more than the iPhone 6s Plus.

Both phones scored well in our standard battery benchmark. Streaming video over Wi-Fi with displays set at an absolute brightness (measured by a lux meter), the Moto Z dropped 10 percent per hour, and the Moto Z Force dropped just 8 percent per hour. For some context, the Moto G4 (and G4 Plus) and LG G5 both matched the Z Force at 8 percent per hour, the Galaxy S7 (and edge) dropped 9 percent per hour and the latest iPhones lost 13 percent per hour.... and remember those scores are without a power pack attached. The phones on their own already give you some of the best battery life among current flagships; add that extra 2,220 mAH from a battery mod and you have the battery beast so many people say they want.

The phones themselves are beautiful metallic affairs (Motorola says they're made of both stainless steel and aluminum). The standard Moto Z, sans mods, feels incredibly light and thin in hand. The Force still isn't bulky or heavy, but it does lose that so light and thin it almost feels like a toy quality that the standard Z has.Displays look as eye-popping as you'd expect from a 5.5-inch, QHD AMOLED panel. White balance is good, brightness is solid, colors are rich (and you can choose from both realistic and vibrant modes in settings) and that 1440p resolution has everything looking as crisp as can be.

Performance is also just about everything you could ask for, with 4 GB of RAM and Qualcomm's early 2016 high-end chip, the Snapdragon 820, inside. The upcoming Galaxy Note 7 should be a little faster, with the slightly faster (late 2016) Snapdragon 821 rumored to be inside, but the Moto Z's speed is right up there with the Galaxy S7, LG G5 and HTC 10. Expect zippy multitasking and butter-smooth performance throughout.Both cameras are very good. The Moto Z Force has a higher-res 21 MP sensor, while the standard Moto Z's is 13 MP. Here are some unedited sample shots (with HDR off) to show the minor difference between the two:The bad news: Darby appears to be tracking closer to the Hawaiian islands than first reported here, and the Big Island, Oahu and U.S. military facilities on each can expect a miserable, wet, gusty weekend, if the latest reports from the Central Pacific Hurricane Center and Weather.com are any indication.

Darby is forecast to remain a significant tropical storm, 63-mph sustained winds and 81-mph gusts. CPHC projects Darby to retain that intensity as it rumbles past Hilo 18 miles northeast at about 6 p.m. Saturday, with Hilo expected to be well within Darby's 58-mph wind bands.Darby should then curve west-northwest, skimming just northeast of Oahu around 8 p.m. Sunday, 31 miles from Camp H.M. Smith, 36 miles from Marine Corps Air Station Kaneohe Bay, 40 miles from Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam and 54 miles from Barbers Point. Winds should begin diminishing, but only slightly, to 58-mph sustained and 74-mph gusts.

Posted by: retrouve3 at 04:23 AM | No Comments | Add Comment
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