Modifiche al passo #11
Modifica di Kristen Gismondi —
Modifica approvata da Kristen Gismondi
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- | [* black] Now that the motherboard is out we can remove the (hopefully undamaged) battery! After some more prying that is. |
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+ | [* black] Now that the motherboard is out, we can remove the (hopefully undamaged) battery! After some more prying, that is. |
[* black] Yep, the motherboard [guide|23615|still|stepid=61146|new_window=true] has to come out before the battery. And the battery is ''still'' a glue sandwich. Lame. | |
[* black] Spec-wise, HTC has once again given the battery a slight capacity boost—up to 10.87 Whr from yesteryear's 9.88. (The original One sported a measly 8.74 Whr battery.) | |
[* black] [http://www.anandtech.com/show/9102/the-htc-one-m9-review-part-1/2|Anandtech's review|new_window=true] found that the M9's battery life is a bit of a disappointment compared to the M8—looks like the capacity bump was an effort to stop the bleeding, but ultimately not enough to surpass its predecessor. | |
- | [* black] Add to that the fact that the M9 supports Qualcomm's new Quick Charge 2.0 spec, but ships with a conventional 5 V, 1.5 A charger that can't provide the quick juice, and we're a little disappointed. |
+ | [* black] Add to that the fact that the M9 supports [http://www.androidauthority.com/quick-charge-explained-563838/|Qualcomm's new Quick Charge 2.0|new_window=true] spec, but ships with a conventional 5 V, 1.5 A charger that can't provide the quick juice, and we're a little disappointed. |
+ | [* icon_note] Take note, HTC. The [guide|32877|Nexus 6|stepid=77033|new_window=true] accepts Quick Charge ''and'' ships with a quick-charge compatible charger. |