Friday 31 August 2012

What devices are running and getting Android 4.1 Jelly Bean Update

I am sure we all spent hours reading articles to see if our devices would receive Ice Cream Sandwhich. Now it's time we start all over. This time we hunt Jelly Beans! Here are the flavors:
Smart phones with Android 4.1 (jellybean):
- Samsung Galaxy III (S3) ( rumored, update may roll-out in last quarter of 2012 or 1st q of 2013 )
- Samsung Galaxy Note ( rumored, no-official announcement )
- Samsung Galaxy R ( rumored, JB support if unlocked, no-official update )
- Samsung Galaxy S plus ( rumored, JB support if unlocked, no-official update )
- Samsung Galaxy S advance ( rumored, JB support if unlocked, no-official update )
- Motorola Droid Razr Maxx ( rumored, update may roll-out in last quarter of 2012
- HTC One ( official update will be rolling out shortly)
- HTC One X ( official update will be rolling out shortly)
- HTC One XL ( official update will be rolling out shortly)
- HTC One S ( official update will be rolling out shortly)
- Sony Xperia S ( rumored, no-official announcement )
- Sony Xperia P ( rumored, no-official announcement )
- Sony Xperia U ( rumored, no-official announcement )
- LG Optimus 4X HD ( rumored, update may roll-out in the 1st q of 2013 )
- Lenovo K800 with Intel ( rumored, no-official announcement )
Smart tablets with Android 4.1 (jellybean):
- Google Nexus 7
- Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 ( will be updated shortly )
- Motorola Xoom ( will be updated shortly )
- Motorola Xoom 2 ( will be updated shortly )
- Karbonn Smarttab 1
- Asus Transformer TF101 ( will be updated shortly )
- Acer Iconia ( rumored )
- Toshiba AT200 ( will be updated shortly )
- Toshiba AT300 ( will be updated shortly )



Don't see your device? Not to worry! Ice Cream Sandwhich hasn't fully rolled out yet. There is still time for Jelly Bean to be coded for your device. What Android powered phone or tablet do you have that you'd like to have Jelly Bean sent to?

HP reveals first Win8 laptops for Australia

The first tranche of new laptop models slated to land in Australia and fuelled by Windows 8 have been announced by Hewlett Packard, with three new models due to launch locally later this year, all featuring touchscreens that take advantage of the new touch features of the new Microsoft operating system.
Almost all current laptops available in Australia are modelled along traditional lines — featuring a keyboard, trackpad and monitor which does not feature any touchscreen capability. However, Windows 8 has been redesigned from the ground up to integrate touchscreen features, in a design approach which commentators have said is designed by Microsoft to keep ahead of the growing appetite for tablets led by Apple’s iPad. In the US today HP announced three new laptops which the company said would also launch in Australia later in 2012, which are designed to take advantage of this feature. No local pricing or concrete launch dates are available yet.

The most visibly different of the three, the HP ENVY x2 model, is effectively a laptop which doubles as a tablet as its screen can be separated from its keyboard through a “seamless” magnetic latch. In a statement, HP said that the total unit weighed 3.1 pounds (1.4 kilograms), while the tablet unit alone weighed 1.5 pounds (680g). These weights are a little heavier in general, but broadly comparable to current tablet and laptop weights.
 
The ENVY x2 features a 11.6″ screen, with an IPS display pan with a brightness of 400 nits. An eight megapixel camera on the back and a HD webcam on the front (for videoconferencing) are included, and HP has integrated audio from Beats with a view to providing quality sound on the unit. The company has not provided any other specifications for the unit, or pricing.
A second unit, the Spectre XT TouchSmart Ultrabook, features a 15.6″ touchscreen, and weighs 4.77 pounds (2.16kg). This model is designed more as a traditional laptop, with its screen not able to be disconnected. It will feature Intel’s latest Ivy Bridge processors, and a SSD drive in several sizes, and it comes with a number of new features, such as a Thunderbolt port. The Elements versions of Adobe’s Photoshop and Premiere editing suites will also come bundled in. It will sell in the US in December for a price starting from US$1,399.99.
Lastly, HP has also introduced the ENVY TouchSmart Ultrabook 4, a 14″ laptop weighing 4.77 pounds (2.16kg). It features similar specifications to the Spectre XT, but can also feature an optional AMD dedicated video card, and will also go on sale later this year, although prices have not yet been announced.
“Consumers want the flexibility to move between creating rich documents and losing themselves in a great movie,” said James Mouton, senior vice president and general manager, Personal Computer Global Business Unit, HP. “With the HP ENVY x2, customers can have it all, and the touch experience on these three new notebooks brings out the best of Windows 8.” HP will also be announcing additional notebooks, desktops and tablets “later in 2012″.
opinion/analysis
It is with mixed feelings that I begin reporting on the first batch of Windows 8 laptops, PCs and quasi-tablets to begin entering the Australian marketplace.
On the one hand, it is apparent that every major Windows OEM is about to start flooding Australia with Windows 8 gear. Dell, Lenovo, ASUS, Samsung, HP, Acer and so on — all of these companies right now feel that they must have new Windows 8 gear to launch when Microsoft’s latest opus goes on sale shortly. They’re all excited about it, and all in competition with each other.
However, on the other hand, it’s hard not to agree with the vast number of commentators who have pointed out recently how much of a trainwreck Windows 8 is, and how it is destined to fail and frustrate millions of people along the way.
If you’ve tried Windows 8 at all (as I have), you’ll know that not only is this an operating system which is very much still half-baked (for example, it doesn’t correctly handle many games installed through Valve’s dominant Steam platform), but that even if you’ve been a Windows user for several decades, you still will take weeks, possibly months to get used to Microsoft’s new user interface paradigm. There are countless articles online devoted to bagging Windows 8, and we find it hard to disagree with any of them. Windows 8 is truly awful; breaking decades of user experience training and trying to enforce a new tablet UI paradigm on users who don’t want their desktop to be a touchscreen device.
In addition, to be honest, there really isn’t anything wrong with Windows 7, which we rely on every day, and many people still haven’t upgraded to it from Windows XP.
We’ve been here before; about two years ago, most of these same OEMs started flooding Australia with Android tablets. Again, almost universally, these devices were quite mediocre and not yet ready for mainstream consumption. As a consequence, Australians virtually ignored all of the devices and went for the iPad instead, which was a quality device and not half-baked.
It’s taken two years for a tablet to come along to challenge that dynamic — Google’s Nexus 7 — and I very much suspect that it will take another two years before we start to see decent Windows 8 machines, if ever — given the fact that Windows 8 on the desktop looks a lot worse than old versions of Android did on tablets. I suspect that what we’re seeing here from HP is a quick attempt to slap Windows 8 into hardware which hasn’t really been optimised for it, and I suspect we’ll see this approach from almost all of the other manufacturers as well.
Microsoft’s own Surface tablet is possibly the only really promising Windows 8 device we’ve seen so far — and that’s because it seems designed to appeal primarily to the enterprise, which so far seems vaguely enthusiastic about an easier to manage tablet as an iPad alternative. In any case, although I’m not optimistic at this point, it will certainly be interesting to get some of these new Windows 8 models in for testing. Perhaps they will be surprisingly good. But I’m not holding my breath.

Samsung Unveils Galaxy Note 2 Smartphone

Samsung Electronics unveiled a new bigger smartphone, the Galaxy Note 2, at its "Mobile Unpacked" event in Berlin on Wednesday. The Galaxy Note 2 is expected to compete with Apple's new iPhone 5 due out next month.

"A year ago, the Galaxy Note created a new line of devices that combined the smartphone and tablet PC," said Shin Jong-kyun, the head of Samsung's mobile phone division. He added the Galaxy Note 2 "will offer a more innovative and unique experience."
Shin Jong-kyun, the head of Samsungs mobile phone division, presents the Galaxy Camera at its Shin Jong-kyun, the head of Samsung's mobile phone division, presents the Galaxy Camera at its "Mobile Unpacked" event in Berlin on Wednesday. /AP-Newsis
The event a day before the official opening of the Internationale Funkausstellung, Europe's biggest consumer technology trade fair, was packed with reporters and business figures, with all 1,500 seats filled as soon as it started. Film director Wim Wenders got on stage to promote the device.

The phone has a 5.5-inch screen and, the company claims, is more comfortable to hold thanks to a thinner bezel. It comes with a stylus and looks like a Galaxy S3 smartphone that has been stretched out.

During the presentation, it seamlessly played high-definition movies on the 16:9 ratio screen.

The gadget has some innovative functions capable of detecting the movements of the user. For example, when a user pulls out the stylus, a memo screen automatically appears. Once the stylus is inserted again, the main screen is restored.

The "Air View" function enables users to send e-mail, manage the photo album and arrange schedules with the stylus. It also has a "S Beam" function that enables users to send music files to other handsets at the speed of just two seconds per song.

Boffins said Galaxy Note 2 would be relatively safe from Apple's patent infringement suits because many functions are different from Samsung's other smartphones.

But the phone does include some functions that caused patent disputes with Apple including the "pinch-to-zoom" function that allows a part of an image to be enlarged using the thumb and index finger, and the "double tapping" function that allows a particular image to fill the entire screen. "We think we can avoid copyright infringement if the activation method is different, even though the functions are similar," a Samsung staffer said.
Samsungs new ATIV series powered on Windows 8 Samsung's new ATIV series powered on Windows 8
Samsung also unveiled other products. A surprise was the "Galaxy Camera" that is equipped with fourth-generation LTE and the latest Android OS Jelly Bean. The camera features a 16-million pixel resolution, 21x zoom and 12.1 cm LCD screen.

The ATIV smartphone, also unveiled at the event, comes with Microsoft's latest OS Windows 8. Samsung plans to join hands not only with Google but with a wide range of partners including Microsoft to deal with rival Apple.

Samsung plans to introduce a whole line of smart products under the ATIV brand including a "smart PC" that can be used as a tablet PC and a desktop simply by adding a keyboard and monitor.

Thursday 30 August 2012

Sony announces Xperia tablet

Cape Town - Sony has announced that the Xperia Tablet S will be launched globally at the consumer electronics show IFA.

The Xperia Tablet S is the latest device to take on the iPad and Sony Mobile has said that the device that has received positive reviews in other markets will be heading to SA.

It features a quad core processor and runs the Android 4.0.3 (Ice Cream Sandwich) operating system, placing at the top end of the tablets running Google's software.

The device features an 8 megapixel main camera and 1 megapixel secondary camera. The tablet is slightly smaller than the iPad at 23cm. It also has OptiContrast technology, similar to Sony TVs.

This reduces reflection when viewing the display and should give the device an advantage in direct sunlight.
  
Growth sector


The Xperia Tablet S is splash proof and Sony will exploit its ability to synch with other devices in what the company calls its "four screen interface".

The device features a full sized SD card slot and users can expect customised Android skins that Sony has employed in the Android interface of its range of smartphones.

Tablet computers have emerged as a major growth sector for manufactures, but Apple still commands 68% of the global market.

Sony also announced the launch of the Xperia T and V smartphones featuring 11cm screens, 13 megapixel camera, and 1.5GHz dual core processors.

Both phones run the Android 4.0 operating system, but following their launch Sony will upgrade them to 4.1 (Jellybean).

The Xperia J is somewhat underpowered compared to the previous two, but features a 9mm width and a 5 megapixel main camera.

Wednesday 29 August 2012

Google Nexus 7 tablet: Review

review Manufactured by ASUS, the Nexus 7 is the first Google tablet to carry the coveted ‘Nexus’ brand which the search giant likes to append to flagship reference models running its Android operating system. But does the tablet do enough to overcome Android’s troubled history in the tablet market and rival Apple’s dominant iPad? Read on to find out.

Design
Compared with almost every other Android tablet we’ve seen (and there are a lot out there, most of them pretty mediocre), the Nexus 7 tablet is an exercise in minimalism, which is definitely a good thing.
On the front of the tablet are just two things — its 7″ touchscreen and a small camera for video calling. The screen is surrounded by a substantial black plastic border reaching to the metallic rim edges of its casing. Given that manufacturers like Samsung and HTC have recently made an art out of getting their touchscreens almost to the edge of their smartphone cases, we consider the amount of wasted space on the Nexus 7′s front a little excessive — it’s at about two centimetres above the screen and one on either side. When you consider that the Nexus 7′s touchscreen controls also take up space inside the screen at the bottom, we feel the casing size is not ideal for the size of its touchscreen.
 
The back of the tablet is similarly minimalist. It’s composed of lovely soft dimpled leather material, stamped with the ‘nexus’ branding and also a subtle ASUS monogram. On the bottom is a small speaker grill. On the sides, before they curve away around the tablet’s back, sits a volume rocker and power buttom (right) and a 3.5mm audio jack and microUSB port for charging and synching with a PC. On the top, as on the left-hand-side, there’s nothing.
If you were to pick the Nexus 7 up, there isn’t much remarkable about it. At first glance it could be the Kindle Fire, or the BlackBerry PlayBook — similar 7″ tablets. But it’s precisely this understated minimalism which becomes attractive after a few seconds. Very quickly you realise that this is a tablet which just feels lovely in the hands. Unlike most Android tablets and the iPad, it has a lovely leathery back, which is grippy and curvy and nice to touch. It has just the right weight — at 340 grams. It has just the right size, being easy to pick up and hold in one hand, unlike the iPad. It’ll even fit width-wise in the back pockets of many people’s jeans.
On the whole, the Nexus 7 feels like the best-designed tablet we’ve ever held. It’s just that nice. And we’re sure you’ll love fondling it too, if you pick one up. Perhaps the only negative we could say about it is the fact that the 3.5mm headphone jack is positioned on the tablet’s bottom, which isn’t the most comfortable spot for it.
Features
The Nexus 7 improves on the specifications of the Kindle Fire and other 7″ Android tablets in a number of ways. Probably its hero features are its quad-core Tegra 3 processor, which will make it more than powerful enough to handle any multimedia content or games you can throw at it, as well as the fact that it’s the first tablet to run the next version of Google’s Android platform (Jelly Bean).
Jelly Bean gives the Android universe a number of improvements over the previous version (ice Cream Sandwich). For starters, Google’s ‘Project Butter’ is slated to make Jelly Bean’s user interface silky smooth and fluid, improving the frame rate of animations and making the interface feel a lot nicer than it does now — we still get the odd jaggy on Ice Cream Sandwich.
There’s a new personal assistant/information prediction feature called Google Now, and voice search has also been improved in Jelly Bean, as well as the ability to enter text into the device by talking. Widget management, notifications, app encryption and more are other features which will arrive with the new O/S.
Apart from these hero features, most of the Nexus 7′s features are pretty much what you would expect. The tablet has a 7″ 1280×800 back-lit IPS HD display (216 ppi), which is a higher resolution than the Kindle Fire’s 1024×600 resolution. This display sits under a pane of Corning’s Gorilla Glass, and there’s a 1.2 megapixel front-facing camera for video calls. The device comes in 8GB or 16GB models, costing AU$249 or AU$299 respectively online, and a 4325mAh battery for up to eight hours of active use is included. Other features include support for 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi, but no 3G or 4G mobile broadband, as well as a micro USB connection for charging and syncing; a NFC chip for mobile transactions or beaming data to other Android devices, a microphone, accelerometer and so on.
 
Performance
There are two aspects of the Nexus 7′s performance which you need to know about. And the good news is that the tablet performs fantastically with respect to each one.
The first one is the new version of Android, Jelly Bean. To say that this is a landmark version of Android is no understatement. To our mind, this is the first version of Android which truly matches the slickness and maturity of Apple’s iOS platform. With Jelly Bean, Android has truly arrived, and it’s a wonder to behold. While there are quite a few new features in Jelly Bean, including the new personal assistant/information prediction option Google Now, and things like widget management and notifications have also been improved, the real standout feature here which you’ll notice is the implementation of Project Butter.
Using the Nexus 7, with its powerful Tegra 3 CPU and Project Butter, is a revelation. Apps load instantly, with a lovely smooth animation. Screens flip around just as smoothly. Navigation is slick as all hell and sexy enough to make us want to just dance our fingers around the touchscreen to see it move. From lock screen animations to notifications to application/window management … it’s just all so smooth and lovely to use.
Apps also get a performance boost on the Nexus 7. From HD video through YouTube to download eBooks, to updating apps through the Google Play Store to browsing the web on rich media sites … whatever you want to do, the Nexus 7 has the sheer power to do it, and it’s all done smoothly. Smooth as butter.
It’s fairly hard to quantify the impact Project Butter has had, but think of the way that Windows 7′s window movements got really nice, translucent and smooth, compared with Windows XP. Or the difference between new versions of Mac OS X compared with those of five years ago, and you’ll get the idea. With Jelly Bean, Google has far exceeded the user interface of iOS, and we find it hard to go back to iOS’s harshly mechanical interface after using Jelly Bean. Butter might be fattening — but as far as we’re concerned, we’ll take as much as we can get.
The second aspect of the Nexus 7 which you’ll want to know about is battery life. On paper Google rates the tablet’s 4325mAh battery as being able to deliver nine hours of HD video playback, ten hours of web browsing, ten hours of e-reading and 300 hours of standby. We’re not 100 percent convinced by the standby statistic (with moderate use, our Nexus 7 gave up the ghost independently after five days of moderate use), but we still have to say that the battery life on the Nexus 7 is still very solid.
Like the iPad, this is a tablet which you’ll probably only be charging once a week or so, if that. If you use it intensively for a couple of hours a day, it will be more, but the nature of the Nexus 7 appears to be that it’s the sort of tablet you pick up and use for a bit, then put down, and expect it to still have battery life when you pick it up a day or so later. That’s how we use our iPad, and it felt like the Nexus 7 would perform similarly in terms of its battery life.
Coupled with its stellar design and build quality, as well as its one-hander 7″ form factor (something the iPad lacks) these two aspects — performance and battery life — are what really sold us on the Nexus 7. This is just the perfect device to keep in your bag or on your desk and pick up whenever you get a whim to read an eBook, watch a movie on a plane (we watched ‘The Hunger Games’ from the Google Play Store in bed), do some social networking or email and so on. It’s smaller and easier to handle than an iPad, and overall these factors sold it.
There are some other aspects to the Nexus 7 which you might want to know about — but not everyone will care. We’ll go through some of them now in brief.
With Jelly Bean comes a new voice-activated search feature in Android, and in our testing on the Nexus 7, it works really well — well enough that it comes close to recognising search terms like “Renai LeMay”, which, let’s face it, is a challenge for any voice recognition system. In our testing, the Jelly Bean voice search was much more useful than Apple’s similar Siri system, although not as integrated with the wider operating system. In most cases, you can just hit a button and tell the Nexus 7 what you’re searching the web for, and it will find it.
We didn’t really get into testing the ‘Google Now’ feature that deeply, as most of the information sources it uses to predict what you’re looking for don’t really work yet in Australia (this isn’t really a surprise). Some Delimiter readers have reported some degree of success with it, but Nexus 7 owners and reviewers seem a bit divided in whether it will be a useful tool, and how long it will take to be really useful in Australia. There’s quite a bit of agreement out there that predicting user behaviour on devices like tablets is definitely the way things will go in future, but is it there yet? Not from what we can see of Google Now. Most Australians will probably interpret this feature as basically being a quirky new feature linked to the improved voice search function, and that’s more or less how we view it for the moment as well.
There are some downsides to the Nexus 7. For starters, this is a tablet designed to be used online — it wouldn’t even let us set it up without connecting to a Wi-Fi network. And of course there are the usual compulsory links to all of Google’s services, including your Google account, which we find tends to funnel too much information Google’s way by default. However, unlike the iPad, the Google Nexus 7 doesn’t come with any 3G/4G mobile broadband access. The pain here is lessened due to modern smartphone tethering, but we would still like to see terrestrial cellular access here.
If you’re using from a HTC or Samsung Android phone, you will suffer some discombobulation as you try to work out where all the right settings and apps are stored, given the subtle user interface differences these manufacturers’ software overlays on Android. We found this aspect of the Nexus 7 quite frustrating — hunting around in Jelly Bean’s much more limited settings menu was a pain, compared to our HTC One XL.
And there is just some plain weirdness out there … Jelly Bean, like many Android releases, has occasional problems with PDF attachments in email, and when we tried to examine The Hunger Games video we had purchased on Google’s Play Store a few days earlier (it had since expired), we weren’t able to re-purchase the film or even preview it … we just got errors no matter what we did.
But overall the Nexus 7 performed really, well in virtually all aspects. Any quibbles we had about the tablet’s performance were just that — quibbles, not major issues.
Conclusion
A few days after we received our Google Nexus 7 tablet as a review unit from ASUS, we realised something. We had started thinking of the unit as our new primary tablet device and had set up all kinds of systems on it that we wouldn’t usually bother doing on review units. The thought of sending the unit back (it will return to ASUS tomorrow) filled us with fear and panic. What would we do without it? Then we realised we could just order a new one online or buy one from the range of Australian retailers selling them in Australia — at a pretty decent price, too. Then our thoughts turned to gadget lust and how much we looked forward to buying a new Nexus 7.
This should tell you something. The Nexus 7 is not just a good Android tablet or a worthy alternative to the iPad. We’ve had those before. It’s the first Android tablet which people — a lot of people — are going to really want to actually buy, which hasn’t happened before with Android tablets (apart from the Kindle Fire, which never launched in Australia). If our personal experience is emblematic of the mainstream, this thing is going to sell like hotcakes in Australia — and in fact, there is evidence that this is already happening.
We repeat: We didn’t just like the Nexus 7. We actively want one. Right now. As quickly as possible. And we can see ourselves using it a lot more than our iPad, which has now been relegated to second place in our household tablet pantheon.
The Nexus 7 does pretty much everything the Apple iPad does, but it comes in a form factor much more suitable for single-handed use, and it has a better user interface and comparable battery life. Plus, it’s much cheaper. This is an awesome tablet, and we’re happy to issue an unqualified ‘buy now’ rating on it. Pick one up. You won’t regret it.
 
 

Tuesday 28 August 2012

LG announces the Optimus G

LG's Optimus G is now official. The handset features a quad-core Snapdragon S4 Pro APQ8064 processor, and will use components from various sister companies. The Optimus G will have LTE support, a 4.7-inch WXGA (1280 x 768 pixels) IPS display . LG says its new display is much thinner thanks to a newly developed G2 Touch Hybrid Display and boasts of better visibility outdoors.

LG's Chem contribution is a 2,100mAh battery that has a longer lifespan of 800 cycles--an improvement over the current 500 cycles of batteries today. The phone will also have a whopping 2GB of RAM. Other flagship Android smartphones such as the Samsung Galaxy S III and the HTC One X come with just 1GB.
Lastly, the rumor about the Optimus G's 13-megapixel camera is true, and the smartphone will run Ice Cream Sandwich (Android 4.0). Jelly Bean (Android 4.1) does not seem to be available and was not mentioned in the LG announcement.
Japan's NTT Docomo will be the first to get a Japanese version of the Optimus G--a global version is slated to be launched in September in Korea, with worldwide availability to follow after.

iPad mini to debut in October after September iPhone launch

New Delhi: AllThingsD, a tech website affiliated with The Wall Street Journal, has now confirmed that Apple will unveil its next-generation iPhone and highly anticipated iPad mini at two separate events, rather than a single event as has been widely speculated.
According to the AllThingsD report, Apple will unveil its next-generation iPhone, unofficially dubbed iPhone 5, at an as yet unannounced event on September 12.
The report goes on saying that Apple will debut its smaller iPad in October only after the next-generation iPhone goes on sale. The iPad, which "is expected to have a display of less than eight inches, will be uncrated at a second special event, which sources said is currently scheduled for October," mentioned AllThingsD.

In addition, Daring Fireball's John Gruber, an Apple enthusiast and writer stated, "I don't think Apple would want reviews of both a new iPhone and new-size iPad appearing at the same time."
He posed a great question that why Apple would like to share the spotlight? He asked: "Why have another Apple product battling with the iPhone for the top spots in news coverage?"
"So I thought, well, maybe they'd only seed the review units of the iPhone on September 12, with the new-size iPad going into reviewer hands a few weeks later," concluded Gruber.
He further wrote, "the more I think about it, the less sense it makes for the iPhone to even share the stage at the announcement with any other product. The iPhone is too big, too cool, and garners too much attention — and it's in Apple's interest to keep that attention undiluted."
However, Apple has not officially confirmed any plans yet.

Monday 27 August 2012

Apple’s patent victory spells changes in smartphones for consumers

Apple’s big court victory against Samsung on Friday is expected to trickle down to consumers, affecting the creation of future mobile technology and potentially raising prices for devices, analysts and patent experts say.
A jury’s decision to award Apple $1.05 billion after finding Samsung violated six patents will make rivals think twice about smartphones and tablets that too closely resemble Apple products.
That could mean delays and hardship for Apple rivals as they scramble to change their roadmaps for products that may be too similar to the iPhone or iPad. They will be forced to create software workarounds to avoid legal pushback from Apple, experts say.
The nine-member jury in the U.S. District Court in San Jose agreed that Samsung violated three key touchscreen patents that have become commonplace in smartphones, such as one that allows users to tap on images and making them bigger and another to pinch an image and enlarge it.
And the legal tussle among rivals is far from over. Samsung, which has vowed to fight the jury decision, faces a separate but perhaps even more daunting hearing scheduled to begin Sept. 20 that could ban Samsung devices with infringing technology from U.S. sales.

Any outcome will negatively affect the South Korean company, some experts say. If Samsung’s smartphones are banned, the company will be forced to change features such as the pinch and zoom technology that Apple says is theirs. And even if U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh doesn’t grant an injuction, Samsung will have to work out royalties for patents that the jury agreed were protected intellectual property belonging to Apple, analysts say.
Add up the delays and fees, and devices could get a bump in price, some experts say.
“The scope of injuctions is not limited to accused products of the action but could apply to any products down the road that could apply and be held liable for contempt of court,” said Florian Mueller, a patent analyst and consultant and author of blog FOSSPatents.
Yet there could be an upside for consumers, other experts say. There may be more choice in the kinds of products available.
“Within a product cycle or two, consumers will begin to see exciting, new and different-looking designs,” said Christopher V. Carani, a partner at the Chicago-based intellectual property law firm McAndrews, Held & Malloy.
“If a permanent injunction is ordered, the Apple victory will create some delay to market for look-alike smartphones that need to be redesigned. But this should be viewed as a perfect opportunity to go back to the drawing board,” Carani said.
Apple, emboldened by the jury’s verdict, is pushing to block sales of Samsung devices that infringe its design patents. On Monday, the company will present a list of smartphones and tablets that it wants Koh to ban. The injunction hearing is expected to stretch as long as two months.
And the companies are expected to ask the judge to overturn elements of the jury verdict.
Apple may ask the judge to reconsider a tablet design complaint that the jury denied. It may also seek more money in damages.
Samsung said it is gearing for a extended battle to defend itself.
“We will move immediately to file post-verdict motions to overturn this decision in this court and, if we are not successful, we will appeal this decision to the Court of Appeals,” Samsung said in a statement.
Legal experts say Samsung’s changes are slim at overturning the jury decision.
“There is a strong presumption that the jury was correct and will be reversed only in cases in which the verdict was, essentially, a travesty of justice” said Peter Toren, a patent litigation expert and partner at Weisbrod, Mattheis & Copley in Washington. “There does not appear to be any serious question that the jury’s verdict was wrong in this case. Further, I can’t imagine that Judge Koh would take it upon herself to reverse the verdict in such a high profile case.”

Sunday 26 August 2012

Facebook for iOS updated and optimized for speed

Facebook has answered the pleas of millions of mobile users with the release of a new application for iOS. The social network has finally addressed the most glaring issue of the company’s iPhone and iPad applications: speed.

Facebook 5.0 for IOS dropped on the App Store today, and the new version amounts to a complete do-over. The application looks essentially the same, but it’s now twice as fast in three areas: launching the app, scrolling through the News Feed, and opening photos in feed.
“As you scroll down your news feed, all your friends’ stories appear faster than ever. A banner lets you know when new stories come in, and you can tap once to immediately see the latest updates,” iOS product manager Mick Johnson said in a blog post on the update.
The photo opening experience has been transformed from painfully slow to nearly instantaneous. Users can now tap a photo to open it right away and pull down to close the photo just as quickly. Notifications should now also load just as swiftly.
Perhaps now the Facebook experience on iOS devices won’t be an exercise in  patience. Should that prove to be the case, the social network will have a far better opportunity to monetize its mobile service, as members would be more likely to engage with Sponsored Stories and application ads.

Saturday 25 August 2012

Samsung copied iPhone, iPad: ruling

Apple awarded over $1 billion in damages in speedy verdict

Apple Inc. scored a sweeping legal victory over Samsung on Friday as a U.S. jury found the Korean company had copied critical features of the hugely popular iPhone and iPad and awarded the U.S. company $1.051 billion in damages.

The verdict - which came much sooner than expected - could lead to an outright ban on sales of key Samsung products and will likely solidify Apple's dominance of the exploding mobile computing market.

A number of companies that sell smartphones based on Google's Android operating system may now face further legal challenges from Apple, a company that is already among the largest and most profitable in business history.


Shares in Apple, which just this week became the biggest company by market value in history, climbed almost 2 per cent to a record high of $675 in after-hours trade.

Brian Love, a Santa Clara law school professor, described it as a crushing victory for Apple: "This is the best-case scenario Apple could have hoped for."

The jury deliberated for less than three days before delivering the verdict on seven Apple patent claims and five Samsung patent claims - suggesting that the nine-person panel had little difficulty in concluding that Samsung had copied the iPhone and the iPad.

Billions of dollars in future sales hang in the balance.

Apple's charges that Sam-sung copied its designs and features are widely viewed as an attack on Google Inc. and its Android software, which drives Samsung's devices and has become the most-used mobile software.

Apple and Samsung, two companies that sell more than half the world's smartphones and tablets, have locked legal horns in several countries this year.

Earlier on Friday, a South Korean court found that both companies shared blame, ordering Samsung to stop selling 10 products including its Galaxy S II phone and banning Apple from selling four different products, including its iPhone 4.

But the trial on Apple's home turf - the world's largest and most influential technology market - is considered the most important.

The fight began last year when Apple sued Samsung in multiple countries, accusing the South Korean company of slavishly copying the iPhone and iPad. Samsung counter-sued.

Apple had sought more than $2.5 billion in damages from Samsung, which has disputed that figure.

The companies are rivals, but also have a $5 billion-plus supply relationship. Apple is Samsung's biggest customer for microprocessors and other parts central to Apple's devices.

The U.S. jury spent most of August in a packed federal courtroom in San Jose - just miles from Apple's headquarters in Cupertino - listening to testimony, examining evidence and watching lawyers from both sides joust about seven Apple patents, five Samsung patents, and damage claims.

Jurors received 100 pages of legal instructions from U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh on Tues-day before hearing the closing arguments from lawyers.

Lawyers from both tech giants used their 25 hours each of trial time to present internal emails, draw testimony from designers and experts, and put on product demonstrations and mock-ups to convince the jury.
 (c) The Vancouver Sun

Friday 24 August 2012

Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Review: What the Future of Laptops Should Be

The Lenovo X1 Carbon does the impossible. It makes a business laptop—a business anything—cool. Cool because it looks good, sure, but also because it works the way it's supposed to. And somehow, that's become one of the bigger compliments in tech.

What Is It

A ultrabook wearing a suit of armor, but it still manages to look better than nearly every other competitor.

Who Is It For

Ostensibly for business users, but really, the X1 Carbon is for anyone.

Why It Matters

It might not feel like it, but this is an important computer. It typically makes business computers—machines that are butt ugly and impractical for regular people, even though things like comfortable, reliable, sturdy and secure are things that everyone wants.

Design

The X1 Carbon is immensely beautiful laptop and incredibly goddamn ugly at the same time. The slim, wedge-shaped, carbon-coated body is trim in all the right ways. But it also has the same sharply squared-off lid and gross Thinkpad impressions familiar from other IBM or Lenovo products.

Using It

Basically every Windows laptop review today mentions how non-Apple keyboards and trackpads suck. Not this one. Everything's great. The keyboard is as good as you're going to find on a laptop—nice key travel distance, resistance, and spacing. Using the trackpad, was the first time I've ever done multitouch gestures on Windows and liked it. Three fingers to page back on the first try. Smooth gesture scrolling and zooming. None of that happens on most Windows laptops.

Like

There is a ton of stuff across the business aisle that, for whatever reason, we haven't seen in mainstream ultrabooks—really cool things like spill-proof keyboards, 3G connections, and biometric fingerprint security. And the X1's beautiful, beating-resistant body is so, so, so wonderful. Ditto the trackpad and keyboard.
The matte 1600 x 900 display is a strength, too. Not amazing—certainly nowhere near the 1080p display on the Asus Zenbook Prime—but it's sharp, and represents colors well. It does shade a little blue, and its anti-glare surface keeps it from having great contrast.

No Like

The software, strangely. For as mighty as the firmware on the trackpad and keyboard are, the business-facing software that Lenovo loads onto the X1 is more oppressive than you'll find from other OEMs—even repeat offenders like Asus and Sony. Things like accessing security settings for the fingerprint reader, or simple account or network settings, are just muddied up in sluggish proprietary software.
Then there's the nondescript design, and the marriage of necessity to business features like the TrackPoint (the red nub in the middle of the keyboard). The nub especially feels extraneous for most users now that the trackpad actually works the way it should, but business being business, alienating a mass of outmoded users isn't going to fly.

Test Notes

  • The backlit keyboard is one of the nicer ones out there. The light never feels too bright, and the Fn+Spacebar for two levels is actually more convenient than the usual two buttons.
  • Responsiveness was never an issue, and the only time the X1 overheated was while gaming. But when it gets hot, it really burns. Just idling for 20 minutes in Diablo 3, the X1 got hotter than any ultrabook we've seen—though still not quite as bad as a MacBook.
  • Transfer speeds were really fast, even compared to other ultrabooks. Average of 5 minutes 5 seconds for 25GB in 10 files. Zoom.
  • The only complaint on the keyboard and trackpad is that the cursor will occasionally drop downward for no reason. It's pretty rare, though, and the positives far outweigh it.
  • The X1 Carbon was also our Windows 8 RTM test machine, and it performed admirably. The Windows 7 drivers, while obviously not optimized, stood up to the Windows 8 gestures.
  • The biometric fingerprint scanner seems less finicky than the original X1's—fewer non-reads unlocking it, and it didn't return any false positives for other people's hands.

Should You Buy This

Yes. This is a wonderful laptop, and not just for the business users it's supposedly made for. This is a laptop anyone can use, and maybe love. It takes all of the efficiencies and protections of business class machines and makes them, well, not insanely ugly. Rather pretty, actually. Those things always made this class easy to use—and, now, easy on the eyes.

Lenovo Carbon X1 Specs

• Processor: Intel Core i5 Ivy Bridge
• Display/Resolution: 14-inch HD+ Anti-Glare (1600 x 900) Wide View (300NITS)
• Video Graphics: Intel® HD 4000 Graphics
• Memory: 4GB
• Storage: 128 GB SSD
• Connectivity: 2 USB (1 always on USB 2.0 and 1 USB 3.0); Mini-Display port; 4-in-1 SD Media Card Reader
• Camera: 720p HD Camera with face tracking capability
• Weight: 2.998 Ibs (1.36 kg)
• Dimensions: 13.03 x 8.9 x 0.74 in (331mm x 226mm x 18.85mm)
• Extreme Use Battery Test: 3 hours, 28 minutes
• Price: $1250

Apple in China: not as cool as before

These are not happy days for Apple in China. The iconic American brand, outpaced by Samsung in its appeal among Chinese consumers since last year, is now also losing out to other smartphone competitors.

According to IDC, Apple’s share of the Chinese smartphone market by shipments fell by nearly half to 10 per cent in the second quarter from three months earlier. The company came fourth in a ranking topped by Samsung and Lenovo, the Chinese company that is also the world’s second-largest PC vendor.
IHS isuppli, another research firm, even sees Apple as an “also-ran” in China, trailing, with a market share of just 7.5 per cent, behind Coolpad, Huawei, Nokia and ZTE, as well as Samsung and Lenovo.
Coolpad, a former maker of feature phones that sells mainly in its Chinese home market, is now focused on smartphones as well. Huawei and ZTE, China’s two largest vendors of telecom equipment, are aggressively pushing into the smartphone market as growth in their traditional market for telecom network gear is slowing.
Lenovo leapt from seventh rank to number two with 11 per cent market share in just three months, according to IDC. “Both Lenovo and Coolpad have been rising pretty fast,” says Kevin Wang, director of China electronics research at IHS.
The difference in the two rankings is caused by different ways of counting shipments, particularly the extent to which subsidized shipments to carriers are counted.
But no matter whether it is fourth or seventh, Apple is clearly no longer Chinese consumers’ first choice – a problem that had already been flagged when the company disappointed investors with its results for the June quarter last month.
That is particularly hard for the US company is that the Chinese smartphone market is more important than ever. The IDC figures show that smartphone shipments overtook those of feature phones for the first time in the June quarter, accounting for 51 per cent of total handset shipments of 87m units in the world’s most populous country and largest mobile market by subscribers.
IHS says Full-year shipments are set to rise 141 per cent.
One reason Apple is falling behind is Chinese telecoms operators’ reluctance to subsidise the iPhone enough to make it competitive. While this affects all makers, Apple is especially exposed because its smartphone is the most expensive.
Another headache has been Apple’s reluctance to customize the device for TD-SCDMA, the Chinese homegrown 3G standard used by China Mobile, and thus making itself unattractive to subscribers of the world’s largest mobile operator.
That problem could go away when the iPhone 5 is launched later this year. The device is expected to come with a Qualcomm chip that is TD-compatible.
But there are other disadvantages. With a screen expected to measure 4 inches, the iPhone 5 is no longer cutting edge. “That would still be smaller than many of its Chinese competitors, which have 4.3-inch or 4.7-inch screens,” says Wang.

Sunday 19 August 2012

iPhone 5: 5 reasons why it'll be a disappointment


Looking forward to the iPhone 5? You and everyone else, it seems. Alas, here's five reasons it’s not the hero handset you’re hoping for.
1 Design looks to be largely unchanged
Leaked snaps indicate that although the next iPhone is going to be taller and thinner, its look and feel will remain largely unchanged from the iPhone 4S. Which you'll not need reminding itself retained the design of the iPhone 4, a phone that’s now over two years old. That's aeons in smartphone years.
iphone 5 leak ifix
In that time, Android phones have introduced whopping screens that blur the line between tablets and smartphones and have debuted innovative pebble-shaped form factors. But with those kind of sea changes abroad on phones running Google's OS, Apple's design department seems to have stood still.
If the snaps we’ve seen so far tell the whole truth and there really is no tangible sense of progression from design doyen Jonathan Ive this time around, you’ll be able to see the sense of disappointment from space.
2 Apple could once again fail to manage expectations
The iPhone 4S left many tech fans crestfallen partly because Apple allowed the hype whirlwind around the phone to blow up to Katrina proportions. That was in contrast to the iPad 2.
When a slew of rumours appeared suggesting the second-gen tablet would have a high density retina screen, Apple got in touch with select tech sites and leaked info to put them right about it. The result? Punters adjusted their expectations accordingly were grateful for what they got, not what they didn't.
apple wwdc 2012
We've not heard of anything similar happening with the iPhone 5, with Apple seemingly happy once again to let iPhone 5-related rumours get giddier and more fantastical by the day.
That could mean that it really is going to be all we've been led to believe and that the quad-core processor, 4G support and the kitchen sink are present and correct. Or it could mean that Apple hasn't learned its lesson and is allowing the rumour mill to stir up expectations that the phone won't fulfil.
If it's the latter, it's the kind of PR mistake that might not hurt sales in the short term but could do real damage to the company's reputation in the long run.
3 'Steve Jobs' last device' chatter is raising stakes
Within weeks of the death of Steve Jobs and with his Princess Diana-style beatification and canonisation as one of modern life's few geniuses already underway, leaks emerged from Cupertino claiming that the iPhone 5 is the last iDevice on which the Apple founder was closely involved in its development.
Steve Jobs
Whether Jobs merits his exalted position is a moot point. But one thing is for sure. And that's that the billing the handset is being given means it has already acquired a kind of legendary status. That means it'll have to change the game if it's not to be seen as anything other than an anti-climax.
4 Four-inch screen feels superannuated
At the Galaxy S3 launch a few months back, the uSwitch Tech team of scribes laid out their handsets next to Sammy’s new wonder kit in the interests of comparison.
iphone 5 proto
Stacking up against the S3 that day was an HTC Sensation, a Galaxy S2 and an iPhone 4S. And it won’t surprise you that it was the iPhone 4S, with its comparatively pokey 3.5-inch screen and over-familiar design, that felt and looked the most old-fashioned.
The apparent decision to boost screen real estate to four inches with the iPhone 4S is welcome. But we’d still have liked to see even more space given over to the display. And we think the combined sales of 15m units of the Galaxy S3 and Note, which rock 4.8 and 5.3-inch panels respectively, suggest the public would like more screen to play with too.
5 Points docked for incompatibility
Apple is about to ditch the 30-pin connector that’s been a fixture of the iPhone from year one in favour a new 19-pin port. Or at least that’s the rumour.
If so, it’s a seismic change. And given that the port has been present in every iPhone iteration so far, it’s arguably the most radical change the sixth-generation phone will bring with it.
iPhone 5 rumoured mini port
Alas, it’s also perhaps the least welcome. Not least because it’s about to render scores of existing accessories obsolete in a snap, with what we’re guessing will be predictably angry consequences.
Sure, Apple will probably manufacture an adaptor. But we’re equally sure that it won't come in the iPhone 5 box. And we’re even more sure it’ll sell at the kind of premium price mark-up for which Apple is famed.

Apple heads into choppy waters as new iPhone awaited

Apple Inc faces an unusual phenomenon when reporting earnings this time around: low expectations.
Few are expecting the world's most valuable technology company -- which surpasses Wall Street expectations with near regularity -- to deliver a bumper quarter once more on Tuesday.
The main reason: consumers holding out for the new iPhone.
Apple may still surprise market watchers, but many Wall Street analysts and investors remember how chatter over the launch of a new iPhone last year caused Apple to miss quarterly expectations in the fall, for the first time in years.
The iPhone 5 is only expected to hit store shelves around October -- just in time for the holidays -- with a thinner, larger screen and fine-tuned search features. Couple that pre-launch lull with slowdowns in Europe and China, Apple's biggest markets outside of North America, and sentiment on the Wall Street darling is more muted than many can remember in a while.
"No longer is Apple the company that beats every time," said Tim Lesko, portfolio manager at Granite Investment Advisors, which owns Apple stock. "I expect Apple to beat Apple's guidance, but I don't know whether they will beat Wall Street's guidance."
Tony Sacconaghi, analyst with Bernstein Research, sees a reasonable chance Apple will miss expectations on revenue, citing "macroeconomic weakness in China and Europe, a product cycle lull in the iPhone, a later than expected introduction of the new iPad into China, and the late quarter introduction of new Mac notebooks."
Any hiccup in demand for the best-selling smartphone can have a big impact on both revenue and profits as the five-year old device accounts for nearly 50 percent for Apple's revenues. And it comes at a time Samsung <005930.KS> and other manufacturers that use rival Google Inc's Android software are chipping away at its market share.
Apple is expected to report fiscal third-quarter earnings of $10.35 a share on revenue of $37.2 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Top Wall Street analysts are betting the numbers will undershoot that. Apple may miss the average sales forecast by about 0.2 percent, according to Thomson Reuters Starmine's SmartEstimates, which places greater emphasis on timely forecasts by top-rated analysts.
iPad's launch in China
But some analysts also think the Street is underestimating the impact of a late iPad launch in China, a focal point of intense expansion for the company and a huge driver of growth.
Apple began selling the tablet there on Friday, but many had expected it to ship last quarter.
Sales in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan jumped threefold to $7.9 billion in the second quarter, accounting for about 20 percent of Apple's $39.2 billion in total revenue.
The company typically introduces a new iPhone every year, but has yet to reveal any details on the next model.
However, people familiar with the situation have told Reuters the new iPhone will have a bigger display and that Apple has begun to place orders for the new displays from suppliers in South Korea and Japan.
Meanwhile, Apple's iPhone 4S is just three quarters old, which is relatively new by any standard. But many fans of the phone now see it as a cyclical product with somewhat predictable launch timeframes, preferring to wait a few months to buy the new model, analysts said.
Wall Street estimates Apple sold about 29 million iPhones, down from 35.1 million sold in the March quarter. Sales of the new iPad, expected to be 14 million to 15 million, is likely to offset part of the anticipated sequential drop in iPhones sales.
Apart from concerns about iPhone purchases, Wall Street is worried about the rising prominence of Google and Amazon.com in the mobile market, particularly with the launch of Google's smaller and cheaper Nexus 7 tablet, which is gaining popularity.
Still, no one is bearish in the longer term on the world's largest technology company by market value and most Apple watchers believe the company will make up any lost iPhone volume during the holiday season.
"Big picture, it doesn't matter," said Sterne Agee analyst Shaw Wu. "They are still the share gainer in the larger scheme of things. This is clearly a timing issue."
Big holiday season eyed
Wall Street expects that the outlook for this year's holiday season will be enormous for Apple as it may include the launch of a new iPhone as well as a potential new "mini iPad."
Apple has been working on a smaller tablet, a person familiar with the matter told Reuters.
It is unclear when Apple will launch such a tablet, but some clues are emerging on the timing of the new iPhone.
When Verizon -- one of the wireless carriers that work with Apple -- was asked on Thursday why customers have been holding back on handset upgrades, CFO Fran Shammo said: "There is always that rumor mill out there with a new phone coming out in the fourth quarter and so people may be waiting."
Investors will pick apart executives' comments for clues to new product introductions. While Apple has a policy of never giving advance details or timings on new products, Chief Financial Officer Peter Oppenheimer has often hinted of "product transition" in earnings conference calls preceding a launch.
Wall Street estimates Apple sold about 4 million Macintosh computers as the PC market saw growth sputter in the quarter.
The lackluster expectations do not appear to have affected Apple's stock, which is up nearly 50 percent so far in 2012. The stock has been choppy since a high of $644 in April. It closed Friday at $604.30 on the Nasdaq.
"Of all the quarters, this is the one that seems to have widest range of opinion," said Granite's Lesko.

Saturday 18 August 2012

Samsung takes on iPad with Galaxy note tablet

Samsung on Wednesday unveiled a Galaxy Note tablet designed to make a more personal connection with users and aiming to knock Apple’s iPad off its market throne.

A key feature of the Galaxy Note 10.1 was a sophisticated “S Pen” that can be used as if it were a pen on paper or a computer mouse.

“The mission of this device is personalization -- using pen input to create more human communication,” Galaxy Tab consumer business division director Travis Merrill told AFP while providing an early look at the new tablet.

“Receiving a handwritten note from someone you know is so much more emotional and powerful than just receiving an email,” he said.
Samsung built technology from Japan-based Wacom into the tablet screen to create a layer that can sense “S Pens” so precisely it can tell how hard they are being pressed or even if they are hovering, slightly out of touch.

“If you don’t want to use the S Pen you don’t have to but it is really the heart and soul of the device,” Samsung Telecommunications America product strategy director Shoneel Kolhatkar said.

Note 10.1 tablets are powered by Google’s latest generation Android software and feature powerful quad-core processors as well as two gigabytes of RAM for quick handling of videos, games and other graphics rich content.

The tablets are Wi-Fi enabled to connect with the Internet at hotspots and will be available in the United States on Wednesday at prices of $500 for a 16-gigabyte model and $550 for a 32-gigabyte model, according to Samsung.

The launch of the Note 10.1 will be accompanied by a massive promotional campaign, according to Merrill.

“We are betting big on this; not just on the tablet but on the Note brand,” Merrill said, indicating that Samsung felt that it struck a chord with its Note smartphone that provides an Internet Age note or drawing pad experiences with a stylus that serves as a virtual pen or brush.

Samsung has sold about eight million Note smartphones worldwide in the seven months since its release and believes people want to interact with touch screens more accurately and effectively than fingers allow, said Kolhatkar.

“We felt it was a real pain point in terms of input mechanism. With a fat finger you don't always know if you are clicking the link properly -- the S Pen adds a lot more accuracy and control.”

Software in the tablet lets users hand write notes or scrawl comments on images or documents and then store them or post them to social networks or send them in email messages.

“People today still use Post-it notes and notebooks; you still have people drawing maps or making back-of-envelope calculations,” Kolhatkar said. “We feel the tablet can replace all of that.”

A service in the tablet recommends applications designed to run well on the hardware or which are customized to take advantage of S Pen capabilities.

“With the S Pen, using pressure, I can get as fine or as thick a line as possible,” Kolhatkar demonstrated. “It is almost like pencil on paper. We really believe this is a game changer.”

The tablet also knows to ignore pressure from the palm of someone using an S Pen, freeing users to write or draw naturally.

Note 10.1 software can convert handwriting to text or crudely drawn objects to crisp geometric figures, and even correct written scientific or mathematical formulas, according to the demonstration.

“You can imagine how students will use this to cheat,” Kolhatkar joked of the unintended consequence of a Formula Correct feature. “I am not encouraging that.”

Samsung worked with Adobe to make free Photoshop software that allows people to use S pens to edit images on the Note 10.1 with accuracy and ease.

Movies, games and other entertainment content for devices are available at a Samsung media hub, along with a growing “ecosystem” of applications made by third-party developers.

Samsung also built “personal computing” power into Note 10.1 by letting users engage in several tasks at the same time, perhaps watching a video while working on a presentation and roaming the Internet.

“This is the first of its kind when it comes to multi-tasking,” Merrill said. “This is really about being able to do multiple things at once.”

Why is Apple scared to compete with Samsung?

Most people like some products, but Apple fans love their products. And, who can blame them? I own an Apple TV, five Macs, an iPad, and two iPod Touches because they're darn good devices—and I'm a Linux fan. So why is Apple so frightened of Samsung and the other Android smartphone and tablet vendors that it's trying to sue them into the ground instead of competing with them?

Apple isn't just suing Samsung in the US. Apple has sued Samsung around the world. In Australia, Germany, and the United Kingdom and more than two-dozen other countries, Apple has made the same lousy patent design claims: Samsung has stolen the look and feel of its iPhone and iPad.
These claims are bogus. There's nothing unique about Apple's iPad or iPhone designs. That's not just my opinion. A UK judge told Apple it must tell the world on both its UK . website and in British newspapers that Samsung had not in fact infringed on the iPad's design. See for yourself just how unique Apple's tablet design is:

Apple's iPad Design Patent: Been There, Done That (Images)

You may have noticed that all smartphones and tablets tend to look like each other. There's a reason for that. They all do the same things, they're all meant to fit in a human hand, and the phones are meant to place the receiver at your ear and the transmitter at your mouth. None of Apple's design patents should have been granted in the first place.

They were through and Apple is determined to keep these lawsuits running to the bitter end. Back in 1994, Steve Jobs said, “Good artists copy great artists steal". He should know. Jobs took Xerox PARC's Windows, Icons, Menu and Pointer (WIMP) ideas and used them to create the Mac interface.

Near the end of his life though, Jobs changed his tune. "I will spend my last dying breath if I need to, and I will spend every penny of Apple's $40 billion in the bank, to right this wrong...I'm going to destroy Android, because it's a stolen product. I'm willing to go thermonuclear war on this,” said Jobs.

This is crazy, but while it's not going to cost Apple $40-billion dollars to keep these lawsuits going, I do have to wonder why, now that Tim Cook has stepped into Jobs' shoes, Apple is continuing these lawsuits.
Apple's goal, as Pamela Jones of Groklaw, has looked at Apple's legal claims and she's found an explanation. Apple wants nothing less than “all of Samsung's profits from any product found to look too much like Apple's. 100%, without even subtracting for all the other features and technology that Samsung worked hard to invent, and paid R & D to think up, and put together. On top of that, Apple goes on to say, it wants damages for lost profits, in this case $500 million just for that, with interest and costs. And then it wants 'similar remedies'  for trade dress infringement and dilution as for patent infringement. Ka-ching.”

I doubt very much Apple will get that, but if that's the goal, I think what Apple really wants is to ban all sales of Samsung, and other Android smartphone and tablets from the market. In court after court, Apple demands that sales of the offending products be stopped.

Why? I think it's because Apple, without a well Jobs, has gotten frightened of competition. Apple can afford to make nice with Microsoft. The boys from Redmond with their smartphones and tablets have never been competitive in either market. Android is another matter.

Sure Apple still owns the tablet market, but Android tablets like Google's Nexus 7 and Samsung's Galaxy Note 10.1 are starting to give it real competition. In phones though, Android has 68% of the smartphone market. Apple? They're a distant second with a mere  16% of the market.

In short, what I think is behind Apple's lawsuit mania is that the company saw that it was in danger of losing its marketing mojo. Without Jobs, Apple knows it's coasting rather than moving forward. Of course, there's still lots of Apple product hype. Every day sees another iPhone 5 rumor.  But, how long can Apple  keep the excitment going without  without Jobs pulling rabbits out of the product hat? As ZDNet UK writer Ben Woods put it, “Apple is in danger of becoming boring."

So, if you want to keeep making more money than many countries, but you have reason to believe that you can't keep the product money magic going for much longer, what do you do? Why, you do what many a corporate bully has done before. You try to keep your rivals out of the market by hook, by crook, or by lawsuit. It's what frightened business bullies have always done and Apple is no different.

Nvidia launches GeForce GTX 660 Ti desktop graphics card for $299

While all the attention is paid to the extreme high end when it comes to graphics cards -- and which is the fastest card ever -- not as many gamers are willing to pay $500 or more for those boards. So it may not be as exciting when the new high-end technologies trickle down to the mid range -- that is, unless you're in the market for one of those cards.
A case in point is the new Nvidia GeForce GTX 660 Ti, which is built using the same GK104 GPU (a.k.a Kepler) that powers the blazing -- and pricey -- GeForce GTX 680, but will cost around $299 instead of $499. Obviously, you won't get the same performance, but if you're upgrading from an older card, the benefits will be readily apparent. You will get 1,344 CUDA cores, 2GB of video memory, a 192-bit memory bus, and a base clock speed of 915MHz. Those specs are for any reference card, though customized and overclocked cards from Nvidia's manufacturing partners are available.
So how does the GTX 660 Ti's performance compare to the AMD Radeon HD 7870 and Radeon HD 7950, two competing cards that bookend the new Nvidia board in pricing? As is more the case these days, results are mixed from test to test and reviewer to reviewer (see Anandtech, HotHardware, and Tom's Hardware) -- there's no slam-dunk pick among these mid-range cards. AMD has made things even trickier by announcing that it would be providing a BIOS update to the Radeon HD 7950 that will provide its Boost software overclocking tool, no doubt trying to cushion the blow from the GTX 660 Ti launch.
Gaming PC makers have been quick to announce support for the new Nvidia card, with everyone from CyberPower to Maingear to Velocity Micro now including the GTX 660 Ti as an option for their gaming desktops. Are you in the market for the new card, or would you prefer one of AMD's mid-range offerings?

Thursday 16 August 2012

Cheap and cheerful, Chinese phones outsmart Apple

SHANGHAI: In China’s booming smartphone  market, which is set this year to overtake the United States as  the world’s largest, a host of little-known local firms are  primed with cheap phones to squeeze market share from US giant Apple Inc’s iPhone.      
In the latest local challenge to the iPhone, Xiaomi  Technology on Thursday launches the successor to its popular  MiOne smartphone, which is expected to have top-end  specifications exceeding those of the iPhone 4S – at around half  the price.
While iPhone sales will increase in China, Apple’s market  share may stagnate or even dip as the market’s changing  demographics mean the iPhone flourishes in just a handful of  wealthy Chinese cities, analysts said.
“The sweet spot of affordability in China is 800-1,500 yuan  ($130-$240),” said Michael Clendenin, managing director of  Shanghai-based consultancy RedTech Advisors. “The ‘Lao Bai  Xing’, or man in the street, is going to go for these mid-tier  phones.”
Industry researcher IDC estimates that in China last year,  smartphones costing less than $200 made up 40 percent of  shipments, while devices costing $700 and more accounted for 11  percent of the market.
Apple releases a single iPhone model a year at a price -  around $800 – equivalent to about two months pay for an urban Chinese, who make up half of China’s 1.3 billion population.  Analysts say the real growth in China is in cheaper smartphones  where a wide variety of models at different prices appeal to  first-time buyers.
“Apple isn’t going to rule China, simply because of the limited models they have and the price points they target,” said  TZ Wong, an analyst with IDC. “Based on these two factors, we do  not think Apple will be the No. 1 smartphone player in China.”
Apple ranked second in January-March smartphone shipments in  China, with 17.3 percent market share, trailing Samsung  Electronics’ 19.2 percent, according to research  firm, Gartner.
Smartphones from Xiaomi – founded only two years ago but  already worth more than Blackberry maker Research in Motion  , according to private market valuations – have proved  so popular they sell out in minutes after going on sale online.  The company, founded by CEO Lei Jun, said last month its  first-half revenue was close to $1 billion as it sold more than 3 million phones.
Mirroring Apple’s annual worldwide developers conference  (WWDC), where devotees would pay to listen to Steve Jobs  showcasing new products, the informally-clad Lei will charge  MiOne fans 199 yuan ($31.30) to attend the Beijing launch, with  the proceeds going to charity.
IOS to slip to 3rd
Apple’s market share by volume has been on a downtrend, and  the share of the market commanded by its iOS mobile operating  system is expected to slip to third place by 2016 from second  earlier this year, according to Gartner analyst Sandy Shen -  below Google Inc’s Android and Microsoft Corp’s Windows.
Apple’s iPhone sales in China, its second-largest market,  stumbled in April-June on inventory adjustments with the launch  of the iPhone 4S. That extra inventory meant resellers didn’t  need to buy as many iPhones during the quarter, and the expected  launch later this year of the iPhone 5, with enhanced Chinese  language capabilities, also likely held back orders.
“Apple’s market share is pretty stable. It will be flat over  the next five years. Although volume-wise it’s increasing,  that’s because the total market is growing,” Shen said.
Research firms IDC and Gartner predict China’s smartphone  shipments could hit 140 million this year, topping those in the  United States.
High-spec, low cost
Growth is driven largely by smartphones made by ZTE Corp, Lenovo Group and smaller  private firms such as Xiaomi, Gionee and Meizu Technology.
Meizu phones, which sell in China and Hong Kong for 1,500  yuan, are feted by Western technology blogs for offering  high-end smartphones at bargain basement prices.
Offering even cheaper models, Alibaba Group,  Shanda Interactive and Baidu Inc have all this year  launched smartphones for under 1,000 yuan. Baidu’s phone, made  with partners, retails at 899 yuan ($140), while Alibaba’s  waterproof smartphone, made with Haier Electronics Group  , costs 999 yuan.
“For those with an iPhone or Samsung … it’s just a  replacement cycle. But for many people who haven’t got their  first smartphone, those are the people who will get cheap  smartphones,” Shen said.  ($1 = 6.3586 Chinese yuan)

Wednesday 15 August 2012

Why Carriers Don't Care About Customer Service

Verizon has long enjoyed the best customer service ratings among U.S carriers, but its success has less to do with support than you may think.
Several research companies judge and rank the major carriers' customer service efforts each year, but while Verizon still holds the crown, its competitors are catching up, and the rankings of the rest of the field do not measure up with their respective financial success.
For example, J.D. Power still ranks Verizon on top when it comes to customer service, but the American Customer Satisfaction Index, or ACSI, paints a different picture. ACSI puts Sprint, the third-place carrier in the U.S, at top when it comes to customer satisfaction. Meanwhile AT&T, the country's second-place carrier, sits in dead last with a score of 69 out of 100.
The numbers suggest that having the best customer service is not necessarily indicative of subscriber gains and losses. Providing good help certainly counts for something, but in the wireless industry, customers weigh other priorities before they consider how well a company's online chat assistance works, or how nice a representative was to them on the phone.
The first question that comes to mind is "how good is the coverage in my area?" If a carrier's coverage is lacking, then chances are they won't choose it, even if the employees offer free milk and cookies at the local store. So Verizon remains the top carrier, in large part due to its investment in LTE and the widest footprint in the country. And its dominance will remain in place for the near future, especially with its extensive 4G build-out.
Verizon's dominance also gives it a fair amount of leverage among consumers, even as it revamps its pricing and plans. The larger and more powerful a carrier becomes, the greater its ability to make drastic changes that cause its customer base major upheaval, but keep customer satisfaction ratings intact. The company, the critical darling of customer service for years, made two of the most dramatic changes in the history of the wireless industry in the past 18 months.
Verizon was the first to put an end to unlimited data and recently revamped its monthly plans to focus on sharing data, with unlimited calling automatically included. Both moves garnered criticism from analysts, the press and customers, yet the carrier continues to rank number-one in customer surveys and gain subscribers.
Why? The answer is simple. Because Verizon offers the best wireless service in more areas of the country than any other carrier, and in this nation's narrowing field of wireless competition, that's all that really matters.
Sprint is another perennial leader in customer service surveys, and it still offers unlimited data. However, its financial situation is the exact opposite of Verizon's. The carrier is in debt and struggling to hold on to subscribers. Great customer service and unlimited data are nice attributes, but it isn't enough for the carrier to compete with superpowers like Verizon and AT&T because what it really comes down to is the network, and Sprint's just isn't as good as the other guys.
Even T-Mobile, which competes on lower price, can't seem to win with customers. However, it's not necessarily because it doesn't provide half-way decent customer service. Instead, its wireless coverage is poor, lacking a true 4G network and a poor selection of smartphones.
The reality is Verizon ranks number-one on customer service, but there's no real winner in the public eye. People love to complain about their carrier -- it's become something of a national pastime. But the truth remains that carriers are a necessary evil and whichever company offers the best coverage in your area is the one you're going to go with.
So the next time you get that wireless bill in the mail and you uncover those hidden fees, or you receive a notification that you'll have to change your plan to fit the carrier's new offerings and you grab the phone to call and threaten to cancel, just stop.
Stop, and realize that canceling will cost you hundreds. Stop and pull up a coverage map and see that this carrier is truly what's best for you, whether you like it or not. And stop and understand that customer service doesn't mean a thing.

Battlefield 3 Premium Edition Out In September

Players who have been looking at getting into the Battlefield 3 videogame may be pleased to know that a Battlefield 3 bundle has been launched by EA called the Battlefield 3 Premium Edition. The package itself is cheaper than buying the original version of the game and the new Premium service separately.
Included in this package are the Original and Full Battlefield 3 game, the Battlefield Premium service and the Battlefield 3 Mutliplayer Head-Start Kit. What may irk some players about this is that the Multiplayer kit essentially gives new players a bunch of weapons and items that other players would have had to grind for hours to obtain.
Battlefield 3 Premium Edition will be priced at $69.99ASD and $79.99NZD. It will be released on the 13th of September for Australia and 14th of September for New Zealand for the Xbox 360, Playstation 3 and PC platforms.

Tuesday 14 August 2012

Apple iPhone 5 pre-orders to begin on Sept 12?

The US web giant Apple will start taking US pre-orders for its smartphone the day it will launch new iPhone on September 12, said a report.

According to reports, a blog post on iMore, which earlier wrote about the launch date said that shipments of the device would begin just 9 days later, on September 21.

The post on iMore stated that buyers in the international market will be able to book the device in the first week of the following month, most probably from October 5.

Last year, the tech giant unveiled the iPhone 4S on October 4 and started taking bookings just three days later.

Apple's next iPhone is expected to feature a thinner and larger screen, smaller dock connector, and repositioned headphone jack and FaceTime camera.

Meanwhile, an Apple executive recently said that Apple Inc has licensed its design patents to Microsoft Corp but with an "anti-cloning agreement" to prevent copying of its iPhone and iPad.

The testimony from Apple patent licensing director Boris Teksler reportedly came in one of the most closely watched technology trials in years. Apple is accusing Samsung Electronics Co Ltd. of copying its iPhone and iPad, while the Korean company says Apple infringes several of its wireless technology patents.

Apple had reportedly reached out to Samsung in 2010, hoping to strike an agreement with its rival on patent licensing before their dispute hit the courts.

The case in US District Court, Northern District of California, is Apple Inc v. Samsung Electronics Co Ltd et al, No. 11-1846.

Monday 13 August 2012

Yellow Jacket Case Brings A Stun-Gun Attachment To The iPhone

Think your iPhone provides great security features? Sure, the protection from viruses and other threats is there, but what about personal protection from physical harm? The Yellow Jacket iPhone case takes your iPhone security to a new level by giving you a handy stun gun attachment. The Yellow Jacket was created by former-Military Police officer Seth Froom after an armed robber broke into his home and took many electronic devices, including his cell phone.
With this unique $125 case for iPhone 4 and 4S you have an extra layer of protection against very real violent threats. The case includes a 650k volt stun gun and has its own external battery that can even extend the iPhone’s overall life by twenty hours. According to its creator, the Yellow Jacket has more than enough power to take down a fully grown adult male but also has a safety switch and rotating electrode cap to prevent you from accidentally shocking yourself while making calls or using your favorite apps.
This isn’t the first product like this, with products like SmartGuard which offer pepper spray options, but it is the first stun-gun attachment made for your iPhone and is nothing short of a genius idea. The Yellow Jacket is still currently in development but is raising funds through Indiegogo. At the moment they’ve raised $15,000 out of their $100,000 goal with sixteen days left, so if you like the idea of the Yellow Jacket, it’s not a bad idea to head to their fund-raising page and give your support.