The Galaxy S Light Luxury was just announced in China packing very modest specs, the device is pretty much a "lite" variant of the Galaxy S8. The 5.8' screen from the S8 makes a return keeping the same dimensions as its bigger brother. The Light S features the same Super AMOLED panel with 1,080 x 2,220 px resolution (18.5:9). The phone has a single camera on the back - 16 MP sensor and an f/1.7 aperture. It can record 4K video at 30 fps, but OIS is absent (surprisingly). The selfie camera has an 8 MP sensor with an f/1.7 aperture. The Snapdragon 660 chipset inside the Galaxy S Light Luxury should offer similar CPU performance to the Galaxy S8's 835. It does have 4 GB of RAM and 64 GB of storage. Given the Galaxy S Light Luxury's size, it shouldn’t be a surprise that there’s a 3,000 mAh battery – the same capacity as the Galaxy S8. There’s support for fast wireless and wired charging, the latter of which goes over the USB-C port....
Steel Series has just introduced a new mouse for gamers that seeks to eliminate any annoying "skips" that are known to occur when in the heat of battle. The Rival 600 has a second sensor from PixArt that promises to eliminate the surprise cursor movements that come whenever you lift your mouse either on purpose or by accident. The component ntracks lift distance to a greater level of precision of about 0.2", and it also lets users customize when tracking begins and ends to match your mousing habits.

Th Rival 600 has an unconventional design, placing the weights on the side rather than in the middle. This allows users adjust the centre of gravity of the mouse. The RGB lighting is customizable, as well as savable macros and buttons. The main sensor is the same 12,000 CPI TrueMove 3 sensor as in the Rival 310.
The Steel Series 600 is going to set you back about $80 and is highly recommended if mouse skipping is an annoyance when lining up that perfect sniper shot in PUBG.
Source, Twitter
Th Rival 600 has an unconventional design, placing the weights on the side rather than in the middle. This allows users adjust the centre of gravity of the mouse. The RGB lighting is customizable, as well as savable macros and buttons. The main sensor is the same 12,000 CPI TrueMove 3 sensor as in the Rival 310.
The Steel Series 600 is going to set you back about $80 and is highly recommended if mouse skipping is an annoyance when lining up that perfect sniper shot in PUBG.
Source, Twitter
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