Wednesday, 23 April 2014

Review TechRadar: Phone and communications news 04-23-2014

TechRadar: Phone and communications news
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In Depth: Your house is getting smarter - and your phone is the brain
Apr 23rd 2014, 15:25, by James Rogerson

In Depth: Your house is getting smarter - and your phone is the brain

Smartphones are nice and feature-stocked these days, but we know what the phone buying hoardes are like: everyone wishes they did more. Sure, you can tweet from them, but we want them to be able to cook us dinner and take the robot vacuum for a walk.

The good news is that's a future which may be closer than you think.

We're already on our way there, as phones are gradually connecting us more to other devices. For example many smartphones, such as the Samsung Galaxy S5 and HTC One, now have infrared blasters, which can be used to control televisions, set top boxes and even air conditioners, removing the need for a separate remote.

But as the internet of things takes off (and the universe of things expands) more devices are becoming smart and connected, more and more potential is being unlocked in smartphones; before long they may be the brain of homes everywhere.

And if your smartphone is the brain, your router is the heart, as most smart devices are connected via Wi-Fi, so your router keeps it all going and keeps everything connected.

Music streaming

A lot can be done already, though in many cases it requires additional setup costs. Apple AirPlay lets you stream or mirror photos, videos and games from your iOS device to your HDTV, allowing you to view your snaps on a big screen, but aside from needing an HDTV there's also a middle man in the form of Apple TV, which is required to make it work. That in itself costs around £80 ($99, AU$109).

Sonos

On the music front there are things like Sonos, which lets you use your smartphone to stream music to any room in your house, allowing multiple people to listen to different things in different rooms with ease, or just filling your whole house with music.

But with a basic one room setup coming in at £169 ($299, AU$399) and the price going up substantially for multiple rooms or higher quality speakers it's far from cheap.

On the more affordable side, things like the 'Unified Remote' app for Android and Windows Phone lets you control a Windows PC from your phone, complete with a mouse, keyboard and custom remotes for media, task manager and more, so you don't have to stay chained to a desk.

Similarly the Xbox SmartGlass app gives you a similar level of control over your Xbox 360 from your smartphone, meaning you can enter text without having to use a clunky controller.

iKettle

Appliances are starting to get smart too. There's now such a thing as an 'iKettle' and no, it's nothing to do with Apple. It's a Wi-Fi enabled kettle that you can turn on from your smartphone. It will then tell you when the water has boiled and even keep it warm until you get there.

Even more usefully: it can send a message to your phone first thing in the morning or when you arrive home from a long day at work, asking if you'd like to turn the kettle on, so the water will be boiled by the time you make it to the kitchen.

Unfortunately the price angle rears its ugly head yet again here, as at £99 it's quite a lot more than a standard kettle. That's particularly problematic when you consider that most users will be apprehensive about upgrading when traditionally a kettle is a device that only gets replaced once it breaks - you'd have to really want that convenience.

LG Lightwave

Other appliances are seeing similar features added. For example LG's Lightwave oven can be used as an oven, grill, microwave or toaster and the best part is that all of those functions are controllable from an app on your smartphone.

This means you can adjust the cooking temperature and check how much longer something needs to cook for without ever setting foot in the kitchen... once you've actually put the food in it, that is.

Warming up the home

Behind the scenes things such as your general toastiness are also getting a smart overhaul. Honeywell's new evohome system allows you to create up to 12 thermal zones in your home which can be controlled individually, so you're only heating the rooms you're using and then only when you need to.

To make things even easier both the heating and hot water can be turned on and off from a smartphone app.

Google has also raised temperatures by buying out Nest and offering the smart thermostat through Google Play store.

Both use apps to control the devices when you are both in and away from the home. In Europe Google is being closely tailed by tado - a heating app that promises to reduce your heating costs by 26 per cent.

Smart security

Alongside living rooms, kitchens and heating, home security has also been revolutionised by smartphones.

SkyBell

Alarms, motion detectors, cameras, doorbells, locks and more can all be controlled by smartphones now. Take the SkyBell. When someone rings your doorbell you can get an alert on your phone and see a video feed of them. You can also talk to them through your phone and it works wherever you are as long as you have a Wi-Fi connection.

So whether you're in the bath or on holiday you can still keep track of who's coming to your house and even communicate with them, giving you security and peace of mind.

Then there's the Canary security hub, which is an all in one security device complete with an HD night vision camera, a microphone, a motion detector, an alarm and temperature, humidity and air quality sensors.

And it's smart too, gradually learning about the environment of your home so that it's better able to differentiate a genuine threat from something harmless. For example a sudden, dramatic temperature change could indicate a fire, but if you live somewhere that's always very hot it will be smart enough to not keep alerting you about the heat.

When it does alert you about something you'll see details of it on your smartphone and can choose how to respond, whether that's by ignoring it, making a call, sending a message or triggering the alarm. Even when there aren't any alerts you can always access Canary remotely from your phone if you just want to check on things.

Canary

All of these devices are available now or due to hit the market soon and they all aim to make life easier, by giving you as much control as possible from wherever you are, just as long as you've got your smartphone with you.

The setup cost is a stumbling block for some of them, but once you've overcome that they bring you a long way towards having a truly connected home, empowering you to do things you never could before, be it freeing your music or keeping an eye on your home from afar.

But this is just the beginning, as work is being done to make household devices even smarter in ways which could revolutionise the home.

So what about the FUTURE?

By looking to Asia you can already get a glimpse of what's next to come, as places like South Korea are way ahead of the UK in the connected homes stakes. For example, Samsung makes a fridge (sadly only available in South Korea) that has a touchscreen, allowing you to tell it what food you're putting in it.

That food index is then synced to your smartphone, so when you go shopping you'll be able to see at a glance exactly what you already have. The fridge can also send an alert to your phone or to your television if the door has been left open. We imagine that's colloquially called the 'Sigh-inducing' app.

Then there's LG's HOM-BOT vacuum cleaner. Automated vacuum cleaners are nothing new, but this one lets you remotely take control of it with your smartphone. You can activate it from your phone and even steer it. You don't even need to be in the same room as it has a built in camera that streams to an app on your handset.

We've actually had a go on this one, and while it doesn't help the cleaning, the novelty value of moving the vacuum cleaner with your phone never gets old.

Of course there's a flipside with all this extra tech: you might also be concerned about the energy use of all these connected devices.

LG HOM-BOT

But actually by having devices that intelligently know when to turn on and off it's likely to actually save you energy, which is one of the points touted with by Honeywell for it's evohome. Plus there are smart devices for homes that specifically deal with keeping track or your electricity use, such as the British Gas Smart Meter, so you can always keep on top things.

Through the power of apps, smartphones can also potentially add extra functionality to connected devices. You can see the beginnings of this with Philips Hue light bulbs. Out of the box these let you turn your lights on or off and change the colour of your lights with your phone or tablet.

However, Philips has also opened the Hue API up to developers, which has led to apps which expand their functionality. For example there's now a 'Hue Disco' app, which lets you program the lights to pulse in time to music, while another will make the lights blink whenever you're tagged in a Facebook photo, which, if you're sufficiently popular, is also a guaranteed way to get a headache.

Philips Hue

If other smart household items, such as fridges, ovens and televisions open their APIs up to developers then a lot could be achieved. Gaps in functionality could be filled and custom apps could give you even more control of your house from your smartphone.

Televisions, for example, could be given access to more content sources or made to support more file types, while apps could keep track of use-by dates for food in your smart fridge.

Looking further ahead, devices are likely to start communicating with one another as well as with your phone, as that, after all, is what the internet of things is all about.

Samsung's smart fridge does that already to a small extent by being able to communicate with your television, but the real future will come when things become even more automated, minimising the need to control devices at all, giving you a daily roundup of all the bits you need to know.

That could mean a toaster that communicates with your kettle to ensure that your tea and toast are both ready at the same time. Or speakers that can communicate with your television and will know to turn music off in that room when you start watching something. Not to mention the curtains that will then automatically close to create a cinematic experience.

That's the real future, a home where all the devices are connected to one another, not just to the internet or to your phone; we imagine most would still like to have a smartphone or similar device at the centre for all the things to kick it all off with a flick of the finger.

Your smartphone will give you remote access to all of these things, letting you fine-tune their behaviour and take control when needed, be it to change the channel on your television or take control of your robot vacuum cleaner.








Samsung Galaxy K works its zoom in latest leak
Apr 23rd 2014, 12:56, by Hugh Langley

Samsung Galaxy K works its zoom in latest leak

The Samsung Galaxy K (or S5 Zoom, if you'd rather) has been papped ahead of its expected reveal, as some new pictures of a camera-heavy handset have appeared online.

The leaked images, uploaded over on Baidu, suggest that the Zoom will retain the S5's dimpled back but Samsung has worked in a hefty 10x optical zoom lens, Xenon flash and dedicated shutter button.

Other recent leaks suppose that the K will have a 20-megapixel camera, 4.8-inch Super AMOLED 720 display, a hexa-core Samsung Exynos 5 5260 processor, 2GB of RAM and a 2-megapixel front camera.

Kaught on Kamera

Overally, it looks as though Samsung has managed to make the K much more compact than the S4 Zoom, but we'll have to wait until the official launch until we can say for sure.

Samsung has already sent out invites to an April 29 event in Singapore, where the "K" device will make its debut. Well - official debut, at least.

  • If you're not fussed about being a camera pro, the Galaxy S5 flagship might be for you







OnePlus One arrives to blow the competition out of the water
Apr 23rd 2014, 08:25, by Hugh Langley

OnePlus One arrives to blow the competition out of the water

The OnePlus One has been shrouded in mystery on its journey to launch, but the phone is now out in the open and looking pretty sweet.

OnePlus isn't a widely-recognised name right now but its first handset is pretty damn impressive, going shoulder to shoulder with smartphone titans but at a more affordable price.

The 16GB version is available in "Silk White" for £229 ($299, about AU$322) and the 64GB in "Sandstone Gray" for £269 ($349, about AU$375).

But the CyanogenMod-based handset is also pretty impressive in the spec department.

It's rocking a 5.5-inch 1080p display with a 2.5GHz quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, 3GB of RAM, a 13-megapixel camera, 5-megapixel front-facing snapper and 4K video support.

Smashingly good

OnePlus has announced that 100 handsets will be available in the US from April 25 via its "Smash" promotion, which you can apply for via this site.

What is this, you ask? Basically, you can smash up your existing phone and in exchange you'll be given a brand new One handset for just $1.

An exact date for a wide release hasn't been confirmed yet, but we know it'll be available very soon.








Google on the hook for some costs, damages in Apple vs Samsung trial
Apr 22nd 2014, 22:52, by Michelle Fitzsimmons

Google on the hook for some costs, damages in Apple vs Samsung trial

The court battle between Samsung and Apple has long been considered a proxy fight for a larger war between the iPhone maker and Google. Now, we have concrete evidence the Android purveyor is playing a key role behind the scenes.

Emails between Google and Samsung were dissected and authenticated in court today, revealing Google agreed to help the firm behind the Galaxy S5 defend itself against patent infringement claims related to its technology.

The 2012 emails show Google was prepared to "defend and indemnify" Samsung in the use of its tech (specifically two universal search patents), of which Apple claims rips off its own IP. As it stands, only one of the patents Google agreed to help defend is still on the table in this trial.

Google is prepared not only to pay for some of the defense cots, but it would also help cover any damages Samsung is ordered to pay Apple, according to the emails.

It's all in the fine print

The agreement to contribute and compensate for defense and damages stems from a "Mobile Application Distribution Agreement" between Samsung and Google.

Samsung agreed to stick Google apps on its Galaxy devices, and in return Google signed on to help Samsung in cases, such as this one, where the legality of the use of its technology is called into question.

Google patent attorney James Maccoun provided a taped deposition regarding the emails and agreement, and he outlined the set-up between Google and Samsung as one where Google would supply apps as well as backup in case a legal issue arose.

It's not apparent how much if any help Samsung has received or will receive from Google.

Apple is seeking $2 billion (about £1b, AU$2.1b) in damages from Samsung this time around, while Samsung has countered Cupertino owes it $6.2 million (about £3.6m, AU$6.6m) for infringement on its own patents. Unlike the 2012 trial between the two hardware behemoths, this trial tackles more recent devices, including the iPhone 5 and Galaxy S3.

More than a fight for the moral high ground, the court proceedings are about seeing which company will dominant the mobile landscape in the years to come. If one can keep key features from making it to the other's future phones as well as cease sales of old and current devices, then it's one less fight that has to play out in the market.

That is, if the appeals ever end.








LG G3 may be the host with the most thanks to 'concierge' feature
Apr 22nd 2014, 21:46, by Michelle Fitzsimmons

LG G3 may be the host with the most thanks to 'concierge' feature

With the advent of Siri, Google Now and Cortana, users are clearly looking for more than search results when it comes to the information their smartphones provide.

Leaked info slipped to Digital Trends suggest the still-unofficial LG G3 is taking a page from these personal assistants' play books with a new "concierge" service. The name, mercifully, isn't final, but the feature is said to offer contextual information to help you better plan and experience your day.

For example, when checking its AccuWeather weather forecast, the G3 will chime in, "You may want to take an umbrella, since rain is expected this afternoon."

Sure, you probably could have come to that conclusion yourself by looking out the window, but concierge reportedly isn't limited to the obvious. It will tune into data "from various sources" and learn how you use your G3, going on the recommendation rampage from there.

Some sort of advanced personalization tool is also apparently part of concierge, but details on this facet are sketchier.

That's not all

Aside from its rumored assistant powers, the G3 is expected to receive a hearty UI overhaul, something we've heard before and was made obvious once again in today's leak.

Circular icons, a flatter, brighter look and a rejiggered pull-down Notification menu all appear to have made the G3 cut. In the Notification menu, users will find shortcuts to activate NFC, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and cellular data and access the Q Remote button.

The phone's Favorite Contacts window now includes bubble images of the people who you like to chat with the most.

Side-by-side comparisons with the LG G Pro 2's interface show a sharper, more sophisticated turn with the LG G3.

It's important to note the leaked screenshots come in at a resolution of 2560 x 1440, all but confirming the next LG phone should have a stunner for a screen.








Apple iOS 7.1.1 update aims to fix Touch ID fingerprint fallacies
Apr 22nd 2014, 20:35, by Michael Rougeau

Apple iOS 7.1.1 update aims to fix Touch ID fingerprint fallacies

Some iPhone 5S users have complained for months that the phone's fingerprint sensor tends to lose accuracy over time, and Apple has finally released an update to iOS 7 that addresses the issue.

The iOS 7.1.1 update purports to improve Touch ID's accuracy, which hopefully means making sure it doesn't forget what your fingerprints look like.

Reports of that issue began arriving in December 2013, and Apple dallied in tackling the problem directly.

A February rumor had Apple working on a software-based solution for the issue, and this could very well be the fix that users have been waiting for.

Breaking the mold

iOS 7.1.1 won't address all of Apple's Touch ID problems, as there are still some handy workarounds for crafty hackers.

The rubber mold that fooled the iPhone was recently found to work equally well on Samsung's Galaxy S5, but at least Samsung recently opened its fingerprint sensor up to third-party developers too, a step in the right direction to develop security solutions.

As for other improvements, remember when you had to plug your iPhone into your computer and open iTunes just to update it? Yeah, just head to the settings menu to update to iOS 7.1.1 and you won't have to any longer.

The latest iOS 7.1 update also makes the official iOS keyboard more responsive and fixes a conflict in the software between Bluetooth keyboards and the VoiceOver user accessibility feature.

  • Here's everything TechRadar knows about the iPhone 6







Amazon smartphone looks to favor tilting gestures over touch
Apr 22nd 2014, 18:25, by Michael Rougeau

Amazon smartphone looks to favor tilting gestures over touch

The long-rumored Amazon phone will reportedly sport enough sensors to rival Microsoft's Kinect, and those sensors will enable some unique forms of interaction.

The Amazon smartphone will feature four infrared cameras on its front so it can effectively track the position of users' faces in relation to the display, according to BGR, which spoke with "multiple trusted sources" on the matter.

Perhaps even more revolutionary than this set-up will be the Amazon handset's tilt controls, which may aim to make the large phone (4.7 inches, according to whispers) easier to use with one hand.

It seems these tilt controls will not only replace existing essential functions, but also create new features, like revealing extraneous but helpful information without requiring touch interactions.

Tilt to live

For example, tilting the Amazon phone in the maps app might reveal Yelp ratings for any visible restaurants.

Or tilting the phone could reveal labels beneath icons in apps where they aren't normally present, in case you forget what a button does.

The tilt gestures would be present in Amazon's included first-party apps, of course; tilting in Amazon's video store could reveal IMDB ratings, and moving the phone on Amazon.com product listings might flip between photos.

amazon phone

However, the new controls might also cause menus that previously would have been accessed with a tap to slide onto the screen when the phone is tilted in the corresponding direction.

Tilting could reveal the X-Ray menu in the Kindle app, or a photo pane in the messaging app, or extended forecasts in weather. And really obvious functions - like scrolling up and down in books and websites when the phone is tilted - would be possible as well.

Read the signs

There's one more new feature of note, sources said: the Amazon phone will have special optical character recognition software that can interpret and convert text captured using its rear camera.

Using this function you might snap a photo of a business card to have the phone automatically add information to your contacts, or be able to quickly translate signs written in a foreign language.

There's plenty more we'd like to know about the Amazon phone, but for now there's no official word. That could change any time, so keep watching for more info.








Video: Picture perfect: how to take better photos with your phone
Apr 22nd 2014, 15:13, by Owen Hughes

Video: Picture perfect: how to take better photos with your phone

Smartphone camera tech is as impressive as it's ever been. Today, a mobile phone can be a more than adequate replacement for a mid-range digital camera, with Sony, Samsung, Nokia and HTC all pumping top dollar into their handsets' picture-taking prowess.

Unfortunately, top dollar is exactly the amount said companies will expect you to cough up for their latest and greatest. So if you're going to drop a small fortune on a phone with top-notch camera credentials, you should probably know your way around it.

TechRadar's no-nonsense guide is packed full of easy-to-follow tips and tricks to help you get the best from your smartphone camera. Check it out below, then get out there and start snapping.

YouTube : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_oxMpVKnxg
  • Read Marc Flore's in-depth guide here

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