Sunday, 31 August 2014

Review Amazon.com: Hot New Releases in Cell Phones & Accessories 08-31-2014

Amazon.com: Hot New Releases in Cell Phones & Accessories
The bestselling new & future releases in Cell Phones & Accessories Note: Product prices and availability were accurate at the time this feed was generated but are subject to change. 
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Aug 31st 2014, 22:24
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Review TechRadar: Phone and communications news 08-31-2014

TechRadar: Phone and communications news
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Apple is fighting hard to get old Samsung devices banned from sale
Aug 30th 2014, 19:29, by Michael Rougeau

Apple is fighting hard to get old Samsung devices banned from sale

The legal war between Apple and Samsung has been winding down lately, the mushroom clouds finally receding as the two companies cease their bickering in the dozens of cases they'd filed outside the US.

But the war at home isn't over yet, Apple's latest move reveals.

The house that Steve Jobs built recently appealed a US district court's decision not to grant an injunction against Samsung's sale of several devices that were previously found to be infringing on Apple patents.

Judge Lucy Koh, who's been overseeing this case for years, said Apple can't prove that sale of these Samsung devices harms Apple's bottom line, but Apple clearly disagrees.

What is it good for?

The injunction Apple is seeking would permanently ban Samsung from selling devices including the Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Samsung Galaxy Note, Samsung Galaxy Note 2, Samsung Galaxy S2 and several of its variants, Samsung Galaxy S3, and Samsung Stratosphere.

Apple won the case years ago that says these devices and others do indeed infringe on some Apple patents, but the two companies have continued squabbling ever since.

Nevertheless Judge Koh isn't convinced that Apple will benefit from a ban on the sale of these devices, thanks in part to the profits Apple posted in the third quarter of 2014.

"Apple has not demonstrated that it will suffer irreparable harm to its reputation or goodwill as an innovator without an injunction," Koh wrote in her previous ruling.

Given both parties' proven tenacity, it's unsurprising that Apple would appeal, but here's hoping that this battle comes to a real end soon.








OnePlus wants to start selling the One like a normal company
Aug 30th 2014, 18:55, by Michael Rougeau

OnePlus wants to start selling the One like a normal company

The OnePlus One is one of the coolest new phones on the market, perhaps partially because you need an invitation just to buy one.

But OnePlus will prove that exclusivity isn't the One's only appeal when it starts selling the phone normally this fall.

The company said during a Reddit ask-me-anything Q&A session that it hopes to open the phone to pre-orders by October at the latest.

"We are working on a pre-orders system, we were initially aiming for September but it's been slightly delayed, hopefully we'll be ready to launch it in October," the company wrote.

Better than nothing

Obviously that's not concrete, but it's better than the nothing we've heard previously on when the average plebe will be able to purchase the OnePlus One.

The One is so desirable because it has top-of-the-line specs, but at a much lower price than similar competitors like the Samsung Galaxy S5, HTC One M8 and Sony Xperia Z2.

We already laid out five reasons the OnePlus One should be your next smartphone - and soon you might actually be able to get your hands on one, depending how pre-orders work and when they begin.








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Review Amazon.com: Hot New Releases in Cell Phones & Accessories 08-31-2014

Amazon.com: Hot New Releases in Cell Phones & Accessories
The bestselling new & future releases in Cell Phones & Accessories Note: Product prices and availability were accurate at the time this feed was generated but are subject to change. 
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Aug 31st 2014, 10:24
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Saturday, 30 August 2014

Review TechRadar: Phone and communications news 08-30-2014

TechRadar: Phone and communications news
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In depth: Beyond GPS: The future of location tech will change how you use your smartphone
Aug 30th 2014, 11:01, by Chris Mills

In depth: Beyond GPS: The future of location tech will change how you use your smartphone

Beyond GPS: The future of location tech

Having your phone know where you are and what you're doing is one of the creepiest (but most useful) aspects of modern smartphones. From Google Now to location-based notifications on iOS, you probably take advantage of it every single day.

But we're still using 1970s technology to make that happen, and when the tech finally catches up with the 21st century, it'll change how you use your phone, for the better. Mostly.

At the moment, your phone uses two main methods to work out where you are – the Global Positioning System (GPS) and Wi-Fi. GPS, as you're probably aware, is a system that uses a global network of satellites to work out where you are.

The status quo

There's a constellation of 24 American military satellites (up until 2000, the rest of us couldn't really use it) that are spread out around the entire world. When your phone wants to know where it precisely is, it tries to acquire the signal beamed out by at least four of the satellites. It then decodes that using some fancy maths invented by Einstein, and can thereby work out where it is in the world, down to an accuracy of around 5 meters.

It's an incredibly clever system, and absolutely perfect for applications like sat-nav. But for smartphones, GPS actually kinda sucks. It's hugely battery-intensive to have on all the time, clouds or slightly-too-high buildings can foil it, and it doesn't work indoors.

Wi-Fi

To try and get around this problem your phone uses an alternative system: Wi-Fi location. Thanks to a couple of vast databases that cross-reference Wi-Fi network data with geographical location, your smartphone can normally work out where you are in the world in under a second. It does so by looking at what Wi-Fi networks you can see, and cross-referencing the network names with where they are on a map.

The data for these databases is collected either through "wardriving" (cars with Wi-Fi antennas driving around, collecting the data) or, more commonly, by using every smartphone on a given platform. So, when you have GPS and Wi-Fi switched on, it's quite possibly gathering data about nearby Wi-Fi hotspots and phoning it home.

It's far less accurate, but because it's using a fairly low-power sensor (the phone's Wi-Fi chip) rather than trying to communicate with satellites in outer space, it's a good option when you only need to know roughly where you are.

Of course, there's one other, even less accurate location-finding method that your phone can use: cellular triangulation, which is the thing referenced in early episodes of 24, with Jack Bauer hunched over a laptop trying to track the baddies.

Apple Maps

Cellular triangulation can work out where you are to within a couple hundred metres (or, sometimes, a couple hundred kilometres) by looking at which cell towers your phone is communicating with, and basically putting you in the rough nearby area. It's not a particularly useful tool (unless you're Jack Bauer), but it is somewhat handy for determining initial location, before GPS gets on with the job.

The space race

The most immediate and subtle change to location technology that you'll probably see is the switch away from GPS, towards other satellite-based systems. GLONASS (Global Navigation Satellite System) is the Russian version of GPS, and it too uses 24 satellites to give global coverage.

It doesn't really offer any advantages over GPS in and of itself, but having access to two systems doubles your chances of getting a signal quickly.

Which explains why Apple's included a GLONASS chip in every iPhone since the 4S, and most Android manufacturers have followed suit. (Well, that, and the fact that Russia has a 25% import tax on any non-GLONASS-enabled handsets these days, so most manufacturers find it worthwhile to stick the extra chip in.)

Galileo

Europe's challenge to GPS dominance is a system named Galileo. It works on exactly the same principle as GPS and GLONASS, a bunch of satellites orbiting Earth, but offers a few advantages. It has much better accuracy with altitude, and a function that'll turn your phone into a rescue beacon that can summon Mountain Rescue or the Coast Guard with the push of a button, even if you're out of mobile phone reception. Unfortunately, since Galileo is an EU project, it's running quite a long way behind schedule and over budget, and isn't quite reality yet.

It's not all about the astronauts

But even with this new host of satellite systems on the market, your phone still can't accurately work out where you are indoors. That's a problem, because indoor location services would open up a whole host of possibilities. When you're out shopping, you'd be able to navigate round a giant supermarket to find things or the Tescos app could give you a route, based on your shopping list, to get in and out as fast as possible.

Or, when you're at home, smart thermostats and lighting systems could use your phone's location to work out where you are in the house, adjusting lighting and temperature accordingly. The possibilities are huge, and just like with most new tech, it's impossible to predict what developers will do with it. After all, no-one would've predicted that opening the iPhone up to apps would lead, seven years later, to the existence of Flappy Bird.

A magnet and a seismometer walk into a bar…

Thankfully, a bunch of clever start-ups and established R&D labs are already working on making indoor location technology work better, with a whole laundry-list of different approaches.

One of the more mature technologies for indoor location tracking is our good old friend, Wi-Fi. With the installation of antennas around a shop (or anywhere else, for that matter), a far more accurate Wi-Fi grid can be built up, which allows phones to be tracked to an accuracy of around a metre. That's good enough for most purposes, like finding items on shelves.

It's also good enough for shops to be able to track customers in store, which is what the technology is currently (and very quietly) used for. A whole host of firms offer "in-store analytics" for retail chains, which basically amounts to tracking unsuspecting customers' phones using Wi-Fi, looking at the path they take around the store and what products they pause over, and then feeds that information to the stores.

Maps

However, far less sinister technologies also exist, and also require far less hardware than Wi-Fi solutions, which require dozens of antennas for just one building. IndoorAtlas is a US-based company that maps buildings based on their 'magnetic fingerprint'.

Basically, they use the fact that minor variations in steel structures give buildings a unique magnetic field, which can be used to geo-locate a phone with accuracy of a metre or two, without needing to install any new transmitters.

Even better, most phones already have magnetometers already installed, and they use very little battery power. Once the initial mapping of a building has been done, there's little to stop magnetic location becoming the new standard (unless we all choose to live in mud huts, of course).

Another slightly quirky location concept is the Open Positioning System, which wants to use existing low-frequency sources of seismic noise, things like power station turbines, for example, to triangulate location, without needing an expensive satellite system and without being hindered in the slightest by cities. The idea, developed by a Royal College of Arts student, is still in beta testing at the moment.

With so many different options, however, the most promising solution of all could be some kind of hybrid. BAE Systems, a British engineering firm, has a research project that uses a whole mix of electromagnetic signals from TV broadcasts, to Wi-Fi and cell towers to work out your location. The theory is that whie one single system might not offer universal coverage or great accuracy, bundling them all together probably will.

AlterGeo

AlterGeo is a company that already uses this approach for positioning: it uses Wi-Fi, WiMAX, GSM, LTE, IP addresses and network environment based location algorithms to serve location requests. It's not hard to imagine adding in magnetic and seismic data, in addition to the hundreds of location satellites already floating overhead, to work out exactly where you are, indoors or outdoors, with zero effort.

While that might have privacy advocates running for the tinfoil and blackout blinds, being able to work out your location should vastly improve our smartphones in the future. The current generation of smartphones, like the iPhone 5S and Moto X, put "contextual computing" at the forefront of your handset.

They pride themselves on being able to offer relevant information, whether that's the current weather, train times or football scores, and better location information will drastically improve how well they can do that. The end result? Prepare to be even more attached to your smartphone – but don't worry if you lose the damn thing, you'll know exactly where to find it.








Sprint could get the next Sony flagship, and all signs point to Xperia Z3
Aug 29th 2014, 21:00, by Michael Rougeau

Sprint could get the next Sony flagship, and all signs point to Xperia Z3

Sony hasn't done a great job of getting its Xperia flagships into the US, but it could be trying to get a head start with the next one.

That next one being, most likely, the Sony Xperia Z3, a phone we're expecting to see in September.

Both The Wall Street Journal and Reuters report that Sony has teamed up with Sprint and its parent company, Softbank, to release Sony's next flagship smartphone on Softbank in Japan and on Sprint in the US.

It will be a big step for Sony if the company can actually release a new flagship in the US in time for it to be relevant, so our fingers are crossed.

Guesswork

Granted, these reports don't specify what new Sony flagship they're talking about, but what else could it be?

It's also unclear whether this phone will come exclusively to Sprint in the US, or if that's just one of the carriers that will launch the Xperia Z3.

We're still expecting to see the Sony Xperia Z3 and a compact companion phone launch after IFA 2014, so watch out for some announcements next month.








T-Mobile's next 'Un-carrier' event will shake up Apple's iPhone 6 launch
Aug 29th 2014, 17:30, by Michael Rougeau

T-Mobile's next 'Un-carrier' event will shake up Apple's iPhone 6 launch

T-Mobile has announced that it's next "Un-carrier" event will take place September 10, just one day after Apple is expected to unveil the iPhone 6.

The carrier sent out invitations for the Un-carrier 7.0 announcement with the note that this one is "personal."

"We told you Un-carrier 7.0 was coming. We told you we won't stop. And this time, it's personal," TechRadar's invitation reads.

T-Mobile has been hosting these events to announce various surprising policy changes, and they've been well-received by consumers. But this one might be a little different.

Disrupt this

As usual we won't know what part of the wireless business model T-Mobile is shaking up this year until it happens, and it's hard to speculate when there are so many parts that need shaking up.

Interestingly this Un-carrier show will take place not in a theater or other large venue, but at a T-Mobile store in San Francisco.

The last Un-carrier event covered Un-carrier 5.0 and Un-carrier 6.0, a free iPhone 5S "test drive" period and its "Music Freedom" streaming services, respectively.

We're eager to see how T-Mobile's upcoming move will relate to the new iPhone's release, especially given that "it's personal" this time around.








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