Sunday, 25 May 2014

Review TechRadar: Phone and communications news 05-25-2014

TechRadar: Phone and communications news
TechRadar AU latest feeds 
Helpdesk Ticketing System

Award-winning helpdesk system with an inbuilt KBase, forums, canned responses & more. Try super user friendly Freshdesk today. (In 2 minutes, You'll set it up!)
From our sponsors
European HTC One (M8) update makes everything a little more stable
May 25th 2014, 14:10, by Chris Smith

European HTC One (M8) update makes everything a little more stable

European owners of the new HTC One (M8) are receiving a minor update this weekend, bringing a host of bug fixes aimed at making the device more stable.

The 66MB download, brings stability updates for the camera app, the barometer in the weather app, the FM radio player and the video highlight feature.

The firmware update offers plenty of behind the scenes fixes, but doesn't seem to offer and visual improvements.

It is the second update issued for the device since its launch in February. Early adopters got a day-one software update that added an 'Extreme Power Saving' mode.

Banking on it

The HTC One (M8) is perhaps the Taiwanese firm's most important handset in years, so it's good to see HTC stamping on bugs in a timely fashion.

The company is banking on the 2014 edition to be a commercial winner after the original HTC One's rabid critical acclaim failed to translate into a high enough volume of sales.








Apple requests Samsung patent retrial over damages claim for billions, not millions
May 25th 2014, 11:43, by Chris Smith

Apple requests Samsung patent retrial over damages claim for billions, not millions

In news that'll have tech fans everywhere reaching for the cyanide capsules, Apple has decided wasn't given due damages in its most recent legal battle with Samsung and wants a retrial.

Earlier in May a California judge awarded Apple $119m (around £70.7m, AU$129m) after agreeing its Korean giant had infringed on two of its patents.

Good news for Apple right? Well no. It wanted more than twenty times that figure, having set out to gain $2.2 billion (around £1.3bn, AU$2.4bn) from the case.

So, Cupertino's lawyers are pulling themselves out of the corner to go one more round, and this time they're asking for $3.2 billion (about £1.9bn, AU$3.46) plus another few million in interest payments.

Deliberate strategy

In it's request to the court for a retrial Apple alleges it has not been properly compensated for Samsung's deliberate attempts to copy the disputed 'click to call' and 'slide to unlock' features.

In its filing Apple wrote that Samsung's internal development documents "reflected its deliberate strategy of copying hundreds of software features from the iPhone, including Apple's patented "slide to unlock."

On May 17th Apple and Google reached an accord, deciding to end all patent litigation against one another. However, Apple made clear there was no chance of it dropping its complaints against Samsung. Here's the first evidence of that vow.








You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

No comments:

Post a Comment