Slashdot Mirror


OnePlus 5T Featuring 6-inch AMOLED Display, 3.5mm Headphone Jack Launched (wired.com)

Chinese smartphone maker OnePlus, which has been lauded by consumers for offering phones with top-of-the-line specs at a reasonably affordable price range, on Thursday at an event in New York announced its newest flagship smartphone. Called the OnePlus 5T, the handset sports a 6.01-inch AMOLED screen (screen resolution 1080 x 2160) manufactured by Samsung in a body that is roughly of the same size as the 5.5-inch display-clad predecessor OnePlus 5. The secret sauce is, much like Samsung, LG and Apple, OnePlus has moved to a near bezel-less design. The company is not getting rid of the fingerprint scanner though, which it has pushed to the back side. The front-facing camera, additionally, OnePlus says, can be used to unlock the device. Other features include a 3,300mAh battery with the company's proprietary Dash Charge fast-charging tech (no wireless charging support -- the company says at present wireless charging doesn't really add much value to the device), top-of-the-line Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 processor with Adreno 540, 6GB of RAM with 64GB of storage (there is another variant of the phone which offers 8GB of RAM with 128GB of space). As for camera, we are looking at a dual 16-megapixel and 20-megapixel setup in the back. One more thing: the phone has a headphone jack and it runs Android 7.1 out of the box. The OnePlus 5T will go on sale in Europe, India, and the United States starting November 21st, with the base model priced at Euro 499, INR 32,999, and $499, respectively. The high-end variant is priced at Euro 559, INR 37,999, and $559. Wired has more details.

12 of 54 comments (clear)

  1. OnePlus Admits to Collecting Your Data... by wooppp · · Score: 4, Interesting

    While OnePlus will provide fix for security issues, you have to play cat and mouse all the time... https://www.tomsguide.com/us/o...

    1. Re:OnePlus Admits to Collecting Your Data... by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2

      fastboot unlock

  2. Free publicity by joao.cordeiro · · Score: 3, Funny

    The new way to make publicity: make a article showing your product and present it like it is news....

  3. Headphone Courage by geekmux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    (Circa 2014)

    Manufacturer - "Our phone comes with a headphone jack."

    Customer - "Uhhh, no shit. Why are you even telling me this?"

    (Circa 2017)

    Manufacturer - "Our phone comes with a headphone jack."

    Customer - "Ballsy move man. I'm impressed by your courage."

    1. Re:Headphone Courage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I hope you realize the only reason the word "courage" has any meaning when discussing technology is because a world famous CEO used it as a cover up for removing a very useful feature from a phone just to fleece it's customers.

      To be more clear, he lied out of ass and no one took him to task. People opened the iphone and found the space *empty* where the headphone jack used to be. And then they added a 3d poop emoji VR scanner in the extra space on their next phone iteration... Some amateur even later put his OWN headphone jack in place.

      So, yes, it will be funny/insightful/whatever for a long, long time. This is tech history now. The fact that this CEO didn't fired for lying his ass off to the entire world, and actually being supported by so many goes to show how cowardly and deluded the world is getting.

  4. Runs Android 7.1 out of the box by trawg · · Score: 4, Informative

    Doesn't that just mean it's obsolete out of the box given the current version of Android is 8 (Oreo)?

    Pretty much the only thing I ever want to know about new Android phones is whether or not I'm going to get the latest updates. These days unless it's a Pixel the answer is 'no' (maybe that will change with this Project Treble thing) but for some reason we still get breathless Android phone announcements like this Wired one that are all about how many megapixels or bezels it has.

    1. Re:Runs Android 7.1 out of the box by guacamole · · Score: 3, Informative

      I think it's fair to say that 99% of all phones that already run Oreo are Google's own Pixel and Nexus phones. Oneplus historically hasn't been bad about updating its phones. For example, they promised the Oneplus 3 and 3T should get Android 8 eventually. Their update cycle is actually faster because they don't sell any carrier branded phones. Marshmallow and Nougat are the most popular Android versions (each taking around 30 percent of market), so either of those is hardly obsolete.

    2. Re: Runs Android 7.1 out of the box by Type44Q · · Score: 2

      obsoleteness

      There's actually a word for that...

  5. Oneplus pricing creep by guacamole · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is no denying that Oneplus 5T is a good value considering you get top shelf hardware spec for 500-something USD. However, this is no longer a budget "flagship killer" phone the way the original 300/350USD Oneplus One (16/64GB) used to be in 2014. At this +500 price, you can find mainstream brand phones, such as LG G6. I was able to score a Galaxy S8 for under 500USD with a trade-in phone. Other things being equal, I still prefer Oneplus to LG, but a lot of brand loyal who were originally attracted by low pricing will start wondering what happened.

  6. Re:Headphone Jack! by Hal_Porter · · Score: 2

    Real courage at this point would be bucking the trend and selling a phone with all the features people want but which are being removed - removable battery, SD card, headphone jack, fingerprint scanner on the front. And stock Android. Instead it seems like all the manufacturers seem to be competing as to who can remove the most things people want while at the same time introducing things like higher display resolutions when the 1080p on a three year old phone is already fine and more pixels usually means less battery life, thinner handsets, face recognition replacing fingerprints or scanners on the back, Bixby buttons and glass front and back that no one wants.

    Meanwhile of course after each release we find that they 'didn't sell as many as they hoped' and that the follow up would be 'radically different'. Which usually means more useful features being lost.

    You can see Samsung's sales falling off. E.g.

    First month sales for the S4 - 10 million

    https://www.digitaltrends.com/...

    First month sales for the S5 - 11 million

    Five million S8 and S8+s in the first month

    http://www.zdnet.com/article/s...

    I.e. things are not going well for Samsung.

    --
    echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
  7. Re:Headphone Jack! by Big+Boss · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There are pros/cons to all the fingerprint scanner locations. I think on the whole, I'd prefer it on the front with a physical home button, so it could be accessed when the phone is sitting on a desk, but my current device has it on the back and it's not that bad. I'm also a weird one that would like all the navigation keys to be physical, so I'm an outlier. I also completely agree with SD, headphone jack, and removable battery. I bought a Nexus 6 with neither SD nor removable battery. After a couple years the battery holds about 50% charge and as apps and such keep getting bigger, I get low on space. With SD, I can move my media over there and leave the internal for the apps etc.. And as I don't mind my phone being a few mm thicker, I can install an extended battery and have power for days.

    I wish someone would make a device targeting enthusiast users. Those features, a 6" class screen, 1080p is good enough. Say, $500, and release a working AOSP build tree from the start. It doesn't have to include any extra features for the OS, just the base AOSP with all the hardware working properly would do fine. For real bonus points, a working standard Linux kernel would be great. Break off the proprietary bits with source stubs like the Nvidia drivers so we can update the kernel. I'd love full open source, but for some reason that's a big ask. So how about meet us in the middle?

  8. Re:Their cost is low because they sell your data by Kamien · · Score: 2

    "Since OnePlusLogKit is disabled by default, the attacker would require access to the victim's smartphone to enable it." So what is the problem exactly?