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Thursday, February 28, 2013

Samsung invites public to Times Square for its Galaxy S IV unveiling


So, what are you up to on March 14th? If your idea of a good time is seeing a new smartphone unveiled, Samsung's arranging just such a party at Times Square in New York for the upcoming Galaxy S IV, according to a recent tweet. We'd guess that revelers will get to watch a livestream of the recently announced Samsung Unpacked 2013 shindig for the new handset on the block's famous big screens, while the event itself happens at Radio City Music hall. There's no other details other than the @timessquare Twitter handle, but if you're not in the big apple, you'll be able to catch it right here instead, of course.

Source: engadget.com

Last Day To Snag 8 Useful Mac Apps For Free! [Freebie Bundle]


The new year is well underway, and we’ve got a bundle lined up for you here at Cult of Mac Deals that will help you make the most of your Mac over the months to come. And the best part is that you’ll get all 8 of these time-savings apps for free as part of The Mac Freebie Bundle.


Here’s what’s included (Note: Regular price is listed.):
  • IconBox 2 – $15.00
  • Ondesoft Screen Capture for Mac – $30.00
  • VidConvert – $8.00
  • Image Smith – $16.00
  • Wallpaper Wizard – $10.00
  • ClipBuddy – $30.00
  • Type Fu – $5.00
  • Sweetie – $3.00
Let’s dive a little deeper into each of these apps…

IconBox 2: IconBox is a full-featured icon library for your Mac. It provides icon lovers new and old with a great toolset to manage the icons on your system. System icons, application icons, and even the dock are freely available to alter. If you want to revert to the defaults, a quick button will remove any changes you’ve made to the system.

Ondesoft Screen Capture for Mac: Have you been looking forward a screen capture app that can do it all? The easy to use interface and variety of customizable options makes Onde Screen Capture for Mac a must have application for graphic designers and novice bloggers alike.

VidConvert: VidConvert will convert just about any type of video into one of the many popular formats of today. Creating videos for your iPhone or iPad, for your Mac or TV, or formats such as DivX and MPEG are now just a click away!

Image Smith: Image Smith is a powerful batch image processing tool. With a variety of features you can easily scale, reorient, recolorize, convert, and flatten images. Image Smith can open numerous different picture file types, and output in the most common industry standard formats like JPEG, GIF, and PNG.

Wallpaper Wizard: There’ll be no more surfing the web to find a nice wallpaper that fits your screen. You’ll now have Wallpaper Wizard and its access to a private collection of more than 100,000 HD and top quality wallpapers!

ClipBuddy: Touted as the most comprehensive clipboard manager for your Mac, with ClipBuddy, you can easily save and organize all of your cut and copy contents – text, image or both – from any app. ClipBuddy does more than just copy and paste text, it automatically organizes all of your copied text from any program in easy-to-navigate categories.

Type Fu: Type Fu is the “go to app” when it comes to increasing your typing speed. It’s an insanely easy piece of software to use that allows you to run through typing exercises that will get your fingers dancing.

Sweetie: Sweetie stylizes your images and turns them into beautiful pieces of text art. The app has a simple and clean interface that allows you to choose tile type and size, font, character set, color option, and more.

All of these apps sold outside of this bundle would cost you $117. But with The Mac Freebie Bundle, you’ll get all 8 apps for absolutely free!

This is you absolute last chance to get The Mac Freebie Bundle, so head over to the Cult of Mac Deals page now and get it before it’s gone!

  

Source: cultofmac.com

Facebook to Serve Up Ads Based on Your Offline Shopping Habits

Facebook will now be able to target some ads based on your offline shopping habits thanks to some partnerships it announced on Wednesday.

The social networking giant has inked a deal with data mining firms Datalogix, Acxiom and Epsilon that will apply their records about customers' offline purchases to Facebook's Custom Audiences product. Facebook is also working with BlueKai "as a marketing data platform to bring a brand's first party site data to use for targeting on Facebook," according to the company. Custom Audiences, which was released last August, lets advertisers identify Facebook users by their Facebook ID, phone number or email address. Now, advertisers can match that information with data from the firms, which was gleaned through shopper loyalty programs.

As Facebook explained in a blog post, the deals let advertisers target by generic product segment: "We will work with these select third parties to create pre-defined targeting categories on Facebook. Businesses of all sizes will now be able to target categories like "soda drinkers" or "auto-intenders."

According to Facebook, the change means advertisers can skip a step to identify an audience segment by its purchase intent:

For example, an auto dealer may want to customize an offer to people who are looking to buy a new car. To do this today, many businesses work with third parties to better understand how to identity and reach that audience. With today's updates businesses can now do this same thing by showing ads to people on Facebook who may be in the market for a new car.
Facebook also claims that it won't share personal data about users with marketers. As with other Facebook ad, you can also opt out at any time.

Source : mashable

MWC 2013: Intel isn't giving up on tablets and smartphones

It’s no secret that Intel has struggled to break into the mobile market. But if there were any doubts as to whether or not the company is in it for the long haul, this week’s announcements should put them to rest. None of these were unexpected, but together the announcements, at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, seem designed to show Intel remains serious about getting its chips into everything from inexpensive smartphones to high-end tablets.

The biggest announcement was the Clover Trail+ platform, which consists of three new Atom processors, the 2.0GHz Z2580, 1.6GHz Z2560 and 1.2GHz Z2520.

Intel currently has two mobile platforms:

Medfield for Android smartphones includes the 1.6GHz Atom Z2460 single-core with 400MHz PowerVR SGX 540 graphics. (Intel later added the low-end Z2420 used by Acer, Lava and Safaricom for smartphones in developing markets and the high-end Z2480 used in the Motorola Razr i.)

And the Clover Trail platform, which includes the 1.8GHz Atom Z2760 dual-core with 533MHz PowerVR SGX 545 graphics, is used in Windows 8 tablets from Acer, Asus, Dell, Fujitsu, HP, Lenovo, LG and Samsung. All of these processors are manufactured on a 32nm process.

Clover Trail+ takes the Medfield platform, adds a second core and the improved memory controller from Clover Trail, and tops it off with more capable PowerVR SGX 544 dual-core graphics. Intel says it will deliver twice the compute performance and 3x the graphics performance of the Atom Z2640.

Despite the code-name, Clover Trail+ is primarily designed for Android smartphones. The first is the Lenovo IdeaPhone K900, which has a 5.5-inch 1080p display (more than 40 pixels per inch), the Atom Z2580, 2GB of RAM, 16GB of storage, a 13MP camera and Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean.

It will be available starting in the second quarter in China, followed by Russia, India, Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia, and the Philippines, but it lacks 4G LTE so is unlikely to be sold in the U.S. But Clover Trail+ is likely to be used on other devices such as Android tablets as well. Asus and ZTE will release devices based on it as well.

Clover Trail+ is manufactured on the same 32nm process as Medfield and Clover Trail. But the follow-up, the 22nm Merrifield platform for smartphones, will be available later this year.

For tablets, Intel is planning to ship its first quad-core platform, Bay Trail, in time for the holidays. At Mobile World Congress, Intel said it is working with a number of the original device manufacturers (Compal, ECS, Pegatron, Quanta and Wistron) to make it easier for their customers to get Android- and Windows-based tablets to market quickly.

Intel is also making progress with its cellular modems, which are critical to be competitive in smartphones. The Medfield platform uses the XMM 6260 HSPA+ baseband while Clover Trail+ uses the XMM 6360 with twice the theoretical throughput (HSPA+ 42Mbps). The XMM 7060, a single-mode 4G LTE modem that Intel announced more than two years ago, will be replaced by XMM 7160, the company’s first multi-mode LTE baseband. It will be shipping in the first half of this year, and is designed for smartphones, tablets and Ultrabooks.

Intel has been working on putting these 3G and 4G basebands on the same die with its processor, but it hasn’t said when this will happen. Pretty much everyone is playing catch-up with Qualcomm when it comes to this level of integration.

Finally, Intel has gotten a few more wins for its low-end Atom Z2420 platform, known by the code-name Lexington. At Mobile World Congress, Asus announced the Fonepad, a 7-inch tablet with the Z2420 and 3G voice and data. A wireless operator in Egypt, Etisalat Misr, is also planning to release a smartphone based on the chip.

None of these moves is going to significantly tilt the playing field. Intel dominates the PC and server processor market, while ARM and the long list of chip designers that use its technology, own the mobile market. (To underscore this, ARM announced at the show that it now has seven licenses for its latest big.LITTLE architecture and 75 companies using its Mali graphics in 150 million chips last year.)

But it does show that Intel has some momentum and doesn’t plan on giving up on tablets and smartphones.

The next steps for Intel will be to use its manufacturing advantage to get 22nm Atom chips out the door, while the rest of the industry is still rolling out 32nm and 28nm processors, and to use its LTE technology to secure some more high-profile designs here in the U.S.

Do you think Intel standas a chance in tablets and smartphones? Let us know your thoughts in the Talkback section below.

Source : zdnet

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Samsung Galaxy S4′s Display Will Put the iPhone 5′s Retina to Shame


Galaxy S4 Display vs Retina

For the last couple of years, the quality of smartphones isn’t measured by the number of cores and the amount of storage on the device; but by the display resolution and the sharpness of the display play, which of course is an important role in determining the quality of a smartphone. According to a recent report, the next addition to Samsung’s top-selling Galaxy S line-up is going to sport a high resolution display, and will have the highest resolution of any other smartphone currently available in the market; this also includes the iPhone 5 with its retina display.

Samsung Galaxy Series

In the past few weeks, we have watched (and read) the good news roll in for Samsung; proof positive that their Galaxy Series has really paid off. Reports are flooding in about the tech giants last quarter, and their bold predictions about 2013 and the mobile market. Apple on the other hand, has some serious soul searching to do, with the future of their device line. Apple stocks seem to be taking a tumble, while many see smooth sailing ahead for Samsung.

Even though Samsung has kept the details on their next flagship device tightly wrapped, it has been known for quite sometime that the Galaxy S4 will at the very least come with a Super AMOLED display, with a pixel density of 440ppi. Although, newer reports are claiming the Korean giant will ditch the traditional side by side pixel layout for the latest hexagonal diamond layout.  This allows more pixels to be stuffed into a smaller space. This would definitely be a bigger step from the current Galaxy S3’s 306ppi display and even the iPhone 5’s 326ppi Retina display.

Samsung Flexible Mobile Phone
CES 2013, Las Vegas

The Samsung Galaxy S line-up has been the most popular smartphone franchise and has managed to capture a large market share. Even though the Korean manufacturer has been quite mum on the details about the Galaxy S4, we are almost sure a better display is on the list. At CES in Las Vegas, Samsung showed us a prototype of a bendable display and it looks brilliant. But, we are still not sure if Samsung is going to introduce it with the next flagship Galaxy S phone. We’ll keep you posted as soon as we get any more info about the matter.

Do let us know what features would you like to see in the Galaxy S4? Comment below.

Source: geekmagazine.org

iPhone 6 'about to enter production, packs 4.8" screen'


Analyst backs talk of phablet-sized iPhone.

The iPhone 6 is preparing to enter production ahead of its mooted launch date in June, reports indicate, as the start of a new year brings a slew of new rumours around Apple’s plans for 2013.

In a note to investors, Jefferies analyst Peter Misek claims that Apple is already undertaking trials of the next iteration of the iPhone and the fabled iPhone Mini, presumably in the environs of its Cupertino campus, before they enter production in March.

Misek also corroborated persistent rumours that the iPhone 6, also informally dubbed the iPhone 5S, will be home to a 4.8-inch screen, up from the four-inch display that debuted on the iPhone 5.

That tallies with a separate report from the China Times, also claiming that Apple will enter the fast-growing phablet market this year with a device that teams smartphone functionality with dimensions that verge on tablet territory.

The industry expert also backs conjecture that the handset will be equipped with a super HD camera, Near Field Communications technology to up the handset’s credentials as a digital wallet, improved battery life and 128GB of storage.

Apple is also thought likely to make its seventh-generation handset available in a host of new colour options, including pink, yellow, blue, green, purple, silver, red and slate.

Source: uswitch.com

Adobe announces Photoshop Touch for iOS and Android phones


Time to get layerin.

Would-be graphic designers rejoice: Adobe has an app designed just for your smartphones.
Announced today, Photoshop Touch for mobile brings the core functions of Photoshop to the form factor of a phone.

Those who've been paying attention will know that Photoshop Touch for tablets has been around since last year, though Adobe has planned about bringing the app to life on handsets ever since.

"We wanted to make the app more accessible and available for situations where you don't have a tablet available," Stephen Nielson, product manager at Adobe, told TechRadar.

"We wanted to bring the same core features of Photoshop to millions of pockets worldwide."

Shop talk

The app features are virtually identical features as Touch for tablets, yet shrunken down to pant pocket size.

Users can utilize layers, advanced selection tools, adjustments and filters as they manipulate images taken straight from their phone's photo gallery or redacted from the cloud. The app can edit images as large as 12MP with layers.

There's also a phone optimized version of Scribble Select that allows for precise selections and cropping even with a finger.

The Camera Fill feature lets users blend layers in real time using their camera as well as add textures.
Adobe has gone to great lengths to make sure everything is accessible within a thumb reach: tool bars around the perimeter make for quick swipes and taps to all the image manipulation tools you'd expect of Photoshop.

What would be mobile without easy share options? Touch users can quickly post their creations to Facebook and Twitter or send via email.

Instagramming it?

Though Photoshop tends to run in fairly graphically advanced circles, Nielson said that the mobile app is appropriate for someone who doesn't just want to apply a filter to a photo.

"Photoshop Touch is more of an advanced app in a lot of ways," he said. "You can do a lot more with it than any other app, but it does require a little more learning. You can pick it up very quickly, though."

When asked if Adobe is trying to do a little jockeying with Instagram, Nielson noted that what is central to the social site isn't Touch's focus.

"Our focus is the core features of Photoshop – the layering, advanced selections. It does include filters and adjustments, but those aren't the core features.

"We have some unique features, like more transformative tools that transform an image into something different rather than overlaying a filter."

Creative cloud

What really stands out with Adobe's app offering is the ability to start a project on a desktop, tinker with it on a tablet, then finish it off and share on a phone.

Flip the steps around or skip from one to the other, it doesn't matter thanks to the Creative Cloud.

If users do start a project on their phone, the image is first saved there and then is transmitted to cloud storage (there's even a loading bar to let you know when the transmission is complete).

Though there are several cloud subscription models, ranging up to US$50, a free cloud account comes with 2GB of storage.

The app will work on iPhone 4S's and higher and Android running Ice Cream Sandwich or later. iPod touch (5th generation) owners can also get a taste of Touch.

Except for China, the app is available through the App Store and Google Play for US$4.99 globally, though Adobe noted there may be some lag time between the initial announcement and availability.

Stay tuned for our full of review of the app, and be kind if you want to critique our photo skills. We're sensitive, you know.

Source: techradar.com
 

Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 Tablet Becomes Official

[MWC 2013] After nearly one month of leaks and rumors, Samsung is making the Galaxy Note 8.0 tablet official. We all knew what it looked like, thanks to various web leaks leading to Mobile World Congress, but now you can get (almost) all the details related to this new Samsung product.

The Galaxy Note 8.0 has been designed to maximize the pen experience, while remaining a usable one-hand device. Maximizing is the important term here because this will also stretch your hand grip what seems to be the limit for “one hand devices”. Still, it is undeniable that a larger display surface does help in terms of drawing and writing, so we need to see what the usage model is going to be, and how the tablet will perform in the real-world.


Hardware Overview

First, let’s take a quick look at the specifications: the Galaxy Note 8.0 will be powered by a quad-core processor (unknown model at this point), which we bet is a Samsung Exynos chip with four Cortex A9 CPUs and 2GB of RAM. The display is an 8-inch 1280×800 (189 ppi or pixels-per-inch), which is the same resolution than the Galaxy Note 10.1, but in a smaller form-factor, so the pixel density is effectively higher. Android 4.1.2 is the operating system of choice here, and we expect most of it to look like what is on the Galaxy Note 2 and Galaxy Note 10.1, but Samsung has added new content and services (more on that later).

The Note 8.0 will come in WiFi-only (A/B/G/N) or WiFi/HSPA+ versions (the carrier can decide to allow cellular phone calls…), and the latter will have GPS services from both the GPS and Glonass networks. Finally, we have confirmed that this S-Pen supports 1024 levels of pressure sensitivity, just like the Galaxy Note 10.1, so we think that this is the same type of Wacom digitizer. The last highlight is the battery capacity, which stands at 4600 mAh. We’ve added more specs at the bottom of the article…

The Galaxy Note 8.0 will compete with other small tablets like the iPad mini, the Kindle Fire HD or the Nexus 7. It has the advantage of being the only major one that comes with a digitizer pen (The Surface Pro isn’t in the same category), which remains a very rare feature in the Android tablet world. This is enough differentiation to truly insulate the Note 8 from any real competition, if the end-user cares about a good pen experience.


User Interface, Content and Services

Although the Galaxy Note 8.0 is a cousin of the Galaxy Note 2 smartphone, it is fair to say that the sheer increase in size can alter the usage model significantly. For instance, the multi-window (split-screen) feature would become much more useful, since details in a sub-window are much more readable. Obviously, the writing experience is magnified by the increased surface. Although we can write on post-its, it’s fair to say that we all like using pens on a big surface.
To supplement its traditional S-Note application, Samsung is adding Awesome Note, a new app that this more suited to intensive note-taking while S-Note was more for casual, if not artistic, notes and drawings.

Of course, Samsung continues to be committed to its tablets use at home, which means that the Galaxy Note 8.0 can also be used as a high-tech universal remote, thanks to Smart Remote which merges TV remote and TV Guide in one place.


Conclusion

This new tablet will be all about usage model. For users in select countries, it could serve as a cellular voice device, which the iPad mini doesn’t do as far as we know, so that could be an extra-appeal (there is always a small, but hard-core, crowd for that), but the Galaxy Note 8.0 was not designed to compete based on specs, or based on the industrial design (we would have loved to see a design closer to the Note 2…).

In many ways, we suspect that the Note 8.0 will be more successful than the Galaxy Note 10.1 (in terms of unit shipped), thanks for a more portable form-factor and possibly a lower price. It’s not clear what Samsung’s own goal is (in terms of unit shipped), but so far, the company believes in the “pen” market, and we think that they are right to invest: as time goes on, faster hardware translate into a better pen experience, and this may just pay big time down the road.

Have you tried a Galaxy Note device? What would you like to see samsung do with electronic pens in the future?

Source : ubergizmo

Adobe issues emergency Flash update for three vulnerabilities, says two are being used in attacks on Firefox


Adobe on Tuesday released a security bulletin addressing three vulnerabilities in its Flash product. If you use Flash on Windows, Mac, or Linux, you should download the new version and update as soon as possible.

Two of the vulnerabilities are being exploited in the wild as part of targeted attacks designed to trick the user into clicking a link which directs to a website serving malicious Flash content. In this case, the exploit is designed to target Flash Player in Mozilla’s Firefox.

The security patch is available for multiple versions; here’s the full list of upgrades Adobe is recommending:
  • Users of Adobe Flash Player 11.6.602.168 and earlier versions for Windows and Adobe Flash Player 11.6.602.167 and earlier versions for Macintosh should update to the newest version 11.6.602.171 by downloading it from the Adobe Flash Player Download Center. Users of Flash Player 11.2.x or later for Windows and users of Flash Player 11.3.x or later for Macintosh will receive the update automatically if they have selected the option to “Allow Adobe to install updates” or will be prompted to download it.
  • Users of Flash Player 10.3.183.63 and earlier versions for Windows and Flash Player 10.3.183.61 and earlier versions for Macintosh who cannot update to Flash Player 11.6.602.171, can download the Flash Player 10.3.183.67 update from here.
  • Users of Adobe Flash Player 11.2.202.270 and earlier versions for Linux can update to Adobe Flash Player 11.2.202.273 by downloading it from the Adobe Flash Player Download Center.
  • Users of Flash Player 10.3.183.61 and earlier versions for Linux who cannot update to Flash Player 11.2.202.273 can grab the Flash Player 10.3.183.67 update from here.
  • Adobe Flash Player installed with Google Chrome will automatically be updated to the latest Google Chrome version, which will include Adobe Flash Player 11.6.602.171 for Windows, Macintosh, and Linux.
  • Adobe Flash Player installed with Internet Explorer 10 for Windows 8 will automatically be updated to the latest version of Internet Explorer 10, which will include Adobe Flash Player 11.6.602.171 for Windows. Microsoft has also revised its corresponding Security Advisory.
In short, make sure Adobe Flash gets updated regardless of what browser or platform you’re on.

Today’s emergency patch is the third update to Flash this month. Details about the vulnerabilities are here: CVE-2013-0504, CVE-2013-0648, and CVE-2013-0643.
See also: Mozilla to enable Click to Play for all Firefox plugins by default, except the latest Flash version

Image credit: Vangelis Thomaidis
Source: thenextweb.com

How to Update Samsung Galaxy S2 GT I9100G with Official Jellybean 4.1.2 XWLSR


An upgraded firmware version of jellybean as android 4.1.2 has now officially launched for Samsung galaxy S2. This update android 4.1.2 jellybean now become commonly launching one by one for most of the powered android devices. Well in this case it is dubbed as XWLSR just after of XWLSD. It also comes along with some new impressing features and most the bug fixes, check them below.

Features of XWLSR

  • New jellybean UI
  • Improved speed and performance
  • Camera and gallery fixed*
  • Battery optimization*
  • More stable and optimum
Now let’s head to update our Galaxy S2 with this new jellybean update. Use the below tutorial to update your galaxy S2 via Odin. Task every step carefully of the tutorial to avoid sudden errors and damages.
Disclaimer:- We are are not responsible for any kind of error or damage to your device cause of using any kind of info of this tutorial. So do anything only at your own risk.

Update Samsung Galaxy S2 GT- I9100G to Official Android 4.1.2 Jellybean XWLSR manually by Odin [Tutorial]

Step [1]. Download these required tools and files below
 
Step [2]. Prepare your phone and PC (pre-requisites)
Recommend link- Preparing your Android Phone Before Upgrading Firmware
First make backup of all your important data- How to backup your Android phone before upgrading firmware
Note:- Do not backup phone data using KIES, cause it is not sure that this version will release for your country later.
  • Must enable the USB debugging mode in your Galaxy S2 by following- Settings>>Applications>>Developments>> USB debugging. And here just ticked the “USB debugging” option.
  • Disable all kind of security suites and firewalls such as antivirus from both PC and device, to avoid interruption during the process.
  • Charge your galaxy S2 at least 70%.
  • Ensure you have Samsung Galaxy S2 of modal no. GT-I9100G. If you not have the right device or modal then don’t ever try to upgrade it via this method.
You can check the phone’s modal no. by- Follow Settings>> About Phone in your phone.
Rooting Warning: This is an official Android 4.1.2 XWLSR update for Galaxy S2, which means you will lose root as soon as you install this update .
Step [3]. Follow below procedure to flash XWLSR firmware via Odin
1. First extract both the downloaded packages (odin & firmware) separately in desire folders of your PC.
2. Then launch Odin3 v1.83.exe from the folder where you extracted Odin before.
3. In Odin window check that “Auto Reboot” and “F.Reset time” boxes are ticked and “Re-partition” box is unchecked. Now keep Odin opened in your PC.

odin3v1.83_thumb3

4. Switch off your Galaxy S2.
5. Reboot Galaxy S2 in download mode by- press and hold “Volume down” + “Home” buttons and then power on your Galaxy S2. Next you will see a green robot, indicates your S2’s download mode.
6. Now connect your galaxy S2 to your PC via USB cable.
7. Then check in Odin that ID:COM box turns to yellow shaded and a message“Added” appeared in message box, indicates that your Galaxy S2 is perfectly detected by Odin.
8. Now in Odin fill the “PDA” tab with a file, which have “.tar” extension. You can browse this file from the folder where you extracted the stock XWLSR firmware before.
9. After it just click on “Start” button to begin the flashing process.
10. Wait approx 3-5 minutes until the flashing process get finished. Your phone will automatically reboot and a “PASS”message will appear in message box of Odin, when flashing will complete.
Note:- If your device get stuck between the process or failed to reboot to the new ROM, then just pull out the phone’s battery and reinsert it and boot the device in normal mode. Otherwise for more rare case just task the whole procedure again.
Now when the phone will restart, and as soon as you see the language setting option, just then you can disconnect the device from the computer.

Done very well!

Great! You have successfully updated your Samsung Galaxy S2 GT-I9100G with Official Android 4.1.2 Jellybean XWLSR firmware.

Have Funsmiley_thumb133
  
Source: androidflip.com

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

How could Apple make a cheap iPhone Mini?

Rumors that Apple is working on a cheaper version of the iPhone—dubbed the iPhone Mini—got a bit of a boost last week when Morgan Stanley analyst Katy Huberty commented how a lower-priced iPhone made sense.

At the core of Huberty's argument is the fact that Apple wants to expand into China, and Chinese consumers want access to the latest version of the iPhone at a lower price, rather than discounted older generation hardware. Huberty believes that an iPhone Mini would help Apple gain a stronger foothold in China.

While an iPhone Mini would have lower gross margins, and certainly cannibalize iPhone sales to a certain, albeit unknown, degree, it would boost the company's revenues and profits.

But how much cheaper could Apple make an iPhone Mini? Let's take a look at a few options open to Apple.

  • Cut profit margin on existing hardware.
    The iPhone commands a huge profit margin, estimated to be anywhere between 35 and 50 percent.
    I find it unlikely that Apple sell the iPhone cheaper in China than anywhere else in the world.
  • Release an iPhone Mini based built using last-generation technology.
    While Huberty says that Chinese consumers want the latest version of the iPhone at a lower price, rather than discounted older generation hardware, repackaged older tech might fit the bill. After all, Apple doesn't focus that much on hardware spec, so old-tech packaged in a new shell could pass for new tech.
  • A new, cheaper iPhone 5.
    Another possibility would be to for Apple to come up with a cheaper iPhone 5. An IHS teardown of the handset from September 2012 suggested that a 16GB iPhone 5 with a price tag of $649 cost Apple $207 to make.
    (Source: IHS)

    That was a few months ago, so chances are the iPhone 5 now costs Apple less to make, thanks to falling component prices.

    It's also possible that Apple could shave a few bucks off certain components. Processor, the display and touchscreen assembly, and wireless chipsets could all see few bucks shaved off the price.

  • Stick cellular capability into the iPod touch.
    The iPod touch retails for $299 for the 32GB model. This could be an ideal platform from which Apple could build a cheaper iPhone.

So, Apple has options open to it. But no matter what route the company takes in China, if it decides to come out with a cheaper iPhone then it will need to carefully address the issue of cannibalization. A cheaper iPhone will need to be inferior in some way to the full-priced iPhone. Either that, or Apple could limit availability of the iPhone Mini to certain territories.

An iPhone Mini would certainly be disruptive, but Apple would need to be careful not to disrupt its already profitable business in order to expand, and potentially pull in more money. 

Source : zdnet

Twitter will have a native client ready for Firefox OS launch, will support Web Activities for easy tweeting


Twitter has announced that it will release a native Firefox OS client in time for the launch of Mozilla’s upcoming mobile operating system later this year.

According to Twitter, the app will be in the Firefox Marketplace by the time the first Firefox OS handsets ship. The company showed off the interface for the app, which includes Home, Connect, Discover and Me tabs, much like its other apps. It will also include a unique feature of Firefox OS: Web Activities. Users will be able to tweet directly from supported apps, such as the built-in photos app.



Mozilla is showing off Firefox OS at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona this week after revealing the platform’s first devices, which come from ZTE and Alcatel.


It also announced two new handset partners, LG and Huawei, and over a dozen new carrier partners. Sony has also lent its support to the fledgeling operating system this week with the announcement that it will release a Firefox OS handset in 2014.

Twitter’s support for Firefox OS is a significant win for Mozilla. At this point, a native Twitter client is a must have for any mobile operating system that’s aiming for widespread adoption.

In addition to Twitter, other software partners have come on board to support the Firefox Marketplace: AccuWeather, Airbnb, Box, Cut the Rope, Disney Mobile Games, EA games, Facebook, Nokia’s HERE maps and Soundcloud.

Photo credit: KIMIHIRO HOSHINO/AFP/Getty Images
Source: thenextweb.com

No, the new iOS 6.1 lock screen bypass bug does not allow access to your iPhone’s file system


Earlier today, word began getting around that there was a new way to bypass the iOS 6.1 lock screen and that this one was even worse, allowing full access to the user portion of the file system. Well, that’s not exactly true, as we’ve uncovered with some simple tests.

The lock screen bug does in fact exist, and it works as advertised, bypassing the lock and bringing you to a blank black screen with just the status bar. But it allows you no access to anything, not pictures, not contacts and certainly not the file system.

Security researchers submitted a note to the Full Disclosure blog when they discovered the bug, but unfortunately their testing methods were flawed.

How do I know this? Because early last year, while investigating the security issues in the way that the Facebook (and Dropbox) apps were handling user tokens, TNW discovered that the user file system is in fact encrypted and un-viewable on a computer when an iPhone had a passcode enabled.
This ‘bug’ does not change that behavior. Though it appears as if the lock has been fully ‘bypassed’, it does not change the fact that the file system is still encrypted and unreachable.

Once an iPhone has been connected to a computer and unlocked once, its file system is always viewable by that machine, regardless of passcode status. Don’t shoot the messenger if you don’t like this behavior, that’s just the way it is. But, what it means is that this bypass method could only show the file system if it had been plugged into that computer unlocked previously.

If the researchers had bothered to plug it into a machine that had never been connected to that device before, then they would have been unable to access the file system. They would have been presented with an error message by iTunes and by any file explorer utility.

In fact, the flaw in their methodology is exposed in the very first line of their instructions, where they say to connect it to iTunes.

To demonstrate, here is an iPhone with a passcode enabled and the bypass trick done on it connected to a new computer for the first time. No dice on reading it, you can see the iTunes error message there:



Here’s a closer look at the message:


And here’s what happens when you unlock it, allow the computer to register the device and then ‘lock’ it again. Voila, access (you can see the iTunes restore dialog):


In short, in order to gain access to your iPhone’s file system, someone would need your computer and your phone. And if they’ve got both of those, you have bigger problems than someone getting access to your saved games.

All that aside, there is still two ways to bypass a passcode now in the clear, and that shouldn’t be. Apple needs to fix them and has already begun testing fixes for the next version of iOS 6.

Source: thenextweb.com

Microsoft posts Dev Center app for Windows Phone, tops 130,000 total apps


Despite launching the Windows Phone Dev Center months ago, Microsoft hasn't provided an option to run the dashboard on Windows Phone itself. The company is at last introducing some logical consistency (and recursion) by launching a Windows Phone version of its Windows Phone developer console. The app lets registered creators track downloads, crashes and feedback without turning to a computer, and a Live Tile can sometimes save the trouble of launching the app in the first place.

Having the Dev Center always on hand may be increasingly necessary, based on Microsoft's own figures -- the Windows Phone Store is up to about 130,000 apps, or 10,000 more than it had in December. That's not quite the breakneck pace of other mobile stores, but it's quick enough to justify hitting the download link.

Source: engadget.com

Monday, February 25, 2013

Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 goes official with S Pen on board


When available, the Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 will sit between the Galaxy Note 10.1 and the Galaxy Note II in the company's Android range. The slate's design follows the same language as the rest of the current Note range.

The Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 features an Exynos chipset with a 1.6GHz A9 quad-core CPU and 2GB of RAM. There are 16 or 32GB of available built-in memory on board and a microSD card slot for further expansion. The display is an 8" unit with WXGA resolution (1280 x 800 pixels) and a pixel density of 189ppi. There's a 5MP main camera on the device's back and a 1.3MP front-facing unit. Naturally, the Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 comes with an S Pen which packs Wacom tech.

The Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 boots Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean which features the company's latest TouchWiz UI. There is a host of software tricks up the tablet's sleeve which include Smart Stay, Direct Call, a host of S Pen-centric apps, and the usual set of Samsung Hubs. A Smart Remote is also on board. It utilizes the slate's IR port, located on its right side.

We will be bringing you live impressions of the Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 when we hit the MWC floor, so stay tuned for our impressions from the device.

Source: gsmarena.com

Why iOS won't become Apple's 'Windows XP'

Apple is selling millions of iOS devices every quarter, but some worry that the lack of innovation, combined with the fact that people find the operating system to be 'good enough' could turn Apple's mobile operating system into the company's own ' Windows XP.'

First, some background on what is meant by 'Windows XP' in this context. Microsoft released Windows XP back in October of 2001, and it remained the most widely used—and, most loved—operating system up until Windows 7 finally overtook it in August 2012. Windows XP held on to the reign of power for over a decade because Windows Vista didn't offer users enough of an incentive to upgrade. Not only did this 'upgrade ennui' affect Microsoft, but it also helped to put a damper on PC sales and the entire PC industry.

David Sobotta of ReadWrite thinks that iOS is on the way to suffering the same problem.

"To keep the iOS train moving and churning out profits," writes Sobotta, "Apple needs to innovate - but not so much that it scares away the legions of happy iPhone and iPad users."

He goes on to point out how "to turn the tide, iOS may need to be re-invented," but that this "is not easy to pull off without killing the goose that lays the golden eggs."

This may be the case, but I don't think that there's much danger of iOS becoming Apple's 'Windows XP.' Here's why:

  • Apple has been innovating and adding features to iOS with each iteration. Users don't seem scared of change.
  • iDevice owners are enthusiastic about new iOS updates, and each release shows rapid adoption. As opposed to Windows upgrades, people seem to enjoy upgrading iOS devices.
  • iOS is a free upgrade, Windows isn't. People like free.
  • Apple has maintained excellent backward compatibility for apps through the life of iOS. What people dislike about upgrading operating systems the way it breaks apps. Apple has, to the most part, made iOS upgrades as 'low drag' as possible. Apple recognises that iOS—and iDevices—are a platform for apps.
  • iDevices are continuing to fly off the shelves almost as fast as Apple can make them. Consumers seem oblivious to the whole "iOS may need to be re-invented" debate.

Bottom line, if Apple keeps iOS updates free, maintains app compatibility, and keeps upgrades simple, I don't see there being any risk of iOS becoming Apple's 'Windows XP.'

Source : zdnet

Early Sony PS4 price and pre-orders appear

The Sony PS4 has been announced and unveiled earlier this week at last, but unsurprisingly Sony failed to give us any indication on exact release dates that the console will be out and perhaps more importantly, how much they will be charging gamers for a piece of their new technology.

Luckily, that hasn’t stopped rumors from circulating online following the event, as we can tell you that there are already rumored price points for the UK and US markets, with even one reputable retailer in the UK already accepting pre-orders for the PlayStation 4. With all of the new features and hardware upgrades available, you can bet that Sony will be commanding a premium price at launch for the system, just like they did with the original fat PS3 model.

Having said that, it’s fair to say that $600 USD is now a lot of money for a home console and Sony may be wary of alienating consumers if they choose to go for the most expensive of launch prices compared to Nintendo and eventually Microsoft when the next Xbox system is announced.

The rumors we have for you today though are a good indication to prepare yourself for what may be coming, and we’ll start with whispers suggesting that the PS4 may come in two storage varieties and will be priced at either $429 or $529 in the US. Over in the UK, there is even more movement from retailers, with popular seller ShopTo listing a £400 price for the new system.

GAME are deploying some interesting tactics on their UK website, accepting pre-orders for the PS4, but only when consumers put down a £20 deposit. Unlike ShopTo though, they haven’t listed an actual price for the system. One important nugget of information for our UK readers though, is that Sony hasn’t actually committed to a 2013 PS4 release in Europe yet.

There is growing speculation that EU based fans may have to wait until early 2014 to get their hands on the system – a similar tactic that was deployed with the PS3 when it launched some five months later than the US. £400 seems like a decent price at first glance though, but it’s a good idea to take the initial price rumors with a pinch of salt.

If you are interested in picking up the next-generation console, let us know what kind of price you would be willing to pay.

Source: product-reviews.net

Samsung Galaxy S4: 14 March reveal in New York confirmed



Samsung has confirmed that it will reveal the Samsung Galaxy S IV in New York on the 14 March.
The confirmation comes as the rest of the mobile phone industry gathers in Barcelona to see what the industry has to offer, although we suspect that the news will now dominate the news headlines.

It will be the first US launch of Samsung's flagship Galaxy smartphone in 3 years, company spokeswoman Chenny Kim said.

"We introduced the Galaxy S III in London last year, and this time we changed the venue (to New York) ... as we were bombarded with requests from US mobile carriers to unveil the Galaxy S IV in the country," Samsung Electronics' mobile division chief JK Shin was quoted as saying on the Edaily news website, picked up by Reuters.

The date won't come as a surprise, having been widely rumoured previously, but the words of JK Shin do seem to confirm a continuation of Samsung's naming convention.

Otherwise, little is known about the next-generation Galaxy device from Samsung. It has been rumoured that a 4.99-inch 1080p display will front the device, along with debate about whether it will carry a Samsung Exynos processor, or the Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 chipset found in the recently launched rival, the HTC One.

We're still awaiting the arrival of the traditional Samsung Unpacked invitation, which may give some further hints, but we suspect that Samsung will wait till after Mobile World Congress is concluded, so as not to overshadow the launch of its latest device, the Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0

Source: pocket-lint.com

Meet ownCloud 5, The Open Source Dropbox


ownCloud is a free software suite, written in PHP, that provides file storage, synchronization, and sharing. It provides the same basic features of Dropbox or Box.net. It also provides a whole lot more.

ownCloud was started three years ago when Frank Karlitschek wanted a free software alternative to proprietary solutions. In the time since the project has attracted a dedicated group of core contributors, made several significant releases, and is available in 42 languages. It’s also spun off a commercial project to drive development of ownCloud for enterprise users.

The core ownCloud offering is file storage and synchronization. You also get optional contacts and calendar synchronization, if you want to use it. As an open source application, you can install it on any computer you control. This means you know how and where your data is stored, something which existing hosted solutions abstract away from you. Individuals and enterprises can install ownCloud on their own hardware, and define access policies according to their own needs.

I’ve been using ownCloud on my own for a couple of months now. My primary use is a backup for pictures taken from my phone. Just like Dropbox and Google+ and Facebook, the ownCloud mobile client can automatically upload pictures taken from your phone. I like this because not all of the photos I take with my phone are intended for public viewing, but I don’t want these photos to live only in my phone. Having backups automatically uploaded and stored at my house on media I can control gives me great peace of mind.

Interestingly, ownCloud can be connected to third-party storage like Dropbox or Google Drive or even an FTP server. These are read-write connections, allowing you to use third-party storage in whatever ways make sense for you. Maybe you want a local backup of your Dropbox data? Maybe you want a single interface to all your hosted storage? ownCloud lets you do it.

The commercial version of ownCloud is built atop the open source project, and includes features of interest to enterprise customers. Things like MS SQL and Oracle support, connections to enterprise groupware and directory services applications, and white-label mobile clients. The commercial version specifically targets organizations that require on-premise data storage and control.

The first beta release of ownCloud 5 was just announced, with a release candidate due in the next week or so. I spoke with Karlitschek about the upcoming release of the latest open source offering from the project. According to him, there are three major elements of this release: integration, performance, and usability.

The biggest visible change in ownCloud 5 is in the presentation. The interface has been completely redesigned to present a more streamlined, usable experience. More space is allocated to the display of your data, rather than the display of the ownCloud controls.

Karlitschek highlighted a new photo gallery included in ownCloud 5, including better sharing options. This isn’t anything revolutionary, but does keep ownCloud on equal footing with its proprietary competitors. Also included are updates to the contacts application, and the calendar. ownCloud also provides a video player application, a PDF viewer, and a whole lot more.

ownCloud administrators can connect an ownCloud installation to a variety of back-end account databases. These include UNIX user accounts, LDAP, and the built-in ownCloud account mechanism. The upcoming release of ownCloud 5 supports multiple simultaneous backend systems, allowing you to use both UNIX and LDAP systems at the same time for accounts, for example. This makes it easier to tie ownCloud into an existing infrastructure.

Users can also select a “display name” other than their account name. So where an LDAP user might have an account name of “cn=scott,ou=people,dc=techcrunch,dc=com”, that user could select a display name of “Scott Merrill”. This is a small touch, but goes a long way toward usability.

Under the hood, the file-caching mechanism employed by ownCloud has been revamped, and Karlitschek reports speed improvements of up to 500% in some circumstances. The caching changes reduce the number of round-trips to and from the server, so desktop sync clients and mobile clients should see noticeable improvements.

Another big new addition is a full-text search mechanism, powered by Lucene. This is something that ownCloud offers that the proprietary solutions don’t. The full-text search will work in the mobile clients, as well as the web interface, allowing you to find files based on their contents, not just their file names.

The current versions of ownCloud have file versioning, allowing you to track changes made to files. The upcoming ownCloud 5 will introduce a complete “trash bin” feature, allowing you to undelete files. Versioning plus undelete means that your data has multiple levels of safeguard against accidental removal.

I asked Karlitschek about any particular challenges specific to the development of ownCloud 5. Since ownCloud is intended to run on any major platform, he said that they ran into a particularly surprising problem when running an ownCloud server on a Windows host. It turned out that PHP was “interesting” with UTF8 filenames on Windows systems, and a large number of bugs were reported which all boiled down to this issue. Several days of troubleshooting led them to the root cause. The solution was to write a filesystem abstraction layer specifically for Windows. That kind of effort goes a long way toward ensuring that this open source application works on as many platforms as possible.

As with any open source project, it’s hard to know how many people are actually using it. Counting downloads doesn’t tell the full story. Karlitschek estimates that there are more than 800,000 active users of the ownCloud project. This number specifically does not count enterprise users who are purchasing the commercial version from ownCloud.com.

Karlitschek shared some interesting use cases for ownCloud with me. Some people aren’t interested in file synchronization, and are instead only using ownCloud for the contacts and calendar functions. If you don’t want Google or Facebook to know your every move, but you still need consolidated access to your schedule from multiple devices, ownCloud offers a great solution. Karlitschek also told me about a group using ownCloud as the foundation for an e-book library sharing solution. As ownCloud continues to mature, it will continue to be used as a platform for more interesting solutions.

ownCloud supports HTML5 applications, allowing you to add all sorts of additional functionality. The ownCloud app catalog has dozens of apps. This extensibility makes ownCloud so much more than just a Dropbox clone. Indeed, according to Karlitschek, there is no other open source solution providing what ownCloud does.

When I asked about the future of ownCloud, Karlitschek identified additional opportunities for integration: things like SharePoint, Atlassian products, and other hosted repositories of data. Karlitschek was adamant that ownCloud needs to integrate with all cloud services, since different users may be limited to using specific offerings. iOS users are tied pretty tightly to iCloud, and Android users are tied pretty tightly to Google Drive, etc. Existing proprietary solutions like Dropbox and Box.net offer limited freedom from platform lock-in, but they don’t go far enough.

Moreover, those proprietary solutions are driven by what their customers are willing to pay for. ownCloud, as an open source solution, is free to pursue solutions that don’t provide specific economic benefit to their maintainers, but rather solve the real needs of its users.

ownCloud 5 promises some major new features and some much needed improvements to an already impressive product. As an open source application, if it doesn’t scratch your itch you are invited to get involved to help make it better for your own needs. Whether that’s submitting bug fixes, helping to run tests, or translating ownCloud to its 43rd supported language, all contributions are welcome.

Source: techcrunch.com

Friday, February 22, 2013

Samsung Series 7 Chronos trickles into US stores


After whetting our appetite at CES, Samsung's updated Series 7 Chronos is slowly squeaking its way into US retailers. Spotted at Best Buy for $1,200, this 21mm dynamo packs a 2.4GHz Intel Core i7 3635QM CPU and an AMD Radeon HD 8870M GPU along with a 15.6-inch touchscreen. While this lean, mean, Windows 8 machine's streamlined design and spec sheet are impressive, such adornment comes at a price. Absent from the Chronos' fine engineering is room for an optical drive, so DVD and Blu-ray enthusiasts be warned. However, should this caveat not apply to you, then by all means you have our blessings to check out Sammy's new up and comer.

Source: engadget.com

Twitter ratchets up phishing protection by adopting DMARC standard

Phishing emails often pose as being sent by major league sites rather than princes from far-flung countries, but Twitter's implemented a new measure to stamp out phonies that borrow its name.

Costolo and Co. announced that, earlier this month, they began leveraging a tech called DMARC that establishes a way for email providers to authenticate senders and reject messages penned by impostors. While the DMARC specification does need support from e-mail services, outfits including AOL (which happens to be our parent company), Gmail, Hotmail / Outlook and Yahoo already make use of it. According to Twitter, it's now "extremely unlikely" that the majority of their users will receive emails masquerading as being sent from a Twitter.com address. We're sorry to disappoint, but it looks like you'll have to get your fix of foreign lottery notices from somewhere else.

Source: engadget.com

Apple's iOS 6.1.3 Will Fix Lock Screen Security Flaw

Apple has supposedly released iOS 6.1.3 to developers.

9to5Mac reports that Apple has released iOS v6.1.3 beta 2 to developers that addresses the current lock screen security flaw. The news arrives after Apple released iOS v6.1.2 over the air earlier this week which supposedly fixes the Microsoft Exchange and battery drainage problems.

This latest beta release follows beta 1 which was previously named as v6.1.1 beta 1. Apple reportedly changed the current name due to the public releases of v6.1.1 and v6.1.2. Apple's iOS v6.1.1 was unleashed on iPhone 4S owners weeks ago to address 3G connectivity issues specific to that model.

Until now, the only problem Apple hadn't addressed related to the original v6.1 release was the lock screen security flaw.

As one report stated last week, iOS 6.1 "hasn't been Apple's finest hour." In just 36 hours after its debut at the end of January, the update had been downloaded and installed by 21.8-percent of Apple's iOS users – 11.3-percent upgraded within the first 24 hours. But shortly thereafter reports of overheating batteries, 3G connectivity issues, and Microsoft Exchange issues began to emerge. There were also reports that anyone could gain access to a locked iOS 6.1 device by merely using a sequence of physical and virtual button presses.

One of the ways to bypass the lock screen is to lock the device, slide to unlock, and then tap emergency call. After that, anyone can go through a series of steps that include calling 911, locking the device with the sleep button, and tapping the emergency button again (this is the short edited version of the sequence that's listed here). The call app will go nuts and open, granting anyone access to photos and contacts as long as the sleep button is pressed.

This isn't the first time Apple has broken the screen lock security. A similar bug was found in iOS 4.1 which was fixed in the v4.2 update a month later. The current bug is now supposedly fixed in v6.1.3, but when that comes out is anyone's guess at this point. Also slated in the update are several enhancements to the Maps application for Japan, and possible plugs for exploits used in recent jailbreaks.

Source: tomshardware.com

Chrome Delivers Voice Recognition Capability To The Internet

If you deal with web applications, or are currently looking into such an endeavor, I think you would be stoked to hear that today’s Chrome stable release will introduce support for the Web Speech API that was originally discussed in January, where it will allow developers to take advantage of speech recognition capabilities into their web apps. Just in case you want to get a better idea on how integrated voice recognition in a web app would work and look like, there is this particular demonstration that should pique your attention.

The demonstration would show just how you can speak to the web app in order to compose an email from scratch, now how about that? Apart from that, today’s release will also do away with the silent extension installs in Chrome for Windows. There is one very good reason for doing to – this ensures that Chrome will remain fast and safe to use, making sure that your consent is required for every extension that is about to be installed on your computer. The auto-update feature would mean you need not actively seek out the update, as these enhancements will arrive as the release rolls out. Bear in mind that you need Chrome version 25 or later for this voice recognition API to work.

Source : ubergizmo