Senin, 28 Januari 2013

Design of 'budget' iPhone to be mix of multiple devices?

Design of 'budget' iPhone to be mix of multiple devices?

Rumors of a low-cost iPhone were only borne a few short weeks ago, but the whispers are starting to gain some steam, especially as more details seemingly emerge.

Following a report from last week that contained details on the iPad 5, iPhone 5S, iPad mini 2 and a so-called plastic iPhone, iLounge is back at it again with what it claims are some specifics for the lower-end handset.

"Reliable sources" are saying the phone will be predominately plastic, and while we've heard that before, it also won't merely be an iPhone 3G or 3GS packed with Retina display or sparked by Lightning. Nor will it be an all-plastic cutout of the iPhone 5.

Instead, this device will supposedly be a mash up of the 5, the fifth-generation iPod touch and the iPod classic. Yes, as in the music player from 2008.

It's alive!

According to the publication's sources, the phone will be a hybrid: its screen will fall in the iPhone 5's 4-inch display, while its bottom will take a cue from the iPod touch. As for overall shape, the phone will look much like the iPod classic.

Here's where it gets weirdly specific: iLounge details how the phone will appear almost identical to the iPhone 5 from the front. The sensor, camera and button arrangement will be the same, though the screen will only have a resolution of 1136 x 640.

Unlike the 3G and 3GS, the glass (likely made by Corning) will protrude ever so slighty as it does on the 5 and iPod touch.

The phone is said to be about half a millimeter taller and half a millimeter wider than the iPhone 5 though it will be about a full millimeter thicker (you can totally feel that extra half).

Different views

From the side, the phone will take its cues from the iPod touch and pre-iPhone 4 phones. In other words, no circular volume buttons but instead squeezed out, pill-shaped pushers.

Aside from the materials used to make it, the housing of the new phone should be similar to the iPod classic in shape. The sides and back will be flat, unlike the "soft curves on all sides" found on the iPhone 3G and iPhone 3GS.

This design element apparently allows the SIM card tray to sit in the center on the right side of the phone (like the iPhone 5's) while the buttons and ports are housed in flat surfaces.

Flipping to the back, the phone will look like the iPod touch 5th gen with the camera, a circular microphone and rear flash featuring similar proportions. The lens, however, won't poke out.

The bottom will be a mix of the iPhone 5 and fifth-gen iPod touch - there will be fewer holes than the iPhone 5 but a headphone port, Lightning port and bottom microphone will all call to mind the iOS 6 handset. A second microphone will supposedly sit next tot he headphone jack.

According to iLounge, the phone won't be much of a departure from the designs Apple has already given us with the real shocker coming in the price, of which we still don't have details.

Without official word from Apple, we can't confirm these details just yet, but sit tight. We doubt this is the last we'll hear of the less and less mysterious budget iPhone.

Apple updates iOS 6.1 to expand LTE, add Siri movie ticket purchases

Apple updates iOS 6.1 to expand LTE, add Siri movie ticket purchases

Better LTE than never, Apple rolled out its free iOS 6.1 update today so that more international users can access their carrier's high-speed network on the iPhone 5 and newer iPads.

"iOS 6.1 brings LTE support to more markets around the world," said Apple in a press release.

Italy, Denmark, Finland, Switzerland, the Philippines, and several Middle Eastern countries now have LTE capabilities.

Today's LTE expansion adds 36 additional iPhone carriers and 23 new iPad carriers.

Silver screen Siri

Downloading iOS 6.1, users will also discover that Siri has learned a new trick: buying movie tickets.

Yes, waiting in a movie theater line - at least in the U.S. - has finally become a thing of the past thanks to Fandango and Apple's voice controlled assistant.

The integration is even more enjoyable when you command Siri to buy you movie tickets next to a really long ticket line on a jam-packed Saturday night.

This incremental iOS update is rounded out by iTunes Match, which lets subscribers download individual songs to their iOS device via iCloud.

Apple TV updated too

iPhones and iPads weren't the only Apple devices to get a software update today. Apple also pushed Apple TV firmware 5.2 out to users of its "hobby" set-top box.

Second- and third-generation Apple TVs are now a little bit easier to control thanks to Bluetooth keyboard support, something we knew was coming since December's Apple TV beta.

Also in the new Apple TV update is an "Up Next" feature that displays which song will play next, and support for browsing and playing iTunes music from iCloud.

While these updates aren't enough to send Apple's fallen stock price back up, iOS 6.1 and Apple TV 5.2 should give dedicated users a little faster speed and an easier way to control their devices.

Via PC Magazine, 9to5Mac

Apple updates iOS 6.1 to expand LTE, add Siri movie ticket purchases

Apple updates iOS 6.1 to expand LTE, add Siri movie ticket purchases

Better LTE than never, Apple rolled out its free iOS 6.1 update today so that more international users can access their carrier's high-speed network on the iPhone 5 and newer iPads.

"iOS 6.1 brings LTE support to more markets around the world," said Apple in a press release.

New regions include Italy, Denmark, Finland, Switzerland, the Philippines, and several Middle Eastern countries now have LTE capabilities.

Today's LTE expansion adds 36 additional iPhone carriers and 23 new iPad carriers.

Silver screen Siri

Downloading iOS 6.1, users will also discover that Siri has learned a new trick: buying movie tickets.

Yes, waiting in a movie theater line - at least in the U.S. - has finally become a thing of the past thanks to Fandango and Apple's voice controlled assistant.

The integration is even more enjoyable when you command Siri to buy you movie tickets next to a really long ticket line on a jam-packed Saturday night.

This incremental iOS update is rounded out by iTunes Match, which lets subscribers download individual songs to their iOS device via iCloud.

Apple TV updated too

iPhones and iPads weren't the only Apple devices to get a software update today. Apple also pushed Apple TV firmware 5.2 out to users of its "hobby" set-top box.

Second- and third-generation Apple TVs are now a little bit easier to control thanks to Bluetooth keyboard support, something we knew was coming since December's Apple TV beta.

Also in the new Apple TV update is an "Up Next" feature that displays which song will play next, and support for browsing and playing iTunes music from iCloud.

While these updates aren't enough to send Apple's fallen stock price back up, iOS 6.1 and Apple TV 5.2 should give dedicated users a little faster speed and an easier way to control their devices.

Via PC Magazine, 9to5Mac

Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 goes side-by-side with Note 2, S Pen and all

Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 goes side-by-side with Note 2, S Pen and all

The Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 has yet to make its official debut, but that hasn't stopped it from showing up in leak after leak.

The mid-sized tablet's latest appearance comes from the French site FrAndroid, which posted photos on Friday alleging to show the Galaxy Note 8.0 alongside its little sibling, the Galaxy Note 2.

Besides the obvious opportunity for comparison here, there's one important thing to note (pun intended): while some have been calling this rumored device the Galaxy Note 8.0, others, including FrAndroid, refer to it as the Galaxy Tab 8.0.

Of course, that doesn't make a whole lot of sense, since there's already a Galaxy Tab 2 7.0; but the point is that the name might be up in the air.

Side-by-side

Besides, the Galaxy Note 8.0 looks more like the Galaxy S3 than it does the Galaxy Tab series (like the Galaxy Tab 2 10.1) or the Note 2.

That's aside from its signature S Pen, which appears to be fully photographed for the first time here.

It's difficult to tell, but the white Galaxy Note 8.0 stylus looks like it could be slightly thicker than the Note 2's pen.

Regardless, it's interesting to see the two devices side-by-side, especially considering that the Note 8.0, based on what's been leaked so far, appears to share its smaller brethren's portrait orientation rather than the landscape mode of the larger Galaxy Note 10.1.

Debut at MWC

The Galaxy Note 8 is rumored to pack an 8-inch, 1280 x 800 display, a quad-core processor, 2GB of memory, a 5-megapixel rear camera, and Android Jelly Bean.

Purported photos of the medium-sized Note tablet appeared on Tuesday, then again on Thursday, when it apparently popped up on public transportation.

Of course, these could all be fake, but the Note 8.0 does seem pretty real - Samsung even confirmed it.

Samsung Mobile Communications president J.K. Shin confirmed on Monday that the Galaxy Note 8.0 would make its debut at Mobile World Congress in February.

TechRadar will be on site in Barcelona to bring you that and more news from the event.

Via TechCrunch

Sony C5303 Xperia photos leak ahead of MWC

Sony C5303 Xperia photos leak ahead of MWC

Images of a new Sony Xperia phone, codenamed "HuaShan," reportedly leaked on a German forum site on Thursday, only now coming to light in the English-speaking world.

The photos were reportedly posted on the USP-Forum.de message boards anonymously, so their validity can't be confirmed by any means.

However, one image shows the purported Xperia handset's "About" page, with the model number C5303 and Android 4.1.2: Jelly Bean.

As the Xperia news site Xperia Blog pointed out on Monday, the Sony C5303 is part of the rumored C530X series, which also includes the C5302 and C5306. The C5303 is the LTE model.

Sony Xperia Rumors

The "HuaShan" smartphone that reportedly appears in these leaked images features the same side power button seen on the Xperia Z, Xperia ZL and Xperia Tablet Z, according to Xperia Blog, as well as a strange, metallic (or possibly transparent) strip on the bottom bezel, both front and back.

This new Xperia device isn't one that we at TechRadar have encountered before, but Xperia Blog claimed that it's rumored to rock Qualcomm's 1.7GHz dual-core Snapdragon S4 Pro MSM8960T processor and Adreno 320 graphics.

The site also claimed that the Sony C530X series Xperia phones will sport 720p displays, and beyond that nothing else is known.

But with Barcelona's Mobile World Congress going down in less than a month, it seems likely that we'll hear more about Sony's next Xperia successors soon.

TechRadar will of course be there in force, so keep an eye on the site to stay up to date on the latest Sony Xperia rumors and more.

New version of iPad 4 might double up to 128GB, pricing to match

New version of iPad 4 might double up to 128GB, pricing to match

Apple has been sticking with a maximum capacity of 64GB for its iOS devices for some time, but a new report claims we may soon see a new model of the iPad 4 packing 128GB of storage within.

9to5Mac reported Sunday that Apple may be preparing to release a new configuration for the current iPad 4 with Retina display, which debuted in September, this time doubling the maximum storage capacity from 64GB to 128GB.

According to unnamed sources, the larger capacity model will be a new SKU added to the current lineup and not a new model altogether. It will come in the same black or white colors and have Wi-Fi only or Wi-Fi + Cellular options.

The report also claims the new 128GB model with Wi-Fi only will retail for US$799, while the cellular-equipped version will take it to US$929. For comparison sake, the iPad 4 currently costs between US$499-US$699 for Wi-Fi only models and US$629-US$829 for Wi-Fi + Cellular versions.

Software support

Lending credence to Sunday's report is a new iOS 6.1 beta build Apple released over the weekend, which appears to contain code specifically referencing an iOS device with 128GB storage capacity.

Although early reports assumed the iPhone would be the device to receive the storage bump, 9to5Mac sources claim that a beefed-up iPad bearing the code name "P101 ULTIMATE" (for Wi-Fi only) and "P103 ULTIMATE" (for Wi-Fi + Cellular) could appear in the very near future.

The fifth iOS 6.1 beta also isn't the first place where a 128GB storage capacity has turned up in Apple's software recently - the company's iTunes 11 software for Mac and PC released back in November also featured code referencing the same capacity.

Whether a 128GB iPad is something that will see a consumer release (various reports have the iPad aimed at government or retail applications) or with subsidized pricing remains to be seen, if the device is in the works at all, that is.

Via 9to5Mac (1), (2)

Lenovo and RIM play it cool over buy-out quotes

Lenovo and RIM play it cool over buy-out quotes

The tech world was aflutter at the prospect of Lenovo mulling a bid for RIM's BlackBerry business last week, but it may have been a storm in a teacup.

It turns out that when Lenovo's CFO Wong Wai Ming told Bloomberg that, "We are looking at all opportunities - RIM and many others" he didn't really mean that a RIM buy-out was on the cards.

The company has issued a statement to clarify that Ming was "speaking broadly about M&A [mergers and acquisitions] strategy" and that it doesn't comment on speculation such as this.

There's always a but

However, today's statement also reiterated that Lenovo is "very focused on growing its business, both organically and through M&A", presumably standing by Ming's comment that Lenovo would go for RIM "if the right opportunity comes along".

So it's not so much as a no as a maybe - and RIM's playing it cool too, adding in its own statement in reaction to the rumours that it is continuing "to examine all available options" although it has nothing new to add at this time.

To sum up: Lenovo might buy RIM, it might not. Carry on.

Eyes laid on the iPad 5 while iPhone 5S details leak

Eyes laid on the iPad 5 while iPhone 5S details leak

The iPad 5 will be significantly thinner and smaller than all previous incarnations of the 9.7-inch tablet according to a new report.

Apparently the editor over at iLounge has been treated to a shifty look at the case for the upcoming iPad 5, although it's unclear how this opportunity came about.

If the claims are true than we can expect the fifth generation iPad to sport an almost bezel-free front, with just enough space above and below the display for the home button, sensors and front camera.

iShrunk

It's apparently considerably thinner than the bulky iPad 3 and iPad 4 – which put on weight when Apple applied its Retina display and larger battery post-iPad 2 - with a design which closely follows the iPad mini.

According to iLounge sources the new iPad 5 is codenamed J72 and won't be arriving in March as some have suggested, with the launch event actually pegged for October.

On the topic of smaller iPads there's also a brief mention of the iPad mini 2 which is also apparently set for an October launch, complete with Retina display.

Say cheese

As well as the iPad 5 rumours iLounge has also received information on the iPhone 5S, with the handset sporting the same design as the iPhone 5 with the key difference being a beefier camera and larger flash on the back.

That's hardly ground breaking upgrades from Apple, with the touted 13MP camera on the 5S hardly bucking the trend considering the Sony Xperia Z already has this and we'd expect the Samsung Galaxy S4 to offer up something similar.

The unknown sources "confirmed" the iPhone 5S release date is set for sometime this year, with July looking likely at the moment.

Budget iPhone rumours are also refusing to die with iLounge reporting that Apple is developing a plastic-clad handset in partnership with China Mobile.

It seems unlikely that the Cupertino firm would develop a handset specifically for China, so we're taking this and the rest of the rumours in this piece with the recommended amount of salt.

From iLounge (1, 2)

Blurry shots fail to instil confidence over iPhone 5S and iPhone 6 components

Blurry shots fail to instil confidence over iPhone 5S and iPhone 6 components

Is this the next piece in the iPhone puzzle or are these images claiming to be speaker modules for Apple's next handsets just white noise?

Picked up by French site NoWhereElse, the blurry images apparently show the speakers which will feature in the iPhone 5S and iPhone 6.

According to the site, the components were snapped by an employee of one of the manufacturers that produces parts for Apple, although we're unable to verify that.

Loud, but not so clear

iPhone 5S - iPhone 6 - LEAKS

The employee in question claimed that the iPhone 5S is due for launch between March and July this year, while the all new iPhone 6 will make an appearance towards the end of 2013.

The speaker module which is apparently meant for the iPhone 6 appears to be significantly smaller than the one destined for the iPhone 5S, suggesting Apple will dramatically reduce the size of its flagship handset once the 5S is out of the way.

While the two components do look similar to the speaker block found in the iPhone 5, we're not getting too carried away with the suggestion that Apple is prepping not one but two smartphone launches this year.

From NoWhereElse via AppleInsider

Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 pops up boxed and ready to go

Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 pops up boxed and ready to go

The Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 series looks even more likely to make an appearance soon as a boxed slate appears online.

We've previously heard rumours that Samsung is readying 7- and 10-inch variants of a new range of tablets to fall under the Galaxy Tab 3 name for an MWC 2013 launch.

Phone Arena has now been sent a couple of images which apparently show a Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 chilling out in its box ready to hit stores.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 - LEAK

Lifting the lid

As with a lot of leaked shots of unannounced products the quality of these snaps is not brilliant, and it's not possible to read the text on the lid of the box other than the Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 name and the start of the model number: GT-P.

Judging by the size of the icons on the display image on the front of the box we assume this is a photo of the 7-inch Galaxy Tab 3, which will look to take on the Google Nexus 7, Amazon Kindle Fire HD and Nook HD.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 - LEAK

TechRadar will be out in force at MWC 2013 in Barcelona to bring you all the latest from the key manufacturers, including Samsung and any new tablets it may be planning to spring on us.

From Phone Arena

From birth to death: why Nokia's Symbian was the future of mobile tech

From birth to death: why Nokia's Symbian was the future of mobile tech

It's official: Nokia's 808 PureView is the last of the firm's Symbian handsets.

Symbian has been on death row for a while - we reported that Nokia had put it into "maintenance mode" back in October, and at the beginning of 2012 Nokia's then-new boss Stephen Elop said it had "competitive challenges that there was [no way to solve]" - but its demise was only confirmed this week during Nokia's latest earnings announcement.

As The Telegraph reports, Nokia had previously said that "Q4 2012 was 'the last meaningful quarter for Symbian'", and this week it confirmed that "The Nokia 808 PureView, a device which showcases our imaging capabilities and which came to market in mid-2012, was the last Symbian device from Nokia."

We won't miss it - Symbian's been looking rather dated since the arrival of the iPhone OS in 2007, never mind the latest iOS, Android and Windows Phone variants we have today - but that doesn't mean we won't wave it a fond farewell. We've gone through an awful lot of Symbian phones over the years.

Windows Phone
Nokia is now concentrating on Windows Phone

Where Symbian came from

Symbian came from another firm we have fond memories of: Psion, whose Organiser computers were powerful and futuristic.

Well, they were at the time. In the late 1990s Psion Software joined forces with Nokia, Motorola and Ericsson to create Symbian from its EPOC OS. Symbian made multiple products - S60 for Nokia, UIQ for Sony Ericsson - and until the iPhone came along, it powered some of the tastiest handsets the world had ever seen.

Remember the Nokia N95 or its Communicator mini-laptop, Sony Ericsson's P990i or W810i? I had one of those latter ones, and at the time having a fully-fledged MP3 WalkMan living inside my phone felt awfully high tech.

So what went wrong? It's easy to say "the iPhone did it", but while Apple undoubtedly benefited from Symbian's problems it didn't create them. As Psion's first employee Charles Davis told The Register in 2011, Symbian was plagued by disagreements. "Owner-licensees "went for maximum differentiation in the end - UIQ was completely different to Series 60. This hampered Symbian's ability to innovate, and it stopped the aftermarket. We could have had an App Store 10 or five years before Apple."

Symbian grew messy. When Cisco considered adopting it, they discovered that not only did Symbian come in multiple, incompatible versions, but that - as Davis recalled - "we hadn't sorted out backwards compatibility at that time so apps written for Symbian 7 wouldn't work on Symbian 8." Cisco decided to go elsewhere.

The burning platform

Despite its many partners Symbian's one true friend was Nokia, especially outside Japan - but Nokia neglected what Stephen Elop would later describe as a "burning platform", failing to take the iPhone threat seriously enough quickly enough, inventing but not shipping devices awfully like today's iPhones and iPads and getting bogged down in bickering and bureaucracy.

As one designed told the WSJ: "You were spending more time fighting politics than doing design." Qualcomm's CEO found that Nokia would spend so much time assessing potential opportunities that by the time it made a decision, "the opportunity often just went away."

There's a truism that the most dangerous time for a company is when it's really successful, because that's when firms think nothing can touch them. IBM suffered from it in the 80s, Microsoft in the 90s, and Nokia did it in the 2000s. In Nokia's case the disruptor was Apple: not only did it not see the threat coming, but when the iPhone actually arrived it still didn't see it as a real danger.

MeeGo
MeeGo was a failed attempt at Nokia developing its own successor to Symbian

Nokia's focus was on dumbphones, because that's where the money was. It isn't there any more.

Whether you see Stephen Elop as Nokia's saviour or the architect of its downfall, it was clear from his "burning platform" memo that Symbian's days were numbered. Writing specifically about Symbian, Elop said it was "an increasingly difficult environment in which to develop" that was hindering Nokia's ability to "take advantage of new hardware platforms. As a result, if we continue like before, we will get further and further behind, while our competitors advance further and further ahead."

Elop pulled the trigger, but what really killed Symbian was Nokia's belief that the smartphone space was a war of devices. It wasn't.

As Elop explained, "The battle of devices has now become a war of ecosystems, where ecosystems include not only the hardware and software of the device, but developers, applications, ecommerce, advertising, search, social applications, location-based services, unified communications and many other things. Our competitors aren't taking our market share with devices; they are taking our market share with an entire ecosystem."

In Symbian, Nokia had an OS - but what it didn't have was time to build an ecosystem to rival Apple and Google. Elop believed that building one around Symbian would take more time than Nokia could afford, so he bet on Microsoft's ecosystem instead. It's too early to say whether the move saved Nokia, but it certainly signed Symbian's death warrant.

Goodbye
This is farewell