The second public beta brings new security features and better support for larger screens. The WearOS 5 beta is also here.
The second attempt smartwatch from OnePlus offers some of the best battery life in the category—as long as you can handle the hefty look.
This year, Google’s second attempt at folding smartphones might be worth the wait.
$100 earbuds with great ANC and decent battery life? Sign me up!
OnePlus’s second smartwatch is way more functional than the last one, but it feels tuned only to people who want a big time piece.
The OnePlus 12 also managed to outpace the iPhone in Gizmodo's battery benchmark tests.
More memory and an improved camera make the phone a compelling offering. But then you still have to deal with OnePlus's OxygenOS.
They’re still too expensive without compromises, but at least now there are more types to choose from.
OnePlus's next phone may also have a 64 MP periscope telephoto lens and 'rain touch' to avoid annoying ghosting in a downpour.
Is Nothing Chats the answer to the digital classism on the mobile market?
OnePlus’ first foldable is still expensive and it has manufacturing problems, but it has the smallest crease of any squashable screen yet.
Marketing banners show Nothing’s "Watch Pro" could cost around $55 and come with a near-two-inch screen.
The China-centric Ace 2 Pro phone should be able to handle any amount of fog or rain without any annoying ghosting.
We're not getting a lower-priced Nothing Phone. CMF by Nothing will debut its earbuds and smartwatch later this year.
The OnePlus Open might use similar display technology as the Galaxy Z Fold, Google Pixel Fold, and Motorola Razr+.
You’ll need a microscope to spot the differences between the $1,800 Fold 5 and Fold 4, but a streamlined UI makes running multiple apps easy and fun.
The new device is an upgrade from the Phone (1)—a better processor, improved camera, and even more signature LED glyphs—with a $599 price tag.
So far the Phone (1) sequel doesn't seem like the jump it needs to be.
Carl Pei’s sequel phone is coming to the U.S. and should be more powerful than the first iteration with a Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 chip.
Nothing CEO Carl Pei wants to keep the hype train going, though he’s not revealing much else about his company’s upcoming Phone (1) successor.