Showing posts with label hd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hd. Show all posts

Thursday, 29 May 2014

One-time Apple fanboy explains why he dumped his iPhone for a Moto X

It’s always entertaining to read what
happens when longtime iPhone devotees
switch to another platform, regardless
of whether they like their new platform
of choice
or absolutely hate everything about it .

CNN’s David Goldman, however, is a
somewhat unusual case
— he’s a self-described former “big
Apple fan” who dropped his iPhone last
year in favor of the Moto X, Motorola’s
little-bought Android phone that came
in with lesser specifications than other
Android heavyweights released last year
such as the Galaxy S4 and the HTC One.

However, if you’re expecting Goldman to
talk about how he ran screaming from
the Moto X and never looked back, then
you should prepare to be surprised —
Goldman is completely in love with
Motorola’s last flagship phone.
“It’s by far the most useful gadget I’ve
ever owned,” Goldman gushes. “I can
check the time just by taking the phone
out of my pocket. When I want to
change directions while I’m driving, I
don’t hit any buttons — I literally just
speak to my phone, ‘OK Google Now,
navigate to…’ When there’s traffic,
and I’ll miss my meeting if I don’t leave
soon, my Moto X will tell me to get going.

An app called Trigger automatically puts
my phone in vibrate mode the second I
step into my newsroom… Android’s
widgets are better and more convenient
than the iPhone’s badge notifications.
Google is far, far superior at backing up
photos than Apple. iCloud in general is a
confusing mess.”

This is certainly different from the
impressions we wrote about earlier this
week from design expert Hillel
Cooperman, who described Android’s
notification bar as “ always oozing like
an open sore” that leaves a “pile of tiny
incomprehensible turds appear at the
top of my screen, uglifying it to no
end.”

In large part, this boils down to what
you want to have from your
smartphone. The iPhone provides a
smoother, more consistent user
experience than many Android devices,
but the way that Google’s services are
so tightly integrated into Android makes
Android phones more useful for some
people. Despite the wailings of fanboys
who want to declare that one is
objectively better than the other, it
turns out that both platforms have
something valuable to offer to
different sets of users.

The same goes for Goldman’s love of
Microsoft’s Surface Pro, which he says
has essentially replaced his iPad as his
go-to tablet because of its ability to
double as a laptop. He says he doesn’t
love everything about Windows 8 but
he’s gotten used to it and besides that
he says, “there is nothing better for
watching Netflix in bed than the
Surface, with its kickstand and screen
optimized for HD videos.”

Are Goldman’s tastes for everyone?
Sales numbers suggest they certainly
aren’t but that doesn’t mean that
they’re wrong. Different users want
different things from their technology
and we should be glad that there are so
many incredible gadgets out there right
now that are competing like crazy for
our business.

Monday, 7 April 2014

Nokia designer talks about the Lumia930


Nokia’s new Lumia 930 was announced earlier this week, but it won’t be released until June. We don’t know why it’s taking so long for the 930 to hit shelves, especially since, according to Nokia designer Jonne Harju, the handset’s “single aluminum frame body means less manufacturing time.” Talking to Nokia Conversations, Jonne Harju obviously acknowledged that the Lumia 930 “unquestionably has DNA from other devices”, naming the Lumia 925 , and the Verizon-exclusive Lumia Icon among those. 

As with the Icon, he says, Nokia has “put maximum effort to create the most purest and honest aluminum frame body that fits seamlessly together with the vibrant back cover shape.” Jonne Harju further said that, since Nokia’s hardware design and the Windows Phone UI have similar principles (simplicity and minimalism), the Lumia 930 has “a human quality throughout to remind people it’s not just a technical device.” 

The Lumia 930 is basically an Icon for international markets - but one that will run the new Windows Phone 8.1 out of the box. The handset will cost $ 599 unlocked, coming with a 5-inch 1080p ClearBlack display, a 20.7MP PureView rear camera, quad-core Snapdragon 800 processor, 2GB of RAM, 32GB of internal memory (non- expandable), and a 2,420 mAh battery.

Monday, 7 October 2013

LG's curved display smartphoneconfirmed for November launch

LG Electronics Inc's display unit said on Monday it will start mass production of curved smartphone displays as the South Korean phone maker plans to launch a smartphone with the new screens next month to catch bigger rival Samsung Electronics Co Ltd. 

Samsung said last month it would introduce a smartphone with a curved display in October as the world's top handset maker seeks to set the pace of hardware innovation amid slowing growth in the high-end smartphone market. 

Curved displays are in the early stages of development and allow bendable or foldable designs that could eventually allow mobile and wearable gadgets to take new forms that could radically change the high-end smartphone market.

LG Display Co Ltd said on Monday it has started production of a six-inch display curved top to bottom. LG Electronics plans to launch a smartphone with the curved display in November, a source familiar with the matter said. By contrast, Samsung's phone will have a display curved side to side, another source who has direct knowledge of the matter said. In January Samsung, which has taken over from Apple Inc as the global smartphone leader, showed off prototype products with a flexible screen and a display that extends from the side of a device. 

Technology firms have yet to figure out how to mass produce the parts cheaply and come up with display panels that can be thin and heat resistant. 

Curved displays are already commercially available in large-screen televisions. 
Samsung and LG Electronics started selling curved OLED TV sets this year priced at about $9,000.

Wednesday, 19 June 2013

Super-sharp displays on Android phones take on Apple

HTC, Sony, and Huawei are leading the charge
into large, full high-definition phone displays,
said DisplayMate Technologies. It's a market
Apple has yet to enter.
"With the iPhone 4 Retina display, Apple
pioneered the previous generation of
smartphone displays in 2010," wrote Raymond
Soneira in DisplayMate Technologies' Full HD
Flagship Smartphone Display Technology Shoot-
Out released on Tuesday.
"This time the pioneers are all Android devices,
with the iPhone still not even at the basic HD
resolution of 1,280x720," he said.
Apple has some catching up to do to achieve
"true Retina," as Soneira puts it.
As I have pointed out before, the
effective resolution of the human retina
is much higher than Apple's Retina
Display, and corresponds to somewhere
around 600 PPI [pixels per inch] at a 10
inch viewing distance, which is the limit
for the best human vision, around
20/10...On the other hand, very few
people have that level of 20/10 visual
acuity.
But lower visual acuity doesn't necessarily
mean you can't appreciate displays with very
high pixel density.
If you study and stare at the image on
the screen, move it closer, or move it
around, you'll be able to make out
considerably more fine image detail
because you are building an integrated
visual image map in the brain. So, when
you are looking at an image with finely
detailed graphics and small text, most
people with reasonably good vision will be
able to make out and appreciate the
extra sharpness and image detail if they
take the time to do so.
Super-sharp screens aren't the only criterion
for excellence, however. The iPhone 5's
display is still very competitive in other areas:
it has comparatively high peak brightness, high
contrast rating for high ambient light (bright
conditions), and low screen reflectance,
DisplayMate said.
The shoot-out itself compared the full HD
1,920x1,080 screens on the Huawei Ascend
D2, HTC One, and the Sony Xperia Z, with the
iPhone 5 serving as a yardstick of sorts.
The Ascend D2 came out on top.
"In our extensive side-by-side viewing test
comparisons the Ascend D2 was virtually
indistinguishable from the iPhone 5 and iPad
Retina Display, two of the most accurate and
high quality mobile displays we have ever
tested," DisplayMate said.
The Ascend D2 is Huawei's entry into the
premium smartphone market. "The Ascend D2
joins an elite group of smartphones with world
class displays. While Huawei is better known as
a manufacturer of low cost smartphones, their
Ascend D2 is aimed at the premium top tier, so
they managed to hit a home run with the
display the first time at bat."

Tuesday, 18 June 2013

Micromax Canvas 4

Indian smartphone manufacturer Micromax has released a teaser of its upcoming handset called Canvas 4. The company has posted two teaser videos of the device on its official YouTube channel. The videos, with tagline "Can Life Be Endless," show a smartphone with a sleek body and 13MP camera.

Expected to be an update to the popular Canvas HD smartphone, the upcoming Micromax Canvas 4 is speculated to have an eight-core processor, like Samsung Galaxy S4. The YouTube channel of Micromax states that pre-bookings for the device will start from June 28.

Micromax in January said that it will launch a total of 30 smartphones this year. Since then, it has rolled out devices like Canvas HD, Canvas 3D, Canvas Music, Bolt A35 and Canvas Viva.