Oneplus benchmarks from geekbench over allegations
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OnePlus makes even setting arbitrary length PINs more of a pain than it should be, with the same weird 6/4-digit defaults ColorOS uses.There’s no QR code scanner in the camera app (even though we’re using QR codes for things more than ever these days).You can’t access the “App info” screen from the multitasking menu on Oxygen OS to see permissions, storage use, or troubleshoot app issues.In the interest of brevity, I’ve put my personal OxygenOS 12.1 complaints on the 10 Pro so far (big and small) here in a list: It’s part of the launcher but accessible with a swipe down on the right side of the status bar from anywhere, and I frequently trigger it when I don’t intend to. Other changes feel vestigial and almost bolted on, like the current Shelf, which integrates with the Notes app you’ll immediately replace with Google Keep, a step counter, weather, and a Spotify widget, among other features. There are a few cool changes, like three different dark theme types depending on whether you prefer inky blacks or gray backgrounds. Arguably, OnePlus’s software hasn’t been “stock” in a long time (even if it once looked close to that in UI terms), but that word shouldn’t appear within a mile of OnePlus’s marketing materials now.įundamentally, this is still Android - it runs Android apps, you get them from the Play Store, notifications and settings work (mostly) as you expect, though OnePlus has changed the appearance of a few things, and some features you expect are missing. I’m not here to mince words: I don’t like OnePlus’s current version of Android, and OxygenOS 12.1 offends my sensibilities in a thousand tiny ways. The only two other issues with the screen that I ran into were a distracting flicker when the ambient display was enabled, and the default display resolution is locked to HD, though you can set it to a higher resolution or an adaptive mode yourself. Outdoors it got more than bright enough, even in direct sunlight (outside a dumb camera limitation I’ll touch on later). If you’re a nighttime YouTube-in-bed binger and watch a lot of content at very low brightness, this is the screen for you. Like most LTPO panels, it’s also incredibly uniform. I don’t have the hardware to test that claim in detail, but I noticed that the phone had exceptional black levels down to its minimum brightness setting, preserving shadows incredibly well, and color saturation and contrast only started to feel incorrect at a very high brightness level. OnePlus says that calibrating for multiple levels improves the accuracy across a wider range of brightnesses. Almost all phones tend to fall out of whack when it comes to color accuracy and gamma (i.e., contrast) at both their maximum and minimum brightness levels. Probably more noticeably, OnePlus calibrated the display at two different brightness levels.