Showing posts with label smartphone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label smartphone. Show all posts

Saturday, 5 July 2014

OnePlus One will receive Android L 'within three months' of final build release


Ever since Android L was introduced at Google I/O last month, the question that’s been on the mind of most Android users is “When will I get a piece of that?” HTC already confirmed that its flagships will get the L update, and today we can add another device to the list of hardware that’ll make the jump.
OnePlus has announced in its official forums that the OnePlus One will indeed be updated to Android L. As for when the update will be released, well, that’s on Google. OnePlus says that it promises to push the update out “within three months” of Google’s release of the final Android L build.
The OnePlus One is a flagship phone that was released fairly recently, so it’s not terribly surprising to learn that it’ll be bumped up to Android L. It’s good to get confirmation of the update plans from OnePlus itself, though, and it’s also nice that the company has given a timeframe in which users can expect the update to be pushed by.
While we wait for Android L and the OnePlus One’s update to arrive, you can check out our video overview of the top five Android L features below. Does the news that the OnePlus One will receive Android L make you want a unit?

Thursday, 3 July 2014

Karbonn Launches 4 Budget Smartphones, Including 2 KitKat-Based Models

Karbonn has launched a new range of budget dual-SIM smartphones including - the Smart A52 Plus, Smart A11 Star, Smart A12 Star and Smart A50s - all of which will be available exclusively on Flipkart. The all new range of Karbonn Smart smartphones start at Rs. 2,699.
The Karbonn Smart A52 Plus has been launched at Rs. 3,099, the Smart A11 Star at Rs. 4,499, theSmart A12 Star at Rs. 4,099, while the Smart A50s is priced at Rs. 2,699.
Notably, all the new Karbonn Smart smartphones are now listed on Flipkart with a 'Coming Soon' tagand offer a 'Notify Me' option for consumers.
The Karbonn Smart A52 Plus runs the dated Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean out-of-the-box. It offers dual-SIM (GSM+GSM) support and features a 3.5-inch IPS display with HVGA (320x480 pixels) resolution. A dual-core MediaTek (unspecified chipset) processor powers the smartphone, clocked at 1.2GHz coupled with 512MB of RAM.
Other specifications include a 2-megapixel rear camera; VGA front camera; 4GB inbuilt storage (expandable via microSD card up to 32GB), and a 1300mAh battery. The Smart A52 Plus does not support 3G networks.

The Karbonn Smart A11 Star, on the other hand, runs Android 4.4.2 KitKat and features a 4.3-inch IPS display with a WVGA (480x800 pixels) resolution. It is powered by a 1.2GHz MediaTek processor with 512MB of RAM. Other specifications of the Smart A11 Star include a 5-megapixel rear camera; VGA front camera; 4GB inbuilt storage; expandable storage support via microSD card (up to 32GB), and a 1400mAh battery. The smartphone supports 3G networks.
The Karbonn Smart A12 Star, much like the Smart A11 Star, runs Android 4.4.2 KitKat out-of-the-box. Under the hood, specifications include 1.2GHz dual-core MediaTek processor; 512MB of RAM; 4-inch IPS WVGA (480x800 pixels) display; 5-megapixel rear camera; VGA front-facing camera; 4GB inbuilt storage (expandable up to 32GB via microSD card), and a 1400mAh battery. The Smart A12 Star also comes with 3G support.
Lastly, the Karbonn Smart A50s was recently listed online ahead of any official announcement. The Karbonn Smart A50s runs the now-dated Android 4.2 Jelly Bean out-of-the-box. Other specifications of the Smart A50s include a 3.5-inch TFT LCD HVGA (320x480 pixels) display; 1.2GHz dual-core MediaTek processor (unspecified chipset); 256MB of RAM; 2-megapixel rear camera with LED flash; a 0.3-megapixel front-facing camera; 2GB inbuilt storage (expandable up to 32GB via microSD card), and a 1100mAh battery. It's worth noting that the Karbonn A50s does not support 3G connectivity.
Commenting on the launch, Kalyan Krishnamurthy, SVP - Retail at Flipkart said, "It is our continuous endeavour to make technology available easily and at affordable prices to the greater masses of India. In this digital age, we believe every Indian should have access to a smartphone. These Karbonn phones that have been made exclusively for Flipkart customers are a step in that direction."

Wednesday, 25 June 2014

Flipkart Reportedly Set to Launch Its Own Tablet on June 26


Online marketplace Flipkart is said to be all set to launch tablet with its own label on June 26.
The Bangalore-based firm, which sells its own brand of electronic and computer accessories like headphones, speakers and pen drives under the DigiFlip range, is expected to launch the tablet under the same label.
While the specifications of Flipkart's rumoured tablet still remain under the wraps, the company is hosting a blogger event on June 26 and has sent out a cryptic invite in form of a jar of tablets.
The move is expected to help Flipkart, which follows the mix of marketplace and inventory-led model (with resellers putting up their wares for sale on the website) to boost its margins in the highly competitive electronics retailing space.
Interestingly, last week, online retailing giant Amazon had launched its first smartphone Fire Phone(First Impressions) becoming the first e-commerce firm to compete in the over $150 billion global market, led by players like Apple and Samsung.
Amazon also has its Kindle range of e-Book readers. Flipkart's move to launch a tablet is also expected to help the e-commerce firm connect faster with its consumers.
Another similarity that Flipkart shares with Amazon is its annual subscription service for its customers.Flipkart First, which is similar to Amazon Prime premium subscription service in the US, is aimed at rewarding registered shoppers, which the company claims are about 18 million for the portal, as well as getting new ones on board.
Like Amazon's Firefly feature on its Fire Phone, Flipkart's tablet is expected to be integrated with features that will enable users to complete transactions with the firm that sells everything from apparel to household appliances to stationery, within minutes.
Amazon's Firefly feature can identify things like books, games, CDs etc., by pointing the Fire Phone's camera at them. It can also capture songs or TV programmes and gives the user options to purchase them.

With this move, Flipkart will compete with global giants like Samsung and Apple, which are leaders in the domestic market too.
However, going by tablet sales data, the growing demand for phablets is eating into the market share of tablets and it is yet to be seen how does Flipkart markets its device to catch the consumer's pulse.
According to research firm CMR, the tablet sales in India declined 17.5 percent to 0.75 million units in January-March 2014 compared to 0.9 million units in the same quarter last year, pulled down by higher demand for phablets (smartphones with displays larger than 5-inches) and BIS certification compliance issues.
However, with the consolidation in the market (as many smaller players have discontinued their products), analysts expect sales to pick up in the quarters ahead.

Nokia X2 Dual SIM With 1GB of RAM and 4.3-Inch Display Launched

For many tech pundits who believed that the Nokia X smartphone range was dead after Microsoft's completed acquisition of Nokia's devices and services business, the Redmond giant has a surprise - the launch of the Nokia X2, the successor to the popular Nokia X.
The Nokia X2 will be available at EUR 99 (roughly Rs. 8,100) without taxes and subsidies. The company on its official Conversations blog has revealed that the Nokia X2 will be available immediately in select countries globally; however it has not listed the markets.

The new Nokia X series phone will be available in Glossy Black, Green, Orange, Dark Grey, White and Yellow. The Nokia X2 now sports a translucent outer layer, reminiscent to the ones seen on Nokia's Asha range of handsets.
Microsoft Mobile reiterates that the all new Nokia X2 can run Android apps and comes preloaded with the latest version of Nokia Store that now incorporates third-party app stores.
The Conversations blog said, "The Nokia X2 is also equipped with another navigation option; the brand-new 'apps list', which keeps your home screen clear for your most used apps, bringing Nokia X2 in line with the existing Lumia experience."

One of the prominent additions in the design of the Nokia X2 is the new home button that takes you back to the start screen and is accompanied by the back button that allows flipping through most recent actions, and long pressing shows what apps are open. Notably, the exact version of the Nokia X software platform being used has not yet been revealed by the company, though Engadget notes the Nokia X2 runs Nokia X Software Platform 2.0.
The new Nokia X2 is a dual-SIM variant and do not has a single SIM variant. Notably, the Nokia X2 Dual SIM has been listed on the company's official India site without pricing.

The new Nokia X family member features a 4.3-inch ClearBlack LCD display with WVGA resolution (480x800 pixels) that offers a pixel density of 217ppi. It is powered by a dual-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 200 processor clocked at 1.2GHz clubbed with 1GB of RAM. Notably, last generation's Nokia X+ and Nokia XL had just 768MB of RAM, while the Nokia X had 512MB of RAM. All three last generation Nokia X phones ran on a dual-core Qualcomm MSM8225 Snapdragon S4 chipset, and can therefore can be considered an upgrade.
The Nokia X2 sports a 5-megapixel autofocus rear camera with LED flash, while there a front-facing camera (unspecified resolution) also onboard. The smartphone is backed by an 1800mAh battery that's rated to deliver up to 10 hours of 2G talk time and up to 86 hours of continuous music playback. The Nokia X2 features 4GB of built-in storage, which is expandable via microSD card (32GB).


The Nokia X2 also comes preloaded with a bevy of Microsoft apps such as Skype, Outlook.com, Bing Search app, WeChat, Path, Facebook, Facebook Messenger, Yammer and Xbox games. The all new OneDrive is also preinstalled with 15GB cloud storage available right out-of-the-box. Games include SnapAttack, Wordament and Kinectimals. The note-taking app, OneNote, is also present. For the socialites, Line, WeChat, Path, Facebook and Facebook Messenger are also available.

EverythingMe Releases Its Contextual Launcher Globally


EverythingMe‘s contextual launcher aims to customize your Android home screen so that you get exactly what you need every time you switch on your phone. It’s the results of years of work on mobile discovery. And today, the app is available globally.
 At the time, it was an iPhone app to improve the mobile search experience.
“But the number of search queries are decreasing on mobile,” Ben-David told me. So that’s why the startup started working on something completely different — context.
You might get the Kindle app when you’re at home in the evening, and the Twitter app when you’re waiting at the bus stop in the morning
When it comes to mobile startups, it’s still a brand new world. Modern smartphones only hit the market in 2007, and countless of developers started providing content for this new platform. Hundreds of thousands of apps are now available at our fingertips.
Yet, this is also a challenge. You may have 150 apps on your phone, but chances are that you only use a dozen of them. “Nobody swipes to the third page of apps,” Ben-David said. This is where EverythingMe is useful.
Here’s how it works. When you switch on your Android phone, you will get four apps that are relevant to the time of the day, your location and more. For example, you might get the Kindle app when you’re at home in the evening, and the Twitter app when you’re waiting at the bus stop in the morning.
Sometimes, you are looking for something in particular beyond these four apps. For example, you might want to get the latest world cup results. This app might not necessarily show up in your top four apps as you don’t open the world cup app all year round. EverythingMe automatically organizes apps in smart folders. You will find the world cup app in the “Sports” folder, maybe in the “News” folder as well.
In these smart folders, you will get information cards so that you even get info without opening and app. And below, you will find the relevant apps depending on the category, as well as app suggestions from the Play Store. You won’t have to micromanage your phone to organize apps anymore, and you won’t miss on this cool new app you installed and forgot a few minutes later.
Finally, EverythingMe replaces the search engine of your phone. For example, if you contact someone very often, his or her name will show up at the top.
The team of 65 has received $37 million in funding over the years, and has attracted millions of downloads in its test markets since February. This contextual launcher also powers Firefox OS. Overall, EverythingMe is all about learning about your habits to make your phone even more personal.

Friday, 20 June 2014

Fire Phone Immerses Users in Amazon's World


Amazon on Wednesday announced a device that tries to fulfill the retailer's dream of being integrated into consumers' lives at every possible waking moment - whether they are deciding where to eat, realizing they need more toilet paper or intrigued by a snatch of overheard music.
The device is a cellphone, but making calls on it got almost no attention at all at the event in Seattle where it was unveiled. The Fire phone, the product of four years of research and development, offers Amazon fans the chance to live in an Amazon-themed world, where just about every element can be identified, listed, ranked, shared and, of course, ordered. It offered a view of a mobile future that will be alluring to some but might repel others.
If the device works as described, and Amazon entices even a small portion of its 250 million active customers to buy one, the Fire could accelerate Amazon's already intense competition with other retailers and tech companies, not to mention intensifying some of its current battles with suppliers.

As if to underline the no-gloves nature of the battle, a promotional video in the first few moments of the presentation took a direct slap at Apple. Both Apple and Samsung were criticized for having inferior cameras in their devices, and there seemed to be other jabs at technology like Google Glass.
The Fire's product recognition feature, Firefly, "is potentially a real threat to bricks and mortar retailers," said Rebecca Lieb, an analyst with the Altimeter Group. "Scan a product or listen to music, and you're delivered straight to the page on Amazon on which you can purchase it. Impulse shopping just went to a new level."

Amazon's phone - consumers can order it now; it ships starting July 25 - is arriving as the leading tech companies are increasingly trying to develop an array of services and products to keep consumers from wandering, the digital equivalent of Disney not wanting you to leave Disneyland for lunch. So Microsoft brought out a tablet; Facebook tried a phone; Google is experimenting with a shopping and delivery service.
Against such a frenzy of competition and innovation, an Amazon phone was inevitable. The company's leaders asked themselves only one question, Jeff Bezos, Amazon's founder and chief executive, told the crowd at the event: "Can we build a better phone for our most engaged customers?"
Bezos touted Firefly heavily as well as something Amazon calls Dynamic Perspective. Cameras on the phone allow the user to gain another view of a video game or see layered information on a map, like a Yelp review. Whether Dynamic Perspective is a gimmick or something more will depend on how aggressively developers invent new apps for it.
"This is the next big battleground in the ecosystem war," said Ben Schachter, an analyst with Macquarie. "Amazon is not going to turn the tide decisively in its favor with this, but just needs to establish a beachhead."
The announcement took place in a warehouselike space filled with 300 members of the news media, app developers and hand-picked Amazon fans. The presentation began with videos from people begging to attend; 60,000 people applied to do so.
Bezos began by citing laudatory reviews of the company's existing hardware, including its tablets.
"The most important thing we've done over 20 years is earn trust with customers," he said.
Amazon's leap into the smartphone business comes as sales of the devices are beginning to mature, at least in the United States and Europe. Their use for shopping, however, is just beginning to explode. In the United States, purchases made with phones will jump more than 25 percent this year to over $18 billion, according to eMarketer. At the moment, most mobile shopping is done with tablets.
Bezos, for all his zeal, was relatively circumspect about the phone's ultimate implications. Ralph de la Vega, chief executive of AT&T Mobility, Amazon's carrier partner, was more direct during a brief appearance on stage.
"I am going to buy a whole lot more things with this technology than I ever have before," De la Vega said.
One interesting question will be whether the phone will allow apps that might take customers to retailers whose prices undercut Amazon. Will residents of Planet Amazon, in other words, be permitted to visit other shopping worlds?
"Our idea is to give the lowest price to the customer," Dave Limp, an Amazon executive, said in an interview. "If we don't have it, shame on us."

As for whether customers will go into physical stores, check a price with Firefly, and order the item right then - inflaming Amazon's already bitter relations with Main Street - Limp noted that people could do the reverse: Look up something on Amazon and then buy it in a store.
"Both ways are very valuable for customers," he said.
The lengthy phone development process for Amazon was partly because of the difficulty of the task. Phones are a graveyard of tech dreams. Just ask Google, which was hailed as a genius for buying the handset maker Motorola, and then hailed again for cutting its losses and promptly selling the faded icon. Only Apple and Samsung have found it consistently profitable to make phones.
But Amazon, as always, is operating with a different playbook.
When Amazon introduced the Kindle Fire in 2011, there was a lot of chatter about its being a challenge to Apple's iPad. It was not. In the first quarter of this year, Apple had about a third of the tablet market, according to the research firm IDC. Amazon had less than 2 percent.
Still, that's a million more consumers taking up residence in the Amazon ecosystem. Just about anyone who has a Kindle Fire is a good candidate for membership in Amazon's fast shipping club, Amazon Prime, and just about any Prime member might be enticed to buy a Kindle. Amazon Prime has an estimated 20 million subscribers, who pay $99 a year.
The Fire Phone, which will be available late next month, costs $199 for a two-year contract with AT&T. But Amazon, as expected, is sweetening the deal with a year of free membership in the Prime club.
"If they are able to capture 10 percent of those Prime subscribers in the near term, then that would likely constitute a success," said Eugene Signorini, vice president of mobile insights at Mobiquity.
That would force Google and Apple, and possibly Facebook and Microsoft as well, to introduce new innovations and features in their own products. That would benefit consumers in the short term, Schachter said.
And in the long term, if Amazon or one of the other companies becomes dominant to the exclusion of all others?
"That might be more problematic," Schachter said.

Wednesday, 18 June 2014

Samsung Galaxy Core 2 Duos and Galaxy Pocket 2 Briefly Listed Online


Samsung might soon announce the next iterations of two of its popular budget Android smartphones, the Galaxy Core and Galaxy Pocket, if a new online listing (now pulled) is to be believed.
The yet-to-be-announced Samsung Galaxy Core 2 Duos and Galaxy Pocket 2 were briefly listed at a Vietnamese online retailer named Mainguyen before being pulled down. However, GSMArena has obtained the complete specifications and also the press renders of both the rumoured Galaxy Core 2 Duos and Galaxy Pocket 2.
Notably, the Samsung Galaxy Core was launched in June last year, while the Galaxy Pocket was announced back in 2012.
According to the leaked specifications, both the briefly listed Samsung Galaxy Core 2 Duos and Galaxy Pocket 2 run Android 4.4 KitKat out-of-the-box. The Galaxy Core 2 Duos is said to come with dual-SIM support, as the name suggests. The smartphone will come with a 4.5-inch WVGA (480x800 pixels) display and will have a pixel density of 207ppi.
The other specifications listed of the yet-to-be-announced Galaxy Core 2 Duos include a quad-core Cortex A7 processor, 768MB of RAM. It features 4GB of inbuilt storage and comes with expandable storage via microSD card. It is said to sport a 5-megapixel rear camera with LED flash and also include a VGA camera.
GSMArena, citing the online listing, claims that the Galaxy Core 2 Duos comes with 3G connectivity option in one SIM, apart from Bluetooth, GPRS/ EDGE and Wi-Fi. A 2000mAh battery is said to back the alleged Galaxy Core 2 Duos and it will measure 130.2x67.9x9.8mm and weigh 138 grams.
The other yet-to-be-announced smartphone, the Samsung Galaxy Pocket 2, is said to come with dual-SIM support and a 3.2-inch QVGA (320x480 pixels). It is powered by 1GHz processor clubbed with 512MB of RAM, according to the online listing. There is a 2-megapixel rear camera and a VGA front camera on board. The rumoured Galaxy Pocket 2 is said to come with a 1200mAh battery and weigh 110 grams.
As of now, there is no word from Samsung on the launch of both the Galaxy Core 2 Duos and Galaxy Pocket 2 smartphones.

Intex Aqua 3G With 4-Inch Display, Dual-Core SoC Launched at Rs. 3,555


Intex has expanded its range of budget 'Aqua' of smartphones, with the introduction of the Aqua 3G.
The smartphone has been launched at Rs. 3,555.
The company notes that the Intex Aqua 3G is targeted at consumers in Tier 2 and 3 cities of India. The new smartphone from Intex supports 3G connectivity, as the name suggests, a feature that is also the highlight of the device at this price.
The Aqua 3G runs Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean out-of-the-box. It offers dual-SIM (GSM+GSM) support, and features a 4-inch IPS display with WVGA (480x800 pixels) resolution.
A dual-core (unspecified chipset) processor powers the smartphone, clocked at 1GHz and coupled with 256MB of RAM. The Aqua 3G sports a 2-megapixel rear camera without flash, while there is a 0.3-megapixel front-facing camera also onboard.
The Intex Aqua 3G comes with 512MB of inbuilt storage, and can be expanded up to 32GB via microSD card. It supports Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, GPS/ A-GPS, GPRS/ EDGE and Micro-USB. The budget smartphone is backed by a 1400mAh battery with no word on talk time and standby time.
Commenting on the launch, Sanjay Kumar Kalirona, Business Head, Mobiles said, "We at Intex are at the forefront to innovate and offer products which promises the customers seamless functioning and unbeatable browsing experience at a rock bottom price. Aqua 3G is a marvel from Intex basket which will enable users to stay connected with the world all the time."
Last week, soon after Mozilla's announcement that Intex would be launching Firefox OS-based smartphones in the 'next few months', the company in a statement said its first Firefox OS smartphone, the Intex Cloud FX, would be priced under Rs. 2,000 when it launches in the first week of August.

Friday, 30 May 2014

Samsung trademarks Galaxy Wear, could beits first Android Wear device



Microsoft's rumored "major restructuring" looks set to be unveiled by July 1st. All Things D reports that the reorg, which will focus on the devices and services vision, is being led by CEO Steve Ballmer without the consultation of all Microsoft's executives. 

The upcoming changes are said to be major, leaving some executives worried for their own positions and the plans for the company as a whole. All Things D quotes one insider as saying they're "titanic" changes, noting they might be attached to Ballmer's legacy at the company. "It’s the first time in a long time that it feels like that there will be some major shifts, including some departures," says the alleged insider. 

Could Windows and Windows Phone move closer together? Ballmer is reportedly considering a new structure that would create four separate divisions: enterprise business, hardware, applications and services, and an operating systems group. Bloomberg reported earlier this month that the OS group could be jointly led by Windows Phone chief Terry Myerson and head of Windows engineering Julie Larson-Green. 


Sources familiar with Microsoft's plans have revealed to The Verge that the new structure would see a significant focus on further aligning the Windows and Windows Phone operating systems. Microsoft moved to a shared Windows 8 kernel in October for Windows Phone, but applications that run on both platforms still need tweaking by developers, and the two Windows stores remain separate. Microsoft is heading to San Francisco on Wednesday to host its annual Build developer conference. 

The software maker will unveil improvements to its Windows 8 OS in the form of a Windows 8.1 update that will enter public preview this week. Microsoft plans to finalize and ship the Windows 8.1 update in time for new 7- and 8- inch devices later this year. It's also expected to play a role in new Surface devices expected for the holidays. Any reorg news, internally at least, would likely come during the Build conference as Microsoft switches to its new financial year on July 1st. 

If Ballmer's rumored reorg takes places then it will be the first company-wide structural change at Microsoft under Ballmer's leadership. The 57-year-old took over the CEO role from co-founder Bill Gates in January 2000, and made some significant changes in 2008 ahead of the company's Windows 7 software. Ballmer recently let former Windows chief Steven Sinofsky go, in an unexpected move just weeks after the company shipped Windows 8. 

It's clear a significant change is underway at Microsoft, and Ballmer has detailed a "fundamental shift" in Microsoft's business as it moves to a combination of hardware and software.

Thursday, 29 May 2014

Samsung Unveils Simband Fitness Tracker, Digital Health Initiative

Not content to stop at fitness bands
and smartphones with heart monitors,
Samsung today showed off a new
prototype wrist monitor while
announcing a new cloud-based health
data service that aggregates all your
readings from different devices. At an
event in San Francisco, the Korean tech
giant talked about its desire to create
an open platform for digital health
information that doctors, developers
and patients can all take advantage of.

Samsung Architecture for Multimodal
Interactions (SAMI), will be a cloud-
based open software platform, where a
variety of devices and sensors can
securely store data. Developers and
scientists can then create algorithms to
analyze the data, and find new insights,
Samsung says. The personal data stored
in SAMI will still be owned by the
individual and is totally secure, like
money in bank.

SAMI will allow your many health and
environmental sensors to collaborate in
the cloud. Your fitness tracker usually
can't communicate with your
thermostat, but through SAMI,
developers could design an app that
turns the temperature down when you
come back from a run, Samsung said.
"We want to provide a platform to
accelerate the speed of innovation,"
Young Sohn, president and chief
strategy officer at Samsung, said at
the event.

The company also showed off a
wearable wristband called Simband,
which is intended to serve as a
reference design for future devices
rather a shipping product. It is designed
in sections, or modules, so that other
companies can integrate their own
sensors. The open platform will allow for
the inclusion of sensors that haven't
even been imagined yet, said Ram Fish,
vice president of digital health at
Samsung.

                Samsung Simband
Future Simband sensors could include a
PPG sensor to measures changes in blood
flow, and monitor vital signs such as
heart rate and blood pressure, and an
ECG sensor to monitor the rate and
regularity of the heartbeat. Fish
demonstrated how a Simband prototype
could continuously monitor heart rate
and other vital signs.

The Simband can be charged with a
"shuttle battery" that is attached, and
charges while the user wears the device,
Fish said.
Samsung has partnered with the
University of California, San Francisco
to work on validating the technologies
and algorithms that come out of the
project, to ensure that the technology is
accurate, and that healthcare
professions feel they can rely on the
devices, said Dr. Michael Blum, associate
vice chancellor for informatics at UCSF.

"This is a really exciting time for the
medical community to engage with
Silicon Valley," Blum said. "We can
collect massive new datasets" to develop
new understandings about how our
bodies work, he said.

Samsung said that the beta APIs for
SAMI would be ready by the end of the
year.

Wednesday, 9 April 2014

OnePlus One will have 3GB of RAM and a 2.5GHz Snapdragon 801 processor

OnePlus revealed new details about its
much-hyped One smartphone (which
will be officially announced later this
month, on April 23).
One of the things that we didn’t know
about the OnePlus One was the amount
of RAM that it would feature. Today,
however, the CEO of OnePlus
confirmed that the handset will have
3GB of RAM - which should be enough
for any tasks that you’ll throw at it.
The company’s CEO also re-confirmed
that the upcoming smartphone would
use a quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon
801 SoC. It will be the 8974-AC model
that’s clocked at 2.45 GHz. As you may
know, this is the same SoC that’s
used by Samsung for its new Galaxy S5
flagship (not in all versions, though).
OnePlus is planning to release its One
in various markets around the world -
hopefully not long after announcing it.
The smartphone will be sold unlocked
for less than $400 (or €350 in
Europe). It will run a customized
variant of CyanogenMod 11, also
offering a 5.5-inch 1080p display, a
13MP rear camera made by Sony, and a
3,100 mAh battery.
OnePlus hasn’t revealed any images of
the new handset yet, but we know
that the device should have a premium
build quality.
source: OnePlusforum

Tuesday, 8 April 2014

Sony Hong Kong now says Sony Xperia Z2 is delayed until June

The delayed launch of the Sony Xperia
Z2 has become a major problem for
the Japanese manufacturer. After all,
this particular model is expected to
take on competitors like the Samsung
Galaxy S5 and the HTC One (M8) . Early
news about the delay had the phone
launching in late April/early May
. Nearly two weeks later, Sony U.K.
was telling retailer Clove not to
expect delivery of the handset until
May
.
But even that time frame might be too
optimistic. Sony Hong Kong is now
confirming that the flagship phone
won't be released until June. This has
to be disheartening for those who saw
the phone unveiled at MWC in late
February and have been patiently
waiting for the release of the Xperia
Z2. In the U.S., there is speculation
that the phone will be a Verizon
exclusive with a Q2 launch
.
Sony might have boxed itself into a
corner. With the Japanese
manufacturer releasing a new flagship
model every 6 months, by the time the
Xperia Z2 sees the light of day, its
successor could be due. Remember,
Sony Mobile’s Creative Director
Kurozumi Yoshiro called the Xperia Z2
Sony's flagship model for the first half
of the year. If the delay stretches out
any longer, buyers might decide to
wait for the Sony Xperia Z3
which would force Sony to take a
hatchet to its pricing for the Xperia
Z2. Shortages of parts needed for the
device are being blamed for the delay.
source: XperiaBlog via AndroidCentral

Saturday, 19 October 2013

Has any phone in 2013 made you switch platforms?

We're in that final stretch of months
before 2013 officially comes to an end,
and it's been a pretty wild year for
mobile all year long.

In the beginning, we saw BlackBerry's
plans and release of BlackBerry 10. In
the following months we saw the
release of two of the most anticipated
Android flagships of the year, the HTC
One and the Samsung Galaxy S4. We
finally found out the dark and
mysterious details of Google's "X"
phone, which turned out to be none
other than the Moto X, which featured
just about none of the things leaks,
rumors and hopes predicted that it
would. Nokia pushed the envelope even
further with their Nokia Lumia line,
famous for its notably good cameras
for a smartphone, by releasing the
Nokia Lumia 1020 with its 41-megapixel
camera. We also have phones like the
iPhone 5s, the Nexus 5, the Galaxy
Note 3 and the LG G2 . Yep, it's been a
pretty good year for mobile.

New phones are released all the time.
But regardless of how many phones
can be produced, each smartphone is
more than likely using one of four of
the most popular mobile platforms that
we have available to us today: iOS,
Android, Windows Phone or BlackBerry.

These platforms are constantly
changing and tweaking in order to
become the best, and I have to say
that this year has had one of the
most interesting combinations of new
hardware and new software I have
seen in a while. If you guys have had
any thoughts like I have, you've
probably considered jumping from
whatever phone it is that you have to
something new - perhaps you even
made the switch.

Did any new phones tickle your fancy
enough to make you switch this year?
One did for me (get it? One ? Ha!)
Actually, I should say two . Initially, I
was more intrigued by the Galaxy S4.
However, just as I had suspected in
previous thoughts mentioned across my
articles, there is such a thing as a
phone that's too big for some people.

It seems that a 5" screen is just too
much for me to be able to hold without
dropping onto the floor, my face, or
whatever else I happen to be holding
my phone over. Aside from that and
some apparent issue with overheating
(as in the phone felt hot - really hot
- but didn't show much adverse
effects from it) the phone would have
been dandy. I really did like the
camera and all of the features. But
the fact that I couldn't even hold the
phone comfortably bothered me more
than anything, and I ended up
switching out for the HTC One.
Switching from iOS back to Android
was a lot easier than I thought it
would be, mostly because I still
remembered Android as being the slow,
buggy OS that it was back in 2010. But
once I decided to make the jump back
to Android from iOS after being mostly
happy with iOS for the better part of
two years, I was honestly surprised at
how well Android had adapted.
Whether
it was the advances that Android made
over the past couple of years, or
perhaps just the fact that I had
lowered my expectations when I
switched to the One and my
expectations were surpassed, I am still
to this day pretty darn happy with my
One. Although I will once again stress
that the purple tint on my camera is
still an issue that wasn't fixed since
updating to the official Android 4.3
build. Aside from that, the phone is
fantastic. Great build, great feel,
great battery life, and runs smooth
like butter.

I even entertained the thought of
switching to BlackBerry or Windows
Phone as well, considering the only
hands-on experience I've had with the
devices are limited to retail store
displays. BlackBerry was intriguing; I
was interested in seeing how
BlackBerry 10 worked on the
traditional BlackBerry form factor of
having a small screen and a full
physical QWERTY keyboard. I was also
intrigued by the Z10, BlackBerry's
first attempt at what might be
considered a more "normal" look for a
modern smartphone. However, the lack
of applications made specifically for
BlackBerry wasn't exactly inviting. I
will admit, it is nice that several what
I would consider "important"
applications that were initially made
for Android can be "sideloaded" onto
BlackBerry 10, but in the end I wasn't
exactly thrilled with the idea. The same
"lack of application" problem stopped
me from Windows Phone, but definitely
to a lesser degree.
I was mostly
interested in the fact that the Lumia,
at the time, had some of the best
cameras that a smartphone could have.
I also dig the minimalistic interface of
Windows Phone.
Overall, I'm happy I switched to the
One. It's not the first time I've
switched, nor will it be the last, but I
am happy that I was able to switch to
a phone that I thought I would like,
and ended up actually liking it, because
I'm not always that lucky.
Readers, did you find a phone this
year that made you switch platforms?
Which platform did you come from, and
which one did you go to? Are you
happy with the decision? Let us know
your thoughts in the comments below!

Thursday, 8 August 2013

How to decide if you need a new smartphone

With a new iPhone looming on the
horizon, it might be time to take
stock as to whether you really need
to buy a new one. Just last week I
had a conversation as to whether it
was time to replace my iPhone 4, and
the first question asked of me was,
does my phone work and do
everything I need it to do? My
answer was yes. So, even with that
burning desire to upgrade, I decided
to keep what I have.
It's always best to consider the whole
picture when making a decision to
upgrade your phone and Gigaom has
hit the nail on the head with Alex
Colon's article, "How to decide
whether to buy a new smartphone."
Alex offers some good concise advice
to consider in your lust for a new
smartphone. This sidesteps that
burning desire to own the latest and
greatest products though.
The article poses a set of 10 rational
questions for you to consider before
emptying your wallet on some
retailer's counter.
Does your phone work?
Can you renew your contract to get
a subsidized price?
Can you get a discount?
When was the last version of the
phone you want refreshed?
Have you chosen a carrier?
Which is the right platform for you?
(Gigamon recommends the iPhone if
you're an app junkie.)
Or do you love freedom? (Gigamon
cites that Android and Windows
phones offer more customization than
the iPhone.)
And which is the right phone?
Try before you buy.
Can you return your phone? (I once
bought a phone only to discover it
had no cell coverage in the states
where I travel. Thankfully, the
carrier took the phone back within
the first month with no hassle.)
Do you even need a new phone?
If cell phones hold a certain
fascination for you, then you should
take a gander at this article, "The
Evolution of Cell Phone Design
Between 1983-2009" from Web
Designer Depot. It's a fun look at
phones we have used and discarded
through the years.

Sunday, 28 July 2013

Intex Cloud X3 smartphone with dual-core processor launched for Rs. 3,790


Intex Technologies has launched an entry level smartphone, the Cloud X3 in India for Rs. 3,790. The Intex Cloud X3 features a 3.5-inch display and boasts of MiraVision technology. 

The device is powered by a 1GHz dual-core MediaTek MT6572 processor coupled with 256MB RAM. It has a 2-megapixel rear camera and a VGA front-facing camera. The Intex Cloud X3 runs Android 4.2 Jelly Bean. It comes with 115MB of internal memory that is expandable up to 32GB through microSD card. Other key features include dual-SIM functionality with GSM+GSM support, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, gravity sensors, video recorder, audio recorder, motion sensors, and GPS. 

The Intex Cloud X3 comes with a 1450mAh battery that the company claims can give 6 hours of talktime and 200 hours of standby time. The handset has been launched in two colours, White and Black. Commenting on the launch Sanjay Kumar Kalirona, GM-Mobility Division, Intex Technologies Ltd said, "The feature phone market in India has matured and there is a subsequent growth in the smartphone category. 

Building on this burgeoning market, Intex offers its latest smartphone Cloud X3 that is especially designed to meet the need of entry level users who would like to migrate to a more sophisticated mobile experience". Intex claims that it is targeting a revenue growth of more than 400 percent this fiscal from the mobile vertical with smartphones being the driver. 

The company also plans to extend the entry level Smartphone range to 10 models by September 2013. The Intex Cloud X3 comes with an all new MediaTek MT6572 processor. Dr. Finbarr Moynihan, General Manager - Business Development, MediaTek Inc said, "MediaTek continues to drive the democratization of smartphones by re- defining the entry level segment, moving the baseline to dual-core processing with the MT6572. 

This new dual-core chipset, designed to offer excellent performance to end users, integrates a power-efficient dual-core Cortex-A7 CPU sub-system with speeds up to 1.3GHz in the leading 28nm process technology." Intex Cloud X3 key specifications 3.5-inch display 1GHz dual-core MediaTek MT6572 processor 256MB RAM 115MB internal memory, expandable by up to 32GB via microSD card 2-megapixel rear camera VGA front facing camera Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) 1,450mAh battery Dual SIM (GSM+GSM)

Monday, 8 July 2013

Who will get the third place? LG,Sony, and Huawei duke it out


We are at a point in the mobile industry where the battle for the third place has become more interesting than the competition for the first position in the world market. 

Samsung and Apple are clearly ahead of the pack, and it’s hard to believe that anyone could disrupt their leadership in the next year or so. But behind Samsung and Apple, several players vie for the third place, and potentially, the chance to displace the leaders. 

These three players are LG, Huawei, and Sony. LG: 45 million These three companies all have ambitious plans for the rest of the year. LG puts all its hope in the G2, which will debut on August 7 at a New York event. The Korean company has already begun teasing the device, and I expect a big marketing push to drum up the interest for the G2. 

LG wants to sell 10 million units of the G2, which may not seem much compared to blockbusters like Samsung’s Galaxy S4, but is quite ambitious for a relatively small player like LG. With the G2 on the horizon, and encouraged by the success of the Optimus G and the G Pro, which propelled it on the third place in the first quarter of 2013, LG increased its internal target to 45 million smartphones this year, up 5 million from the initial goal. 

LG Optimus G Huawei: 60 million Huawei is just as ambitious – the Chinese telecom giant is a big player in its home market, which buoys its hopes for 2013 – Huawei wants to sell no fewer than 60 million smartphones. That’s a lofty goal, but if Huawei plays its cards right, it may profit from the LTE boom that’s expected to sweep China soon. 

In the international market, Huawei will continue to push attractive devices like the Ascend P6, the current world’s slimmest phone. Are Huawei’s goals realistic? Last year, the company had the same 60 million target, which proved unreachable. Could this year be different? Huawei Ascend Mate Sony: 42 million Sony may be the dark horse of the smartphone race right now. After a long period of lagging behind competitors in terms of specs, design, and software, in 2012 Sony has been making up the lost ground. 

The company told the Chinese press gathered for the launch of the Xperia Z Ultra that it plans to sell 42 million smartphones in 2013, to end the year on the third place. The Xperia Z and its siblings were moderately successful, while the Z Ultra shapes up to be a good competitor to the Samsung Note series. But probably Sony’s real hope is the i1, also known as Honami, which is rumored to be the first device created from scratch under the One Sony strategy. 

One Sony is the plan pushed by CEO Kaz Hirai to use the entire technological expertise of the Sony group in the making of each product. In other words, the i1 might benefit from Sony’s rich photography acumen and all the display expertise accumulated in years of making high-end television sets. 

Sony Xperia Z Disruption So, who will be in the third spot come December 31? Judging from estimates alone, Huawei, but history tells us that setting targets and actually meeting them are completely different things in the smartphone business. 

In the best scenario for the Android ecosystem, all three players will meet their targets and begin putting pressure on Apple and Samsung. Both juggernauts show signs of slowing down, and in times like this, upstarts have the best chance of disrupting the status quo. And, while, disruption may not be good for the incumbents, we, the consumers, can only gain from it.

Monday, 1 July 2013

Apple applies for iWatch trademark

Filings in Japan and Russia spark
rumours that company may be
preparing to introduce a wearable
technology product
Apple CEO Tim Cook has not ruled out
the idea of the company introducing a
wearable tecjnology device.
Photograph: Kevork Djansezian/Getty
Images
Charles Arthur
Apple has filed for ownership of the
"iWatch" trademark in Japan,
suggesting that the company could be
preparing either to introduce a
wearable technology or a product
relating to the TV business.
The Wall Street Journal reports that
the application was made there on 3
June, and made public on 27 June.
Izvestia reported that it applied for the
same trademark in Russia in June.
However, it does not appear to have
registered the name in Europe, where
an Italian company owns the
trademark.
Registering a trademark is usually an
essential step made ahead of the
launch of a product in order to prevent
rivals from registering the same name
and creating an embarrassing and
costly legal clash. The name of
Apple's iPod was first discovered from
trademark filings ahead of its launch
in October 2001 – though it trampled
over Cisco's "iPhone" trademark in
2007 when it launched its phone that
January. The two companies later
came to an agreement.
There have been rising expectations –
after a growing hiatus since October,
during which it has not released any
new devices – that Apple will
introduce either a watch-style device
or some form of TV-compatible
device.
The idea of an iWatch that would offer
a wearable system able to connect to
a smartphone has raised interest, with
a number of media outlets saying the
company has a huge team of
engineers working on such a product.
Wearable technology such as Google
Glass, now in beta testing with
thousands of "explorers" in the US,
and Pebble's Bluetooth-connected
watch, has become a hot new item.
Tim Cook, Apple's chief executive,
didn't rule out the idea of such a
product when he appeared at the
AllThingsD conference earlier this
year.
Alternatively, the "watch" element of
the name could relate to a TV-related
product. Analysts have expected Apple
to make a move in the television
space, but with margins on sets very
thin and replacement cycles low – at
about 10% per year – have been
unable to think of what it might do.
Benedict Evans of Enders Analysis has
suggested that Apple could introduce
an HDMI-powered dongle with the
ability to use TV signals. But the
company has given no indication of its
intentions, and there has been no
industry chatter from TV content
providers that would indicate a product
was on the way.
So far there is no record of a similar
iWatch trademark filing from Apple in
Europe. An EC trademark database
search on iWatch turns up three
results , with the ownership being held
by Probendi of Italy and filed in 2008.
The other two applications were made
after Probendi's, and were either
opposed or withdrawn.
Probendi's iWatch application is a
mobile-phone application which sends
real-time information to an emergency
support system.

Why It Doesn't Make Sense ForMicrosoft To Make Its Own Phone


Since last October, Microsoft has been reorganizing itself around the idea that it's a "devices and services" company . The company has plenty of services, but not so many devices. If it's really going to become a devices company, then it stands to reason that it needs a few more devices. 

The most important missing device from Microsoft's line up is a smartphone. So, naturally, it would make sense for Microsoft to build its own smartphone, right? Well, never say never, but we don't think Microsoft is going to enter the smartphone business despite the fact that it's focusing itself on devices and services. 

There are three reasons for Microsoft to steer clear of the smartphone business: 1. Carrier distribution is complicated. 2. Nokia and HTC are making good Windows Phones. 3. Microsoft's Windows Phone failures don't have anything to do with bad hardware. After Microsoft released its own tablet, the Surface, chatter of a Surface smartphone started kicking up . 

There are, however, many important differences between the tablet market and the smartphone market. In the tablet market, Microsoft just has to ship the Surface and let users fire it up with WiFi. To enter the phone market, Microsoft would have to build a global distribution network, as well as secure contracts with carriers around the world. Each carrier is going to have its own specifications, and its own demands. That's a headache Microsoft doesn't want, or need. Look at Apple. Despite selling the most influential phone, it's only on 240 carriers. Samsung, by contrast, is on 800 carriers. 

This is part of the reason Apple's iPhone isn't winning on market share, while at the same time the iPad remains relatively strong in tablet market share. There's another key difference between the Surface tablet and the current smartphone market. Microsoft's PC partners weren't making great computers with strong brands. Quick quiz: What's the best Android smartphone on the market? If you're paying attention at all, you would probably guess the Samsung S4, or maybe just, Samsung. (The correct answer is actually the HTC One, but that's another story. The important thing here is that there is at least one well-known Android brand for hardware.) Next question! What's the best Windows-based computer on the market? You're probably stumped. 

This is a problem for Microsoft. If a consumer walks into Best Buy, he or she has no problem asking for a MacBook, or an iPad. Which Windows- based PC would he or she ask for? An Acer Aspire S7? An Asus Zenbook Prime? The Sony Vaio Pro 13? They don't exactly roll off the tongue, or come to mind very easily. 

The hope for Microsoft is that the Surface can become a strong brand that rivals iPad, or MacBooks. Consumers can walk into a store and say, "I want a Surface." Microsoft wanted to have at least one premier Windows 8 device when it launched Windows 8 last year. Because Windows 8 was such a radical departure from what Microsoft had been doing, it had to have at least one device it could confidently say did exactly what it wanted. Its PC partners were dragging their feet in the tablet market, and Microsoft wasn't sure it could rely on them to produce something that competes with the iPad. In the smartphone market, these problems don't exist to the same degree. HTC and Nokia both make high-quality hardware. 

There's almost nothing Microsoft can do that will be better on the hardware side than either of them. As for branding, Nokia's Lumia brand isn't exactly killing it, but Nokia is a brand on its own, and Windows Phone is slowly developing into a brand. If a consumer walks into a Best Buy looking for a Windows Phone, it won't take much to get the best Windows Phone in his or her hands. It's important to note that Nokia and HTC are both sickly companies. If they were to face serious financial problems, then we would expect Microsoft to either step in with a big check to bail them out, or it would be forced to go on its own and make a phone. 

Until then, we think it stays out of the phone manufacturing business. Just because Microsoft is developing into a devices and services company, it doesn't mean it has to make all the devices. It just means it has to work well on devices. The reason Windows Phone hasn't caught on has less to do with hardware, and more to do with software and apps. A Microsoft-built smartphone wouldn't change that.

Friday, 28 June 2013

Huawei wants to make a Google PlayEdition Ascend P6


Google Play Edition handsets are definitely the hop topic right now, and it appears that Huawei is the next company looking to join the ranks of Samsung and HTC in the GPE handset club. 

Speaking with Pocket-Lint earlier today, Kevin Ho, president of the handset product division at Huawei, stated that the company is collaborating with Google to produce a new edition of the Ascend P6 which will run stock Android. We are working with Google to analyse the possibility of bringing out a Huawei Ascend P6 with Google Edition, 
Ok, so nothing’s set in stone quite yet, but at least we officially know that talks are on-going. Interestingly though, this is directly counter to the company’s statements issued when it initially launched the Ascend P6 in London earlier this month. 

The company’s chairman, Richard Yu, insisted that Huawei’s Emotion UI was better was far better than stock Android, and that it offered “hundreds of improvements” over the default Android experience. So the real question is what is Huawei’s motive; a simple u-turn to capitalise on all the coverage that’s being given to these Google Play Edition handsets? Perhaps Richard Yu was overselling the benefits of Huawei’s Emotion UI when he said it would be better in touch with a user’s “emotions”. 

Needless to say, the PR on this one looks to be a little bit of a mess. But Huawei isn’t the only company which might be interested in joining the GPE club, both Sony and LG are considered likely candidates for another stock Android device. It will be interesting to see how many other manufacturers will announce Google Edition handsets in the near future.

Sunday, 23 June 2013

Walmart permanently drops iPhone 4S price to $39, iPhone 5 to $129

While brief sales on iPhones are
relatively common, it's rare to see
permanent price drops outside of a
hardware refresh cycle. Walmart is
willing to give those cuts a shot,
however. Visit the company's stores
from this point onward and you can
pick up the 16GB iPhone 4S in its
AT&T, Sprint or Verizon forms at $39
on contract, instead of $90. The 16GB
iPhone 5 for those same networks is
dropping to $129 from its usual $190;
sorry, T-Mobile fans, you're out of the
loop for now. It's not hard to
understand Walmart's sudden
generosity -- when the iPhone range
is nearing its annual upgrade, the
lower prices should keep current units
moving.
VIA: Mashable
SOURCE: Walmart (1) , (2)