
Best phones under Rs 30,000 in July 2025: iQOO Neo 10R, OnePlus Nord CE 5 and more
OnePlus' latest Nord CE 5 offers strong competition in this price range. With a 7,100mAh battery and 80W fast charging, battery anxiety is pretty much out the window. The phone is powered by the new Dimensity 8350 Apex chip and runs OxygenOS 15 based on Android 15, delivering a smooth user experience. The dual-camera setup may sound basic on paper, but the 50-megapixel primary sensor clicks good photos even in tricky lighting. Add to that the sleek design and reliable performance, and you have a solid all-rounder for under Rs 30,000.Poco X7 ProFor users who want flagship-like features without crossing the Rs 30K mark, the Poco X7 Pro is a solid pick. It comes with a MediaTek Dimensity 8400 Ultra processor, a sharp 6.78-inch AMOLED screen with a 120Hz refresh rate, and brightness of up to 3,200 nits — which is great for outdoor use. The battery here is a 6,550mAh unit and supports 90W charging. The camera setup is headlined by a 50-megapixel Sony LYT-600 sensor with OIS. Other highlights include an IP68/69 rating, stereo speakers, and HyperOS 2.0 built on Android 15.Nothing Phone (3a)Nothing's mid-range strategy continues with the Phone (3a), which swaps the previous MediaTek chip for Qualcomm's Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 — offering better efficiency and smoother performance. The phone's unique Glyph interface, clean software (Nothing OS 3.1), and updated camera system make it a tempting option at around Rs 25,000. You get a 120Hz AMOLED screen, 5,000mAh battery, and a 50-megapixel telephoto lens to go with the standard main camera. If you want a phone that looks different and still performs well, the Phone (3a) is worth checking out.- Ends

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Exide bets on innovation, expansion to boost exports
1 2 Kolkata: Storage battery major Exide Industries is focusing on innovation and expansion across geographies in a bid to enhance exports in the medium term. In the last fiscal, exports contributed around 8% to the company's turnover. "We have come out with a lot of innovative products targeted for exports which we have never done in the past," said Avik Roy, managing director and CEO, at the 78th annual general meeting. "We have entered new countries to make our business more resilient and distributed and not dependent on one or two geographies," Roy added. You Can Also Check: Kolkata AQI | Weather in Kolkata | Bank Holidays in Kolkata | Public Holidays in Kolkata When a few shareholders asked the management its export expansion plans, Roy said, "In the medium-term your company aims to increase the share of export business and will actively take initiatives to achieve this objective." Roy said. The company said it has so far invested around Rs 3,700 crore in the first phase of the lithium-ion cell manufacturing project in Bengaluru. "We will probably invest another Rs 600-700 crore in this this we see that the requirement for the phase I of the 6 gigawatt hour will be met. At the end of this fiscal year we are likely to start the trial production commercially. We will see the utilisation of the 6 gigawatt hour factory, and then we will gradually plan for phase II," Roy said.

The Hindu
2 hours ago
- The Hindu
AI literacy must for teachers to ensure good use of tools by students: panel
While the deep penetration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools in India is a serious concern, it could be turned into an opportunity with structured sensitisation and training programmes for both teachers and users, speakers at a panel discussion said on Monday. A way forward would be AI literacy for teachers to ensure good use of AI in educational institutions, including schools. There need to be clear guidelines developed by academics on what these tools can be used for and these guidelines should be continuously monitored, the panelists stressed. The discussion was the first of a series of dialogues started by Tamil Nadu State Council for Higher Education (TANSCHE), titled Uyarkalvi Uraiyadalgal, and the topic was 'Impact of Generative AI on the Future of Education and Employment'. Gayathri Devi Jayan, Indian Chapter President, Applied AI Association, said that children in the education system should be thinking more laterally rather than following a pattern. 'AI follows patterns. We are not AI, we are humans. How do we bring that into the curriculum should be the point of discussion,' she stressed. B. Ravindran, Head, Department of Data Science and AI, and Head, Wadhwani School of Data Science and AI, IIT Madras, said that popular LLMs (Large Language Models) have recorded significant biases in their responses. For example, when prompted about higher education opportunities in India, 'almost 80 % of the recommendations are asking you to go to the US or to Europe; they don't recommend higher study institutions in India even though the student is asking [about] India'. There was a need to step back and think about what could be responsible use of AI in the Indian context. V. Ravindran, Director, Institute of Mathematical Sciences, said that AI was a sophisticated tool that mimics our brain and awareness on what it is and how it works should be brought to children at school level because, if used wrongly, their cognitive skills could be hampered and interpersonal relations and emotions can be affected. Industry, too, was incentivising the use of minimal resources to maximise output and, therefore, the right mix of human expertise and AI tools are required to optimise operations, said Dhinakaran Vinayagamurthy, Lead, Quantum Innovation Centre, IBM Quantum India. Data bias and quality of output in AI models, he added, was much more of a serious concern in the industry. Earlier, inaugurating the discussion series, Govi. Chezhiaan, Higher Education Minister, said that for the first time in decades, the State government this fiscal allocated Rs. 60 crore for refurbishing laboratories in higher education institutions strengthening the foundations for development of Tamil Nadu. Besides, two basic science research centres are coming in Chennai and Coimbatore at a cost of Rs. 100 crores. Delivering the keynote address, Lakshmi Narayanan, Managing Trustee, Chennai Mathematical Institute, said that based on the available data, there was a case to demand more investment in higher education from the State government. M.P. Vijayakumar, Vice-President, TANSCHE, said that in addition to the labs and the research centres, a science park would be built on East Coast Road at a cost of Rs. 100 crore and two STEM laboratories would be established in Madurai and Coimbatore at a cost of Rs. 10 crore each. P. Shankar, Higher Education Secretary, spoke. J. Innocent Divya, Commissioner, Directorate of Technical Education, and E. Sundaravalli, Commissioner, Directorate of Collegiate Education, were present.
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
3 hours ago
- Business Standard
Satcom spectrum allocation rules likely to be in place within two months
The spectrum allocation rules are the last lap that will enable Elon Musk-led Starlink, Bharti Group-backed Eutelsat Oneweb and Jio SES to apply for the radiowaves and start rolling out their services PTI New Delhi Rules for the allocation of spectrum for satellite communications services are likely to be in place within two months, a government official said on Monday. The spectrum allocation rules are the last lap that will enable Elon Musk-led Starlink, Bharti Group-backed Eutelsat Oneweb and Jio SES to apply for the radiowaves and start rolling out their services. "Spectrum allocation rules are likely to be fixed in two months. After that, it will be at the discretion of satcom services when they want to roll out their services," the official said. The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) has recommended that the government should allocate spectrum without auction and through an administrative process-- a move that has seen huge resistance from telecom operators Reliance Jio and Bharti Airtel initially. The regulator has suggested that spectrum for satcom services can be for a period of up to five years and considering the market conditions, the government may extend it for a further period of up to two years. Trai has suggested that spectrum charges for both GSO-based and Non-Geostationary Orbit (NGSO) Fixed Satellite Services should be levied at 4 per cent of adjusted gross revenue (AGR). OneWeb and Starlink fall into the LEO (low earth orbit) category which are considered to be Non-Geostationary Orbit (NGSO) satellites. Besides, NGSO-based Fixed Satellite service providers should also pay an additional per subscriber charge of Rs 500 per annum in urban areas while exempting the rural and remote areas from this additional charge. While allaying the threat to land-based telecom networks from satcom services, Union Minister Pemmasani Chandra Sekhar said that Musk-led satellite communication services provider Starlink can have only 20 lakh connections in India with a peak speed of 200 megabits per second. A government official mentioned that the limit on Starlink connections is due to its existing capacity. The minister said that the upfront cost for satcom services will be too high and the monthly cost may be around Rs 3,000. (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)