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Ok, let?s get straight into it. The K750i is the latest phone from Sony Ericsson and packs a hell of a lot into its little package. Here?s a quick run down of the specs:

2.0 Megapixel camera

Built in MP3 player with playlist support and equalizers

Memory Stick Duo slot

RDS Radio

176*220 resolution screen with 262k colours

Those are the main reasons I bought the phone, plus I fancied a new toy, you know how I like my toys :Box Contents:

Out of the box it?s a pretty standard fare; there?s the handset, 64MB MS Duo plus Adapter (for using it in regular Memory Stick slots), headphones, USB lead, charger, CD and manuals. As such there?s not a huge deal there, I wouldn?t have minded a little slip of sorts like I had included with my 7610, just a little pouch for the phone or headphones.

It comes with a quick start guide which is extremely basic. All it tells you is how to insert the sim, how to play music, how to put the Memory Stick in and how to take a photo. The basics and nothing more.

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The camera cover has a very, very nice motion. It takes about 5-8mm of smooth motion before it flicks out all the way open and the same is true of the reverse. There?s just enough resistance so that you couldn?t open it by accident, but you?d never struggle to get it open (cue comments about m:pin the video later on :p ).

The MS Duo slot on the other hand I have a problem with, it?s nothing to do with the built quality but the design. Now anyone who owns a PSP will know that the MS Duo cover unclips then has something like a tether, so you can pull it about 8mm out and fold it away before inserting or removing the MS Duo; now the K750i doesn?t have this ?tether?, well to be true it does, but it?s only about 2-3mm so there?s almost no travel. There?s just enough give to fold it 90? to the phone which leaves people with larger then average fingers in a bit of a pickle. The MS Duo sits below the surface of the phone so you have to squeeze your finger right in and I can only remove and insert the card with the very tip of my nail, it?s very fiddly and seeing as this phone shares the 1GB Duo Pro with my PSP and my T7 I?m going to have to get some practise in.

The keypad feels good, it?s nothing spectacular but it?s more than usable. Comparing it to some other phones I feel it comes out on top. The D500 for example I can?t get on with because of the raised rim of the face getting in the way of the outer keys. The K750 is traditional enough with the right amount of click to not annoy or stand out in any way; couldn?t ask for much more.

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This phone is my first experience of a Sony Ericsson phone and as such I?ve not used a joystick on a phone before, always a rocker or 4 way keypad. Now I?ve read in places that people coming from a K700i to a K750i find the joystick overly sensitive but considering this is my first time using it, it feels pretty damn good. There?s no accidentally hitting up or left/right when trying to press the centre joystick button and again, it?s done its job without hindering me at all. The UI suits the joystick down to a tee but more on that later.

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There are a couple of important buttons which sit on the side of the phone which are pretty important to the usage of the features mentioned at the beginning. The first and most obvious to mention is the camera shutter button.

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I can tell you that from the time I?ve used it so far, it doesn?t seem to do anything in any other mode apart from the camera mode where it takes photos. That?s it. It has quite a lot of travel, you can press it quite a way in at which point you?ll hit a little resistance then there?s a further click. I guess you could liken it to the Gamecube triggers. Pushing it halfway in makes the camera auto focus (as it would a normal digital camera) with the full click taking the photo.

The other button is in relation to the music feature, this is where another problem/annoyance occurs.

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I would?ve assumed that pressing the music button brings up the media player, and in fact it does, but it only does this if you have the headphones plugged in. Now you can run the media player from the menu without the headphones (in fact the speaker is pretty damn good!) so this seems like an oversight on Sony Ericsson?s behalf. In the settings you have the option of it starting the radio, which I agree needs the headphones plugged in because the cord acts as the antenna for the radio, but I liked to listen to some music at work with the phone sat on my desk (in my nice quiet office on my own) through the speaker; cue the annoyance. I?ve mapped the media player shortcut to ?up? on the joystick so it?s still only 1 butt:o press, but if that music key would let me I?d have a free shortcut space! :o

Onto the last of the accessories (and I?ll make this one brief), the headphones are crap:

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They feel too large and the layout of the cord is clearly designed for hands free use as opposed to music with the little microphone hanging around neck height. The W800 coming up in the autumn has a regular 3.5mm adapter which would suit this phone down to a tee, I can only hope Sony Ericsson don?t limit its usage on the K750i through firmware. My other option is a DIY job, people are opening up the microphone area and just soldering on their own headphones. I might have to give that a t:rofl:tPhone OS:uy another set of headphones for when I inevitably sell this on :rofl:

Phone OS:

As I mentioned above, I?ve never used a Sony Ericsson phone before so for me to be delving into the OS and into settings withCamera software:nt to the intuitiveness of the OS; it?s extremely simple to use.

Camera software:

Anyone familiar with the Cybershot range of digital cameras from Sony will feel right at home with this, when the camera is activated (by opening the cover) the viewfinder activates and from there on it?s exactly the same as a Cybershot. The camera UI definitely suits holding the phone in a horizontal position, the text and all the on screen instructions are rotated through 90?, pressing the settings button brings up a horizontal line of icons where you can have the following options:

Switch to video camera (also doable by flicking down on the joystick)

Shoot mode ? Normal, Panorama, Frames or Burst

Picture Size ? Large (1632*1224), Medium (640*480) or Small (160*120)

Turn on macro

Turn on night mode

Turn on light

Turn on self timer

Effects ? Off, Black & White, Negative, Sepia or Solarize

White balance ? Auto, Daylight, Cloudy, Fluorescent, Incandescent

Picture Quality ? Normal or Fine

Turn on time and date

Reset file no.

Save to ? Memory Stick or Phone Memory

As you can see it?s pretty comprehensive. I?ve taken a few sample shots, but the weather has been really bad so there?s none of gloriously sunny days unfortunately. I will take a good walk when it's nice and sunny and take some more photos because I know it can do better (I've seen!) Here?s a few samples (resized to 1024*768):

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Music mode:

I?ll get one of my misconceptions out of the way first, this phone does not support .M3U playlists. When it says playlist support, it?s the phones own custom playlists. You can create a new playlist within the phone adding music from special folders in the Memory stick. This frustrated me because I was hoping that I could leave my music in X:\PSP\MUSIC so both the phone and the PSP could share the music but that?s not the case. The music has to be stored in X:\MSSEMC\Media files\audio\ which is a shame. Let?s get one thing straight as well, this is a more then competent MP3 player, but it is no replacement for the iPod. If you?re happy with sticking a few albums and a playlist or 2 on your phone when going out then it?s perfect, but for anything more a dedicated MP3 player would be needed. I mean I could quite happily use this on the bus on the way home from work or something, but if I was going away then I?d need my iPod, that and the headphones suck. But saying this, compared to all the other MP3 players in phones I?ve tried this beats them all out by a long shot, along with playlist support it has a couple of equalizer options, shuffle, repeat; basically what you might expect from any MP3 player. You can also minimise the player and go back to the phones front screen whilst still being able to control the player with the music button and the volume buttons.

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The radio is probably one of the best specced out radio features I?ve seen on a phone as well. It requires the headphones to be plugged in (the same as other phones) because the cord acts as the antenna for the radio. Initial scanning picked up zero stations for me, but I was stuck in the office so I manually added a couple and they were fine. The radio has RDS as Video:cks up the station information such as ?Radio 1?

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Video:

The video support on this phone is above average, but just a few little changes and it could be a hell of a lot more impressive. I played with some video converted on my PC; I converted an episode of Scrubs to 150kbit/s MPEG4 with 80kbit/s audio, the video has to be 176*144 which is where my first problem lies. Here?s a shot of the video occupying 1:1 space:

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As you can see it?s pretty tiny so kind of pointless but alas! There is a full screen mode!

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Except this is where Dazzla gets annoyed again, the full screen mode turns 90? which I?m OK with but it stretches out the 176*144 to fill 220*176. I?m going to give it a try later with a higher bitrate but the results weren?t really to my liking with the stretching producing a little bit of artifacting. It would be absolutely ideal if you could encode 220*176 videos to fill the screen, that would be ideal, but as it stands you can?t do that so I?ll have to try and compensate for that.

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I guess you could call these my initial impressions; I've only been able to play with it for a few hours so I've really got to get stuck in. I want to report back on the Sony Ericsson?s software, I've installed and ran it and the synchronisation software seemed to do its job. It pulled Calendar entries, Notes, Tasks and Contacts from Outlook 2003 and inserted them into the relevant places in the phone. It was all seamless with the Calendar application in the phone now sporting my schedule, pretty handy, and all it took was the phone sat remotely near my laptop; it synced over Bluetooth.

The camera used to take the shots was a Panasonic FZ20 (Silver ;) ). As for battery life, I received the phone yesterday at about 11AM and it was around 50% charged, I had it in the USB port of my laptop up until about 80% at which point I haven't charged it again. I've made about 10 minutes worth of phone calls, listened to around 2 hours of music and had bluetooth active the entire time and I'm back down to just over 50%.

Great review. And you got a lot of gadjets.

But why do you need them all? iPOd, K750i, that Nokia, Cybershot and PSP.

Actually K750i plays music as your iPOd (and you have a lot of space with that 1GB. ok if you need more...), and takes photos as your Cybershot...

That PSP is awesome and it's good to play..... It's worth the price?

Comparison to the 7610. Hmm. If I compare just the core features that I reviewed then it would come out on top. It has a better MP3 player, better camera and has a Radio. But then the applications that the Series 60 platform can offer is immense. I mean I'll never be able to have emulators, N-Gage games, e-book readers etc on this K750. That's the sacrifice you make.

Also, will this phone work on Cingular's networks?  I ask just because some triband phones don't get along so well with Cingular.

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It'll work on Cingular's 1900mhz band, but not the 850mhz band (as its 900mhz). I'm in the same position...I'm hoping a 850mhz version of this phone or the W800 comes out, I don't know if the reception around here would be quality just using the 1900mhz :(

Was going to get the S710a, but the phone's too fat for my tastes...really loved the look of it too

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    • DuRoBo Krono Review: Portable E-Ink reader with great ideas that need a bit of improvement by Taras Buria Phone-sized e-readers are gaining traction these days, with more people treating them as a getaway device to cure phone addiction (or at least they are trying to) or having a more pocket-friendly reader that is easier to carry and hold. The market now has plenty of such readers to choose from, and DuRoBo is the latest addition, a new player that offers a more interesting approach to the idea. The Krono is a $279 e-reader with an interesting twist, which tries to make the device more fun and ergonomic. Here is my review. Disclaimer: DuRoBo provided the review sample without any editorial input or pre-approval. The Krono comes in a phone-sized box with pink accents. Inside, you get the device itself, a short user manual, and a USB cable. The cable is a bit old-fashioned, Type-A to Type-C, which is a bit disappointing. Hot take: I would rather have no cable in the box rather than another Type-A cable that gets immediately thrown into my box full of similar cables I never use. The Krono also has no charger in the box, as it relies on accessories you already own, which is fine with me. Here are the specs: Dimensions 154 x 80 x 9.0 mm or 6.06" x 3.15" x 0.35" 173 g or 6.10 oz Materials Black or White plastic Display 6.13-inch E-Ink Carta 1200, 1,648 x 824 pixels, 300 ppi Touch-capacitive. Dual-tone frontlight. Processor 8-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 690 (QTI SM6350) 2 performance cores at 2.07 GHz 4 efficiency cores at 1.71 GHz Memory 6 GB Storage 128GB, non-expandable ~104GB available out-of-the-box Operating system Android 15 with a custom launcher Connectivity Wi-Fi and Bluetooth Battery 3,950 mAh battery Buttons and port USB Type-C port Power button, Volume button, Smart Dial Breathing Lights Audio Mono Speaker and Dual microphones In the box The Krono, a Type-A to Type-C cable, user manual Price $279 on Amazon First impressions Right off the bat, no, this is not a phone replacement. Do not approach this device thinking it can serve you as a dumb phone to cure your TikTok addiction. In addition to the fact that the Krono has no cellular connectivity, I strongly believe that no amount of extra devices can fix your phone addiction until you put some serious effort into it. The Krono is a phone-sized e-reader, a companion for your phone dedicated to reading without distractions. The DuRoBo Krono is made of plastic with a very fine texture. It is hardly premium, but I also cannot say it feels cheap. The device is also a bit thick, quite dense, and well-built without rattling or cracking. You get to choose between two colors: white and black. The front has quite thick bezels, which is hardly surprising for an e-ink device. These things use front light, with LEDs usually placed on the screen perimeter. While I do not mind thicker bezels, the notably larger chin cheapens the look a little. What I mind is a notable seam between the display and the main case, which, after just two days of use, collected plenty of dust and specks. The back of the Krono is what makes the device stand out. There is a cylinder (DuRoBo calls it the Axis) embedded in the back of the reader, housing three elements: a power button on the right edge, a Smart Dial on the left edge, and "Breathing Lights" on the back. An etched DuRoBo logo sits below the cylinder, and it is the only piece of branding you can find on the device. Overall, the design and materials are very unassuming, but the cylinder with additional control elements certainly elevates the look and makes it more interesting. Other physical elements include two microphones (one on the top edge and one on the bottom edge), a USB Type-C port, a volume rocker, and a single mono speaker. There is no fingerprint reader, so if you want to protect your device, a PIN is your only option. The official TPU case is not the most premium-looking Display The Krono has a 6.1-inch E-Ink Carta 1200 touchscreen display with a resolution of 1,648 x 824 pixels (300 ppi). The display is front-lit, and you can adjust the brightness and temperature from cool to warm. Unfortunately, the Krono lacks automatic brightness and temperature adjustments, and you cannot set a custom schedule for the frontlight. However, you can set it to always enable frontlight so that you can see what is happening on the screen when turning it on in a dark environment. On the bright side (get it?), the front light can get extremely dim so that the screen is barely readable in a pitch-dark room. The front light is also uniform across the screen, with no noticeable temperature gradients. I am very susceptible to uneven front light, and it is very easy for me to notice it, but the Krono is doing a very good job in this area. I also like that the edge shadow is not very prominent and barely visible in the black variant. E-Ink Carta 1200 is not the newest generation (there are Carta 1250 and 1300), but it is still a good display. It supports three modes: Clarity, Speed, and Quality. In Clarity mode, text is very sharp and easy to read, but you trade that for more ghosting, a slower refresh rate, and more artifacts when the display changes images. Speed mode, as the name suggests, boosts refresh rate and reduces ghosting, but fine print and text become more jagged. Finally, Quality mode is only available in Android apps. It has the lowest refresh rate, but in return, you get much better visuals, improved gradients, and more. Like brightness and temperature, you can toggle modes from the control center. It is available when swiping from the top-right corner of the screen (the top-left is for notifications). I also like that the Krono can work as a desk clock when not in use. It has a bunch of screensavers, including horizontal clocks with time, date, and current battery level. The screen refreshes once per minute, and battery drain is extremely low (not even 1% in 24 hours). It is a great use of the technology, and another thing I wish more e-ink devices featured. Smart Dial The Smart Dial is Krono's main party trick. It sits on the left side of the device and serves multiple purposes. You can twist or press it to perform various actions, depending on the current use case scenario. When reading books, twisting the dial flips through pages, and pressing it refreshes the screen. On the home screen, the dial adjusts the brightness, and holding the dial pressed launches voice note recording. Finally, a quick double press launches the DuRoBo AI chatbot. While the dial scroll is not notched, it is very smooth and has haptic feedback that confirms your actions, which feels very nice. As a long-term Apple Watch user, I love the idea behind the dial. It feels very natural and oddly satisfying to use, especially with that subtle haptic feedback. I never liked flipping pages with touch input, and I strongly believe each e-reader should come with some sort of physical controls for turning pages. The Krono has both volume buttons (which also work as page turners) and the dial, so you are free to use whichever you prefer. With that said, the dial is not perfect. For one, it sticks out of the case way too far for my liking, raising concerns about durability and longevity when carrying the Krono around in a pocket (it is a pocket-sized device after all). Also, it has too much wobble, which cheapens the experience and makes it feel a bit flimsy and unsecured. While there are two plastic guards on the Krono's case, they are way too small for any kind of protection. I also think DuRoBo should let users customize dial actions (the only available customization is scroll direction), particularly for long and double presses. Not everyone needs voice notes, and DuRoBo AI does not work without an active internet connection, leaving the long press essentially useless when offline. I do not mind these features, and I genuinely think they are useful, but I would rather have the ability to toggle between screen modes, turn the frontlight on/off, or launch my favorite app. I also agree with people on Reddit asking developers to let users adjust the dial sensitivity. I hope this is something DuRoBo can implement with a software update to make the experience more personalized (it is a Smart Dial, after all) and incentivize users to fiddle with the Dial more often. The Dial is a fantastic idea, so please, guys, improve it a little. As for ergonomics, they are mostly fine, but the dial's position may feel a little awkward and way too high. When I use a phone or a phone-sized gadget, I tend to rest one of its corners on my palm for a more secure grip. With the Krono, such a grip is impossible because you cannot reach the dial even with big hands. You have to lower the reader a bit and hold it like a bottle without any extra support for the bottom edge. Such a grip is not necessarily uncomfortable (the Krono is also light enough for it), but it requires a bit of muscle retraining. Sometimes, I do not bother with the dial and hold the Krono like my phone, flipping through pages with volume buttons, as they are perfectly positioned for my right-hand thumb. Interestingly, when testing the Krono, I would often find myself thinking that a roller embedded in the long plastic cylinder on the back of the device would have been a much more comfortable solution. There is a free idea for you, guys. Software The Krono runs Android 15 with a very minimal launcher on top. The home screen presents you with a list of apps, a scrollable list of widgets, and your user profile. Widgets can display time, calendar, or recent books for quick access. You can also add or remove apps from the home screen to keep the most useful stuff around without tapping "Apps." I like this minimalistic approach; it looks clean, easy to understand, and light. I understand that some may find the list of all apps way too clean, but fortunately, DuRoBo lets you switch to traditional icons. The reader also has a bunch of preinstalled apps: Read: The default app for reading. Browser: A Chromium-based browser. Files: A simple file manager. Music: A simple music player. Spark: A voice recorder with transcription support and AI summarization DuRoBo AI: A built-in AI chatbot. Transfer: An app for file transfer over Wi-Fi. If that is not enough, there is the Google Play Store, where you can download all the extra apps you need, alternative readers, podcast apps, chatbots, and more. DuRoBo is not trying to give you an all-in-one device. The standard software experience is quite minimal, which makes it easy to approach and learn. The standard reader supports EPUB, EPUB3, AZW3, MOBI, PDF, TXT, DOC, and DOCX, which is more than enough to let you read most books without third-party software. As for customizing the reading experience, you can select one of five built-in fonts, adjust size and thickness, adjust margins and spacing (only three variants for each), change text alignment and direction, toggle the reading status bar, and switch to dark mode. There is also text-to-speech, which utilizes Android's default TTS tech. While I like the simplistic approach, I cannot help but feel DuRoBo could have made the built-in reader a bit more customizable. However, I am not going to bog down on this, as you can always install any other reader you prefer using the Play Store or by sideloading an APK. Getting books to the Krono is very simple. Given that the device is an Android smartphone without cellular connectivity, you can transfer files via a USB Type-C cable, download them using the built-in browser, share them over Bluetooth, or use cloud storage. My favorite was the built-in Transfer app. It is simple, reliable, and very well-designed. I was surprised by how well-designed the web portal is. It is fast, pretty, and properly categorized. Well done! Once you have your books loaded, you can highlight or underline text, add annotations, bookmark pages, check the table of contents, and ask AI about the selected text. Unfortunately, the Krono has no built-in vocabulary, but again, that is something a third-party reader could fix. Overall, the built-in reader is light and snappy, with just the minimum amount of features for a regular user to enjoy reading books. The Krono has no built-in reading tracking, so stat nerds will have to look for third-party reading apps. However, you can set a daily reading goal, and the reader will notify you when you reach it (for example, one hour). You can also set a reminder to read at a certain time, and when the time comes, the Krono will light up its back LEDs and unlock itself to nudge you. Other than that, the rear LEDs do nothing, not even showing charging progress, which is an unfortunate misopportunity if you ask me. Quirks aside, Krono's Android runs quite snappily and bug-free. Early reviews of the Krono criticized its Android 13-based software quite a lot, but now, the reader runs Android 15, and its software has fixed plenty of initial complaints. I never experienced any issues with built-in apps. AI attempts The DuRoBo Krono comes with a built-in AI chatbot. There is no information on what model powers this thing, but the system says it was "trained by Google." You can launch the bot from the app list or by double-pressing the dial. It works just like any other chatbot, and you can ask it anything by typing or using voice input. The AI saves your chats, and you can rename, export, or delete them. DuRoBo AI requires an active internet connection, and it does not work offline. Its reach and capabilities are also limited. You can only chat in the app and use it in the reader app as a makeshift vocabulary. However, the implementation is kinda awkward. You can only send a selected portion of text to AI without giving it any requests or instructions. I highlighted the word "dumb," and it apologized to me for not being useful. You also cannot ask follow-up questions or send the generated response to a separate chat. The chatbot is also slow, even with fast Wi-Fi, making the overall experience quite frustrating, which makes me again wish for the ability to remap the double press to something else. Spark, the standard voice recording app, also uses AI for note summarization and transcribing. Neither feature works offline, unfortunately. Spark records notes up to 30 minutes using Krono's dual microphones, and you can rename or export notes. Transcription quality is decent, and the speed is alright, but you can find much better solutions in the Google Play Store. What I like about Spark is that transcribed notes are not locked, and you can always type more to elaborate on your ideas, which is handy. Overall, I like that the Krono is not shoving AI down my throat, but to be honest, there is really not that much to shove. AI features here feel raw and need improvements to be more useful. Battery Life Like most E-Ink readers, the Krono has fantastic battery life. Even with a clock as a screensaver, its standby power consumption is incredibly low. And when in use, you can get weeks of reading on a single charge. Without the front light, my unit never sipped more than one or two percent of battery during a one-hour reading session. It was nice to see plenty of battery-related settings. You can limit charging at 80% to protect battery health long-term, check the number of charging cycles, manufacturing/first-time use date, battery health, and the maximum capacity. Additionally, the Krono lets you select what hardware remains enabled when sleeping. This lets you keep Wi-Fi and Bluetooth on (say, if you want to receive notifications, for some reason) and keep audio playing when locked. Turning these features off effectively eliminates any standby battery drain. I left my Krono sitting for 24 hours with a clock screensaver on, and it did not drop a single percent. The pretty big 3,950 mAh battery justifies the device's thickness and ensures you do not have to charge it for long periods. Speaking of charging, it is capped at only 10W, which is a bit disappointing, as getting such a big battery to 100% takes a notably long time in the era of super-fast charging smartphones. DuRoBo Moodi The Moodi is a standalone, optional accessory for your Krono. It is a wireless remote with two customizable buttons that you can use to flip pages, control media, or scroll webpages. The accessory connects via Bluetooth. Despite having a built-in rechargeable battery, it is extremely light. While the Moodi's shape and form factor is not what I would call particularly ergonomic, it is not uncomfortable to hold and use. The Moodi comes with six removable magnetic buttons with various smiley faces. Buttons sit securely, and they have nice-feeling, albeit a little loud, clicks. It is a cute touch that adds a little more fun and character to the device. There is also an accented power button and a single status LED. The latter displays charging status and connection mode. The Moodi supports three modes: Reading: Buttons work as volume buttons, allowing you to flip pages in the built-in reader or other apps that support page turning with volume buttons. Media: Buttons work as skip forward/backward, which is useful when listening to audiobooks, podcasts, or music. Scroll: The third mode lets you scroll pages in the web browser or any other application The Krono properly detects the Moodi and presents you with an on-screen guide when you connect it for the first time (it also displays the battery level). However, you can only change modes by holding both buttons for a few seconds. It is also worth noting that the Moodi works with other devices. I connected it to my iPhone and it let me adjust volume or control media playback. Sadly, the scroll did not work, so you cannot use it to waste time scrolling TikToks. Overall, the Moodi is a cute little accessory, which I can recommend for those who read a lot. It is very useful for remote page flipping when you do not want to burden your hands by holding the Krono all the time. I only wish DuRoBo included a lanyard for the built-in loop. As for the battery life, after using the Moodi for a few days, I only managed to drop several percent of its 90 mAh battery. Despite the small size, it is rated for weeks of use, which is pretty impressive. At $35.99, I cannot say the Moodi is a must-have accessory, but I see the appeal. I prefer using the Krono with its Smart Dial, as I rarely read for more than 40-60 minutes in one sitting. However, if you have a stand and like reading for long periods, the Moodi is the right thing to have. It is a bit more expensive than regular page flippers on Amazon, but it is on par with similar products from Kobo or BOOX. Plus, it has a little more fun to it with removable buttons and better integration into the Krono. Conclusion At the end of the day, DuRoBo Krono is a nice pocket-sized e-reader. Its software focuses on the main things without trying to be everything at once. The smart dial idea is unique and great, and I wish more manufacturers had something similar in their devices. The display is also good, with an even frontlight and "always-on" support. I did not notice any deal-breaking issues with the Krono. However, you can feel that the idea needs some improvements, such as a slightly stiffer dial in a more ergonomic location, perhaps a little more premium materials, and better software customization. I hope the company won't give up on the idea and improve the dial and ergonomics in the second generation. Buy DuRoBo Krono Black - $279.99 on Amazon Buy DuRoBo Krono White - $279.99 on Amazon Buy DuRoBo Moodi - $35.99 on Amazon As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
    • In what way is any of what I said incorrect? To install an update you need to close all browser instances, upping it from once a month to once a fortnight is an inconvenience for users. Particularly when updates don't offer functionality that users want (notably copilot). Security updates should come as they are needed, not on a release schedule
    • Dopamine 3.0.6 by Razvan Serea Dopamine is an awesome free audio player which tries to make organizing and listening to music as simple and pretty as possible. Dopamine has been designed for Windows 7, Windows 8.x and Windows 10 and plays mp3, ogg vorbis, flac, wma and m4a/aac music formats quite well. The best part? It's created by long-time Neowin member, Raphaël Godart. If you’re looking for a music player to handle a large music collection, you should definitely give Dopamine a try. Dopamine 3.0.6 changelog: Fixed Manually edited album covers are overwritten on the next collection refresh Fixed AppImage package not working on modern GNU/Linux distributions Deleting song from playlist sometimes fails Playback controls only work when clicking on upper half of the buttons It's unclear that files must be tagged with an external ReplayGain scanner (for example rsgain) before normalization can take effect. Change to Artist or Album tags is not reflected in the song list view nor in the Now Playing information ReplayGain issues Smart playlist filters ignore text containing accents or other special characters Some MP3 files trigger an "MPEG header not found" error due to a too-narrow initial MPEG header scan range Changed Updated the Vietnamese translation Download: Dopamine 3.0.6 | 122.0 MB (Open Source) Links: Home Page | Forum Discussion | Screenshot | Other OSes Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
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