Tuesday, 24 September 2013

Samsung Galaxy Note 3 with flexible display reportedly in the works.

Samsung Galaxy Note 3 with flexible display reportedly in the works

Samsung's Galaxy Note 3 could get a makeover soon with a new flexible display replacing the conventional display, if a rumour is to be believed.
report in Korean media suggests that the South Korean giant is planning to launch the Galaxy Note 3 in a new avatar that's sporting a flexible OLED (organic light-emitting diode) display. The site also suggests that the alleged Galaxy Note 3 with flexible display will not be produced in huge numbers and will be available as a limited edition device.
The site further notes that the Samsung Galaxy Note 3 with OLED display might be unveiled ahead of Samsung Electronics Show to be held in Las Vegas at CES 2014.
The news comes amidst LG and Samsung announcing end of dispute over next-generation display technology patents earlier on Tuesday. Both South Korean giants, Samsung and LG, have agreed to end a year-long battle over display technology patents that spawned a series of lawsuits. LG Display and Samsung Display respectively are the world's number one and two display panel manufacturers, and had locked horns over a number of patents for next-generation display technologies for TVs and other devices.
Meanwhile, Samsung officially unveiled the Galaxy Note 3 phablet at the sidelines of IFA 2013 in Berlin. The Samsung Galaxy Note 3 comes with a 5.7-inch full-HD Super AMOLED display, and weighs about 168 grams and at 8.33m wide, is both lighter and slimmer than its predecessor. It is powered by 1.9GHz Octa-core processor and a 3GB of RAM and a 13-megapixel rear camera alongside 2-megapixel front camera. It is powered by 3,200mAh battery and runs Android 4.3 Jelly Bean. The Galaxy Note 3 is available in 32GB and 64GB storage variants, and has been launched in India at Rs. 49,900.

Tuesday, 17 September 2013

BBM for Android and iOS launch expected this week,installation file leaks..


The much anticipated cross-platform avatar of BlackBerry Messenger or BBM is soon expected to appear on Android devices and iPhones, with the company hosting events in Malaysia and India on September 18th, where it's expected to offer more details about the service including its launch date.
 
In the meanwhile, it seemed as if the person behind Samsung Mobile Nigeria's official Twitter account jumped the gun and announced that BBM would debut on Friday, September 20th and confirmed that it would be exclusively available on Samsung devices for three months, in response to a user's tweet.
 
However, BlackBerry has denied that the service would be exclusive to Samsung customers. The company issued a statement to CrackBerry that quoted Victoria Berry, BBM Communications Director at BlackBerry as saying, "The excitement around the upcoming BBM launch on iPhone and Android devices seems to know no bounds. Although I'm a big fan of this passion, I want to clarify that no one will have an exclusive on offering BBM. We'll be bringing the app to Android and iPhone users across the globe soon." 

Earlier, Samsung had announced that the messenger would be available on the company's app storethat comes preloaded on its Galaxy series of Android devices, and on the Google Play Store, across the African continent. Samsung had also agreed to join marketing efforts to showcase BBM for Android to customers and to mobile users across Africa.


 Incidentally the installation file (APK) for BBM's Android version has also leaked on several forums. However, it's being reported that the app doesn't work unless the user's BlackBerry ID is whitelisted by BlackBerry. It's worth pointing out that BlackBerry had invited a small set of users who'd registered with BlackBerry Beta Zone to try out the Beta version of the cross-platform BBM app on their Android device before the app was released to the public.  
 
Previously, Alex Kinsella of BlackBerry had posted on Twitter that BBM for iPhone had already been submitted for Apple's App Store approval
 
Landing pages for BBM for iPhone and Android had also appeared accidentally and pulled later.
 
BlackBerry had announced plans to extend BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) to Android and iOS in May
 
Presently, BlackBerry Messenger or BBM allows BlackBerry users to seamlessly exchange texts, audio, videos and pictures with each other. However, a number of cross-platform mobile messaging apps including WhatsApp, WeChat and Line have taken over as preferred choices since they are available on a variety of platforms. When it comes to the iPhone, BBM would also compete with Apple's own iMessage platform that allows users who own Apple devices to send each other free messages over a data connection. 

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Saturday, 14 September 2013

Moto X review



moto-x.jpg
In the four decades since Motorola first showed off a prototype of the world's first cellphone, the company has watched Apple, Samsung and other innovators surpass it in sales. With Google as its new owner, Motorola is introducing the Moto X, a phone notable for innovations in manufacturing, as part of an attempt to regain its stature.
Yes, there's plenty the Moto X offers in terms of software, including the ability to get directions, seek trivia answers or set the alarm without ever touching the phone. There's good hardware, too, including a body that's nearly as slim as the iPhone 5, but with the larger, 4.7-inch screen that is comparable to those found in rival Android phones.
But what's really special about the Moto X has nothing to do with making calls, checking Facebook or holding it in your hands. Rather, it breaks from the pack by allowing for a lot of customization. You can choose everything from the color of the power button to a personalized message on the back cover.
To make those special orders possible, Motorola is assembling the Moto X in Texas, making it the first smartphone to be put together in the U.S. Motorola promises to ship custom designs within four days, faster than it would be able to if the company had chosen to make the Moto X halfway around the world in Asia, as other phones typically are. (Phones for overseas markets will be made overseas.)
You can still buy the phone the traditional way, in black or white. Walk into a store, pay about $200, sign a two-year service agreement (or installment plan with T-Mobile), and off you go with a brand new phone.
But that's boring
Just as Apple's colorful iMacs showed more than a decade ago that personal computers don't have to be beige or black, Motorola is moving away from traditional black and white. You're still limited to black or white as your front color, but you can choose any combination of 18 back cover colors and seven "accent" colors, which highlight the power button, volume control and the rim of the camera lens. There's more coming: Motorola is testing back covers made of wood, for instance, and it plans to let people vote on Facebook on future patterns, colors and designs.
google-motorola-smart-cover-635.jpg
You can choose a custom message for the back of the phone - with limits. I tried to enter profanity and trademarked names and was told, "We'd rather you not say that." You can use the space to display your email address, in case you lose the phone, for instance. In addition, you can choose one of 16 wallpapers in advance and enter your Google ID so your phone is all set up the first time you turn it on. You can select a different custom message to appear on your screen when you turn the phone on. You can even choose the color of your charger, white or black.
Choose carefully, as you won't be able to make changes after a 14-day return window. These aren't parts that you can simply pop out and swap.
With the exception of $50 more for a phone with 32 gigabytes of storage rather than 16 gigabytes, there's no cost for the customization. They will be available at about the same time the standard white and black phones come out in late August or early September. Wood back covers aren't expected until later in the year, however.
In the beginning, you can get custom versions only with AT&T as your service provider, but other carriers are coming. Standard versions will also be available through Verizon, T-Mobile, Sprint and U.S. Cellular at launch. You do the ordering through Motorola's Moto Maker website, which will cover service plan options with AT&T when you order the phone. If you walk into an AT&T store, you can pay for it there, just like a gift card, but you'll then have to visit the Moto Maker site and enter a scratch-off code.
So what does all this mean?
At first, I thought of it as a gimmick. But then I thought more about how phones are among our most personal possessions. Your phone contains your private thoughts in email, contact information for your loved ones and precious memories in the form of photos. So I can understand the desire to add a personal touch to the look of your phone, especially if you don't have to pay more. Keep in mind that your customizations might make the phone harder to resell when you're ready to trade up for a new model.
In many ways, it's similar to the way desktops and laptops have been sold. You can go to Dell's or Apple's website and order any number of configurations. The difference is those configurations typically have to do with the amount of storage, the speed of the processor, the size of the screen and the software that comes with the machine. With Moto X, you're getting the same storage choices that other phones offer, but all the other options are cosmetic.
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Meanwhile, the Moto X advances hands-free phone use. Although hands-free options are available elsewhere to make a call or send a text, Moto X opens the door to the entire Web. It relies on Google Now, the virtual assistant that retrieves information when you speak into the phone. Normally, you press something to activate Google Now. That's how Siri works on iPhones as well. With Moto X, you simply say, "OK, Google Now."
That command is specific to your voice. I asked three colleagues to speak "OK, Google Now" into a phone I trained by repeating the phrase three times. The phone ignored my colleagues, but responded to me instantly once I spoke from the same distance. Sorry, pranksters: You won't be able use this feature to set 3 a.m. alarms on your friend's Moto X.
I was able to get the phone to recognize my command from about 10 feet away, as well as close by with an episode of "The Walking Dead" playing at full blast on a laptop inches away. But under those conditions, the service was more prone to make mistakes. For instance, the phone misheard a request for directions to Boston as "directions to fall."
Even in a quiet room, Google Now made a lot of mistakes responding to requests to call specific people. When I asked Google Now to "call Bob," it offered me "Emily," ''Dave" and "Super" - for the superintendent of my apartment building, who's not named Bob.
I can see this feature being useful to motorists, but it's imperfect. And if you protect your phone with a PIN code, you'll need to type it in to unlock the phone, except to make a call. Motorola says it tried voice recognition for passwords, but couldn't get it to work properly.
There are two things that will work without entering your PIN: You can get a peek at text messages and other notifications by pressing the center of the screen for a second. If you want to respond or see more, then you'll need the PIN. You can also access your camera by twisting the phone like opening a doorknob. You can browse through shots you have just taken, but you'll need the PIN for older ones.
Speaking of the camera, Motorola did a good job of keeping it simple. With Samsung's Galaxy S4 and HTC One, I've often hit the wrong buttons for gimmicky features I don't want. With the Moto X, you have to swipe the screen from the left to access the settings. That way, the buttons aren't there to hit accidently. To access your gallery of photos, you swipe from the right. Again, you won't be getting old images accidently and miss the chance to snap a new one.

google-motorola-moto-x-camera-635.jpg
The camera also lacks a shutter button. Instead, you tap anywhere on the screen to take a photo. Keep pressing on the screen, and the camera will take a series of shots in succession.
The screen measures 4.7 inches diagonally, which is larger than the iPhone 5's 4 inches and close to the 5 inches found on a few other leading phones. Held like a skyscraper, the phone is narrower than most leading Android phones. The edges are curved, but the middle is thickened more than the typical phone. That actually fits nicely in my hands, as the palm isn't flat when in a grip position. It's not heavy either, at 4.6 ounces.
Although Motorola has released other phones since Google bought the company in May 2012, the Moto X is the first to be designed under Google. It's an impressive offering that could make Motorola a contender in phones again.

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Touch ID: Apples fingerprint scanner on Apple's iPhone 5s How It Works.



Apple unveiled the new iPhone 5s and iPhone 5c at a special event held at its headquarters in Cupertino. While the iPhone 5c did not live up to its promise of being a 'low-cost iPhone', the iPhone 5s showed off some promising innovations, like the new Apple A7 chip and, perhaps the highlight of the event, a built-in fingerprint scanner called Touch ID.
Touch ID can be used to unlock the phone, by simply placing a finger on the Home button. It can also be used to confirm purchases made on the App Store, iBookstore or the iTunes Store.
You can scan and add multiple fingerprints (e.g. left and right thumbs, as well as index fingers), including those from multiple people (e.g. your wife or kids), and Touch ID will authenticate based on any of stored prints.
In case you are worried about privacy, Apple assures that fingerprints are encrypted and stored in a secure area inside the new A7 chip. Fingerprints are not accessible to any third-party apps, and nor are they sent to Apple's servers or backed onto iCloud.
So what's the technology behind Apple's latest innovation? The Touch ID capacitive sensor embedded in the Home button scans your finger at 500ppi resolution to get a high resolution image of your finger. The sensor embedded in the Home button is just 170 microns thin.
The new Home button is made out of sapphire crystal, one of the "clearest, hardest" materials out there. The Home button protects the fingerprint sensor and also acts as a lens to precisely beam your fingerprint to the scanner. The Home button is surrounded by a steel ring, that can detect touches and tell Touch ID to start scanning when a finger is placed.
The sensor uses advanced capacitive touch to take high-resolution image of the sub-epidermal layers of your skin. The resultant image is then analysed, and grouped into one of three fingerprint types: Arch, Loop or Whorl. It then analyses ridges and other details too small for the human eye to see, to come up with a match for one of the stored fingerprints.
Update: Apple has reiterated that it stores only encrypted 'fingerprint data' obtained from the process detailed above and not the actual fingerprint image downplaying concerns of the iPhone 5s storing biometric data.
Apple also told WSJ that "customers who wish the use Touch ID also have to create a passcode as a backup. Only that passcode (not a finger) can unlock the phone if the phone is rebooted or hasn't been unlocked for 48 hours. This feature is meant to block hackers from stalling for time as they try to find a way to circumvent the fingerprint scanner."
Here is a link of video of Touch Id


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iOS 7: First impressions


One of the best things about Apple's latest iPhones is the slick new iOS 7 software that runs the devices. But that souped-up operating system could end up hurting sales because the free software upgrade will also work on iPhones released since 2010, giving owners of the older models less incentive to buy Apple's newest products.
Perhaps unwittingly, even Apple's software boss Craig Federighi alluded to this potential problem while he was bragging about iOS 7 at the company's unveiling of its new phones Tuesday. He predicted that anyone who elects to install the software will feel "like they're getting an all-new device."

I understood what Federighi meant once I was able to see the iOS 7's improvements in action on Apple's two new iPhones, the iPhone 5c and the iPhone 5s. Although Apple announced iOS 7 at a conference three months ago, Tuesday marked the first time the company allowed reporters to experience the software hands-on.
Although the iPhone 5c is less expensive than its predecessor, the iPhone 5, iOS 7 almost made it look fancier than previous generations. As an iPhone 5 owner, I was feeling a bit envious until I remembered that I'll be able to spiff up my device, too, when the software is released on Sept. 18. The operating system will work on the iPhone 4 and later models, iPad 2s and subsequent versions, and the iPod Touch that came out late last year.

iOS 7 looks much different than previous versions of the operating system because it no longer displays iPhone apps as three-dimensional, embossed objects meant to mirror their real-world counterparts. The icons instead are flatter and more colorful.



Any significant change in design typically upsets users familiar with the old way of doing things, but I suspect the complaints about iOS 7 will be muted unless there are some terrible bugs in the software that weren't evident during the brief time that I was given to experiment.
I am fairly certain most people who download iOS 7 are going to be pleased. The software makes it easier to navigate around an iPhone and adds some compelling new features.

The additions include the ability to stream music through an advertising-supported service called iTunes Radio and five free apps that used to cost consumers anywhere from 99 cents to $4.99 apiece. The free apps are Apple's photo-editing tool, iPhoto, and video-editing program, iMovie, as well as work-oriented apps called Pages, Numbers and Keynote.
Apple doesn't appear to be removing any popular apps built into the operating system, as best as I could tell. The company did that last year when it replaced Google's mapping app with its own navigation system only to be ridiculed for misguiding users with shoddy directions. Apple isn't bringing back Google Maps with iOS 7, but it is promising that its alternative is getting better.
The software upgrade also will make it easier to take better pictures on the iPhone and automatically sort photos into different categories to denote particular events. I particularly liked a feature that lets you control how the camera operates by toggling between options at the bottom of the screen with the swipe of a finger. Once the camera is open in IOS 7, the choices include taking a square, panoramic or standard photo. The bottom-of-the screen controls also include an option to switch to video mode.



When taking a picture in iOS 7, photographers can also choose a filter to use as they snap the photo rather than waiting to touch up the shot later. When shooting video, shots can be zoomed in while recording. I can't do any of that on my iPhone 5 because it is still powered by iOS 6.
The new system also empowers users to access other open apps more easily by clicking twice on the home button. When you do that, the apps are displayed as tiles that can be scrolled across horizontally so you can more easily see and choose several of them.
Apple is also making it easier to access frequently used controls such as and airplane mode by enabling users to pull up the panel from the bottom of the display screen instead of finding and pressing a settings option.
Other than the new software, the iPhone 5c isn't anything special, as one might expect from a cheaper phone.

The only thing that really distinguishes the 5c from the iPhone 5 is that it's housed in plastic instead of aluminum. Some consumers will no doubt like the plastic alternative because it comes in five colors: green, blue, yellow, pink and white. The price also may be more appealing, with the 5c starting at $99 with a two-year wireless contract, a $100 discount from iPhone models released in previous years.
A higher-end iPhone dubbed the 5s boasts several advantages that aren't available on any other model. The coolest innovation allows you to use your fingerprint to unlock the iPhone 5s instead of relying on a four-digit code that has to be repeatedly typed in. The fingerprint reader can also be used to access Apple's apps and iTunes store instead of a password.

Apple CEO Tim Cook thinks the fingerprint scanner will revolutionize technology security. "There is going to be a whole new generation of kids who grow up not knowing what a password is," Cook predicted during a brief discussion with a small group of reporters after he left the room where Apple was demonstrating its new iPhones.



I found the fingerprint scanner, called "Touch ID," simple to use during my brief test of the 5s. It just took less than a minute for the phone to record the fingerprint on my thumb, instructing me along the way. Once my prints were in the phone's memory bank, all I had to do was lightly press on the home button when the 5s was locked in sleep mode and it quickly opened.
The 5s also contains a faster processor and technological wizardry designed to take sharper pictures and even record slow-motion video.
Best of all, though, the 5s comes with the iOS 7. I am already looking forward to downloading the software next week so I can simulate what it's like to have a new iPhone for free.

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Wednesday, 11 September 2013

Samsung Galaxy Gear Specifications

Display 1.63-inch, 320x320

Body Stainless steel Snap-on

Proprietary Charger USB 3.0

Processor 800MHz Exynos single-core
 
Bluetooth 4.0 LE

Compatible with new Galaxy devices

previous gen Galaxy support coming soon

Around 1 day of use

4GB of onboard storage

$299 Ships in September (October for U.S.)

Camera
1.9 megapixel 720p video recording, speaker + 2 mics

Gyroscope and accelerometer for workout tracking.

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Sony Smartwatch 2 Specification.

Sony has released its new smartwatch named Smartwatch 2 here are the Specifications.

Display 1.6-inch, 220x176

Body Aluminum
Charging Micro USB 
Compatible with most Android phones
Connectivity NFC and Bluetooth 3.0
Battery Backup  
3 to 4 days battery under normal use
Price
€199 ($262 U.S)

Ships in late September
No camera, mic or speakers

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Sony’s SmartWatch 2 Versus Samsung’s Galaxy Gear: Two Very Different Smartwatches Face Off.

Sony's new smartwatch, which is actually named the SmartWatch 2, has been a known quantity since its official announcement in June at the Mobile Asia Expo in Shanghai, and now the Samsung Galaxy Gear has been itemized by its creators in Berlin at IFA. Meaning it's time for the two to square off in our blogger arena of champions for a spec and feature showdown.

Sony Smartwatch specs

1.6-inch, 220x176 display
Aluminum body
Micro USB charging
Compatible with most Android phones
NFC and Bluetooth 3.0 for connectivity
3 to 4 days battery under normal use
€199 ($262 U.S),
Ships in late September
No camera, mic or speakers

Samsung Galaxy Gear specs
1.63-inch, 320x320 display Stainless steel body Snap-on, proprietary USB 3.0 charger 800MHz Exynos single-core processor
Bluetooth 4.0 LE
Compatible with new Galaxy devices,
previous gen Galaxy support coming soon
Around 1 day of use
4GB of onboard storage
$299 Ships in September (October for U.S.)
1.9 megapixel camera, 720p video recording, speaker + 2 mics

Gyroscope and accelerometer for workout tracking

The SmartWatch 2 isn't cheap at €199; in fact, it's the same price as the newly-reduced 8GB Nexus 4 model. Samsung's is $299 and much more full-featured, with Samsung managing to pack a whole host of A/V equipment in its device. It also runs a number of Android apps out of the box, which have been redesigned specifically for the watch.

SmartWatch 2 does have NFC for easy pairing with Android devices that support it, as well as more battery life, a better, higher resolution screen, and water/environment resistance that should keep your device protected from general grit and submersion at 3 feet for up to 30 minutes. Sony's also doing a big push for bringing third-party apps to the SmartWatch software platform, which could help narrow the gap there.

Overall though, as you can see from the list of specs above, there's not really much of a competition between the two devices in terms of features; but Sony's SmartWatch 2 has an edge in battery life owing to its much more narrow feature set, and it offers wider support for other Android devices out of the box.

These are two very different definitions of the term "smartwatch," with the more ambitious vision coming from Samsung. Aside from the steep requirement of apparent (temporary?) platform lock-in, I'm definitely much more intrigued by the Gear, but I also suspect both devices will find a mostly limited receptive audience among consumers.

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Samsung Updates The Galaxy Note 10.1 To Better Compete With The iPad.

Today at Samsung's Unpacked event in Germany, the company unveiled an updated version of one of its big tablets -- the Galaxy Note 10.1. Until now, the Galaxy Tab 10.1 and the Galaxy Note 10.1 came with a 1280×800 display. The company finally put a 2560x1600 display to better compete with the iPad's retina display. As always, Samsung bets on its own set of features, such as the S-pen, to convince customers. But Android tablets really shine in the 7-inch form factor, not in the big iPad-like form factor.

Inside the tablet you'll find the same components as the newly unveiled Galaxy Note 3: an 8-core Octa system on a chip clocked at 1.9 GHz, 3GB or RAM, an 8-megapixel rear camera with a 2-megapixel front camera. Just like the Note 3, you'll get the same faux-leather casing. Finally, all of this will come in 16GB, 32GB and 64GB models.

But specs only tell part of the story. Why should you get this tablet? Samsung hopes that its unique features are enough to pick this one over an iPad. While it comes with Android 4.3, you will be able to use Samsung's multi-window mode, S Voice, S Note and everything Samsung. The S Pen is a nice addition that some users will actually find useful. But many users won't ever use the vast majority of those Samsung-only features.

Yet, the most important flaw is the Android ecosystem itself. 10-inch Android tablets are not popular because Android captured the lower end of the market. That's why many tablet apps are just scaled up versions of their phone counterparts. Developers don't spend time reworking the UI for big screens. It still works on a 7-inch tablet, but it makes you feel like you are holding a giant phone with a 10-inch tablet.

When it comes to watching movies, photos and browsing the web, the Galaxy Note 10.1 will be a nice device for Android users. But if you plan to make the best of the display, you won't find many apps to achieve this. Most Android users would prefer a smaller tablet. It's easier to carry in one hand and you get the exact same apps without wasting screen real estate. Moreover, the high resolution display will make the overall experience more sluggish with stuttering animations.

While the Galaxy Note 10.1 is a good attempt to compete with the retina iPad, Android still has a long way to go to make these tablets compelling. No word on price or availability yet.

Nokia’s First Phablet, The Lumia 1520, Crops Up In Leaked Image.

Nokia has been rumoured to be preparing a Windows Phone-powered phablet for many months, to expand the upper echelons of its smartphone portfolio and battle Samsung's Galaxy Note line (the latest of which, the Note 3, was unboxed only this week). Images purporting to depict a palm-stretching handset carrying Nokia's branding have also cropped up online before now, but today prolific leaker @evleaks has posted a press image in Nokia's typical style.

The image shows what's evidently a larger than usual Windows Phone, with enough screen real estate to display 11 x 6 rows of icons (vs the 7 x 4 icons that the 4.5 inch Lumia 925 accommodates). The other notable feature is the gently protruding rear camera which looks to be the same as the 925's PureView-branded 8.7MP lens -- so not, in other words, the 41MP 'true PureView' Lumia 1020.

Nokia hasn't officially confirmed its phablet launch plans, but the pattern of an increasing flow of leaks is consistent with other leaky Lumia launch trajectories (such as the Lumia 1020). It's certainly no secret that Nokia has been weighing up getting into the phablet space on Windows Phone -- and doing so for a long time. Back in February 2012 the company told TechCrunch that it was "looking closely [at the mid-size tablet market] and looking to see whether it will catch on".

In the event, Samsung has continued building momentum in the category, while smartphone screens generally have inflated in size to try to keep up with the trend for bigger phones. Meanwhile Nokia has faced an uphill battle trying to sell its smartphones in a market dominated by Android and iOS. Indeed, it's been such a struggle for the company that, at the start of this week, it confirmed it would be throwing in the towel by selling its Devices & Services unit to Microsoft for $7.2 billion and licensing its brand name for use by Redmond on mobiles and smartphones.

That transaction is not due to close til the first quarter of 2014, though, so Nokia has a few more months of pushing phones ahead of it. The Windows Phone phablet is named in @evleaks' tweet as the Nokia Lumia 1520 and includes this year's date --indicating a 2013 launch, which suggests Nokia will be launching the device, rather than letting Microsoft do the honours.

Getting into the phablet making-game -- even at this late stage -- is one way for Nokia to try to make its devices stand out against the iPhone, which has remained sub-phablet sized, despite Apple increasing the screen size of its current flagship iPhone 5 to 4 inches (up from 3.5 inches). But it's not going to help Lumia stand out against Android, as many Android OEMs have been ploughing the big phone furrow for some time. As well as the Galaxy Note line (and Samsung's other phablet brand, Mega), a Nokia phablet would compete with phablets from the likes of Sony, LG and Huawei.

Add to that, Apple continues to be rumoured to be testing bigger screen iPhones -- albeit, testing different form factors is simply due diligence in such a competitive market as smartphones. It remains to be seen whether a phablet-sized iPhone will end up going into production -- a Reuters report has previously suggested Apple is considering a 2014 timeframe for that. Meanwhile Cupertino of course has its iPad mini and full fat iPad to cover off the larger form factor tablet space in its portfolio (Nokia is rumoured to be lining up a Windows RT tablet too -- doubtless on its soon-to-be-phone-owner Microsoft's instructions).

Returning to the Lumia phablet, at the end of the day, a larger screen is not what Windows Phone needs to lure consumers away from Android and iOS. It needs more developers to make better apps -- but with Android dominating market share and iOS still leading on app monetisation there's precious little reason for developers to prioritise Microsoft's OS.

And, from the consumer perspective, Windows Phone remains a solution looking for a problem. Android and iOS continue to be successful because of their apps focus and app-centric UIs. Just offering something different is not in itself enough of a reason for choice-spoilt consumers to care at this point -- as the failure of Facebook's Android launcher/app replacer, Home, also underlines.

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OS X Mavericks Most Likely Arriving In October.

Apple's next-generation operating system for desktops, OS X Mavericks, is already in the hands of developers, but we likely won't see version 10.9 make its way to consumer devices ahead of October. Some rumors had suggested Apple might ship the OS at its iPhone even next week, or another time during September, but both 9to5Mac and AllThingsD are now reporting late October for Mavericks' arrival.

Sources speaking to both publications maintain that Apple had dedicated most of its resources to shipping iOS 7 in time for the launch of its new iPhone hardware next week, and therefore planned the arrival of Mavericks for late October. It's worth noting that Apple previously said only that Mavericks would arrive this fall, and October still fits the bill, so this looks like it's in keeping with the original timeframe.

Mavericks brings an enhanced Finder, better multimonitor support, a standalone iBooks application, and improved power management to OS X-powered Macs. Developers using the preview claim that the latest builds feel very stable, though some suggest the latest version is a slight step backwards over the previous release. Either way, some had interpreted its stability as a sign of impending release, but these latest reports suggest users will be waiting a bit longer.

A big possibility with Mavericks is that it will release alongside new Mac hardware, of which Apple is thought to have plenty forthcoming. There's the Mac Pro, which is assembled in the U.S. and features a radical new design that uses external I/O for most of its expandability. Also in the works are new MacBook Pro devices, which will ship with Intel Haswell processors that, combined with Mavericks' power-saving tricks, could make for machines with very impressive battery life. It stands to reason that Apple would introduce OS X Mavericks alongside new hardware to showcase it, though if you've picked up one of the latest Haswell-powered MacBook Airs, expect those to get a juice boost from 10.9 as well.

Tuesday, 10 September 2013

Apple's Latest iPhone Is Expected To Target Cost-Conscious Customers.

You'd be forgiven for thinking: "Not another gadget launch!"
Formulaic as these events have become, Apple is breaking new ground with one of the two new additions to the iPhone range.
On stage, chief executive Tim Cook will do his best Steve Jobs impression and enthuse about the technological advances contained in the successor to the iPhone 5.
More significant though is the shift in strategy indicated by the parallel launch of a cheaper iPhone which will be aimed at more cost-conscious consumers.
Since the launch of the first iPhone, Apple has excelled in the smartphone market with relatively well-to-do consumers rushing in their droves to pay silly money for one of their handsets.
But having shaken up the market and given buyers new expectations about what can be done on their phones, Apple's imitators have narrowed the lead it once had in the smartphone market.
Brands like Samsung, HTC and Nokia don't have the same iconic status as Apple but their phones have gotten better and are an awful lot cheaper.
And what's particularly worrying for Apple is that buyers and phone companies in emerging markets aren't willing to pay a developed-world premium for their phones.
You could say that the "C" in the name of the budget iPhone stands for "China", as well as "cheap".
China Mobile, the biggest mobile provider in the most populous country in the world, reportedly baulked at the subsidies demanded by Apple to sell iPhones to their customers.
Reflect for a moment on just how many customers China Mobile has: 740 million. That's roughly twice the population of the United States.
That's a market Apple wants to take a bite out of even if it has to create a special phone just to get the chance.

Nexus 5 Leaked By Company's Own Promotional Vedio.

Rumors about Google's next Nexus device are heating up in the wake of a perceived leak via the company's own promotional video for Android KitKat earlier this week. Today, a filing from the FCC (via Engadget) that details a new, unreleased LG device making its way to the U.S. offers up what could be some more granular information on Google's next Android reference smartphone.

The Nexus 5 could be the "D820" from the filing, a chance made more likely by the fact that the images shared with the U.S. wireless standards regulator line up closely with the sneak peek revealed in Google's video, and by the knowledge that it contains wireless charging based on the Qi standard, a feature of its forerunner the LG Nexus 4. And per the filing, this supposed Nexus 5 would offer 7-band LTE, 802.11ac Wi-Fi networking, a 5-inch display, and come with Android 4.4 preloaded (which is named "Key Lime Pie" in the filing's firmware name string, a sign the KitKat arrangement was one made late by Google).

Measurements of the device place it at 131.9mm tall and 68.2mm wide per the document, which is slightly thinner and shorter than the Nexus 4 despite the 0.26-inch larger diagonal display, so expect top and bottom bezel to be shaved slightly with the Nexus 5 if these reports do indeed describe that smartphone.

Google started selling the Nexus 4 way back in November 2012, after announcing it at the end of October, so it's nearly due for a refresh. At the time, the lack of LTE was a noteworthy admission, so the fact that its successor could get fairly broad LTE band support is big news, and the Snapdragon 800 is definitely no slouch in the processor department. We'll likely have to wait a while yet to see what shape the next Nexus takes, but if this is it, and if Google can keep unlocked pricing in the same ballpark it managed for the Nexus 4, this could be a very good option for Android smartphone shoppers.

Yahoo China Shuts Down Its Web Portal

Yahoo China, which is operated by Chinese e-commerce and Internet services behemoth Alibaba Group, has closed its Web portal. The site now displays a good-bye message before redirecting visitors to now.taobao.com, a news site run by Alibaba Group's Taobao.

The good-bye message says the decision to shutdown Yahoo China's portal is in accordance with a 2012 agreement made between Alibaba Group and Yahoo and that Yahoo China's employees will move on to new positions within Alibaba.

The closing of Yahoo China's portal is one of the last steps in Alibaba Group's decision to gradually take down the Yahoo-branded services it operates and comes two weeks after Yahoo's email service in China shutdown, with users asked to transfer their accounts to Alibaba's Alimail. In January, Yahoo China ceased its Chinese music service, citing an adjustment to its product strategy.

Yahoo paid $1 billion for a 40% stake in Alibaba in 2005, before the company grew into the backbone of China's rapidly expanding e-commerce market. In September, Alibaba closed an initial repurchase of its shares from Yahoo for $7.6 billion. As part of the deal, Yahoo agreed that Alibaba Group can continue to operate Yahoo China's brand for up to four years. Alibaba Group's decision to gradually cease operating its Yahoo-branded properties is a reminder of the struggles that major U.S. Internet companies--including Google, eBay and Amazon--have faced in China due to confluence of factors including government censorship, failure to localize effectively and the rapid rise of Chinese companies like Baidu and Tencent.

Yahoo's remaining 24% stake in the Chinese company, which is expected to go public within the next two years, is estimated to be worth about $14 billion.

Samsung Galaxy Core I8260 Released Specifications And Price.

GENERAL
2G Network GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 - GT-I8260
 GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 - GT-I8262 (SIM 1 & SIM 2)
3G Network HSDPA 900 / 2100
 HSDPA 900 / 2100 - GT-I8262 (SIM 1 & SIM 2)
SIM
Optional Dual SIM (dual stand-by)
Announced 2013, May
StatusAvailable. Released 2013, June
BODY
Dimensions129.3 x 67.6 x 9 mm (5.09 x 2.66 x 0.35 in)
Weight124 g (4.37 oz)
DISPLAY
Type
TFT capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
Size480 x 800 pixels, 4.3 inches (~217 ppi pixel density)
Multitouch
Yes
SOUND
Alert types
Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
Loudspeaker
Yes
3.5mm jack
Yes
MEMORY
Card slot
microSD, up to 64 GB
Internal
8 GB, 1 GB RAM
DATA
GPRS
Yes
EDGE
Yes
Speed
HSDPA, 7.2 Mbps; HSUPA, 5.76 Mbps
WLAN
Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, Wi-Fi hotspot
Bluetooth
Yes, v3.0 with A2DP
USB
Yes, microUSB v2.0
CAMERA
Primary
5 MP, 2592x1944 pixels, autofocus, LED flash, check quality
Features
Geo-tagging, touch focus, face and smile detection
Video
Yes, 480p@30fps
Secondary
Yes, VGA
FEATURES
OS
Android OS, v4.1.2 (Jelly Bean)
Chipset
Snapdragon MSM8225 S4 Play
CPU
Dual-core 1.2 GHz Cortex-A5
GPU
Adreno 203
Sensors
Accelerometer, proximity, compass
Messaging
SMS(threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Mail, IM, RSS
Browser
HTML
Radio
FM radio with RDS
GPS
Yes, with A-GPS support
Java
Yes, via Java MIDP emulator
Colors Metallic Blue, Chic White
 - SNS integration
- MP4/WMV/H.264/H.263 player
- MP3/WAV/eAAC+/AC3/FLAC player
- Organizer
- Image/video editor
- Document viewer
- Google Search, Maps, Gmail,
YouTube, Calendar, Google Talk, Picasa
- Voice memo/dial
- Predictive text input
BATTERY
 Li-Ion 1800 mAh battery
Stand-by
Up to 500 h (2G) / Up to 300 h (3G)
Talk time
Up to 14 h (2G) / Up to 9 h (3G)
MISC
SAR EU 0.29 W/kg (head) 0.95 W/kg (body)

PRICE
13250 Rs. on flipkart.    

Thursday, 5 September 2013

Samsung Galaxy Note 3 with 5.7-inch full-HD display, Android 4.3 launched

Samsung has officially launched Galaxy Note 3 phablet at the sidelines of IFA 2013 in Berlin.
Samsung Galaxy Note 3
 comes with a 5.7-inch full-HD Super AMOLED display, but weighing at 168g and 8.33m wide, is both lighter and slimmer than the Samsung Galaxy Note II
. Just like theSamsung Galaxy S4
, the Galaxy Note 3 will come in two variants. The LTE variant will be powered by 2.3GHz quad-core processor and the 3G version will be powered by a 1.9GHz octa-core processor.
(Also see: Samsung Galaxy Note 3 vs Samsung Galaxy Note II comparison
)
Samsung Galaxy Note 3 comes with 3GB RAM and a 13-megapixel rear camera alongside 2-megapixel front camera. It is powered by 3,200mAh battery and runs Android 4.3 Jelly Bean. As rumoured, the Galaxy Note 3 will be available in 32GB and 64GB variants, with the company doing away with the 16GB variant after controversy on the available storage with the Samsung Galaxy S4
. Both variants come with support for up to 64GB of additional external storage.
Connectivity options on the Note 3 include Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac, GPS/ GLONASS, NFC, Bluetooth v4.0 (LE), IR, and MHL 2.0. It comes with various sensors like Gesture, Accelerometer, Geo-magnetic, Gyroscope, Proximity, Barometer, Temperature & Humidity, and Hall Sensor.
Samsung says the Galaxy Note 3 will launch starting from September 25 in more than 140 countries around the world. There's no word on pricing yet.
Apart form the Galaxy Note 3, Samsung also unveiled the Galaxy Gear smart watch
 and Galaxy Note 10.1 2014 edition.
Samsung Galaxy Note 3 key specifications
  * 5.7-inch full-HD display
  * 2.3GHz quad-core processor or 1.9GHz octa-core processor
  * 3GB RAM
  * 32GB/ 64GB storage options
  * 13-megapixel rear camera, 2-megapixel front camera
  * Android 4.3 Jelly Bean
  * Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac, GPS/ GLONASS, NFC, Bluetooth v4.0 (LE), IR, MHL 2.0

Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Specifications.

Finally the Samsung Galaxy Note 3 is been announced and here are the Specifications of Samsung Galaxy Note 3
Available as:
Samsung Galaxy Note 3 N9000
Samsung Galaxy Note 3 N9002 with dual SIM card support
Samsung Galaxy Note 3 N9005 with LTE connectivity.
GENERAL
2G Network
GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
3G Network
HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100
4G Network
LTE
SIM
Micro-SIM
Announced
2013, September
Status
Coming soon. Exp. release 2013, September
BODY
Dimensions
151.2 x 79.2 x 8.3 mm (5.95 x 3.12 x 0.33 in)
Weight
168 g (5.93 oz)
 - S Pen stylus
DISPLAY
Type
Super AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
Size
1080 x 1920 pixels, 5.7 inches (~386 ppi pixel density)
Multitouch Yes
SOUND
Alert types
Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
Loudspeaker Yes
3.5mm jack Yes
MEMORY
Card slot
microSD, up to 64 GB
Internal
32/64 GB storage, 3 GB RAM
DATA
GPRS Yes
EDGE Yes
Speed
HSDPA, 42 Mbps; HSUPA; LTE, Cat4, 50 Mbps UL, 150 Mbps DL
WLAN
Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac, dual-band, DLNA, Wi-Fi Direct, Wi-Fi hotspot
Bluetooth Yes, v4.0 with A2DP, LE, EDR
NFC Yes
Infrared port Yes
USB Yes, microUSB v2.0 (MHL 2), USB Host
CAMERA
Primary
13 MP, 4128 x 3096 pixels, autofocus, LED flash
Features
Dual Shot, Simultaneous HD video and image recording, geo-tagging, touch focus, face and smile detection, image stabilization, panorama, HDR
Video
Yes, 2160p@30fps, 1080p@60fps (LTE model)
Secondary
Yes, 2 MP, 1080p@30fps
FEATURES
OS Android OS, v4.3 (Jelly Bean)
Chipset
Qualcomm Snapdragon 800
CPU
Quad-core 2.3 GHz Krait 400 (LTE model)/ Quad-core 1.9 GHz Cortex-A15 & quad-core 1.3 GHz Cortex-A7 (3G model)
GPU
Adreno 330 (LTE model)
Sensors
Accelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass, barometer, temperature, humidity, gesture
Messaging
SMS(threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Mail, IM, RSS
Browser
HTML5
Radio
Stereo FM radio with RDS
GPS
Yes, with A-GPS support and GLONASS
Java
Yes, via Java MIDP emulator
Colors
Black, White, Pink
 - S-Voice natural language commands and dictation
- Air gestures
- SNS integration
- Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
- Dropbox (50 GB storage)
- TV-out (via MHL A/V link)
- MP4/DivX/XviD/WMV/H.264/H.263 player
- MP3/WAV/eAAC+/AC3/FLAC player
- Organizer
- Image/video editor
- Document editor (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, PDF)
- Google Search, Maps, Gmail,
YouTube, Calendar, Google Talk, Picasa
- Voice memo/dial/commands
- Predictive text input (Swype)
BATTERY
Li-Ion 3200 mAh battery
Stand-by
Talk time
MISCSAR EU
0.29 W/kg (head)     0.36 W/kg (body)  
Note:- The information on this page is not 100% correct it is subjected to change..

Tuesday, 3 September 2013

Twitter Updates Android, iOS And Web With New Conversation View, Abuse Reporting.

Twitter has just released an update for iOS, Android and the web application with a brand new interface for conversations, as well as enhanced sharing and abuse reporting capabilities. According to the official blog post, the idea is to make it easier to follow and discover conversations.

With the updates, users will see full conversations in their timeline as opposed to standalone @replies that may be sent hours or even days after the original tweet (the conversation starter) was sent.

This always allowed for strange, context-free tweets in the consumption experience, but with the new update users will have a bit more understanding of what's being tweeted back in forth in a conversation.

Conversations are shown with a blue vertical line between them, with the first tweet in a conversation appearing on top, chronologically. If there are more than two replies, you can click into the blue line to see all the replies in that conversation.

This is a pretty major update to the way that Twitter works and is fundamental to getting a larger demographic on a social network that can be pretty scary and unfamiliar at first.

But that's not all. The update also lets you share conversations via email, as well as the ability to share individual tweets by email on either iPhone or Android. Android users even have the benefit of sharing tweets via PM within Twitter.

Past the conversations revamp, Twitter has also included the ability to report individual tweets for abuse or spam directly from the web and Android apps, which was previously unavailable. The feature, which has been available on iPhone for quite a while, will roll out slowly.

The updates are available now in the Apple App Store and Google Play.

Xiaomi The Company Known As The Apple Of China.

Xiaomi's smartphones are currently sold only in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan, but its hire of Hugo Barra as Vice President of Xiaomi Global is a clear signal that the three-year-old company's plans to break into international markets soon. The company's track record of rapid growth and savvy marketing means that it may not be long before Xiaomi, which means "little rice" in Mandarin Chinese, starts making a bit footprint in the U.S. smartphone market. For those of you who are still thinking "Google-love-quad-Xiaomi-WHAT JUST HAPPENED?," here's a quick primer about Barra's new employer. Rapid Growth

Xiaomi Tech was founded just three years ago, but it already has a valuation of $10 billion after completing its latest round of fundraising earlier this month. To put that into context, Xiaomi is now on par with Lenovo's market value of $10 billion and almost twice BlackBerry's current market valuation of $5.5 billion.

The company only started selling smartphones in October 2011, but it recently raised its sales target for 2013 to 20 million smartphones, up from its previous 15 million goal. Handpicked Team

Xiaomi is staffed by former employees of Microsoft, Motorola and (of course) Google. Barra joins former colleague Lin Bin, who was previously the Vice President of Google China’s Engineering Research Institute and Engineering Director of Google before co-founding Xiaomi as its President.

Xiaomi's founding team was carefully put together by co-founder and CEO Lei Jun with the goal of creating a smartphone company that could take on Apple.

Many profiles of Lei Jun in the Western media center on a narrative that presents Lei Jun as a startup founder who aspires to be "the Steve Jobs of China." Lei Jun has encouraged that comparison, but it belies the fact that he is already one of China's most influential and successful tech entrepreneurs.

Lei Jun's resume includes Joyo.com, which was purchased by Amazon in 2004 for $75 million and is now Amazon China and chairing the board of UCWeb, the largest mobile Web browser in China. He also founded YY, which had its IPO in November.

Lei Jun has said that he wants Xiaomi to push the idea that high-end hardware can be made in China, despite the country's reputation for manufacturing low-cost, low-quality goods. In May, Lei Jun told the GMIC conference in Beijing that he modeled Xiaomi after two unlikely sources of inspiration: a 340-year-old traditional Chinese medicine company called Tongrentang and hot pot chain Hai Di Lao. Lei Jun says these two companies taught him never to produce lower-quality products for the sake of cost, and the importance of customer service. Challenging Samsung In China

A recent report showed that Xiaomi's flagship Mi 2S is now the most popular phone in China, followed by Samsung's Galaxy S4. The Mi 2S was released in April, at about the same time as the S4.

Xiaomi announced in July that it had sold 7.03 million handsets in the first half of 2013. Over that period, it made RMB 13.27 billion (about $2.16 billion) in revenue. That means Xiaomi sold almost the same number of phones in the first half of 2013 as it did in all of 2012, and made more than double the amount of revenue in the first half of 2013 as the $957.46 million it netted in the corresponding period a year ago. Savvy Marketing

Xiaomi's sales can be attributed in part to its willingness to try offbeat marketing strategies. In December 2012, Xiaomi announced that it will sell phones directly from Sina Weibo, China's top microblogging platform with 400 million members. The unusual marketing tactic proved successful: within two days of the announcement, Xiaomi said it had sold 50,000 smartphones in five seconds, with 1.3 million additional reservations.

The company has gained a loyal fanbase by incorporating user feedback into the design of its latest sets and Android skins, which in turn helps the company keep its development costs down. Every week, Xiaomi releases a new version of miUI, its customized Android skin, which is then scrutinized by a few hundred thousand hardcore users.

Xiaomi's smartphones are typically made available in batches of 200,000 to 300,000 on its Web site and sometimes sell out in less than an hour. Xiaomi has dismissed complaints that their limited supplies are meant to inflate demand. Instead, the company insists gauging consumer reaction before rolling out more handsets helps its keep prices down. Xiaomi is ramping up production, however, and there are signs that it may become one of Foxconn's top five clients this year. Monetization Questions Remain

Xiaomi's plan is to sell high-end smartphones at or slightly beyond the cost of materials and eventually monetize through software and services. Its handsets currently range from 799 RMB (about $130) to 1499 RMB ($245).

The company has not revealed its profits, but investor Hans Tung, a partner at Qiming Venture Partners, has said that Xiaomi makes about 10% profit on its handsets.

Xiaomi still has to prove, however, that its business strategy will bear fruit. Xiaomi's sales figures are living up to the company's hype from a consumer perspective, but as Kim-Mai Cutler noted in May, Xiaomi still has to show that it can monetize software services, an area in which it faces competition from Chinese tech giants such as Alibaba and Tencent.

It remains to be seen if Xiaomi will revamp its business strategy now that Barra is on board to head its international expansion, but we may find out soon: Xiaomi's next big press conference, at which it is expected to launch its latest product lineup, is on September 5.

Bug In Apple’s CoreText Allows Specific String Of Characters To Crash iOS 6, OS X 10.8 Apps.

A bug in Apple's CoreText rendering engine in iOS 6 and OS X 10.8 causes any apps that try to render a string of Arabic characters to crash on sight. The string of characters which can trigger the bug — which was discovered yesterday and has spread around the hacking and coding community — has made its way to Twitter, where even looking at it in your timeline will crash the app.

In fact, because it's a CoreText bug, any apps that access this font framework to render text are affected. This means that any apps that use WebKit like Safari are also affected because WebKit uses CoreText.

This is a picture of the string of characters, not replicated here for obvious reasons:

If you'd care to experience the bug for yourself, feel free to seek out the tweet in the pic above, I'm not posting a link. For the record: Tweetbot appears to be immune to this, though it also uses the CoreText engine.

The characters were discovered and posted on a Russian site yesterday morning. The site claims that Apple has known about the problem for 'six months' and has not reacted. The posting includes a request to click the crash report button on any apps affected and report it to Apple.

The issue affects apps on iOS 6 and OS X 10.8 but does not work on OS X 10.9 Mavericks and iOS 7 beta releases. So whatever bug the characters are triggering, they've already been fixed in future releases of the engine. This doesn't help anyone still on iOS 6 of course.

The malicious possibilities are simple, if you send the characters in an SMS, it can initiate a revolving crash of Messages on both OS X and iOS. We confirmed this on both operating systems. You can also deliver the string of text via a web link.

Even worse, you can change the name of a wireless network to the characters and it will crash any device that scans that network to connect.

Nokia Promises Its Amber Update Will Come To All Windows Phone 8 Lumia Devices By The End Of September.

Today Nokia promised owners of its Lumia Windows Phone 8 devices that its "Amber" update will reach all phones by the end of September. The Amber upgrade is a mix of feature improvements that will improve Nokia's handsets, further setting them apart from devices built by other smartphone OEMs.

Amber contains a photo-editing tool, improved image processing, the ability to snag motion in sequence with "Action Shot," the acceptance of double-tap input to wake the phone, and improved internal storage reporting.

However, the most important new piece delivered by Amber is "Glance Screen," a tool that makes your phone's inactive state more interesting. When your handset is inactive, it will display a clock and battery information. So, you can more quickly interact with your phone without having to do anything at all. You can turn off Glance, of course, or have it switch off after a set amount of time.

In past years, we would now discuss how Amber puts Nokia ahead of Samsung, HTC, and other Windows Phone OEMs (remember Dell?). We don't have to do that anymore, as Nokia controls essentially the entire Windows Phone market. Thus, the changes are not as much changes to Nokia's Windows Phone handsets as they are adaptations to the Windows Phone platform itself. Given that Nokia sells nearly 90 percent of Windows Phone devices, any changes that it makes become de facto official changes.

This is a problem for Microsoft, as it initially ceded flexibility to make changes to Nokia in partial exchange for it adopting the platform. This saved Microsoft's mobile life, but in the process cost it control: If Nokia can essentially skin Windows Phone to its own contentment, Microsoft is in a material way not in charge of the Windows Phone user experience and design.

I doubt that sits well in Redmond. Thus, Microsoft either builds a phone itself (there have been rumors), or it bolsters HTC (the only remaining OEM partner with more than a scrape of market share that isn't Nokia) to get a better grip on its platform.

Whatever the case, if you are a Nokia handset owner, the Amber update will be rolling out depending on your handset and country and likely carrier over the next month. Get ready.

Monday, 2 September 2013

Google Confirms It Has Acquired Android Smartwatch Maker WIMM Labs

Google has confirmed it acquired WIMM Labs last year, a company that previously made an Android-powered smartwatch before shuttering operations in 2012. At the time a message on its website said it had entered into an exclusive partnership without releasing further details, but it’s now clear that partner was Google, rather than Apple as some had initially speculated. Google's WIMM Labs acquisition was reported earlier by Gigaom.

Google is rumoured to be developing a smartwatch of its own, with patents turning up earlier this year (filed in 2011), and a report by the FT that claimed Google’s Android team was in the process of developing such a device. Google has also hinted at Android powering a range of wearable devices in the past, when CEO Larry Page let slip during a quarterly earnings call this year that Glass runs on its smartphone and tablet OS, and that Android is "pretty transportable across devices". Google has also long had bigger ambitions for Android than just pushing it onto phones and tablets, with TV set-top boxes, in-car tech, home automation and wearables all areas where it's actively encouraging Android to spread.

WIMM Labs started out building Android-based platforms for wearable displays, akin to Google Glass, and then created the WIMM One in 2011: a smartwatch powered by Android 2.1 that was aimed at developers as a sort of concept flagship ahead of a broader consumer launch. The WIMM One used Bluetooth and Wi-Fi 802.11b/g for connectivity, had 256 MB of RAM plus a 667MHz processor, and used a screen design that refreshed once per minute to conserve battery life. It also supported apps via a “Micro App Store” -- installed and managed by users via a web-based dashboard. Android developers were offered custom APIs for adapting their software to the WIMM One's tiny, 16-bit colour screen.

Google is not commenting further on the acquisition at this point, beyond providing confirmation that it picked up WIMM Labs in 2012. If Mountain View is building its own smartwatch it's unlikely to beat its Android OEM partner Samsung to a launch, as the Korean company's Galaxy Gear device is probably going to be unboxed next week in Berlin at a September 4 event. Plenty of other Android-powered smartwatches are also entering the frame via crowdfunding sites like Kickstarter, and also cropping up on the roadmaps of other Android OEMs. Meanwhile Apple's rumoured iWatch remains elusive.

If Google isn’t building its own smartwatch hardware, acquiring WIMM Labs could be a way to help it develop a custom version of Android designed for wrist-mounted wearables, which it could then provide to OEMs the same way it currently does with Android proper. Given the amount of interest in smartwatches from OEMs big and small, that could be the better strategy for longterm platform growth.