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MWC 2025: FOSSiBOT Introduces 7200W Solar Generator and Starlight Night Vision Camera Rugged Phone

MWC 2025: FOSSiBOT Introduces 7200W Solar Generator and Starlight Night Vision Camera Rugged Phone

Barcelona, Spain - March 4th, 2025 - FOSSiBOT, a new rising star brand from China showcases new feature rugged smartphones, rugged tablets, balcony portable power station, and highest outlet power 7200W home energy solar generator at MWC2025 with booth No.:7D9, Hall 3. As one of the world's most influential communications and technology events, MWC 2025 brings together top companies and industry leaders from around the world. So what FOSSiBOT brought to this exhibition to show their latest breakthroughs and future vision in the field of intelligent technology?
MWC2025: New concept environment-friendly rugged phone FOSSiBOT F112 Pro
FOSSiBOT F112 Pro: this rugged phone is the industry-first smartphone to adopt liquid silicone gel material which is environmentally friendly. Due to the material, the F112 Pro is skin-friendly soft, colorful, IP68-waterproof, shock-resistance, dustproof and thinner than other clumsy rugged phones. The F112 Pro is generally a mid-ranger with 8GB RAM+256GB ROM, 50MP+5MP macro cameras, and Dimensity 6300 5G processor. The F112 Pro will be launched soon by middle March, 2025.
MWC2025: Global first starlight night vision camera rugged phone FOSSiBOT F107 Pro
FOSSiBOT F107 Pro: for the first time, FOSSiBOT combines starlight night vision camera with smartphones. The starlight night vision camera is mostly used in car's reversing imaging or full color supervisory control cameras, but now, it's on the F107 Pro. The starlight night vision camera generates full color images with slight star light, the darker the environment is, the better photo effect it will take. In one word: you can take a full color photo like daylight in super dark environment. Besides the starlight night vision camera, the F107 Pro will come with a 28000mAh huge battery and a strong lumen flashlight torch. The F107 Pro is expected to go to market by May 2025. At FOSSiBOT booth 7D9, many visitors are eager to experience the F107 Pro's starlight night vision camera.
MWC 2025: The highest output power 7200W power station F7200.
FOSSiBOT F7200: as the name it suggests, the F7200 offers 7200W constant AC output power which is the highest in the market. It will come with 5.22kwh capacity power with EV-grade lifepo4 battery. By AC+solar panels charge simultaneously, the 5.22kwh power will be fully recharged in just 1.5 hours. With such huge capacity and high output power, the F7200 is suitable for off-grid living, home backup power and RV living. This will be a new energy product that maximizes the use of solar energy
MWC2025: New balcony power station FBP1200
FOSSiBOT FBP1200: it offers a whole system of generating solar power by solar panels>store electricity>using electricity in household. The FBP1200 offers 800W max AC output power to household appliances intelligently with wall socket connected, saving energy bills and contribute to environment with sustainable green energy. If you are willing to go outside for camping, the FBP1200 offers 1200W max AC output power.
Besides the above 4 products, FOSSiBOT also brings their hot sellers rugged phones like F109, F106 Pro, and hot sellers power stations like FOSSiBOT F2400, FOSSiBOT F1200 and FOSSiBOT F3600 Pro. Fossibot has always been committed to combining technological innovation with sustainable development. We believe that the future of technology is not only about innovation, but also about responsibility. Fossibot will continue to promote the development of green technology and provide users around the world with more environmentally friendly and sustainable smart products.
For more products, keep an eye on FOSSiBOT social media or visit booth 7D9, hall 3 at Barcelona MWC2025.
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Tech leader unveils groundbreaking laptop concept that runs on sunlight and folds flat like a book: 'Worth keeping an eye on'
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time7 days ago

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Tech leader unveils groundbreaking laptop concept that runs on sunlight and folds flat like a book: 'Worth keeping an eye on'

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I tried out Samsung's Project Moohan headset — Android XR won me over
I tried out Samsung's Project Moohan headset — Android XR won me over

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I tried out Samsung's Project Moohan headset — Android XR won me over

We've heard a lot about Samsung's Project Moohan in the past six months, from Samsung's teaser announcement last December to appearance at everything from Galaxy Unpacked to MWC 2025. But we're still waiting on key details on the virtual reality headset, including its specs and how much it will cost. After yet another appearance this week at the Google I/O 2025 developer conference, we're just waiting on those details. But having had a chance to wear a Project Moohan headset and even experience running a few apps on the device, I at least have a better sense of what you'll be able to do with Samsung's product once it arrives later this year. My hands-on time with Project Moohan was less about the headset itself — the Samsung representative walking me through my demo was politely tight-lipped about anything spec-related — and more an introduction to the Android XR platform that the headset is built upon. And from what I saw during that demo, Google apps updated for a virtual environment are very much a critical part of the Android XR experience on Moohan. Despite the lack of details on Project Moohan, we do know a little bit about the headset, which is the result of a partnership announced by Samsung, Google and Qualcomm in 2023 to develop an XR product together. According to Qualcomm back when Moohan was announced, the headset features a Snapdragon XR Plus Gen 2 chipset. That particular silicon offers support for up to 4.3K resolution in each eye, running at 90 frames per second. So it wasn't particularly surprising that graphics and apps looked very sharp when I tried on the headset. The passthrough mode does put an unusual tint around the people you're looking at through the Moohan lenses. I assume that's to add some depth to your view, so you don't feel cut off from the world around you the way you might wearing other headsets. Indeed, that's been my biggest complaint with any type of mixed reality headgear, but it's not an issue I ran into when trying on the Moohan headset. While Samsung hasn't confirmed the weight of its headset, it didn't feel particularly heavy during my demo — I certainly wasn't looking forward to removing it, as I am most of the time when trying on headsets. Putting on Moohan is simply a matter of slipping on the headset like a visor and then turning a knob on the back to tighten the fit and hold things in place. You'll definitely feel like you're wearing something over your face, but it's not overly burdensome, at least for the short time that I had it on. When I tried out Moohan, the headset featured light blockers that enclose the viewing area. But you can take those out to keep things open at the periphery — a way of staying rooted in the real world, the Samsung rep told me. And whether it was the light weight, the passthrough mode or just the overall design of the headset, I never experienced the sensation of disorientation that usually makes headsets a non-starter for me. You control Moohan with hand gestures: a pinching motion selected things while flipping around your hand and making the same pinching gesture takes you back to the home screen. There may be more gesture-based controls but apart from using my hands to scroll — more on that when we talk about the virtual view in Maps — those were the only controls I really needed on my tour of Moohan. I've never used Apple's Vision Pro, but I imagine the Project Moohan experience is pretty similar. When you go into virtual mode, you've got panels floating before you with different apps and information. The word "Moohan" apparently means "infinity" in Korean, and it seems like Samsung is using that as a guiding principal for its headset. The virtual world offers a seemingly infinite canvas, so why not take advantage of that with the apps running on Android XR? For the purposes of this demo, Samsung kept the focus on Google-built apps — things like Maps and YouTube that you'd find preinstalled on any Android device. Here, they've been optimized to work on Android XR, though, and the results can be very visually engaging. In YouTube, for instance, I selected a video highlighting the sights and sounds of Costa Rica, which played before my eyes like any 2D video on any platform. But I also had the option of watching a larger version of the video that took advantage of Moohan's display. Some YouTube videos could even display in 3D in the headset, adding a sense of depth to the footage. The effect felt a little bit like watching a 3D movie in a cinema, for good and for bad. For example, some motorcycles driving toward me looked three dimensional right up until they reached the camera, nullifying the 3D effect and reminding me that I was ultimately watching a flat image. That's more a limit of 3D video, though, and not really the headset's problem. In Google's Photos app, you can also view images with depth, wether it was photos of Google and Samsung reps setting up the demo space or a video of a little boy, cuddling his baby brother. The sensation is exactly what I imagine spatial photos and videos to be like on the Vision Pro, which is not to say that they're any less affecting when viewed on another headset like the Moohan. Perhaps my favorite demo featured Google Maps, as I could leap into an immersive view of a map and get a 3D bird's eye view of the area I had been searching for. 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Meizu Accelerates Globalization with Its Upcoming Global Launch Event on May 20
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Meizu Accelerates Globalization with Its Upcoming Global Launch Event on May 20

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