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The OnePlus 10 Pro Review: Lights, camera and not a lot of action

OnePlus has been improving its phones for years. However, the path from “flagship killer” to actual flagship is well-trodden. What’s more difficult is staying at the top and competing with the likes of Samsung and Apple.

The OnePlus 10 Pro competes with other high-end players, but just barely. That’s fine since I still like the unique power of the camera’s colours, even if the resolution and night mode performance isn’t as strong as other high-end smartphones.

The 10 Pro also suffers from bugs, non-commitment from the company and cut corners that you shouldn’t have to deal with at a $1,150 price tag. If you’re a fan of OnePlus, you’ll be familiar with a lot of these annoyances, but you’ll also likely still enjoy the premium design and fun camera that the OnePlus 10 Pro offers.

A camera built for me… kind of

Some people will say it looks like a stove. Those people suck.

Sometimes, I think I might be one of the world’s biggest OnePlus camera fans. I’ve been surprised with images from the company’s phones ever since the OnePlus 7T, and this year is no different.

I’m not saying every other reviewer is wrong. Technically, the Pixel, iPhone and Samsung flagships take cleaner images with sharper focus and more accurate colours. Still, they feel stale compared to the strong character OnePlus photos offer. There’s magic here, and as someone who usually edits my photos before posting them anyways, I really like the colours and sharp contrast that OnePlus gives me as a starting point.

The camera interface still has the Hasselblad orange accents and the sweet leaf shutter sound.

This year, you can even shoot in 10-bit colour, and the images look eye-wateringly gorgeous on any 10-bit screen, including the 10 Pro’s brilliant display. It’s too bad that sharing them requires you to convert images into JPEGs, which is infuriating and makes it a hassle to share photos. That being said, I still did it. It’s a vicious cycle to be forced to degrade a photo before sharing it, but when I get such fun snaps out of the device, I don’t have a choice.

The OnePlus 10 Pro’s primary lens is the star of the show. It’s the same Sony IMX789 sensor from last year, and OnePlus pixel bins it down to 12-megapixels, but you can force it to take a full 48-megapixel shot if you want. None of that is what’s really important though. What matters is that it features a reasonably large sensor with a good lens and great colour science.

This means that in most cases, photos look sharp and vibrant while still retaining true-looking colours. Sometimes the reds and oranges push together a little too much, but the cool blues and cinematic yellows were really pleasing. Even blowing up the images on my 27-inch monitor looked great without the need to capture the full 48-megapixel photo. However, the images look significantly less saturated on my monitor than they do on the OnePlus 10’s vibrant display.

The sensor was even able to get enough light during the last glimpses of sunlight to produce clean images with texture, including some depth and a wide scope of colours. The camera let me down a few times with wacky exposures, but as long as I took a moment and locked exposure on what I wanted in the frame, the images turned out how I wanted them.

The dark metal contrasts really nicely with the Emerald Forest coloured phone

The camera system could do a better job at making HDR instant though. Sometimes when I want to take a street shot I double press the power button, whip up the phone and snap. But, the OnePlus 10 Pro often doesn’t have enough time to engage HDR if it’s set to auto.

I didn’t mind this since it gave me a blown-out effect reminiscent of point-and-shoot film cameras, but it’s something to be aware of. It’s worth mentioning that the OnePlus 9 Pro features the same issue, and I really liked the way images turned out over the year I spent with it.

Compared to other flagships, the OnePlus camera desaturates skin tones in bad lighting but in good light, it’s accurate enough, even on darker skin in my limited testing. The OnePlus 9 Pro suffered from this same issue. Now that Google has released Real Tone, OnePlus really needs to step up its skin tone production, especially with the selfie camera.

The eight-megapixel zoom lens offers lots of contrast. This helps make up for its overall lack of sharpness. But at the end of the day, I used this 77mm equivalent lens more than any other. The focal length compression it gives images is tremendous, and it allows me to grab frames from even a few hundred metres away.

Sure, the main camera is great for landscapes, but the zoom lens is more fun so I hope OnePlus can improve it next year. Ideally, the company will follow in the iPhone’s footsteps and just use the same sensor for each lens to help with consistency.

Speaking of inconsistencies, the colour accuracy between the zoom and the primary lens doesn’t perfectly line up. This is an issue OnePlus promised to address years ago, and the fact that it still can’t deliver on it speaks volumes about the company’s software support.

I don’t mind the lower-quality zoom lens since it can still do great things under ideal lighting conditions. In lower light, it gives images some noise/grain, but that combined with its rich colours and dynamic range can often look quite filmic. These images held up the least when blown up on a big display.

The ultrawide took me a while to unlock this year, but once I got used to the new 150-degree lens I had a lot of fun with it. It’s a decent lens/sensor, but it’s a step back from last year’s brilliant 50-megapixel ultrawide.

In most scenarios, I didn’t mind the sensor swap since the ultra-wide shots still look great and maintain last year’s 14mm focal length. But last year’s ultra-wide felt almost as good as the main camera, and this one doesn’t quite hit that mark. It’s still a good camera, but since OnePlus puts so much emphasis on its ultrawide camera system, it’s a shame it’s not as good as the main lens.

XPAN mode is back! However, it’s missing a lens option this year and still takes a dog’s age to “expose” photo’s between shots.

This ultra-wide switch also means that the XPAN mode is limited to only the 45mm lens option this year. The 9 Pro can shoot in 30mm and 45mm equivalents when in the same mode. I’ll concede that the 30mm mode is the weaker of the two, so I almost never used it, but it sucks to see OnePlus remove features instead of improving them. Another example of this is the lack of a macro mode on the 10 Pro. While it’s not something I used a lot, it was a versatile tool that I appreciated in previous OnePlus handsets.

Instead, of a macro mode, we get a new fisheye camera effect that’s fun to use, but the images aren’t great for sharing since they feature hardcoded black bars around them. I find myself taking the pictures into the desktop version of photoshop to paint the black bars white to make the images look good for Instagram. Similar to sharing 10-bit photos from the OnePlus 10 Pro, it’s not easy.

A photo taken with XPAN mode in Times Square. This mode uses a more film-inspired colour science and basically automatically crops images from the main sensor. It’s a gimmick, but a ton of fun nonetheless.

You can also take 150-degree photos with this new ultrawide mode which I found to be a lot more satisfying to shoot with. It’s not perfect for everything, but for scenes with fun framing or crazy landscapes, it can take really interesting shots.

My most significant complaints about the OnePlus 10 Pro all stem from the same thing. OnePlus made such big strides with the camera in the 9 Pro, and the 10 Pro maintains what OnePlus did last year, but doesn’t notably push the needle forward. The main lens is still great, and the colour science has a lot of character, but the ultra-wide and the zoom lens could have been upgraded more.

The selfie camera has been improved this year from 16 to 32-megapixels, but for some reason, the new camera has a smaller pixel size, and in my testing, looks a little worse in most situations. The 9 Pro is more colourful and detailed. Even in low light, it did a better job at not making my hair look like a blurry mess.

I found the front camera to be pretty lacklustre the day that I used OnePlus 10 Pro to film an Instagram story at the New York Auto show. In my personal life, this matters less since I only really use the front camera for video calls and the odd Snapchat. Professionally, I’d still rather have an iPhone in my pocket for its brilliant Cinematic mode and great selfie camera for making vertical videos.

I will say that since my hands-on post, Google Photos now plays nicer with OnePlus’ 10-bit HEIC files. Other apps and Windows are still troublesome, but my main pain point has been fixed.

I’ll also mention that I didn’t bother with the company’s AI scene detection modes and I’d suggest that most people turn the feature off. The camera is less vibrant than it appears on OnePlus’ screens, so not having another variable in the mix that could potentially oversaturate your photos isn’t worth it. That being said the fact that the screen is so oversaturated means that photos look better on OnePlus phones than they do on other devices like laptops and external monitors. This can be fixed in post, but it’s worth taking note of.

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~Full resolution camera samples are available on Google Drive in 10-bit.~

The last thing I’ll complain about is the inability to add XPAN mode to the main carousel of camera features. The mode snaps amazing 23-megapixel photos with really pleasing colours, but OnePlus has it hidden behind several menus. I can add the tilt-shift mode to the carousel, but not XPAN for some strange reason. I’ll also mention here that XPAN mode alone kind of makes this camera worth it for me. I love taking panoramic photos and having this in my pocket has really unlocked a new side of photography that I’ve really enjoyed

If you’re after a reliable camera you’re better off looking elsewhere. If you want a camera that offers a ton of character, depth and a super fun experience, then the OnePlus 10 Pro or even the OnePlus 9 Pro, are still great, especially for intentional shooting situations.

Beyond the camera, the OnePlus 10 Pro is still an appealing phone

It features a gorgeous screen with rich colours, pleasing motion and subtly curved edges. I’d still rather have a phone with flat sides like the Pixel 6, but OnePlus’ current flagship is subtle and fits into my hand nicely when it’s not in a case. However, just like the OnePlus 8 Pro, its matte back is extremely slippery. It looks great, especially the Emerald Forest variant, but I’d 100 percent recommend getting a case on it.

“The camera is fun to use, but at this price, most users will be a lot happier with a Galaxy S22+ or a Pixel 6 Pro.”

The battery is also impressive and managed to outlast the Pixel 6 on a recent trip by almost four hours. Combining that with the phone’s ultra-fast 65-watt fast charging, means that you almost never have to worry about being stuck without a charge.

As much as I like looking at the boldly designed camera bump on the back of the OnePlus 10 Pro, it’s also a fingerprint magnet. And since it takes up such a large portion of the device’s rear, my fingers absently touch it a lot. I find this happening less with the Pixel 6’s large camera bar since it’s so pronounced, but still very much at the top edge of the phone. With the OnePlus 10 Pro, I even need to readjust my grip to shoot a landscape photo with its ultrawide camera so I don’t see my fingers in the shot.

The placement of the front-facing camera is annoying too. Within apps that have a status bar, the camera sits right on top of the bottom edge instead of centred. This has been a longstanding issue with smartphones that feature hole-punch camera cutouts, and it still irks me every time I see it.

On the positive side of things, I really liked the power of the OnePlus 10 Pro’s speakers. They sound better than I expected and offer enough oomph to fill my small office with ambient music while I’m working. That also means that they’re more than powerful enough for watching the odd Instagram Reel or YouTube video.

OnePlus also raised the fingerprint sensor this year to make it easier to hit with one hand. I never had any issues with the scanner’s location on the OnePlus 9 Pro, but it’s nice to see OnePlus making a small change like this and listening to feedback.

The haptics are really nice on the 10 Pro this year, with a defined punch that’s still very subdued. I’m a big fan, and it’s safe to say haptics have quietly become something OnePlus does the best.

The OnePlus 10 Pro has been one of the buggiest review units I’ve ever tested. Usually, if I’m working with a phone under embargo, I’ll forgive a few issues since all phones suffer from occasional problems and a simple reset often fixes them.

However, the OnePlus 10 Pro is an entirely different story. During my time with the device, I needed to reset it daily, and sometimes even more than once a day. I usually don’t feel the need to keep a list of bugs when testing phones, but OnePlus has shattered my trust in the brand over the last year, and the OnePlus 10 Pro hasn’t repaired it.

First off, I can’t get 5G to work, and text messages were broken and wouldn’t load images for the first three weeks I tested the device. Android Chat functionality is also broken and won’t connect. To it top off, notifications seem to come to the OnePlus 10 Pro after all my other devices and are unreliable. During testing, I had to silence notifications from TikTok three times, suggesting it didn’t work for an unknown reason the first two instances I did it.

Moving on, the Roku app needs to be forced closed before I use it every time, or it loses connection to the TV and searches for a new one indefinitely. On the morning of my flight to New York, I needed to reset the phone since Google Photos was repeatedly crashing. Then after that reset, my headphones stopped working following Instagram freezing. Then I needed to reset the phone and the headset again. It was super aggravating and represented OnePlus at its worst.

Every time I got into my car, I also needed to manually pull down the notification shade and tell the OnePlus 10 Pro not to charge and use Android Auto instead. No other Android phone has made me do this in the past. The final big glitch that lasted for two days was my GPS being reversed in Google Maps. So whenever I was using it for directions, I needed to go the opposite way it was pointing me (I’ll admit I felt like a detective when I figured that one out).

The device has limped on and continued to take great pictures, but I don’t trust it as my daily driver right now. However, it did get me through a three-day trip, and the battery has been impressive, getting me six hours or more of screen-on time and easily lasting throughout a day and a bit.

I’ll also mention that I’m a huge fan of OnePlus’ Sandstone cases and the newest version that fits on the 10 Pro is still as amazing as ever.

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Mobile Syrup

OnePlus reportedly working on a foldable, could be the same as Oppo’s Find N

OnePlus might be working on a foldable, and according to a new rumour, the foldable might be based on Oppo’s Find N hardware.

The news shouldn’t come as much of a surprise. OnePlus and Oppo are both owned by BBK Electronics, which encourages sharing of hardware designs between the companies. Oppo released the Find N foldable in China back in December.

The report comes from Pricebaba and leaker Yogesh Brar (via Android Police), and says that OnePlus plans to base its foldable on the Find N. Moreover, the OnePlus foldable may even be a rebranded copy of the Find N.

Android Police notes that another BBK brand, Vivo, is set to launch its first foldable in China on April 11th. Like OnePlus, Vivo’s foldable could be similar to the Find N.

Considering Oppo and Vivo don’t typically come to Canada, the OnePlus foldable will be an interesting device to watch. Depending on how similar it is to the Find N, it could be our first chance in a while to check out a new foldable not made by Samsung.

Unfortunately, the Pricebaba leak didn’t include any details about OnePlus’ timeline, so we have no idea when to expect the phone. Still, if the company really is working on a foldable, we should learn more soon.

Header image credit: Oppo

Source: Pricebaba Via: Android Police

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Mobile Syrup

‘Nothing’ might have plans to finally show off its smartphone on April 1

After last week’s disastrous ‘Nothing’ presentation, the company is back at it again, hyping up another announcement. The event is set for April 1st, April Fools Day, too… so there’s that.

The teaser image shows off the bottom of a smartphone, hinting that perhaps we’ll finally catch a glimpse of the long-overdue Nothing smartphone. But at this point, I wouldn’t be surprised if Carl Pei just came out and showed us tangible proof that he actually was the first person to buy an iPod, or something.

I don’t expect this to be a full-blown event like the keynote on March 23rd. It could end up being something as anticlimactic as simple as a blog post hyping a Nothing phone spec like fast charging or a brief glimpse at its design.

Since the Nothing Launcher is scheduled to drop in April, my bet is we’ll get more information about it and possibly even a release date.

The company has retooled its Twitter and Instagram presences to be called ‘Another,’ and you can see the phone’s teaser image on both accounts. The bottom of the device features curved sides that look suspiciously like the OnePlus 10 Pro, but with more symmetrical speaker grills.

Source: Nothing

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Mobile Syrup

OnePlus 10 Pro Hands-on: Trust issues

The OnePlus 10 Pro has finally come to North America, but I’m not sure it will push the company’s smartphone line forward in a meaningful way.

Last year’s OnePlus 9 series cemented the upstart brand as a company capable of making top-tier hardware that can compete with the likes of Samsung. Then, after a year of getting closer to, and then further away from Oppo, software support has become a major pain point for OnePlus devices.

Holding the OnePlus 10 Pro is DejaVu. It feels and looks the same as its predecessor from the front, plus it’s impressing me with its camera and battery life. However, after last year, it’s going to take a lot more than a slightly upgraded OnePlus 9 Pro to get the company back on track.

What OnePlus fans really need is a year of trust-building in the form of stable updates.

First impressions can be deceiving

From the front with a case on, it feels and looks just like my 9 Pro.

When I unwrapped the OnePlus 10 Pro and slapped on the classic OnePlus Sandstone bumper case, it felt great in my hand. Then I started to transfer over all my OnePlus 9 data and the device became pretty warm. It wasn’t hot, but warmer than I would have liked. Since then, it’s been fine, but I have yet to spend more than a few minutes gaming on it yet.

It’s worth noting that the OnePlus 10 Pro uses Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 chip. So far, Samsung’s S22 series are the only other flagships we’ve tested this year with the 8 Gen 1. MobileSyrup’s Dean Daley also noted heat issues with the S22 Ultra when running benchmarks, while staff reporter Jon Lamont didn’t experience abnormal temperatures with the S22 and S22+.

Beyond that, the phone feels solid (even if JerryRigEverything snapped it in half). I’d recommend most users the ‘Emeral Forest’ model since it offers such a nice matte texture on the back. Overall, the smartphone is a great size and feels slightly heavier than the OnePlus 9 Pro since the new camera bump is larger.

We’re now two years into the three-year-long Hasselblad x OnePlus partnership.

Even though this isn’t a OnePlus ‘T’ model, it feels like a subtle improvement over the 9 Pro instead of a generational leap like we’ve seen in the past from the company. This isn’t necessarily entirely bad since the 9 Pro’s hardware is stellar, but it also makes less of a case to upgrade to the OnePlus 10 Pro if you already own the 9 Pro.

Camera performance

The three lenses are equivalent to 14mm, 23mm and 77mm on a full-frame camera.

OnePlus has stuck four lenses on the phone — three on the back and a single 32-megapixel selfie camera on the front. The primary camera features a 48-megapixel sensor, the Ultrawide captures 50-megapixels, and the 3.3x zoom lens is only eight megapixels. Quality-wise, the sensors seem very similar to the OnePlus 9 series.

This time the most attention has been paid to software as OnePlus furthers its partnership with Hasselblad. Last year, the company marketed the Hasselblad colour science and its flattened ultrawide shooter that replicated a 14mm full-frame lens. These systems are still in place in the OnePlus 10 Pro, but the company has added a fun dedicated 150-degree wide-angle mode, a new 10-bit colour capture option, and rebranded filters called ‘Master Styles.’

Not to take away anything from the three Hasselblad photographers since these new filters are pretty sweet, but when OnePlus and Hasselblad got together, the companies announced a lot of exciting camera features, and what’s present in the OnePlus 10 Pro is a little lacklustre.

The camera app still features Hasselblad’s Orange accents, but the ‘Expert mode’ has been renamed to ‘Pro mode’ this year.

This year’s most exciting new feature is 10-bit colour in the camera’s ‘Photo’ and ‘Night’ modes. It helps gather 64 times more colour data from all three rear cameras compared to 8-bit photos. This makes getting deep colours a little easier since you no longer need to shoot RAW (12-bit) in the ‘Pro mode’ to achieve it.

While taking 10-bit snaps is easier than ever (after you enable it from deep in the camera settings), sharing them is enough of a hassle that it almost makes me want to turn the new colour feature off entirely. The 10-bit mode saves files using HEIF/HEIC image compression codec, which is fine, but you’ll likely run into issues once you try and share those files. For instance, most people I sent my pictures to from the OnePlus 10 would just get a link to a file they’d need to download themselves.

It works, but it’s not nearly as seamless as sharing regular JPGs. On Windows, you even need to download two extensions, one free and one that costs $1.30 in Canada. OnePlus tried to make sharing a little more seamless by adding a toggle to the OnePlus Photos app that will auto convert the HEIC files when you share them from the company’s photo locker. However, it decimated my Google Photos library, which is what I primarily use to manage my digital pictures. This is weird too, since my iPhone 13 Pro also uses HEIC to save photos, and Google reads those. Apple is also better at auto-sharing pictures as JPEGs, something I never even knew was happening until OnePlus tried to do it, and fumbled.

This isn’t necessarily OnePlus’ fault either. The nature of Android kind of necessitates having two photos apps on most phones, except for Pixels. Ideally, OnePlus will be able to find a way around this soon, though. HEIC files on my iPhone store in Google Photos just fine, so I assume there must be a way, but OnePlus has yet to find it.

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If you want to use RAW (this does backup into Google), the manual shooting controls on the 10 Pro are decent and you can shoot 12-bit colour (you could do 12-bit RAW on the OnePlus 9 Pro too). There’s even a new ‘RAW Plus’ option that works like Apple’s ProRAW format. That means when you snap a picture, the phone still applies some computational tricks to make the shot look as good as possible while retaining all of the photo information and depth from the RAW file. In my limited testing so far, this has been hit and miss. The pictures look a little better than standard pre-edited RAW images, but not as clean as a fully computational image.

This is all extremely exciting for mobile photographers, but in practice, OnePlus’ current camera app is weirdly confusing and lacks some functions that it used to have in OxygenOS 11. For instance, there is no way to set the Pro mode as your default camera experience anymore, and for some reason, the fun XPan and Movie modes are the only camera functions out of 14 that can’t be added to the quick toggle carousel. This is likely a minimal annoyance to most, but to me, it represents OnePlus’ struggle to really hone its software down to the level of a real flagship. All the pieces are here, but they’re not always held together logically.

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Fisheye mode
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Fish eye mode
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Xpan mode
10-bit-house-3x-zzom

You can find a Google Drive folder with full-res JPGs and HEIC files here. To really take in the differences in colour you’ll need a 10-bit display. 

After all of this, I want you guys to know that these complaints come from the heart. I’ve loved OnePlus’ slightly off-centre colour balancing (for better and worse) since the 7T and at the end of the day, I’m happy with the pictures that the 10 Pro grabs. But compared to the 9 Pro, which has a 12-bit RAW mode, and a very similar lens setup, there doesn’t seem to be a lot to upgrade. Unless you’re obsessed with Fisheye lenses, of course. But in all seriousness, the only people who likely care about 10-bit colour are photographers, who would likely rather shoot 12-bit RAW instead.

Other thoughts

There’s no denying that the Emerald forest version looks great…even with that stovetop camera bump.

Overall the OnePlus 10 Pro is a decent phone but with the company’s current track record for updates, it might be worth waiting to see what happens as it rolls back its ColorOS skin and moves back towards a more stock-inspired Android experience. I have no idea what this even means in 2022, either. Will it look like a Pixel launcher, such as what Nothing attempted, or will it revert to how OxygenOS 11 looked? Or are we going all the way back to OxygenOS 10?

It’s not that I hate ColorOS 12. It looks fine and works ideally 95 percent of the time, but sometimes it’s a little annoying. Especially when I try to do something that I remember from a previous build of OxygenOS only to find it replaced with some other weird feature. For instance, every second time I plug this phone into my car, it starts charging. I then have to manually pull down the notification shade, tap on the system status notification, and then select Transfer files/Android Auto. Almost every other phone I’ve used is able to jump into Android Auto automatically after the initial setup.

A short gif of the OnePlus Shelf action.

The OnePlus 10 Pro comes pre-loaded with OnePlus Shelf enabled too. This means that swiping down from the top right corner of the screen will bring down an area where OnePlus hides some widgets, a nice system search tool and some weather information. Years ago, this used to sit to the left of your home screen, where the Google discover page now sits. In North America, OnePlus had gotten rid of the Shelf for a few years, but now it’s back in a new place, and that’s the issue.

Since I’m right-handed, when I use my thumb to reach up and swipe down for my notifications, it naturally reaches for the top right corner, but instead of getting notifications I now get the Shelf… which isn’t terrible, but after the 10th time, I just had to disable it. This is annoying since this is where OnePlus’ pretty decent system search, ‘Scout,’ lives, so now I can’t use that. Instead, the company lets non-shelf users search through their installed apps with another search bar in the App drawer.

There’s a lot of potential packed into this phone. Using Gorilla Glass Victus, a variable refresh rate screen, Dolby Atmos and excellent display calibration all make it very impressive, but this year isn’t about OnePlus’ hardware. The real story is if the software problems can be solved and whether the company will win back some user trust.

If you’re so inclined, the OnePlus 10 Pro starts at $1,150 in Canada and comes in Emerald Forest (green/matte) and Volcanic Ash (black/glossy).

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Mobile Syrup

Here’s how much the OnePlus 10 Pro costs in Canada

OnePlus has brought the OnePlus 10 Pro to North America, which means Canadians can finally order the smartphone.

Canadians looking to buy the latest OnePlus flagship can pre-order it in ‘Volcanic Black’ or ‘Emerald Forest (Green)’ for $1,150. Both colours come with configurations offering 8GB of RAM and 128GB of storage.

It’s worth noting that this is actually $200 cheaper than the OnePlus 9 Pro when it was launched last year on March 23rd.

Once you’ve pre-ordered, the OnePlus 10 Pro should arrive on April 14th. It’s also worth noting that OnePlus isn’t partnered with any Canadian carriers so the only place to get one is from the company’s website.

If you want to learn more about the phone and see some sample images, you can read my hands-on with the device here. I’d also recommend reading recent coverage from a few other publications since the operating system has changed significantly since the OnePlus 10 Pro launched in China. With this in mind, early impressions from a month or two ago could shift dramatically.

To protect the new smartphone, OnePlus sells a classic Sandstone bumper case that retails for $34 and a more stylized case with Hasselblad camera iconography that costs $55. You can buy the cases from OnePlus.

Beyond the new OnePlus 10 Pro , the company is also selling a new colourway of the OnePlus Buds Pro that it’s calling ‘Radiant Silver’ that replicates stainless steel or chrome. These cost $200 CAD and if you’re interested in buying them make sure to check out our full review. 

Pre-order links

  • OnePlus 10 Pro 5G: $1,150
  • OnePlus Sandstone bumper case: $34 
  • OnePlus Karbon bumper case: $55
  • OnePlus Buds Pro Radiant Silver: $200

Source: OnePlus

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Mobile Syrup

The OnePlus 10 Pro supports 80W charging globally, but not in North America

The OnePlus 10 Pro — which is currently only available in China — will soon release in Canada. The device was released in China earlier in January and is finally dropping globally on March 31st.

The OnePlus 10 Pro is detailed in a OnePlus community post that outlines its several top-of-the-line features. One discrepancy, however, between the device’s global vs. North American release, is that the OnePlus 10 Pro doesn’t support 80W SuperVOOC charging.

The community post explains that North Americans will only be able to get their hands on a version of the OnePlus 10 Pro that supports 65W SuperVOOC charging. In contrast, Europe and India will get an 80W model, allowing the device to charge the OnePlus 10 Pro from 1 percent to 100 percent in about 32 minutes.

According to the company, “80W SUPERVOOC does not currently support 110 or 120-volt AC power,” the typical standard for power outlets in Canada and the United States. However, this small change shouldn’t make much of a difference. OnePlus says 65W “remains the fastest standard for charging in North America” and can juice up the OnePlus 10 Pro from 1 percent to a hundred percent in 34 minutes, so it should hardly make a difference. 34 minutes is still less than what many other flagship smartphones take to charge.

Other than that fact, we already know nearly everything about the OnePus 10 Pro. Other features include Hasselblad cameras along with a large 6.7-inch adaptive 120Hz display and an improved cooling system.

Learn more about the device at OnePlus’ community post.

The OnePlus 10 Pro releases in Canada on Thursday, March 31st. We aren’t sure how much the device will cost yet, though considering its release pricing in Canada, we can expect it to fall somewhere between the $930 to $1,500 price range.

For reference, last year’s OnePlus 9 lineup started at $999 for the OnePlus 9 8GB + 128GB and went all the way up to $1,499 for the OnePlus 9 Pro 12GB RAM + 256GB storage model.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Source: OnePlus

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Mobile Syrup

OnePlus rolling out OxygenOS 12 for OnePlus 8 series soon

OnePlus, a company known for slowly rolling out updates, has finally started to push Android 12 to the OnePlus 8 series from 2020.

The update is currently available for anyone who wants to join the OnePlus open beta, but the company says that the real update should be rolling out to more users soon.

This update is somewhat controversial as it walks back OnePlus’ previously new UI design that arrived with Android 11. If you hated the look of OxygenOS 11, this new Android 12-based update might help you get over it, but it’s unlikely. This version is an English skin of Oppo’s ColorOS, and it’s even less stock Android than the last update.

Since then, OnePlus has announced that it’s walking back its decision to use the ColorOS design and will try to regain some of the simplicity that made OxygenOS unique. That’s slated to come along with Android 13, which might not actually make it to the OnePlus 8 series, given the company’s recent track record with updates.

Source: OnePlus

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Mobile Syrup

OnePlus 10 Pro to launch in Canada on March 31st

OnePlus is finally bringing its 2022 flagship smartphone, the OnePlus 10 Pro 5G, to North America on the very last day of March.

If you’re considering buying this phone, there is already a plethora of coverage online, but it’s packing a new Snapdragon 8 Gen 1, three Hasselblad branded cameras and a large 6.7-inch adaptive 120Hz display.

There’s no North American price yet; we’ll need to wait until the pre-orders go live on the 31st to get specifics. However, it costs 4699 Yuan in China, which is roughly $926 CAD. Last year the OnePlus 9 Pro was priced at $1,169 in Canada, so I wouldn’t be surprised if the new phone was priced somewhere between that old price and the converted Chinese price.

The phone is going to be available after the OnePlus launch event on March 31st at 10:00 AM ET.

The phone is likely to be exciting, but OnePlus has been spiralling over the past year and a half as it merged with Oppo publically and fumbled the rollout of Android 12. The company is working to remedy this, but the OnePlus 10 Pro’s North American release is likely going to determine a lot about the press and the public’s attitude towards the company for the next year or more.

Stay tuned for our full review of the phone coming soon.

Image credit: OnePlus

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Mobile Syrup

OnePlus Nord 2T to bring back iconic sandstone finish

The OnePlus Nord 2T might bring back one of OnePlus’ pretty iconic features. Reportedly, the OnePlus Nord 2T will feature OnePlus’ classic sandstone finish.

91Mobiles has shown off a render of the OnePlus Nord 2T. While not an official render, 91Mobiles says they received it from an industry source.

The render showcases the black sandstone finish and huge camera module. Strangely, the camera module itself is blue with two circular rings. The top ring has a large sensor, while the bottom ring has two smaller lenses.

The industry source only provided renders of the rear, so the front is currently a mystery. However, sources indicate that the Oneplus Nord 2T will sport a hole punch camera in the top left corner.

Additionally, the OnePlus Nord 2T is rumoured to feature a 6.43-inch FHD+ AMOLED display with a 2400 x 1080-pixel resolution and a 90Hz refresh rate. It will also sport a MediaTek Dimensity 1300 processor, Android 12, 4,500mAh battery, 80W fast charger and more.

It’s possible that the OnePlus Nord 2T will come to Canada, but only time will tell. The phone is rumoured to launch in India in April or May.

Image Credit: 91Mobiles

Source: 91Mobiles

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Mobile Syrup

The Nothing phone will likely be revealed March 26th

In an email to ‘Nothing’ fans, the company has revealed when it will launch its next product — we just really don’t know what that device is yet.

The event is scheduled for March 23rd at 8am ET/5am PT. You can sign up to get notifications about the event on Nothing’s website.

It’s widely assumed that this new device will be a smartphone, and the Snapdragon logo on Nothing’s site all but confirms this. There are also rumours that Nothing founder Carl Pei showed off this device at Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona. Other leaks indicate that the phone will feature transparent elements similar to the Ear (1) earbuds.

Nothing has a habit of milking its product launches, so instead of re-writing the same info over and over again, here’s my recap from last week regarding what we expect. The only other twist is that more than one potential device could be announced at the event.

The Verge reports that Nothing will reveal a “product roadmap,” suggesting that we could see a new pair of Nothing earbuds or perhaps an entry into a new product category. For instance, just purely based off Nothing’s Vibes, I wouldn’t be surprised to see it drop a Bluetooth speaker.

We’ve previously reported that the Nothing smartphone would hit store shelves in April, so the company revealing the device in late March lines up well with this timeline. This also means that the Nothing phone will likely compete directly with the OnePlus 10 Pro in Canada.

Via: The Verge