6 things I want to see from the rumored reMarkable Paper Pure
…Price it for the masses Pricing is the whole ball game when a brand aims for mass appeal. Right now, reMarkable’s e-ink devices are hard to recommend unless you’re…
…Price it for the masses Pricing is the whole ball game when a brand aims for mass appeal. Right now, reMarkable’s e-ink devices are hard to recommend unless you’re…
…The upgrade for runners Kaitlyn Cimino / Android Authority On paper, the shift to dual-band GPS sounds predictable. It’s a common upgrade brands make and is fairly expected on top wearables…
…But, as with most paradigm shifts, there’s a catch: the looming hardware requirements are already leaving plenty of phones behind. Starting with a minimum of 12GB of RAM , many affordable devices…
…Smartphone camera apps from different brands used to have distinct identities, but over the years, we’ve all converged on a single design. While this is great for users who rely on…
…Fitbit is one of the biggest names in wearables, and while the brand’s been around for nearly two decades at this point, it’s been undergoing some important changes since being…
…The cameras, despite Sony’s Alpha branding, have often felt undercooked compared to rival flagships. Sony wants Xperia to be the ultimate creator flagship, but it still feels like one built primarily…
…By • April 4, 2026 • • • Add AndroidAuthority on Google Rita El Khoury / Android Authority When I realized that my brand new Pixel 10 Pro XL doesn’t work well with my existing Qi…
…LG had a knack for creating risky and innovative Android phones no other brands could rival — one of its final phones was the swivel-screen LG Wing . It’s easy to wonder…
…I think I said it best in this text: “It’s like Samsung goes out of its way to make Samsung g keyboard a shifty product.” Will this ever get better? Joe…
…Apple also has another advantage in branding. Its operating system has been called macOS for years, and its desktops and laptops have consistently stayed under the Mac branding. Compared to that, Google…