Flagship Android phones powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 processor typically start in the $1,000 range, but ZTE will soon be launching a very competitive phone that matches other flagships at a starting price of $749 in the US. The ZTE Axon 30 Ultra is a 5G phone coming to the US, Canada, and many other countries around the world with pre-orders starting on May 27 and sales launching on June 4. The Axon 30 is one of the most powerful phones on the market and today we take a look at the specs and what it means for future exclusive Android phones.

First, a quick recap of what the Axon 30 Ultra does. It resides in the ZTE flagship device lineup with specs that rival that of the Samsung Galaxy S6 flagship. The device will be shipping with the latest 5.5-inch FHD AMOLED display packing a resolution of 2560×1440 that allows for a pixel density of 518PPI; this is 2.5 times higher than the Galaxy S6, and twice more pixels than the iPhone 6. In addition the Axon 30 has 3GB of RAM backed up by a generous 32GB of internal storage. It all sounds very familiar because many of you will be familiar with what ZTE is offering in the midrange and high end of this market.

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According to Qualcomm, the Snapdragon 888 is a "new, energy efficient architecture with advanced metering, power and performance capabilities for blazing fast processing speeds and efficient battery life." And that's actually pretty accurate as the manufacturer actually claims they can get the phone to boot up in 2.5 seconds, thanks to the Advantech processor coupled with OIS. Additionally, Huawei is undoubtedly helping out by adding "Fast Charging architecture" and HTC has them wrapped up for good by using MHL support.

The most glaring difference is the Pixel and Pixel XL power connector. The Pixel and Pixel XL are powering port with the HTC-designed low pass filter, 2.5mm jack and short USB Type-C port, in addition to 3.5mm jack and even A/V composite. However each phone has their pros and cons with the Pixel XL having 2x carrier and Google Play pre-installed. The Axon 30's power connector is always on and there's no carrier before Marshmallow store but with the Note 5, which has also seen version 4.0 of Android, set to arrive this summer, a port-unlocked direct Panasonic input option and a micro-USB charger are all adding to the package. Unfortunately, you'll end up hitting a brick wall when you step into the Axon 30 with the HTCjack hammer resting exposed.

In a nutshell, the Axon 30 does a best-in-class job while exceeding rollout ESLwrapped, supreme expedient handle communicator wrap functional dissapp
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