Monday, 30 June 2014

Review TechRadar: Phone and communications news 06-30-2014

TechRadar: Phone and communications news
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Samsung outs a foursome of cheap KitKat phones that won't trouble Moto E
Jun 30th 2014, 15:47, by Chris Smith

Samsung outs a foursome of cheap KitKat phones that won't trouble Moto E

Samsung has announced the arrival of four new Galaxy smartphones aimed at the lower end of the market, that probably won't trouble impressive bargain handsets like the Moto G and Moto E.

The Korean firm has taken the wrappers off the Galaxy Ace 4, Galaxy Core II, Galaxy Young 2 and Galaxy Star 2. All four are sequels to sub brands of the Galaxy sub brand, if that's not too confusing.

L-R: The Samsung Galaxy Ace 4, Galaxy Young 2 and Galaxy Star 2

All four devices pack Android 4.4. KitKat and the pared down version of the TouchWiz UI, TouchWiz Essence UX.

The pick of the bunch is probably the Galaxy Core II, which offers a 4.5-inch WVGA display, a 1.2GHz processor, 768MB RAM, a 5-megapixel camera, 4GB of storage (expandable through MicroSD) and a 2000mAh battery pack.

Still no Moto G rivals

Slightly father down the trough is the Galaxy Ace 4, which has a 1GHz dual-core processor, a 4-inch display, a 5-megapixel camera and 4GB of storage. There's also an LTE variant with a slightly more impressive spec sheet.

Next up is the Galaxy Young 2 and the Galaxy Star 2 which seem virtually indistinguishable aside from the lack of a GPS chip and a lower camera resolution on the latter (2-megapixel rather than 3-megapixel).

No news on price or availability yet, but we wouldn't be expecting them to set customers back too much.

As others have pointed out, it is somewhat surprising that Samsung continues to churn out the low-end handsets at a rate of knots, yet are unwilling to offer a device like the Moto G with decent specs for a low price.








Samsung Galaxy S5 Mini release date rumoured for mid-July
Jun 30th 2014, 12:06, by John McCann

Samsung Galaxy S5 Mini release date rumoured for mid-July

We're yet to see an official announcement of the Samsung Galaxy S5 Mini, but the handset will apparently go on sale in mid-July.

According to an anonymous SamMobile source the Galaxy S5 Mini will be available worldwide from the middle of the month, although the site is quick to note it isn't concrete information.

A July launch for the Galaxy S5 Mini would make sense, what with the HTC One Mini 2 already available, Samsung won't want to miss out on this sector of the market for too long.

What's inside?

Previous leaks have pointed towards the S5 Mini sporting a 4.5-inch 720p display, 1.4GHz quad-core processor, 1.5GB of RAM, 8MP rear camera, 2.1MP front camera and Android 4.4.2 with Samsung's latest Touchwiz offering.

The good news is that the S5 Mini is also being tipped to house features including the fingerprint scanner, hear rate monitor and water and dust resistance of its bigger brother.








Something 'pretty amazing' is going to happen with Windows Phone
Jun 30th 2014, 11:38, by John McCann

Something 'pretty amazing' is going to happen with Windows Phone

Windows Phone fans brace yourselves, there's something big brewing over in Redmond as a senior software engineer drops a hint about something "pretty amazing."

Jerry Berg, Senior Software Development Engineer in Test at Microsoft, appeared on LockerGnome's podcast to deliver the teaser.

"Just wait for it, I can't give a timetable, I can't even tell you what is it, but something's going to happen in the Windows Phone space that's going to upset the entire world across everything."

Berg concluded: "wait for it, it's going to be pretty amazing."

Touch-less touchscreen?

Microsoft has already shown off touch-less 3D display technology running on a smartphone prototype, and this could well be the technology Berg is referencing in the video.

Of course, he could be referring to something completely different - hopefully this isn't a nod towards reports that Microsoft will finally provide a folders function in Windows Phone in a future update of Windows Phone 8.1. While that would be a useful addition, it's hardly worth a teaser.

With no timeline provided we're going to have to sit tight and keep an eye out for any other clues in the coming days/weeks/months.

YouTube : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9YTonV2yTsg&feature=youtu.be&t=15m30s






Moto 360 may meet its Moto Maker
Jun 30th 2014, 10:18, by John McCann

Moto 360 may meet its Moto Maker

Motorola created waves when it launched Moto Maker with the Moto X smartphone in 2013, allowing consumers to tweak the colour and materials of the chassis for a unique build - but apparently it's not just phones it can tailor.

According to a source close to Motorola who has spoken to PhoneArena, the now Lenovo-owned outfit is readying its Maker for the Moto 360 smartwatch.

The unknown source didn't divulge any further information on which variables you'll be able to customise, but strap selection would appear to be the obvious one.

360 +1

The source did go on to say that the Moto 360 won't arrive alone, as Motorola will also launch the Moto X+1 with the smartwatch - which will also be supported by Moto Maker.

The only Moto 360 release date we've been given thus far is "later this summer", so we'll have to hold out a little bit longer to find out if you'll be able to design yourself a unique 360.








Gary Marshall: Terrible tech: 11 great ideas that just don't work
Jun 29th 2014, 13:00, by Gary Marshall

Gary Marshall: Terrible tech: 11 great ideas that just don't work

Terrible tech

We love tech, but we don't love it unconditionally - and it doesn't always love us back, either. Tech can fight us rather than delight us, confuse rather than amuse, be destructive when we need it to be productive. Sometimes that's because of bad design, sometimes because of bad users, and sometimes because it was just a really bad idea in the first place. These are a few of our least favourite things. What are yours?

1. Kinect

Kinect

Microsoft's Kinect sensor is the stuff of sci-fi, but unfortunately we mean sci-fi of the dystopian, nothing-bloody-works variety. It ignores our kids, it gets confused by dogs, it struggles in small rooms and it's a pretty awful way to control your Sky HD box.

How to fix it: Give it Cortana.

2. Captchas

Captchas are the little boxes with barely legible text that are designed to frustrate spambots and ticket scalping bots, but as each new generation gets cracked they become harder and harder for humans to decipher. Ticketmaster's current captchas are essentially Rorschach blots.

How to fix it: sites could use puzzles, simple arithmetic, SMS verification… there's no shortage of alternatives.

3. Glossy screens

Mac

We're writing this on a typically dull British day, and we're doing it with the blinds down and a blanket running from the top of our head to the top of our PC. The glossy screens that looked so bright and deep and gorgeous in the shop reflect so much light that if we try to log on at lunchtime, we're blinded until mid-afternoon. Moving around to find a dark corner is all well and good, but that's not much fun with a 27" iMac or on a busy train.

How to fix it: Invest in a matte monitor or, if cash is tight, a matte screen protector.

4. Smartphones

Smartphones seem to be good at everything but the phone bit: we've lost count of the number of times even short calls have become extended games of telephone tennis as calls drop or go silent for no good reason after just a few words. The main culprit is usually mobile phone coverage.

How to fix it: change provider, use voice over Wi-Fi apps or get hold of a Sure Signal, which connects to your router and delivers strong indoor 3G.

5. Windows RT

Windows RT

For consumers Windows RT was a confusing mess, a Windows that didn't run Windows programs and whose predicted armies of low-cost tablets didn't appear. Of the few manufacturers that could be bothered launching RT devices, most of them had bailed out by last summer. The RT-packing Surface 2 is better than its predecessor, but that's better in the sense that death by shooting is better than death by boiling.

How to fix it: buy something running Windows 8.1. Or buy an iPad. Ha!

More terrible tech

6. Freemium apps

Apple's refusal to allow demo versions of apps and people's unwillingness to pay for content have created predictably horrible consequences as developers try to make money from their apps. Most developers are perfectly honourable, but gamers and parents are all too familiar with the minority who aren't: producers of games that are effectively unplayable without in-app purchases and kids' apps that exist solely to try and make kids spend their parents' cash.

How to fix it: get help to find the good stuff and be willing to pay for your entertainment.

7. Jetpacks

Martin Jetpack

You'd think nearly 100 years after jetpacks appeared in SF stories we might all be tooling around in them today, but the problem with jetpacks is that we humans aren't exactly designed to fly. Getting us airborne requires powerful propulsion, and powerful propulsion is big, heavy and uses enormous amounts of highly flammable fuel. It'll get you up there, but it won't keep you up for long - and if it goes wrong, the consequences are of the crashy-explodey-death variety.

How to fix it: Turbine jetpacks such as the Martin jetpack are better, but that's relative: they're still jet engines strapped to people.

8. Voice recognition

Spike Jonze HER

If the Spike Jonze movie Her featured a real personal digital assistant such as Siri, it'd be an hour and a half of an increasingly angry man bellowing the same thing at a smartphone before smashing it to smithereens in a fit of fury. Voice recognition is much better than it used to be, but it's still a long way from being perfect - and that makes it all the more frustrating when its accuracy takes a sudden dip.

How to fix it: More money, better algorithms and more talent.

9. Electric cars outside London


Tesla Model S

Outside cities, electric cars currently face a chicken-and-egg problem: until there are sufficient EVs on the road there's little reason to install lots of charging points, but until there are lots of charging points there's little reason to shell out on an electric car. Things are improving, but as the Zap Map shows, charging points are still fairly rare outside the biggest cities and fast chargers are rarer still.

How to fix it: move to London, buy an EV with a range extender or wait until the infrastructure improves.

10. UltraViolet

If a camel is a horse designed by a committee, UltraViolet is a digital service designed by a camel - or at least it is if you want to use it on Apple kit. It doesn't play nice with iTunes (you need to use Flixster or the Sony store, and the latter doesn't support iOS), HD discs sometimes give you SD downloads, you can't download HD content to iOS devices for offline viewing and some UltraViolet movies suffer delays before arriving in the Flixster app. Other than that it's just dandy.

How to fix it: use a PC, or just buy your movies elsewhere

11. Flying cars

Flying cars

Here's another SF favourite, and it's another one hamstrung by the laws of physics. Making vehicles that fly is a lot tougher and considerably more expensive than making ones that roll. Even if we get the tech right, there's a more fundamental issue, which is that unless they're fully automatic flying cars would cause carnage. More than 32,000 people die in car accidents every year in the US alone, and that's on regulated roads where people can only move in two dimensions. Look at your fellow motorists the next time you're driving. Now imagine them all airborne.

How to fix it: if they ever happen, we humans won't be allowed to drive them.








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