New OnePlus 7T Android Smartphone Review

Upendra Kumar
7 min readJul 15, 2020

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New OnePlus 7T Android Smartphone Review

It’s a lot like one of our favourite phones of the year, the OnePlus 7 Pro, but it’s a little bit smaller and it costs less. It’s a follow-on from the OnePlus 7 that was available in other markets, It more as a successor to the OnePlus 6T from last year. Now don’t let that lower price lead you into thinking that the 7T is a worse phone than 7 Pro, because in reality, between the two, it’s the one that I actually prefer. (smooth synthesizer music) It still has the best parts of the 7 Pro. That super-smooth 90-hertz screen, fast and responsive performance, but it doesn’t have the other things that make the 7 Pro challenging to use, like a giant size and curved edges.

It also has a couple of new tricks that the 7 Pro doesn’t even offer. So let’s talk about specs because when you review an OnePlus phone, you have to talk about specs. The 7T is a 6.55 inch 10 eDP OLED display with that 90-hertz refresh rate. So scrolling on this looks a whole lot smoother than on most other phones. It has a Qualcomm Snapdragon 855+ processor, which is technically faster than the standard 855 in the 7 Pro, but I doubt you’d really notice much difference between them. Either way, performance is still excellent. The 7T that will be available in the US has 8 gigs of RAM and 128 gigs of storage. Other markets like India and China are also going to get a 256 gig option. The screen has a 20 by nine aspect ratio which makes it a bit tall, but it’s noticeably narrower than the 7 Pro and even last year’s 6T. That, plus the flat surface, there’s no waterfall curves here, make it more comfortable to hold. But you shouldn’t go thinking that this is a suddenly new, small phone from OnePlus.

This is still a big phone, it’s just a little smaller than the 7 Pro. The display doesn’t have a completely uninterrupted screen. There is a small water drop notch at the top for the front camera, because the 7T doesn’t have the fancy pop-up motorized front camera that the 7 Pro has. Now OnePlus says this notches specifically 31.6% smaller than the notch on the 6T and the 7. And to be honest with you, I really haven’t found it to be any problem in use over the past week or so. Now the screen supports both HDR10 and HDR10+ and it’s 27% brighter in direct sunlight, thanks to a new boosted outdoor mode, which lets it get to up to a peak of 1,000 nits. There’s really not a whole lot to complain about with this screen. It’s bright, it’s colourful, it has that fast refresh rate that’s awesome.

Now it’s technically a lower resolution than the 1440p panel on the 7 Pro, but I really can’t see a difference in sharpness between them. Now if we stop staring at the screen for a second, which, I admit, it’s hard to do, we could flip the 7T over and check out its camera system. Now just like the 7 Pro and a lot of other phones out this year, the 7T has a three-camera system. It’s got a standard one, an ultra-wide and a telephoto. And they’re all housed in this kinda giant hump on the back of the phone. It kind of reminds me of the old Nokia Lumia 1020. The standard camera and the ultra-wide are basically exactly the same as the 7 Pro’s camera. And the telephoto is just a 2x zoom instead of the 3x that you get on the 7 Pro. You can expect the same kind of images from the 7T as you can get from the 7 Pro and I think a lot of people are gonna be really happy with these results.

One new thing that the 7Thas is a super macro mode that lets you get focused really close on an object. It can be challenging to use because it’s hard to hold still and get a sharp shot at these close distances, but with a little practice, it can be a ton of fun and you won’t be able to get this on the 7 Pro, even though a software update because OnePlus tells me that to get this to work, it requires some special hardware that the 7 Pro just doesn’t have. Another thing that the 7 Pro doesn’t have is Warp Charge 30 plus, which is the latest version of OnePlus’s proprietary fast-charging system. The company says it’s up to 23% faster than the Warp Charge 30 that’s on the Pro, and it should charge the 7T’s battery from zero to 100 in just 60 minutes. In my test, I was able to go from 22 to 87% in just 30 minutes, which is really impressive.

But just know that, in order to get those speeds, you’re going to have to use the included brick and cable that came in the box with the 7T. The 7T is launching with Android 10 and OnePlus’s Oxygen OS 10, making it one of the first phones to launch with Google’s latest software. Now you can choose between Android 10’s new gesture interface or the standard three buttons. But if you were a fan of OnePlus’s old gestures, I’m sorry to report, those are no longer available. One new thing in Oxygen OS that I particularly like is the chromatic reading mode, which desaturates the screen to make it easier to read, but it doesn’t turn it fully monochrome like before. Now I like using this when I’m using Pocket or the Kindle app and doing a lot of reading, but if you prefer the older, full-style monochrome version, you can choose that if you want to. So, what’s not to love with the 7T? Well, for starters, I’m only seeing average battery life with it, which is about four to five hours of screen time.

Even though this thing has a big 3800 milli amp-hour battery. I don’t think this is a huge problem and I think most people will be able to get through a full day with the 7T, but if you saw that stat and were hoping for a multi-day monster, this ain’t it. It’s clear that the 90-hertz screen does take a hit on battery life, but I think it’s totally worth the trade. The 7T also has familiar OnePlus complaints. It doesn’t support wireless charging, which might not matter to you, but matters to me. It doesn’t have a rated official IP rating for water and dust resistance, and you can’t expand the storage with a micro SD card. It also tends to aggressively shut down apps when I’m not using them, which is something the company says it’ll be addressing in future software updates, but it just hasn’t yet. I mostly notice this when I’m using Android messages on my computer and I can’t send or receive new messages until I wake up the 7T on my desk. But I can forgive and forget a lot of those things when I consider the fact that I’m getting this screen and this performance for 600 bucks. We’re expecting Google to puta similar 90-hertz display in the upcoming Pixel 4, but I guarantee that won’t be available for anywhere near the price of the 7T. In fact, when I compare the 7T to any other phone right now, even the 7 Pro, I’m not sure anything else can touch this combination of display, performance and price.

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OnePlus 8 Pro Android Smartphone review After using it for almost two months now I know a lot of you guys are going to be saying, “How have you been using this for two months, “when it was just announced a month and a half ago?” Well, i used to be fortunate enough to urge this a touch bit early before the announcement date. And I have been using it quite heavily since. There are lots to like about this phone. There are few things not to like and there’s definitely room for improvement. And I’m going to be trying to cover as much of that as possible. So this will be a long video, but as always I will try to leave some timestamps down below in the description or in a pinned comment so you can skip to a particular section. Right, with that out of the way, let’s get straight to it. The first thing I want to talk about is the display. So you may have heard a lot of people already say that this has the best display in the market right now, and don’t get me wron…

Originally published at https://androidphonesreviewforyou.blogspot.com on July 15, 2020.

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