The Coolpad Dyno is for parents, not kids. With no games or fun party tricks, the little ones will ignore it. If you can convince your children to wear it, though, as a parent you will absolutely love ...
Coolpad Americas, the US subsidiary of the China-based Coolpad, has announced and launched their first unlocked smartphone, the Coolpad Conjr, as part of CES 2017. The 5-inch Android smartphone will ...
Coolpad does really need to update the Conjr to Nougat. It’s tough to say anything good about a phone’s software when it launches nearly four months after the latest version of Android was made ...
LeEco had released a handful of smartphones this year, and the same can be said for Coolpad. Both of these companies are located in China, though LeEco is quite probably more popular on a global scale ...
It's easy to find a great phone today. In fact, current flagship devices are so good you really don't need to be replacing them every year. Read now There are high end smartphones targeted to early ...
It comes as a bit of surprise that an Android handset could be making its debut in mid-2018 and it would still be running Android 7.0 Nougat, but that seems to be the case with the Coolpad Cool 2.
Staring with the 7-inch tablet, it is nothing but an updated version of the popular Coolpad Halo. While the pricing stays the same at 1,888 Yuan ($300), the device now gets the updated and more ...
After leaking out a couple months ago, the Coolpad Defiant has finally made its official debut. The handset runs Android 7.0, is priced at $100, and can now be purchased directly from T-Mobile. It was ...
We’re going off speculation and rumours for the specs so bear with us. Apparently the Coolpad “GodBox”, we assume this is going to be changed to “halo box” for international markets, will pack 4GB of ...
I wore the world's first HDR10 smart glasses TCL's new E Ink tablet beats the Remarkable and Kindle Anker's new charger is one of the most unique I've ever seen Best laptop cooling pads Best flip ...
Thanks to the Google Pixel 3a the conversation around smartphones has shifted again. We’re back to talking about what we really need from our phones and how much money is necessary to keep pace.