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OnePlus Nord 5 series sale date announced before July 8 launch, Nord CE 5 key specs revealed

OnePlus Nord 5 series sale date announced before July 8 launch, Nord CE 5 key specs revealed

India Today3 days ago
The OnePlus Nord 5 will go on sale starting July 9 and OnePlus Nord CE 5 from July 12, OnePlus has announced ahead of the OnePlus Nord 5 series launch event in India on July 8. OnePlus has revealed the key specs of the more affordable OnePlus Nord CE 5 confirming the processor, battery capacity, and a few other details. As is often the case with the CE or core edition phones, the idea – OnePlus says – is to make 'the signature OnePlus experience accessible to the wider community.' Specifically for the Nord CE 5, it is promising 'a significant leap forward' presumably compared to the Nord CE 4.To that effect, the Nord 5 CE is set to launch with a 4-nanometre MediaTek Dimensity 8350 Apex processor paired with LPDDR5X RAM though the amount isn't specified at the time of writing. In internal testing, the Nord CE 5 is said to have clocked over 1.47 million in AnTuTu benchmark. Running the show is a 'tablet-size' 7,100mAh battery which is rated to deliver up to 2.5 days of power on a single charge. It supports 80W fast charging which OnePlus claims can top the phone from 1-100 percent in just 59 minutes. Moreover, a 10-minute charge is billed to deliver over six hours of YouTube playback. For photography, the Nord CE 5 has a 50-megapixel primary camera with an unspecified Sony sensor and optically stabilised lens.We've covered the Nord 5 and Nord CE 5 design at length in our first look report here. The TL;DR version is that OnePlus has decided to make the Nord 5 and Nord CE 5 look largely identical at least as far as base design is concerned. You can expect some model-specific colours with the Nord 5 coming in white and Nord CE 5 in blue.The OnePlus Nord 5 is confirmed to arrive with Qualcomm's Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chip and what is being billed as 'the category's largest cooling.' It will have a 50-megapixel Sony LYT-700 primary sensor on the back, which is virtually the same as the one on the OnePlus 13, while on the front, it will have another 50-megapixel camera with Samsung JN5 sensor.Joining the Nord 5 series will be the OnePlus Buds 4 wireless earphones. All the three devices will launch at the OnePlus Summer launch event on July 8.- Ends
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Rewind, Replay: How the Walkman changed the way we hear music
Rewind, Replay: How the Walkman changed the way we hear music

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Rewind, Replay: How the Walkman changed the way we hear music

In the late 1970s, music was a communal affair. Families gathered around bulky stereos, teenagers cranked up car radios, and break-dancers spun to boom boxes in city streets. Music was loud, shared, and rooted in place. Then came the Walkman. A 14-ounce device barely larger than a cassette tape, it let people carry their soundtracks anywhere. Suddenly, music became private — a portable bubble of sound that transformed daily life. As cyberpunk author William Gibson wrote in a 2019 article for The New Yorker, 'The Sony Walkman has done more to change human perception than any virtual reality gadget.' The Walkman's story began with Masaru Ibuka, Sony's co-founder and a devoted classical music fan. Tired of long, music-less trans-Pacific flights, he approached Sony's tape recorder division in February 1979, asking, 'Can you make a playback-only version of the Pressman?' The Pressman, originally designed as a compact recorder for journalists, was reimagined. Engineers removed the recording functions, microphones, and speakers, crafting a sleek, lightweight device – first made of aluminum, then plastic. They paired it with 45-gram headphones built for mobility, a leap from the era's heavy, stationary models. The Walkman's design was simple but revolutionary. Its high-quality audio playback minimised hiss and emphasised clear tones, delivering hi-fi sound through stereo headphones. Its low power consumption allowed 3.5 hours of use, or up to 8 with a heavy-duty battery, making it practical for daily use. Ironically, the Walkman wasn't built on groundbreaking technology. As Eric Alder observed in a 1999 article in the Edmonton Journal, 'Portable transistor radios with little earpieces had been around for decades. And home stereophiles wishing to listen to their favourite tapes or albums in solitude always had their headphones.' Even Sony's engineers were initially unimpressed. Cassette players and headphones weren't new, and the Walkman couldn't record. 'Everyone knows what headphones sound like today,' Sony designer Yasuo Kuroki wrote in a 1990 memoir, 'but at the time, you couldn't even imagine it.' What made the Walkman brilliant was its ability to seamlessly combine existing technologies into something entirely new, and something individualised and portable. As author Rebecca Tuhus-Dubrow wrote in Personal Stereo in 2017, 'It gave people the power to enhance their experiences while tuning out their surroundings.' The possibility of having a personal soundscape that one could walk around with did not exist in the 1970s. With no clear market, Sony had to create one. Their marketing was a stroke of genius. In Tokyo, young demonstrators roamed streets, parks, and subways, sharing Walkman earbuds with curious onlookers. Ads showed people running, skateboarding, or studying, each immersed in their private soundtrack. The $200 device at the time wasn't sold as tech but as a lifestyle. It sold out its initial 30,000-unit run in Japan, and in New York, Bloomingdale's had a two-month waiting list. 'It was the first mass mobile device,' Tuhus-Dubrow notes, and 'it changed how people inhabited public space in a pretty profound way.' It let users play what they wanted, wherever they were, without commercials. For many, it felt like freedom. 'It was so liberating, it was like a whole new world,' 67-year-old Matt Richards, a software engineer in Los Angeles, told 'Kids today are used to the iPhone, smartwatch, iPad, but this thing came out before any of us even had a computer!' Richards remembers pleading with his parents for one. 'At first it was expensive,' he says, 'but eventually everyone had one.' With the Walkman, everyone could listen to what they wanted, he says. His favourite? 'Led Zeppelin, without a doubt.' The Walkman quickly became more than just a player — it became a symbol of style and status. Dentists used it to calm patients. American visual artist and film director Andy Warhol tuned out the din of Manhattan, commenting, 'It's nice to hear Pavarotti instead of car horns.' Paul Simon, half of the legendary duo Simon and Garfunkel, wore his Walkman at the 1981 Grammys. Strapped to jeans or clipped to a belt, the Walkman signalled wealth and tech-savviness, much like the iPhone today. It quickly became a fixture of everyday life. 'We just got back from Paris and everybody's wearing them,' Warhol enthusiastically told the Washington Post in 1981. Mike Ma, a California-based sound engineer who grew up in an Asian-American family, recalled his teenage years filled with saggy jeans and a Walkman. 'My friends and I, we'd all be showing up with our jeans down to our butts, and with the Walkman on them, they'd slip down to our ankles,' he told For many, it was also an extension of privacy. 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