Friday 11 October 2024

Level 16 (2018)

This is a story based around a bonkers idea, which I won’t spoil for you here as it will take away most of the enjoyment of the build-up to the big reveal as to what’s behind it all, what’s going on and why! You can enjoy the journey instead if you fancy the challenge as it’s available now on various streaming services.

We spend almost all of director Danishka Esterhazy’s (The Banana Splits Movie) film inside what appears to be a very regimented girls boarding school, though it looks much more like a prison.

The girls are all mid-teens (on Level 16) and younger, we assume - as we don’t see any - on lower (or different) levels. There appears to be about a dozen girls on each level and a strict, tall blond woman, Miss Brixil, played by Sara Canning (The Vampire Diaries), who keeps them all behaving as they should. They need to be ‘clean girls’ and follow the strict rules. If they don’t they are dragged off by a couple of henchmen and ‘punished’ (which we don’t see) or locked in a box/cage (which we do).

Vivien, played by Katie Douglas (Ginny & Georgia) is not accepting this whole scenario and tries to rebel, dragging the not-so-convinced Sophia, played by Celina Martin (The Banana Splits Movie), along with her rebellious intentions. To get out of the place. She doesn’t believe that the air outside is ‘poisoned’ and plots an escape between pretending to conform and being suspected by the nice-on-the-face-of-it doctor in charge of the ‘vitamins’ the girls have to take and injections of nasty stuff to keep them in line if meandering from the path! That’s about the set up really, anything else would be a reveal, so I’ll leave you to it.

The acting is decent enough, particularly by the leads, the tone is sinister and keeps you guessing (there are clues for those who look) until the final act. The whole thing feels very low-budget, which it probably is, but it’s well produced, directed and executed for a fun 102 minutes!


Thursday 10 October 2024

Motorola Edge 50 Neo

Before I get to the ThinkPhone25 vs Moto Edge 50 Neo comparison, I thought I'd do the more logical bunch of thoughts, that being the Edge 50 Neo vs Edge 40 Neo (and possibly sprinkled with some Edge 30 Neo flavouring)! And a bunch of other Moto phones here - it's an addiction! The Edge 50 Neo, released in August 2024, was reduced on AmazonUK Prime Day in October 2024 and frankly, as a Moto Maniac (and MOTOvator!) I couldn't resist it! If Moto PR now send me one too, well, that'll be a brace of braces I have here to decide what to do with!

As is traditional, then - to the unboxing. But before I do, I'll throw in some links to my other recent Moto hardware reviews, thoughts and comparison, to which this piece will refer. ThinkPhone 25 vs ThinkPhone, G Stylus (2024), Edge 50 Pro, Buds+, Edge 40, Edge 40 Neo, ThinkPhone, Edge 30 Neo and Edge 30 Ultra. That's probably far enough back!

The box that the Edge 50 Neo comes in is the now-usual for Moto - plastic-free, recyclable buff colour - and it's clear immediately that there's no charger in the box, as it's that smaller, flatter type. 68W charging it is, but bring-your-own-brick! I guess that's a cost-saving measure. The same perfume/fragrance is present during the unboxing, now common with most of Moto's phones and along with a USB-C to USB-C cable, papers and SIM Tray tool, there's a colour-matched case - which a leaflet informs us is made by some Swedish firm called "agood company"! The case is a good-looking 'wrap around' case, all but for the cutouts where they need to be, enveloping the 5 sides/edges that are not screen. Kudos to them for not putting annoying TPU over the volume and power buttons, but leaving them open. Nice one Moto.

The phone itself is, for me, such a lovely size. It's a tad taller and wider than my Pixel 8 (which was not far from being the perfect size itself), giving a bit more screen for viewing at 6.36" (over the Pixel 8's 6.1"). My phone is the Pantone shade of Poinciana (a bold orangey-red) but it's also available in Nautical Blue, Latte (like the drink's colour) and a kind of blue/grey Grisaille. I reckon this red one is the best! The colour is also matched around the frame of the phone, which is plastic-looking-like-aluminium, with slightly chamfered edges, making the slim sides not quite flat all-over.

On the right, we have the volume rocker (looking like buttons) above the power button, clustered two-thirds of the way up the side. At the top we have a microphone beside the Dolby Atmos emblem, on the left there's nothing and on the bottom, SIM Card Tray, main microphone, USB-C port and one of the two stereo speakers. On the back there's a sizeable camera island top-left in portrait, an 'M' logo in the middle and under that, Pantone's badge denoting the device's colour in their range. The camera island slopes up from the bottom and right, now becoming fairly 'signature' for Moto design these days - and on that, four circles, making up the camera-cluster, which we'll come to.

The back
is 'silicone polymer' (otherwise known as eco-leather) which is also becoming fairly standard for Moto phones, at least in the UK. I have written about this in my other reviews linked to above, but yes - it's a nice velvety, slightly grippy texture, much better than the plastic the phone is coming in, in some regions - and certainly glass! The supplied case, to which I refer above, is slightly more slippery, but as the phone is so small, I don't think gripping it in the hand will be anything like as problematic as it would for, say, a 6.7" phone.

The front is a flat panel with curved corners, the second speaker up the top in the middle between the glass and frame, sitting above the centralised Selfie camera cutout - which is not terribly big or intrusive compared to some. The screen has been rated Gorilla Glass 3 for protection, which is not the best these days, so for those less careful than me, you might want to track down and install a decent screen protector. If you must!

The nanoSIM Card Tray holds just that - one nanoSIM Card with the back blocked where a second could live, so maybe in some regions there's a dual-SIM variant using the same tray, unblocked! There is also eSIM capability in the phone.

The phone is pretty light, as you might expect at this size and with a plastic frame (171g) but they have somehow made it IP6/8 rated for water/dust and, amazingly, MIL-STD-810H compliant! This is a phone which was designed to be rugged, though not perhaps in keeping with the use of the aforementioned Gorilla Glass 3, sadly. But as for out and about, Moto claim that it'll work fine up to 60 degrees centigrade and also down to minus 20. I wonder who might test that!

The setup procedure was painless, utilising the getting-more-smart Android system of using the old phone's camera to scan a QR Code on the new, knowing the old phone's WiFi/Router password/login, then asking about default browser and set up fingerprint scanner. Then confirm that you're going to accept a few 
"from Motorola" apps (but there's actually no choice!) Adobe Scan (Uninstallable), Booking dot Com (Uninstallable), Opera Browser with AI (Uninstallable), Opera News (Uninstallable), LinkedIn (Uninstallable) and a few Google standard ones - then away it goes, wirelessly (no offer of cabled). My baseline (saying no to film/TV but including Music) was about 40GB, which then takes about 20 minutes. Homescreen layout just as it was on the Edge 50 Pro, which I used for the transfer, though Wallpaper didn't survive the switch.

The phone has the MediaTek Dimensity 7300 (4nm) which also appeared in the Razr 50 (not Ultra), G Power and has also been seen in the likes of the CMF Phone (1) along with a long list of phones originated in the far-east from the likes of RealMe, Vivo, Oppo et al. The proof of the pudding is in the eating and based on early use, the phone seems perfectly responsive for the everyday. During the initial setup you could tell that this was no blazingly fast SnapDragon, copying files over, installing/updating 100+ apps from the Playstore, running the camera software at the same time as YouTube Music, for example - these processor-demanding combinations of tasks will show where the cost-shaving has happened, but for 98% of users, after setup (or even during), they simply won't notice. The 98% won't give a stuff about benchmarks, but just get on and use it.

I've also tested out the chipset's performance during relatively demanding car-racing gaming tasks and again, I've not found a judder nor jolt in framerates, making the chipset a decent value-choice by Moto, it would seem. Talking of which, you get the Gametime front-end when Gaming if you want to use it - a simple app-organiser then control-panel once playing to see what the phone's doing in terms of processing power, RAM and so on, with various toggles to throw if you don't want to be connected/disturbed etc. The usual thing. Can't say I'm really much of a gamer, but it all looks like a useful bunch of tools/controls for those who are.

This particular unit has got 256GB of storage onboard and 8GB RAM. Apparently there is/will be a 512GB/12GB variant out there, too, but from what I've seen in daily use here, the storage is a perfectly good amount for my uses (though more is always better, of course) and juggling open apps, once all set up and running, it seems to dance the merry tune well enough. Plenty (staying) open and I think that if any glitch is noticed, it's more to do with the chipset than RAM frankly - but as I said above, it really is quite a smooth experience all-round. There's no microSD Card slot, as I said. Oh yes, you can also boost the RAM by nicking some from storage, but as reported previously, I wouldn't bother!

The annoying Moto App Manager is pre-installed which means unless you're careful and don't agree to them bombarding you with 'helpful suggested apps' on 'occasional auto-download' that's what'll happen. Usually a bunch of crappy games every few days, fit for 2-year-olds. So head to Settings, Apps and Force Close/Disable that app so it can't! And if you ignore it or say 'no' it'll ask again every few days. Beware also that it might rekindle itself after OS or Security updates. Naughty Moto.

The bang-up-to-date 
Wallpaper>Create with AI>Magic Canvas is present, like on the Razr 50 Ultra (but not yet Edge 50 Pro - or any other Moto I have), which is an image generator (like now in Gemini and loads of other AI tools out there) baked-in. So tell it to generate a picture for you - I dunno, a cat with a top-hat - and it will. Nothing unique particularly but certainly a sign moving forward showing that Moto is thinking about and executing AI features to keep up with the Big Boys.

An Always On Display! Yay! Again, only present otherwise on a Moto on the Razr 50 Ultra flip-phone, this now baked into ROM here too. There's no choice - it's that hollow-clock design, with day, date and Weather data below it, Notification 'bubbles' if that's your style towards the foot, fingerprint scanner below, sitting on top of the Battery percentage. Well done Moto. It's been an awful long time since we had an AoD on a Moto phone, then preferring their 'Peek' display for some years, then for a while, pretty much nothing other than Lock Screen on move/nudge/lift. This is great! And it seems to follow the brightness of the system-wide setting. So if you put the Brightness on 100% then so will this AoD be so. Choose Adaptive Brightness and it'll follow that and (supposedly) become 'trained' by your use-patterns. Early days, but it looks like it might be doing so!

The stonkin' news from Moto is that, at last, they've responded to market (or tech-press) pressure, following Google, Samsung, Apple and (growingly) others by offering long update support. This is the first Moto phone which offers 5 OS updates (so, arriving on Android 14, it'll get Android 19 following Google's release in Q42028) and Google Security Patches to August 2029. Out of the box in October 2024 here, it updated with September 2024's Google Security patches (and Google also pushed September's Play System update). This is much, much better Moto. Don't let your customers down by squelching on the deal early, pretty please! With no 'folding' screen involved and the military ruggedisation, who knows - the handset might just last that long too!

Anyway, I seem to be jumping about all over the place now, so will get back on track and look at the screen. It's a 6.36" LTPO (so will help with the AoD) P-OLED which maxes out at 120Hz as a refresh-rate. This can be set to 60Hz or placed into Auto mode and yes, because of the LTPO, can get itself right down to 1Hz. It's HDR10+ compliant with the usual Moto stonking brightness and colours, putting many others to shame. It apparently peaks (in auto brightness) at 3000nits. The pixel count is 474 per inch, generated within the 1256 x 2760 equipped front panel. You can shift the colour intensity in settings between natural, vivid, radiant and/or the colour temperature manually - or via pre-sets.

I can't praise (what we still think is) LG-supplied Moto phone P-OLED screens enough and this is no exception - mid-range or not. Quite stunning. It's a flat panel with minimal bezels and at this pocket/hand-friendly size, is a delight to use. I can reach everywhere on the screen with my relatively large hands, one-handed. Just be careful of micro-scratches over the 5 years of ownership on that GG3! Perhaps a screen protector is a good idea, after all!

The stereo speakers, in keeping generally with the Neo line from Moto, put some of their other models to shame as the sound is loud, good quality and will, again, please the 98% very much. There's good stereo separation even without any of the included Dolby Atmos tools and equalisation, so much so that I have not really felt the need to switch from the default settings. It's not going to pass any audiophile's test, but then very few mobile phones will really, if we're going to get picky. For me, it's not far away from the quality of the Sony Xperia range of phones - and is actually louder. Very happy with this.

There's no 3.5mm audio-out on this model, so for head/earphones it's a USB-C route or Bluetooth (5.3 here). Both of which, as always depending on attached equipment, sound fabulous. Particularly too with Moto's own Buds+ (see above), which is what one might expect. Rich and powerful, tested here with a range of head/earphones including Sony WH-1000XM4, AKG K701, Sony MDR-7506/1, Google's own USB-C Wired and more.

The fingerprint scanner is an under-glass optical one and in isolation it's not the best out there. It works fine with a 'linger' rather than instantaneously. I'm surprised that they didn't put a capacitive one in the power button really at this price-point. Don't get me wrong, it's perfectly functional - just not as blazing fast as some, especially ultrasonic ones - but yes, certainly not capacitive. It's quick and easy to set up. Fortunately the double-barrelled approach to getting-in offers Face Unlock too - and this works flawlessly in my tests - even in dubious lighting. So by the time one's finger is on the screen, you're in and open by face anyway. A good duo of options working together well.

The phone is physically smaller than most (these days) so that needs to be taken into account with the size of the battery that can be crammed inside. They've managed to get in a 4,310mAh unit which, lets face it, is only a bit bigger than the Razr 50 Ultra flip-phone! But actually, on initial testing, taking into account the power-efficient chipset (and even AoD), I have been pleasantly surprised with the performance. My 10% Reading Test returned about two and a half to three hours - pretty much up there with the Edge 50 Pro. Similarly, the Average Daily Test for my use, projected up at this early stage, is likely getting me all-but two days between charges. Obviously everyone's usage pattern is going to be different, so YMMV. I guess it's very much about that chipset component optimisation and smart software. No complaints.

If you are a heavy user, there's also 68W charging, so armed with a brick supporting that, you can get a quick charge. Moto claim that the battery should last "over 34 hours" and that you can "fuel up for the day in 11 minutes". This seems to mean "12 hours of battery life in 11 minutes charge" with a "substantially depleted" battery and with "charge boost" on. Which is in settings. With a warning that it might heat up the phone! They also only claim that you'll get 68W with Moto's own TurboPower charger (that they will sell you for £25.99) but I've been using my UGreen 100W GaN charger with similar results - and the 125W TurboPower charger that comes with various flagship Moto phones here, as you might expect, does the job. Anyway, apparently using the Moto 68W TurboPower you can get from 0-100 in under 40 minutes and nearly 90% within a half-hour.

More impressively at this price-point is that Wireless Qi Charging being included - and will do so at 15W. I have also been testing this with various bedside trickle-chargers and wake up after 6/7 hours sleep with a full charge, AoD on too (which is more than I can say for the Razr 50 Ultra - see my review). It's very convenient to charge like this overnight, though I do understand that it's not energy-efficient to some degree. Here you have both options and in my testing, I wouldn't worry about needing to buy proprietary chargers like you'd have to with BBK Group phones, for example.

HelloUI is Moto's latest Android 'skin' and present here. Unlike some, it's a minimalist skin but brings a fairly feature-rich experience, whilst retaining what's good about a Vanilla Android experience too. It's a smart mix which most don't get right. So often over the top, sometimes dumbed-down. Motorola has included lots of ways in which to change and personalise many elements of the UI including fonts, icon shapes, colours, themes, Lock Screen (now customisable), smart volume controls and more. It's nothing like the Samsung playground open to developers, culminating in a marketplace, but there's still lots of tweaks. Some new, some old.

The Sidebar is fairly new, where apps/tools/shortcuts can be assigned to a quick-release panel on the side of any screen and offers the option to open any one of them full-screen or in a floating window - which can then be resized, minimised (in terms of not having a top-menu) or shrunk to the edge of the screen as a quick-tap button. The button can be moved around and placed where the user likes, in order to quickly snap it open again. This is just one example amongst many features that Moto users have been more used to - like three-finger screenshot, chop-chop for torch, twist-twist for camera, split-screening and so on. The gesture support like this adds useful functionality without going overboard.

Moto have also gone all-in on device and accounts security, in addition to what Android itself now offers, since it was all baked into the ThinkPhone for corporations. ThinkShield, MotoSecure and MotoAI working together to protect the user with various scanning/notification/fixing tools for stuff like phishing detection. The whole front-end looks and feels like it's well thought out, implemented and designed for the benefit of users rather than just money-spinning by the firm, or third parties.

The cherry on the cake is how Moto have taken on Samsung's DeX and, in some ways, come out on top with Smart Connect. This will be a matter of opinion, and both have pros and cons, but I like what moto have done here with the user-friendly, button-driven front-end that you don't get in DeX and is much more flexible than the likes of Phone Link from Microsoft (though admittedly not universal like that). HDMI-Out is not supported here, so you can't plug into a cable and use the phone as the 'brains' for an external monitor or, for example, NexDock or TV by cable, but Moto (and Samsung) apart from with a PC, seem to be assuming that everyone's doing everything wirelessly these days - so they will too.

Almost all recent Moto phones have Smart Connect (previously Ready For) functionality which means that sat in front of a PC with Smart Connect Windows software installed, the user can either wirelessly or with a cable (yes, even if there's no HDMI-Out functionality via USB-C) hook up the phone and computer to enjoy a range of interrelated functions. Phone on PC echoes your phone's screen at the side of the Windows PC's screen with a tag on the side to pop it in and out of the way as needed. You can use the phone via the PC's keyboard, mouse, touchscreen, stylus, whatever control you have available, as-if it's in your hand and you're using the phone. This includes audio and video pass-through and connected via network/Bluetooth, in my tests here, there's near zero latency.

There's a Smart Clipboard which means everything you 'clip' on the phone or PC is instantly available on the other, much faster than Google's QuickShare (though again, that system is not locked down to Moto, rather universal for Windows/Android). App Streaming, which lets you call up any app and use it in a phone-shaped window on the PC (much like you can using Phone on PC and Phone Link), pass-through Webcam use for any messaging apps you fancy - or just shooting video, a Files function which gives very fast file management of your phone in a Windows Explorer window on the PC for moving/managing files and folders between the hardware, Hotspot - to instantly use your phone's connection to get the PC online, Share Hub - which does much like the Files app but the emphasis on quick drag'n'drop, Cross Control where you can use a multi-windowed environment to assign screens where you like then use the mouse of the PC to 'flow' to the assigned screen. For example, if you place the phone's screen to the left of the main window, you can then use the PC's mouse to slide off from the left of the PC's screen and straight on the phone's screen - then control the phone on-the-fly, and lastly Mobile Desktop in which, DeX style, the system creates a virtual Windows-style Desktop environment for windowing, scrolling, resizing - whatever you like really. 
Using your computer's screen, mouse, keyboard and anything plugged into it, but with the 'brains' of the operation being the phone.

All this is where I have found no problem with the 8GB RAM being able to control all of this on-the-fly, no hitch, with the phone's Dimensity chipset keeping up without issue. It's fascinating to play with and for many, no doubt, becoming productive. It would be more useful if it worked via HDMI to 'dumb' monitors or TVs, but certainly the latter works beautifully well wirelessly. More expensive Moto phones do this, case in point being the Edge 50 Pro here (though not Razr 50 Ultra).

The TV/monitor experience is similarly big-button-driven, making it easy-access for casual users to use their phone as a servant, screen as a monitor, or those who want to use a TV to dive into Desktop Mode and get to work. Anyway, that was rather a long spiel depicting the good stuff that Moto have been working on and appear to be taking seriously with Smart Connect. With recent announcements from Google working in partnership now with Moto, it can only look better going forward.

Connectivity using the phone seems positive so far. I've tested both the 4G and 5G cellular with voice and data without issue in various locations, GPS seems good with swift locking/tracking in various apps, NFC I have tested with reliable results for hooking up equipment (like Bluetooth headphones) and at shop checkouts using Google Wallet for payments. Pickup range is good and reliable. WiFi has been tested on 3 networks and seems to be good at each, so no problem - and Bluetooth range seems reliable and far-reaching compared to some. It seems that Motorola have continued to use good aerials/components for even mid-range phones like this one and not just flagships.

Now to my least favourite part, the camera! Well, it is usually and at this point I regularly hand you over to our friends at GSMArena. At this point however, they haven't yet done a full review so instead, here's their Camera and Early Verdict page while I launch into a general overview and layman's impressions here! The main camera is a 50MP f1.8 unit with OIS (not the f1.4 version which comes with more expensive recent models). The secondary camera is a 
10MP f/2 telephoto shooter, again with OIS, and this time a 3x optical zoom. There's a 3rd lens which forms the wide-angle functions, 13MP f/2.2 with AF enabling very good close-up shots. Video can be shot at 4K@30fps or 1080p@240fps, so no 8K and only gyro-EIS in the mix. There's a 32MP f/2.4 Selfie camera round the front, as I said earlier, top-centre screen, punchout.

General consensus from those who know much more about digital photography than me is that photos shot in good light are pretty pleasing and that even when it gets a bit darker the software goes to work in order to create perfectly acceptable, for most uses, results. The zoom shots come out well, again, better in decent light than not - though the camera's Night Vision doesn't do too bad a job. There's a Pro mode for those who want to tinker manually, the usual Moto 'toys' like Spot Colour and Photo Booth - and also the ability to shoot at full 50MP resolution rather than the quad-bayer chopdown to 12MP. The Portrait function allows for different virtual focal lengths (equiv. 35mm) and there's even an 'f stop' slider to emulate bokeh on-the-fly. The AF in the wide-angle creates very nice so-called 'macro' shots - very close indeed - and not via a dreadful 2MP 'macro lens' like on so many others, even in this price-range. When GSMArena do their full review of the camera with more samples and verdicts, I'll come back here and link to their page. In the meantime, as always, I'd suggest that you scour YouTube for some reviews from proper photographers, not me, to gain a more informed opinion!

What a cracking little phone, though. It might just be my new favourite! I'm a sucker for anything Moto, as many people reading this will know. Hopefully that doesn't jade my view and opinion too much. I hope that even through that I can be objective and tell it like it is, not completely through rose-tinted glasses! The Neo line has always held fascination for us here at Phones Show Chat and always seems to offer excellent value-for-money in terms of features and performance. The speakers are usually good, Qi charging included (though they skipped it with last year's 40 Neo sadly), a dinky little size, much like the 30 Neo, great P-OLED screen and this year with HelloUI they've pushed the boat out with an Always on Display, IP6/8 with Military Grade protection and that 5 OS update schedule and long security commitment. I picked this up for £339 but even at full price £399 it feels like a bargain. And, as we know, prices of Moto phones come down pretty quickly as they and their partners get aggressive on pricing to get a Moto into as many hands as possible. As you may have gathered by now, I recommend it enormously!

Monday 7 October 2024

Sometimes I think About Dying (2023)

This is a cracking little film now doing the rounds on various streaming platforms featuring a commanding performance from Daisy Ridley in the lead. She's got a really boring job in small-town America, which she does very well.

Social skills are near-zero, but a new colleague starts to draw her out and tries to engage her in some living outside of her desk and dour life routine in her small apartment. Director Rachel Lambert allows us in on her thoughts, sometimes via dream-like imagery, where Fran's also contemplative about life, the universe, depression and suicide.

Robert, the new employee can't decide whether or not, after a couple of dates/kisses/hugs and her quirky behaviour, he can really be bothered to work at taking it further as the story lurches between hope for Fran and resignation to her plight. And his.

There are lots of connections and sub-stories/plots going on around the main one as she, and he, engage with other ordinary people they come into contact with and we get an insight into their lives too. It's a simple story/film but executed delightfully. It's about lots of things, but mainly a character study of Fran and her difficult and sometimes emotional path through life. Well worth a watch.

Land of Mine (2015)

At the end of WWII the Danish authorities captured 2000 fleeing German soldiers and forced them to find and clear millions of land mines which the Germans had laid across the beaches in case the British tried to invade Europe mainland via that route.


This film tells the story of a small group of young boy German soldiers and a lone Danish sergeant who was charged with the task of ensuring it was done.

The Danish promised the the 'boys' that they could go back to Germany when the task was completed but ultimately squelched on the deal (in this sub-drama). The sergeant started out as a bitter man (who we see being cruel and abusive to other German soldiers before he is assigned his group) changing as time went on and he got to realise that they were just boys.

The message depicted here was that whatever the Germans had done to other people during the war, it was surely not right to treat these boys with the same inhumanity, thus making the Danish authorities and people as wicked as the Nazis, in the name of revenge, on an individual basis.

It's harrowing to watch at times as we are shown some catastrophic incidents relating to the boys, also starving, beaten and abused in the mix. We get to know the boys, children - human beings all, who were, no doubt, forced from their childhood by the Germans anyway to go and serve. According to the captioning at the end of the film, of the 2000 soldiers involved only half survived death or severe injury.

It's as tastefully shot as it could be, given the subject matter and the cinematography, clearly low-budget as it is, benefits hugely from the open beaches, shoreline and vast open spaces. Very well acted by the cast, portraying the bleak, intensity of the situation.

I'm not convinced that the drama surrounding this particular group of individuals is true, more probably a fictionalised account rooted in the historic facts of the scenario. It's on Mubi just now and some other streaming platforms to rent/buy. Well worth a viewing if you can get it.

Sunday 6 October 2024

Before I Fall (2017)

Currently playing on Netflix this is a Groundhog Day clone, pretty much, except it's set in amongst a group of well-to-do teen girls attending a School in America who are pretty horrid to family and various other key people in the mix, kind of Heathers-like. One of the girls gets killed at the end of the first day in question, wakes up in the morning, just like Bill Murray did, lives the same day over and over, whatever she does and however she behaves. Until, like him, she works it out and challenges herself about how she's been with people in order to try to break the loop.


There is a twist and difference from Groundhog Day which I won't spoil in case you haven't seen this, but that's pretty much the bones of it - with a message very much about making the most of your last day on earth, if that's what it is going to be, righting wrongs, being nice to people and making a real difference. Turning around one's personality and character for the good of humankind etc.

Yes, there's lots cliches at work and soppy, soapy stuff as the realisation comes upon her, but it's generally handled very nicely and makes for a cute family fantasy/drama - teaching us all the moral lessons about how important it is to be nice to people live each day as if it's your last. Whether or not it is.

I would have given up during the first day as it plays out long and detailed before we get to the point of the story (and it's not interesting and engaging enough to stand-alone like Groundhog Day was in that build-up period). But I stuck with it as I knew what was coming. Anyone watching it blind would be bored to tears with yet another teen comedy/drama thing. Well, unless they like teen comedy/drama things of course!

Sam is the main character in question, played engagingly by Zoey Deutch and her friends included Cynthy Wu (who we saw in For All Mankind). Directed by Ry Russo-Young and based on a book by Lauren Oliver this is worth a look for sure.

Lenovo ThinkPhone by Motorola vs the new ThinkPhone25

There's a new ThinkPhone coming! The Lenovo ThinkPhone by Motorola! I've had the original here to compare with other Moto hardware as they have come along and it has many fine attributes. It feels like a premium smartphone, hooked into the whole Microsoft partnership with Lenovo giveing corporate users, particularly, great security features and layers of joined up thinking with other 'Think' branded business hardware, including laptops.

I wrote a 5000-word review of the original ThinkPhone here on my Blog, kindly loaned by Ben Wood of the Mobile Phone Museum and I have been able to compare it as I've gone along, not just with other Motorola devices but also hardware from other manufacturers in the Android world and beyond. So I was very keen to see this new release. Hopefully I can get my hands on one of the new units soon so that I can put them head-to-head. In the meantime, here are my expectant thoughts!

The new ThinkPhone is pretty much an armour-plated Motorola Edge 50 Neo (here's a blow-by-blow comparison at GSMArena), but how does it compare with the first ThinkPhone? As discussed on our Phones Show Chat Podcast, the first huge difference is that the release-price is about half! The original was £899 (and difficult to get outside of business/educational circles at first) whereas the new one is pitched right down at £449. So much more affordable and a smart move by Lenovorola! But there's more to it than that. In some ways the new is clearly not as premium as the old, though updated in others.

Running through the specs we find that the new one is smaller (in keeping with the Edge 50 Neo) with a screen size of 6.36" instead of the old one's 6.6". The old one is pretty small in the hand anyway (especially uncased - or with the svelte case supplied in the box), but this makes it more so. A dinky little thing only just bigger than my Pixel 8. The screen on the ThinkPhone 25 also has a higher refresh rate at 144Hz over 120 on the original and similarly a higher ppi rate, 462 over 399 due to the 1220 x 2670 19.5:9 ratio screen over the 1080p 20:9 of the older model.


It's also lighter - perhaps partly because the new one, like the Edge 50 Neo, has a plastic frame where the original was all cool and gorgeous aluminium! The plastic hasn't deterred from the robustness however, with the same MIL-STD-810H compliance and IP6/8 and the back is similarly Aramid FibreGorilla Glass 7i is used for the new one - "advanced toughness for intermediate devices" with claims for the same protection, pretty much, of the more premium Victus on the original ThinkPhone.

What has been added to the new unit is eSIM capability, whereas the original had just physical nanoSIM available. Aimed at business environments and remote management from IT departments, perhaps this will be a good move for those in control, along with the baked-in Walkie-Talkie functions.

Most people will raise an eyebrow at the chipset being not in keeping with the original ThinkPhone's SnapDragon 8+ Gen 1, or as one might expect by now an increase/improvement over that but, again, in line with the hardware specs of the Edge 50 Neo - an arguably lesser MediaTek Dimensity 7300. I'm no expert here but yes, most people who have been running benchmark checks on the two chipsets are clearly showing that in most of them, the SnapDragon is ahead and more powerful. Having said that, there's also clear evidence that the new one is more power-efficient - and all the time I've had the original ThinkPhone here, I have now and then considered that power efficiency was not its strongest point (even though performance is). Not terrible, by any means, but I'm guessing that the Dimensity will have been chosen, yes, to reduce cost, but also to give (particularly) corporate users more power between charges, out on the road and in the air!

Other corners cut include the uMPC storage instead of UFS, but again, long-lasting performance with a guaranteed 5 OS updates (Android 14-19) and security updates to 2030 mean that components need to be built to last. The ThinkPhone was given 3 OS updates (Android 13-16)and 4 years of security, incidentally. USB 3.1 with HDMI-Out by cable has gone on the new model, a feature that I have often used on the original. The move is towards wireless connectivity of course, so more shaving can be executed here to reduce cost and arguably not impact the end-users much, they, armed with the whole Smart Connect software which, to be fair, works flawlessly in my tests wirelessly too. Both phones can be plugged into a PC via USB-C to connect to the Moto Smart Connect software, regardless of HDMI. WiFi is the same 6e, Bluetooth hiked from 5.2 to 5.4, same under-glass optical fingerprint scanner, NFC and GPS etc.

The camera has also been improved, again, identical to the Edge 50 Neo - notably the addition of a 3x zoom secondary 10MP f2 lens with OIS which doesn't exist at all on the older model. The main 50MP f1.8 shooter looks to be pretty much the same on both (neither having the f1.4 wider aperture of some Moto models) and the 13MP f2.2 wide-angle with AF making for decent close-ups. You don't get the ThinkPhone's 8K video shooting on the ThinkPhone25 but the 32MP Selfie shooter is all-but the same on both models.

Both phones have stereo speakers. One of them doubling up as an earpiece for phone calls and the other bottom-firing. I'm hoping that the newer phone will sound better than the old one, which has never been that powerful/optimised. The Neo range of Moto Edge phones, however, has always had very good speaker output and so I'm hoping, yes, that following the same hardware components, the new ThinkPhone will sound better than the old for media playback.

Because the phone is physically smaller, they have not been able to match the original's 5000mAh battery, but as mentioned above, hopefully with the chipset efficiencies, all will be good in that department. The new one (and Edge 50 Neo) has a 4,310mAh unit. They do both have 68W wired charging, with a TurboPower brick in the box, and 15W wireless for overnight charging.

The elephant in the room however, for me, is the missing programmable button on the left side, red accent in keeping with other Think products, it's just gone! That's a real shame as I can't imagine people supplied with this phone not making use of it. But perhaps I'm wrong. I have it assigned to play/pause music but the user can assign it to pretty much any function they like. I guess that again this is a shaving to hit a price-point or maybe I'm wrong and the firms market research declared it an underused feature.

Anyway, needless to say, I'm looking forward to getting my hands on this unit as soon as I can, hoping it won't this time be locked into enterprize/educational channels. I get the distinct impression that this time it's going on open sale, by Moto's blurb and website positioning etc. So fingers crossed and hopefully I'll be back soon with a full comparison - maybe even a 3-way with the Edge 50 Neo!

Friday 4 October 2024

Sony WH-CH720N: First Impressions

These arrived today and it's first impressions time. They're currently £78 at AmazonUK but I got them used at a very generous price from one of our PSC MeWe Group members. I guess it's unfairly inevitable that I will compare them with my oodles more expensive/valuable WH-1000XM4 unit - though first impressions are really not favourable in terms of build at least. Putting them on and listening is different, however. I got them for out and about and chucking in a backpack whilst doing steps, keeping my XM4's for Sunday Best! I'm also getting a bit fed up with trying to keep buds in my ears - particularly the right one - but that's a story for another day!

Compared to the XM4 unit these are clearly made of cheaper, flimsier plastic with control buttons on the sides rattling around a bit when moved - the quality is markedly different from the XM4 unit which is beautifully built, solid buttons, firm to the touch, heavier and a different class (or thickness, maybe) of plastic. The cheaper ones here are lighter, for sure though still comfortable enough for extended use. The cups twizzle through 90 degrees so that when they are around your neck they are 'flat'. But surely the cup facing outwards is then the 'wrong' way to be sat around the neck? Eh? Sure enough, that's how it is. The XM4 unit cups face inwards in that position, not out - which makes much more sense, no?

Unlike the XM4 unit they cups don't have the extra pivot which allows them to fold in on themselves for travel, nor a case in the box. The XM4 has both of these features (although folding has been stripped out again for the XM5 unit). The headband cushioning is thinner, but still comfy enough. The cushions on the ears are not that dissimilar - maybe a little less plump giving the XM4's the edge, but I think both very comfortable.

Then there's the controls, being a mix of touch, swipe and buttons on the XM4's but only physical buttons here on these. They hook up to the (now called) Sony Sound Connect App (which is the very same capable app for any phone, not just Xperia ones) in pretty much the same way - and currently feature the same access to the Google Assistant (in my case) with all the stuff expected, including Read Aloud if that's what you want from Notifications. Brain needs to learn where buttons are on the cheaper ones, but I'm sure when that's done all will be good. Obviously at the moment it all feels a bit alien and I'm fumbling around, taking them off to see what's where and where it is! There's a physical ANC button on the cheaper set, which the XM4 doesn't have. So that's nifty. All this stuff can be assigned to swipes, however, in the XM4's.

I'm no audiophile, but I'll do my best! The first reaction to the sound on the 720's is that it's hugely bass-orientated. I fiddled around in the app to change this and did so in the end but only by utilising the Custom/Manual EQ and pulling the bass slider across to the left, to about 20%. After that, the bass had got to a level I was happy with. They are certainly OOTB more bass-orientated than the XM4's but I think both of these can be wound up or down as required. As I say, I'm no audiophile and those who are will no doubt be more discerning in declaring the much more expensive headset as sounding better, but they both sound great to my ears. I'd be very happy with either. Or both! My favoured music is solo piano and jazz and they both sound just great for that. You really could be sitting next to a grand piano with the right recordings and audio files as tested here.

The ANC on the XM4's is pretty amazing and I've always thought so. Testing that against each other, yes the cheaper set is not quite as good - but there really, really isn't a huge amount in it that I can hear. It may not be as good, but it really doesn't seem far behind, to me. There's Reality Audio 360 and Multipoint connection, though no LDAC support. Battery I haven't been able to test in this time but the cheaper set is supposed to get 35hrs between charges with ANC on, so more with it off. This, then, better than the XM4's which can only hope for 30hrs with the same settings.

First impressions, anyway. For the price (particularly the one I paid) if you're OK with the build being not quite up there and a slightly more clunky button-driven control array, they're a lightweight marvel really and I'd say worth every penny. Even at full price. Here's my Affiliate Link for AmazonUK if anyone fancies the challenge. https://amzn.to/3TWOB5V

Tuesday 1 October 2024

PodHubUK Podcasts for the Month of September 2024

  ...a roundup of our month of podcasting. Links to the team, communities and podcast homes on the net at the foot, so scroll down!

Tech Addicts Podcast
Atari or Spectrum this Christmas?
Sunday 1st September
Gareth and I are back 
with more tech twaddle - AI explains the offside rule, Humanoid Robots actually have humans inside, the Realme 320W SuperSonic Charger, a modular Raspberry Pi 5 tablet, FiiO K19, Wear OS 5, Galaxy S25 Ultra/Note rumour, Red Magic Gaming Pads, Doom: AI style, Spectrum 48k leaked, Atari 7800+, Retroid Pocket 5 and a load more besides!

Projector Room
Episode 169 - Kindness and Greed
Wednesday 4th September
Gareth, Allan and I are back with another festival of all things film, cinema and TV. This time we treat on Jeremy Irons, consider what Kinds of Kindness Greedy People would Damage approaching The Great White, play The 8 Show with The Lone Ranger, linger with Lolita and loads more.

Phones Sho
w Chat
Episode 818 - From Pixel Perfection to Moto Monopoly
Sunday 8th September
Steve and I welcome back Mark Mochan to the show after 5 long years! We chat about his devices during that time and his photography. We also get his take on our flippin' adventures - Moto and Sammy! Load more stuff as always. Up in the usual places!

Phones Sho
w Chat
Episode 819 - Richard Yates Unleashed!
Saturday 14th September
Steve and Richard Yates natter together about the new iPhones for most of this weekend's show, so I put my feet up and grab another cuppa. That's about it really - well, apart from a few other bits wedged in! A very Apple-centric show, and it's long, so be warned!

Tech Addicts Podcast
Cloud Controversies
Sunday 15th September
Gareth and I are back again with another trail into all things tech - chatting about Moon time, Galaxy Tab S10 rumours, TCL NXTPAPER 14, Roberts Rambler Dab Radios, Huawei tri-folding phone, a cheap Moto Razr, Anbernic RG406V and loads more. So do join us in this Apple-free zone!

Whatever Works
Episode 212 - Chilly's Gluttok Thar!
Tuesday 17th September
Aidan and I are here 
to annoy you for another hour with inane drivel about clap-trap that Works. Or Whatever! We whistle for a kettle, coo over lovely water bottles, tamper with tin openers, grip some tape and even walk with a coffee table! Fun and frolics formed by Fixodent-infused fumblings!

Project
or Room
Episode 170 - Subservience Trap
Wednesday 18th September
Gareth, Allan and I are joined by Steve this time as we chat about all things film, cinema and TV. We have wicked Robot Dreams for just A Few Dollars More, toy with Mad Max's Lethal Weapon (it's What Women Want, you know), Trap People Like Us on A Bridge Too Far and loads more besides.

Phones Show Chat
Episode 820 - Foldables and the Future
Sunday 22nd September
Mike Robins joins Steve and I this week as we chat for an hour about Dynamic Vibration (and the others playing catch-up with Sony), far-east folding options, Moto's shot at world domination(!), AI and who it's for - and even August's PSC Photos' winner of Photo of the Month too.

Phones Show Chat
Episode 821 - Asking the Guru!
Saturday 28th September
Joe Hickey's back with Steve and I again as we talk a lot about folding hardware, two-thirds of the panel not wanting one as a primary phone(!), there's also my review of TCL's NxtPaper tech within their latest phone, Steve with his YouTube Shorts and loads more, available in the usual haunts.

Tech Addicts Podcast
Here Comes That Syn(c)thing Feeling
Sunday 29th September
Gareth and I are 
joined by Ricky West to chat about Syncthing, Huawei's HarmonyOS Next, Lenovo's new gaming tablet, FiiO KA15 DAC, Wear OS 5, Vivo on Android 15, Motorola ThinkPhone II, Hasselblad's limited medium format camera, Galaxy Tab S10+ and Ultra, OpenAI and ChatGPT pricing, Marshall Monitor III, Pro-Ject T1 EVO and a little deal from Denon!

The Podcasts

PodHubUK - Phones Show Chat - The Phones Show - Whatever Works - Chewing Gum for the Ears - Projector Room - Tech Addicts

Level 16 (2018)

This is a story based around a bonkers idea, which I won’t spoil for you here as it will take away most of the enjoyment of the build-up to ...