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Review TechRadar: Phone and communications news 05-31-2014

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In depth: Behind Lenovo's plan to become king of the smartphone
May 31st 2014, 10:01, by Marc Chacksfield

In depth: Behind Lenovo's plan to become king of the smartphone

Lenovo's plan to become king of the smartphone

It was a phone call that started it. A phone call to sell a phone business. Eric Schmidt, Google's executive chairman, rang Lenovo and asked if it was still interested in buying Motorola Mobility - a company that Google had acquired just three years previous.

The answer was a resounding 'yes' and Lenovo's big move towards mobile dominance was revealed.

For both companies this is a marriage of convenience. The $2.1 billion deal is set to go through in the next few months - it still needs approval from the courts in China and the US - and once it does Google will have found a company that will take away its hardware headache while it retains Moto's patent power. On the flipside Lenovo is getting the helping hand it needs to pursue the lucrative mobile avenues of the US and Europe.

The deal is a huge one for Lenovo and a massive part of its future going forward. But to understand just how it got to being on the precipice of global smartphone domination you have to look to its past - something TechRadar did when it went to China to learn more about how the company operates.

Chasing characters

2014 marks 30 years for Lenovo as a company. Born in Beijing in 1984, Lenovo started out as a reseller of IBM products before making its name when it invented the Han Character Insertion Card.

This technology significantly shortened the number of keystrokes it took to input Chinese characters, making the process twice as quick and proving to the population of China that computers were something that was needed not just for business but for helping in the education of children.

Lenovo

Before long it was creating its own computers, using older processors that were sold back to China when upgrades were made. So, when the West was flooded with computers packing 486 Pentium processors, China were given the 386 variants and so on.

Then in 1993 when the Chinese government 'opened up' the country to western brands that wanted to compete in the market, Lenovo began selling computers under its English name of Legend. At that time it was 26th out of 26 companies competing for PC dominance in China. By 1996 it was top.

When the second wave of Western brands hit China in 2000, Legend had a plan to make sure it could retain its market share and fight the influx of cheap computers from the US and beyond - it came in the form of a button.

In 1999 access to the internet was a complicated thing for consumers, so Legend simplified the process with the Tian Xi, a desktop computer with one-button web access.

Couple this with offers of landline access and a year's free internet and this computer raised the company's market share by 6%. To put this into context, at the moment only Apple can command that much trading excitement with one device.

Lenovo

Skip to 2005 and Legend became Lenovo (a portmanteaux of Legend and Novo, greek for 'new') and to show the world how far it had come, it bought the ThinkPad computing arm from IBM, the very company whose products it made a living from back in 1984.

30 years on and Lenovo is the number one computer seller in the world.

PC Plus points

The person who oversaw this careful maneuvering through the computing space was Yang Yuanqing. YY, as he likes to be known, is now CEO of Lenovo and he is hoping to do the same again with mobile, hence the Motorola buyout.

The deal is set to be completed in the next few months and in many ways can be seen as the brand's mobile equivalent of the ThinkPad - a brand that can bridge the global gap where the Lenovo name doesn't quite reach.

This all clearly points to where Lenovo is going next: to a PC Plus world, where mobile and PC categories are blurred by the rise of tablets.

Although this acquisition alongside the potential purchase of IBM's server division tested the confidence of investors when they were announced earlier in the year, YY told TechRadar that Motorola was a brilliant buy for Lenovo.

Lenovo

"I definitely think the Moto deal is the perfect thing for Lenovo's strategy. We got a good deal at a good price," he said.

"We need to globalise our smartphone business. But to become stronger and faster we needed to be bold. Motorola gives us the elements we need to globalise and compete. It is a well known brand that has strong relationships with carriers. "

As for how investors reacted he explained: "Market reaction is not important to us. We understand our strategy. We understand what we need and what we want to get."

Hello Moto

Lenovo is out to do something that many PC-focused companies have failed to do before: become a global mobile force.

Its current figures prove that in many ways it is already achieving this. In China it is number two only to Samsung when it comes to tablets and phones. And it is currently making similar gains in India, Indonesia, Russia, Thailand and Vietnam.

All of these countries recognise the Lenovo brand as a mobile one but this simply isn't the case for the US and Europe - two of the biggest smartphone areas - and this is where Motorola comes in. Currently Lenovo is the number four phone manufacturer in the world, behind Apple, Samsung and Huawei, mainly due to its popularity in China, and it believes Moto is the key to getting even higher up the ranks.

Moto X

"Motorola is a good brand with worldwide awareness. This is the company that invented mobile phone, not just smartphones," said YY.

"Motorola will give us a good retail relationship. It has a strong portfolio of IP and rights and will help us become one of the clear global leaders.

"We will not be satisfied with number three, we will want to be number two in the future."

Wuhan clan

This intent was made clear when TechRadar visited Lenovo's latest manufacturing plant in Wuhan, a thriving city that's capital of the Hubei Provence in China.

Wuhan is not a city that many will be familiar with but there's a good bet you have a gadget that's been manufactured in its confines. Alongside Lenovo there are a number of other big product manufacturers - including Apple's go-to manufacturer Foxconn.

Lenovo

Opened in December 2013, in an area called the Optics Valley, Lenovo's Wuhan Industrial Base has the ability to produce 100 million mobile devices - which just happens to be the number of smartphones and tablets Lenovo wants to sell this year.

Currently there are 3,000 people working at the plant but there's room for 8,000. And, according to Lenovo, most of the workers come from the neighbouring universities.

Jack Zhu, Lenovo's manufacturing lead executive for mobile, told TechRadar that it takes around seven minutes to make a phone and everything in the factory is done by people power.

"There's no automation, everything is checked by our workers. In all 34 people work on making one device," he said.

Lenovo

Think ThinkPad

Even without the Moto deal, mobile is definitely taking precedent within Lenovo. Recent figures showed that for four quarters in a row, tablets and phones have outpaced the sale of PCs.

Its new strategy smacks of this too. According to YY it wants to protect PC and attack PC Plus, a division that was announced in 2010 that essentially marries PCs with tablets. It sees itself as number two in this area, with Apple at number one - a spot YY is eyeing up.

"In the past couple of years, tablet has canibalised the PC market but now this is changing. We now believe tablets have become part of the PC," said YY.

"Tablets are PCs without keyboards and we are a proven winner in PCs. The Yoga tablet helped us have our best year. It is shaking up the market with unconventional design and we want to become number one in the broad PC market."

Yoga

To achieve this, Lenovo needs Motorola to work for them. It needs the brand to plug the gaps in the market that it can't currently reach with its Lenovo range of phones, much like the ThinkPad name did back in 2005.

And this brings us full circle to that initial phone call. If Lenovo hadn't contacted Google as soon as it had bought Motorola, the deal may never have happened. It was a long game of second guessing that eventually worked in its favour.

"We first approached Moto when Google first announced the acquisition. Google was the owner of Android and we thought maybe it wouldn't want to own the hardware side of the business," said Liu Jun, EVP President of mobile for Lenovo to TechRadar.

"To us, it was clear that Google wanted to own the IPs. So we thought we had an opportunity to own the hardware side.

"Google initially tried to do the hardware itself but then a year and a half later they reconsidered their strategy. The end of last year we got a call from Google, from Eric Schmidt. We were asked if we still had the interest.

"We always thought Motorola was a good buy so we said yes and signed the contract quickly."

Lenovo

Without Motorola, Lenovo managed to increase its mobile shipments to 50 million smartphones and 9.2 million tablets in 2013 - a growth of 60% year on year. This helped Lenovo achieve its most successful year ever.

So what could happen with Motorola? YY wants this number to be at least 100 million which is a high prediction but maybe the signs that Moto is the company to help with this were there way before a purchase was proposed.

"My first phone was a Motorola," explained YY to TechRadar. "And hopefully now that means it was a Lenovo."








Acer just debuted five new phones and a tablet
May 30th 2014, 21:07, by Michael Rougeau

Acer just debuted five new phones and a tablet

Acer had a lot to get off its chest before the weekend, announcing five new smartphones, a new tablet and offering details on its new wearable smartband, for a total of seven new devices launching in 2014.

Most interesting are the Liquid Leap smartband and its paired smartphone, the curved Liquid Jade. The two will be bundled together "in selected markets," Acer said in a press release.

We originally saw the Liquid Leap in April, but Acer played coy about its release then.

The Liquid Leap is a 1-inch touch screen housed in a rubber wristband with fitness and sleep tracking, phone notifications and music controls. Its battery life is tagged at seven days and it comes in white, black, blue, pink and orange.

Acer Liquid Leap

The Liquid Jade, meanwhile, is a curved 5-inch HD smartphone with Android 4.4 KitKat and a 13MP camera. Both smartphone and wearable launch in the third quarter of 2014, Acer said.

Acer Liquid Jade

That's not all

But the Leap-Jade combo is only a small part of Acer's announcements. The Taiwanese company has also debuted four other smartphones.

Acer Liquid X1

The impressive Liquid X1 sports a 1.7 GHz octa-core processor, a 13MP camera, a 5.7-inch display, 2GB of memory and microSD expansion.

Acer Liquid Z200

Where the X1 is professional- and business-focused, the budget-priced Acer Liquid Z200 smartphone is focused on "color" and "fun." It comes in five colors, has a 4-inch display and Android KitKat.

Acer Liquid E600 E700

Next up are the Liquid E700 and Liquid E600, two similar devices with varying specs. The travel-ready E700 has an impressive 3,500mAh battery, triple SIM capability, a 5-inch screen, 4GB of storage with microSD room, Android KitKat and a quad-core processor.

The E600 has similar specs, including a 5-inch display and quad-core processor, but lacks the triple SIM capability of the E700.

Don't forget the tablet

Finally Acer announced the Iconia Tab 8, a Wi-Fi-only tablet with an 8-inch 1920 x 1200 anti-fingerprint display, Intel Atom quad-core chip, Android KitKat and microSD expansion.

Acer Iconia Tab 8

All of these devices have various "intuitive and convenient" control and interface features, like the X1's AcerRAPID rear button, as well as its Acer Zoom Fit and AcerFLOAT UI tweaks. The former limits the display's active area when you're using it with one hand, while the latter is a multi-tasking tool.

In addition they'll all launch in Q3 this year, so watch out for more info as summer gets on.








The white iPhone 6 appears, raises questions in its wake
May 30th 2014, 19:52, by klee

The white iPhone 6 appears, raises questions in its wake

Apple might be throwing yet another wrench into the iPhone 6's final design.

New images of a stark white iPhone 6 have popped up on Korean news site named Joseilbo. Not only do the images possibly show the next iteration of the iPhone in white for the first time, it also reveals Apple's next handset might have a smoother back than originally thought.

Unlike iPhone 6 dummies we've seen previously, this iPhone 6 sports a completely smooth back with an almost plastic sheen. The new handset also doesn't seem to have any clearly segmented breaks at the top and bottom for the antennas as the dummy model did.

Additionally, the flash is shaped as a vertical bar, similar to the dual True-Tone LED found on the iPhone 5S, rather than the circle we've seen on previous leaks.

It's possible this supposed iPhone 6 might just be wearing a case, and of course who really knows if the image is the real deal at all. Still, it's an interesting wrinkle in the iPhone 6's ever-growing rumor wheel.

Will the real iPhone 6 please stand up?

Apple, iPhone 6, smartphones, 4.7-inch iPhone 6, rumors, early reports, Newstrack

In another possible leak, the Australian MacFixIt blog posted images of what it claims is the back panel of the upcoming iPhone covered in a green protective plastic casing.

Sporting a much closer design to the dummies - down to the round flash and two distinct antenna breaks - this back plate may be part of the final production model of Apple's next handset.

We can see a new cut-out for the Apple logo, which has since been missing on any leaked devices. Meanwhile, around the camera and flash area, we can see a bit of the back panel's underlying silver tint.

Although everything lines up with the suspected design of the iPhone 6, it's hard to tell if the frame will fit the phone's all-but-confirmed 4.7-inch screen. These renderings could have easily been shopped together from iPhone Touch parts, so we're going hold off on calling it the real McCoy until we see it for ourselves.

Which do you think is the real iPhone 6? Fight it out our comments below.








Samsung's virtual reality headset might be a Galaxy Oculus Rift
May 30th 2014, 18:36, by Michael Rougeau

Samsung's virtual reality headset might be a Galaxy Oculus Rift

It's been just over a week since the initial rumor that Samsung is working on a virtual reality headset appeared, and now a new report says at least one of our assumptions was wrong.

That is, Samsung is not looking to compete with Oculus VR and Facebook, but is actually working with them.

Engadget, which also reported the original story, has now shared a flood of new details about what could ultimately be a Galaxy Oculus Rift - or at least something like that.

The Samsung VR headset will reportedly use your phone's actual screen instead of including one of its own, but the headset will also include sensors like accelerometers and other hardware essentials.

Virtual insanity

So what does Samsung need from Oculus? Software, according to this report; Samsung is allegedly getting early access to Oculus's mobile software development kit.

In return, Oculus gets to use the next generation of Samsung's OLED displays in its next Oculus Rift headset. These screens are reportedly higher-def than 1080p.

The Samsung VR headset will supposedly be able to play both games and media and use a paired game controller and/or motion and voice controls.

The phone's rear camera could be used for video pass-through to check your surroundings in between frags, and there might even be buttons on the headset itself, including Android's standard recent apps, home and back buttons.

Currently both Samsung's hardware and Oculus' software are both said to be so early that it's impossible to build full games, but devs have reportedly tried out a musical application set on a beach and a skydiving demo.

Between Oculus Rift, Sony's Project Morpheus headset, and now Samsung's supposed Galaxy VR project, the virtual reality space is starting to really heat up. Wonder what we'll see at E3 2014?








The Moto X will no longer be made in the USA
May 30th 2014, 18:23, by klee

The Moto X will no longer be made in the USA

The Moto X is one of the more unique smartphones on the because folks could customize it and it is one of the few constructed in the United States. Soon, however, Motorola won't be assembling devices in the US of A anymore.

The Wall Street Journal reported Motorola plans to shutdown its Mobility Factory in Fort Worth, Texas by the end of 2014. A Motorola spokesperson confirmed the news with TechRadar.

Currently the factory employs over 700 Americans to produce the Moto X and operate an essential part of the Moto Maker assembly process.

However, Motorola says the closure won't affect the availability of the device or its smartphone customization program. After the factory closure, Moto X production will be moved to China and Brazil, as well as other undisclosed locations.

Moto-ivational

The plant closing comes just four months after Google sold Motorola to Lenovo. Despite the coincidence, a Motorola spokesperson noted the decision to close the plant came independently of the planned sale.

Instead it seems the Fort Worth plant will shutter due to poor sales of the Moto X coupled with the high labor costs in America. Motorola President Rick Osterloh explained to the Journal that the Moto X sales were "exceptionally tough" in North America.

The Moto X was an over-priced device given its hardware specs and being marketed as a middle-tier device. Since then, Motorola moved away from higher-end devices to pursue value-oriented customers with the Moto G and Moto E.

Now that Lenovo is steering the ship, Motorola could go into a whole new direction with its future wearable, the Moto 360, and the rumored Moto X+1.

  • Check out the latest Android handset to hit, the LG G3







HTC One Wear tipped as smart watch rival to Moto 360
May 30th 2014, 18:00, by JR Bookwalter

HTC One Wear tipped as smart watch rival to Moto 360

Wearables are all the rage with consumer electronics companies these days, and HTC isn't about to sit on the sidelines and watch (pun intended) the likes of Motorola or Samsung bask in all the glory.

TK Tech News filed a report from Taiwan today, with sources there revealing the extent of HTC's ambitions to jump squarely into the ever-crowded smartwatch market with a device tentatively known as One Wear.

Expected to launch in late August or early September of this year, the gadget was apparently demonstrated to the lucky folks at TK, who described it as featuring a round design similar to Motorola Mobility's upcoming Moto 360.

Furthermore, HTC appears to be planning to release both "polycarbonate and metal flavors" of the One Wear, an approach that seems to be working out well for the Taiwanese manufacturer with its HTC One (M8) smartphone line.

HTC One Wear spy shots

What to Wear?

Although the initial report stopped short of revealing what HTC's smartwatch might actually look like, SlashGear did some additional digging and turned up the images above.

One appears to show part of a metallic wristband presumably attached to the One Wear, while the other shows a trio of icons for notebook, music and camera apps, although they curiously seem to be formatted for a square display.

While it seems unlikely HTC would incorporate an actual camera lens into the One Wear as Samsung did with the Galaxy Gear, the report suggests the icon could indicate some kind of "remote shutter button," presumably capable of controlling the camera of a connected HTC smartphone.

Last but not least, the followup report claims HTC One Wear will be powered by Google's fledgling Android Wear software platform - not a big surprise, given everyone but the world's largest Android hardware maker Samsung appears to be jumping on that bandwagon.








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