Cool. Thanks for replying sand_man.
Can you advise which seller to get the cover from? Would have liked to purchase all items from Pophong but they don't have any decent looking covers.
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Cool. Thanks for replying sand_man.
Cool. Thanks for replying sand_man.
Can you advise which seller to get the cover from? Would have liked to purchase all items from Pophong but they don't have any decent looking covers.
Geez sorry man!Don't make the same mistake as I did and get your cover from Wantitall.
I swore never to buy anything from them but impatience got the better of me and I caved and got the Spigen Ultra Hybrid clear cover through them. Cost me R509 including shipping, ordered and paid for it on the 22nd of August, still waiting for it.
Mobilefun didn't have stock, and at the time, their website listed it as 1-2 months away.
Looks like they'll have it in about a weeks time and including shipping would have cost me about 40% less than what it's costing through Wantitall...
Geez sorry man!
Thanks for the advice.
Got some time to make this purchase so I'm going to wait and see if there are any sales or if the exchange rate moves.

Takealot Now has the OnePlus 5 in Slate Grey for R11 000
Link: https://www.takealot.com/oneplus-5-dualsim-6gb-lte-slate-grey/PLID46859976
Takealot Now has the OnePlus 5 in Slate Grey for R11 000
Link: https://www.takealot.com/oneplus-5-dualsim-6gb-lte-slate-grey/PLID46859976
Chris Moore, the owner of a UK-based security and tech blog, recently published an article demonstrating that OnePlus has been gathering his personal information and transmitting them without his permission. He noticed an unfamiliar domain while completing the SANS Holiday Hack Challenge and decided to further examine it. He found that the domain – open.oneplus.net – had essentially been collecting his private device and user data and transmitting them to an Amazon AWS instance, all without his permission.
The data that OnePlus is accessing ranges from device information like the phone’s IMEI, serial number, cellular number, MAC address, mobile network name, IMSI prefix, and wireless network ESSID and BSSID to user data like reboot, charging, screen timestamps as well as application timestamps.
Moore states that the code responsible for this data collection is part of the OnePlus Device Manager and OnePlus Device Manager Provider. Fortunately, Jakub Czekanski claims that despite their being a system service, they can be permanently disabled through replacing net.oneplus.odm for pkg via ADB or through running this command: pm uninstall -k –user 0 pkg
It’s concerning that a major Android manufacturer has been collecting and transmitting user data without permission, but it’s even more concerning that OnePlus doesn’t seem to consider it a big issue. When we reached out for a comment, the company simply stated that the data are collected for user support and failed to address privacy concerns:
"We securely transmit analytics in two different streams over HTTPS to an Amazon server. The first stream is usage analytics, which we collect in order for us to more precisely fine tune our software according to user behavior. This transmission of usage activity can be turned off by navigating to ‘Settings’ -> ‘Advanced’ -> ‘Join user experience program’. The second stream is device information, which we collect to provide better after-sales support."