Sabtu, 26 Januari 2013

Nokia slowly turning fortunes around, but it's still got a way to go

Nokia slowly turning fortunes around, but it's still got a way to go

Things are looking up over at Nokia as the Finnish firm posted a healthy profit for the final quarter of 2012.

Nokia managed to rack up €8.04 billion (around £6.76 billion/$10.7 billion) of profit during the last three months of 2012, which is 33 per cent up on the same period in 2011 and a massive 714 per cent gain on the third quarter in 2012.

The firm also highlights that it experienced a turbulent start to the year and this is reflected in its annual profit dipping 93 per cent year-on-year between '11 and '12.

Lumia is shifting

When it comes down to device sales Nokia shifted 4.4 million Lumia handsets - including the Lumia 920 and Lumia 820 - in the final quarter of last year which sounds impressive until you compare it to the competition.

In the same period Apple managed to sell 47.8 million iPhones – which puts Nokia's position in the market into its true perspective.

The upturn at the end of 2012 is a positive sign for the firm and Windows Phone – which Nokia now relies solely on for its smartphones – and we hope it can continue this upwards trend in 2013.

From Nokia

Graphene: the miracle material explained

Graphene: the miracle material explained

We could be on the brink of a new industrial revolution, and it's all down to a single layer of carbon atoms called Graphene.

Graphene is the thinnest, strongest, lightest, stiffest material ever made, and if it lives up to its potential it could change pretty much everything.

Why graphene is exciting

Graphene can do almost anything bar making you a better dancer or more skilful in bed. Fancy a superconductor that works at room temperature? Graphene can do that. Want to make bendy OLED touchscreens, or print solar cells, or make something harder than diamond? Or make thin, light structures that are 200 times stronger than ones made from steel? Graphene's good for all that too.

Speaking to Nature magazine, graphene expert and Nobel laureate Andre Geim explained: "It's the thinnest possible material you can imagine. It also has the largest surface-to-weight ratio: with one gram of graphene you can cover several football pitches... it's also the strongest material ever measured; it's the stiffest material we know; it's the most stretchable crystal. That's not the full list of superlatives, but it's pretty impressive."

Conspiracy theorists believe that graphene is a material left on Earth by - or rather, stolen from - space aliens. The theory reckons it's no coincidence that the theory behind graphene was first published in 1947, just when the US was dismantling UFOs in Roswell.

There's a bit of a graphene gold rush

According to figures from Cambridge Intellectual Property, in 2012 there were an extraordinary 7,351 graphene patents and patent applications, with the majority - 2,200 - filed by Chinese institutions and corporations.

The US is next with 1,754 patents, but while the UK kicked off the whole frenzy by publishing the first significant research back in 2004, it's far behind in the patent stakes: it only filed 54. That might explain why chancellor George Osborne has actually decided to spend some money for once: the UK government is supporting graphene research to the tune of £60 million.

Here's an interesting nugget spotted by the Cambridge IP: the biggest single corporate patent holder is Samsung, with 407 patents to IBM's 134.

Uses for graphene are starting to snowball

Graphene will make some people very rich, and we're already seeing practical uses of the technology: University of Manchester researchers have developed a graphene transistor that could enable much faster computing, while other research is helping us understand the substance's electrical and magnetic behaviour.

Graphene is being used to make "extremely efficient" flexible OLEDs for displays, highly conductive nanomaterials for the electronics industry and exceptionally powerful tennis rackets, and some people want to use it to make lightning-powered skyscrapers or to replace carbon fibre in cars and other vehicles.

We're not finished yet. It's also being used to make better batteries, and some people reckon it might even stop the next Lance Armstrong from getting away with doping: researchers are working on a system that incorporates graphene "to detect a single molecule of a drug in a few minutes".

It could be great for the environment

Today's vehicles, even electric ones, still face the same old problem: cars, trucks and trains are heavy, and pushing something heavy around the place at high speed uses enormous amounts of energy. Cutting weight is a priority, and today's vehicles are increasingly using aluminium and carbon fibre to achieve that.

Graphene would make those vehicles' weight savings look insignificant, ushering in an era of super-light transport that uses considerably less energy to start, steer and stop.

It has other environmental uses too: scientists at Moscow State University and Rice University have found that graphene is very good at extracting radioactive materials from water. They believe that it could be used to clean up nuclear accidents, for more efficient mining of rare metals, or for oil extraction.

Graphene is coming sooner rather than later

Firms such as Samsung and Nokia are getting into graphene in a big way, with the first commercial products based on the material due in 2013 or 2014.

As Geim told Nature, when he was in South Korea he was "shown a graphene roadmap, compiled by Samsung. On this roadmap were approximately 50 dots, corresponding to particular applications. One of the closest applications with a reasonable market value was a flexible touchscreen. Samsung expects something within two to three years." That was three years ago.

Is graphene being overhyped?

Writing in The Guardian, Philip Ball urges caution. While so-called miracle materials "can still grab headlines and conjure up utopian visions", they don't always deliver.

"High-temperature superconductors, which nabbed a Nobel in 1987, would give us Maglev trains and loss-free power lines. Carbon nanotubes... would anchor a space elevator and transform microelectronics. These things haven't materialised", he points out.

Graphene is banging around your head to the tune of Dolly Parton's 'Jolene'

And if it wasn't, it probably is now. Sorry about that.

Lenovo eyeing RIM for possible mobile mingling

Lenovo eyeing RIM for possible mobile mingling

Lenovo is looking into ways to boost its mobile business, and according to the firm, a partnership with Research in Motion may just be the way to go about it.

Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Lenovo Chief Financial Officer Wong Wai Ming told Bloomberg, "We are looking at all opportunities - RIM and many others."

"We'll have no hesitation if the right opportunity comes along that could benefit us and shareholders," Wong added.

The comment immediately set off a flurry of excitement, including a 3 percent rise in RIM stock at the thought of a Lenovo bid.

How likely is it, really?

Over the last year RIM has been changing its tune when it comes to hardware partnerships, shifting from a firm no-sell policy to a more open consideration of selling its hardware production side after launch of BlackBerry 10.

Meanwhile Lenovo, despite rhetoric of leading a PC plus era in the tech industry, is looking for ways to make a splash in the ever-increasing mobile marketplace.

On paper a Lenovo/RIM deal seems like a match made in tech heaven.

But there are significant hurdles that could easily break down Lenovo and RIM's partnership possibilities, chiefly from government regulations.

An acquisition of RIM's size could require approval from the Canadian government to pass. Earlier this week, Canadian Industry Minister Christian Paradis responded to the possibility of a RIM sale telling Reuters that, "We hope to see RIM remain a global leader and player, and make sure it can grow organically."

Any deal or partnership would also of course hinge on how the first crop of BlackBerry 10 handsets fare after the Jan. 30 launch. RIM may be more open to a deal these days, but it isn't in any hurry to sell if BB10 is a success.

BlackBerry Z10 to cost 480 unlocked from Carphone Warehouse?

BlackBerry Z10 to cost £480 unlocked from Carphone Warehouse?

We know what RIM's flagship BlackBerry Z10 smartphone will look like, what it's capable of and when it'll be launched. Now we've got the first indication of how much it will cost.

If leaked inventory shots prove to be accurate, the first handset to run the BB10 operating system will cost just a score short of 500 nicker, to use the parlance of our southern brethren.

Engadget has received a photo, claiming to be a shot of Carphone Warehouse's internal listings, showing a BlackBerry Z10 in white for the SIM-free price of £479.95.

The all-touchscreen affair will be officially revealed on January 30, although at this stage 'reveal' feels like too strong a word.

Full exposure

The device has been subject to more leaks than perhaps any gadget in recent memory. The Z10 has been seen numerous times in leaked photographs and hands on videos.

Just last week, a German blog posted a full hands-on comparison with the Z10 and the iPhone 5.

One has to wonder whether RIM will have anything left to surprise us with when its global launch events kick off on Wednesday. TechRadar will be there to let you know.

Via Engadget

Samsung sells 63 million smartphones in three months

Samsung sells 63 million smartphones in three months

Samsung has reported record financial figures, with a huge 76 per cent jump in profits for the last three months of 2012. This is thanks mostly to its range of Galaxy smartphones flying off the shelves.

This follows the record revenue Apple reported recently. So it's boom time for mobiles.

Samsung's net income rose to a record 7.04tn won ($6.6bn, or £4.2bn), which is up from 4.01tn won over the same period last year. Its mobile profits more than doubled over the same period, too.

63 million smartphones sold

Samsung didn't say how many smartphones it sold in the last three months of 2012, but analysts estimate it was around 63 million.

The Korean mobile maker also has big plans for its much-rumoured Galaxy S4 smartphone. It's reportedly ordered 10 million components for the handset, hinting it reckons it can sell that many every month. Which would be quite some feat.

The S3 has sold more than 40 million units worldwide, and Samsung is widely expected to repeat this success with the S4.

Samsung's Galaxy Note 8.0 is expected to make its debut at Mobile World Congress at the end of next month, along with its Galaxy Tab 3 range. The S4 isn't expected until April or May.

Via BBC

Microsoft lining up Outlook for Windows RT tablets?

Microsoft lining up Outlook for Windows RT tablets?

Microsoft is reportedly testing a version of its Outlook client for ARM-based tablets running Windows RT.

Tablets like the Microsoft Surface, have a dedicated Mail app, but nothing which compares to the all-singing-all-dancing Outlook app for Windows 8 PCs and laptops.

Now, Zdnet's Microsoft guru Mary Jo Foley has heard from three different sources that the full solution, including email, calendar, contacts and task management may well be on the way.

However, although testing is said to be taking place behind closed doors, the report claims Outlook for Windows RT may never see the light of day, commercially.

Internal back and forth

Apparently, there is "some internal back-and-forth" as to whether Microsoft should release such an app for its tablet operating system.

Foley's sources claimed that one camp is entrenched in the view that the existing Mail, People, and Calendar app bundle is the right way to go.

Another camp may be in favour of changing the name of the existing Mail app to Outlook.

Via ZDNet

Sony Xperia Z the ultimate super phone

Sony Xperia Z – the ultimate super phone

The Sony Xperia Z touched down in style at CES 2013 in Las Vegas with a fabulous 5-inch full HD display, powerful quad-core processor and stand out 13MP camera.

With so much on offer we've rounded up the best features of the Sony Xperia Z for you to digest as your leisure.

The ultimate viewing experience

Sony Xperia Z

The Xperia Z pulls in expertise from Sony's TV, camera and computing divisions to deliver a phone with a beautiful, full HD 5-inch display.

Sony's heritage in the TV industry comes into play with the Mobile Bravia Engine 2 which is created by specialist engineers to really make you feel like you're part of the action.

With a wealth of power under the hood, highly functional Android Jelly Bean operating system and dazzling CyberShot camera with an EXMOR RS sensor, the Sony Xperia Z is well equipped to bring you the best mobile viewing experience.

  • Find out more

A wealth of content

Sony Xperia Z

Whatever your vice may be, from movies to music, downloads and steaming the Xperia Z has you covered from head to toe.

With a vivid 5-inch full HD display, powerful 1.5GHz quad-core processor, slick Android Jelly Bean operating system and optimised 2,400mAh battery the Xperia Z is ready, are you?

  • Find out more

Super connectivity

Sony Xperia Z

On top of offering the ultimate viewing experience, fantastic performance and stunning design the Sony Xperia Z also features a wealth of great connectivity options.

The Xperia Z provides you with one-touch connectivity, giving you the easiest and fastest way to wirelessly share music, photos and videos from your phone.

With the NFC technology built into the Sony Xperia Z, you can easily pair the handset to other compatible devices such as your NFC-enabled BRAVIA TV or wireless headphones.

  • Find out more

Always working, come rain or shine

Sony Xperia Z

The Sony Xperia Z manages to marry a dust- and waterproof design with a stunning 5-inch full HD display and powerful 1.5GHz quad-core processor for a truly super-phone experience.

Carrying IP55 and IP57 certificates, you can take the Xperia Z for a dip in fresh water up to 1 metre for 30 minutes, meaning a trip into the bath or a slip into the toilet shouldn't end your phone's existence.

You can also rest easy when you next head to dustier climates as these are no problem for the tough Sony Xperia Z, which laughs in the face of such danger.

  • Find out more