Category: Mobile

  • LG’s 5.5″ Optimus G Pro Phablet Confirmed Headed To The U.S. In Q2

    LG-logo

    LG’s Galaxy Note clone forthcoming flagship, the 5.5 inch Optimus G Pro, has been confirmed for the U.S. market. Writing in a release on its website (translated from Korean by Google Translate), LG said the device will be  released in international markets including North America and Japan in the second quarter of this year. Pricing has not been confirmed.

    Phones that are large enough to act as small tablets — hence the phone+tablet ‘phablet’ portmanteau — were popularised by Samsung’s original Galaxy Note — and now its successor, the Note II. Back in November Samsung announced it had pushed past five million channel sales of the Note II in around two months since the device went on sale. Analyst iSuppli is predicting phones with screens of more than five inches will more than double their share of the smartphone market this year, with 60.4 million units forecast to ship in 2013 as big phones carve out a larger niche for themselves.

    On paper, the LG Optimus G Pro is a specs-busting affair — packing in a full 1920 x 1080 HD display, with screen resolution equating to 400ppi. Under the hood the 4G phablet is powered by a quad-core 1.7GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor, which LG claims offers improved performance — including lower power consumption — than Qualcomm’s S4 chip. It runs Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, skinned with an updated version of LG’s UI.

    On the back there’s a 13 megapixel camera, while the front facing lens is 2.1 megapixels. The removable battery is a whopping 3,140mAh. There’s also NFC on board. Device thickness is 9.4mm.

    The forthcoming phablet will make its debut in LG’s domestic market later this month, and will doubtless also be on show at the Mobile World Congress tradeshow next week — so stay tuned for hands-on.

  • Google May Open A String Of Retail Stores, But What Does It Hope To Gain?

    fiber-space

    Microsoft and Apple already have their own physical retail stores, but thus far Google has managed to resist that particular temptation

    If a recent report from 9to5Google is to be believed though, that may not be the case much longer. According to a single “extremely reliable source,” Google will erect its own standalone stores by the holidays in an effort to more effectively push its hardware to consumers.

    These stores will reportedly carry Google’s Nexus devices as well as Chromebooks, but the curious report goes on to note that Google conceived the project as a way to get its ambitious Glass project in front of more people. But is this all really necessary?

    Let’s just say that these rumors are true — the value of something like Glass can be hard to discern without seeing what it brings to the table first-hand, but the more practical thing to do would be to leverage its existing partnerships. Google has a fair number of Chrome Zone experience areas already installed in existing retailers like Best Buy and PC World in the U.K., and those stores already get plenty of foot traffic (if perhaps less than in recent years). Even if Google had to pay for some more experienced folks to demo Glass, it could still be less expensive and potentially more impactful than going it alone in the retail space.

    Sure, there’s something to be said for Google controlling that experience end-to-end the way Apple does, but that approach isn’t without its potential pitfalls. Putting Glass aside for a moment, Google may have a hard time turning a profit off these stores thanks to some of its other products — devices like the Nexus 4 smartphone and the Nexus 7 and 10 tablets are sold at or around cost, meaning that Google hardly makes any money on them. Google’s hardware then is something of a Trojan horse (and not all that different from what Amazon offers): it’s generally cheap and powerful enough to make it worth a purchase, and Google has been aiming to make up that money in Play Store revenue down the line.

    That’s all well and good, but running a physical store takes a decent chunk of money. Rent is a pain, as are utilities, training and staffing costs, paying for interior design and fixtures; there’s a considerable amount of overhead that goes into a venture like that. Sure, Google could still make some money in the long run but it doesn’t seem like much of a sure thing unless Google manages to perform very, very well in terms of sales volume. If we’re looking at this whole situation purely in terms of dollars and cents, a big retail push seems like a very dicey decision.

    Of course, that’s not to say this whole thing is completely impossible — Google may be going after more than just money. A move like this may serve to solidify Google as a real consumer brand instead of just that thing you use when you want to scour the Internet for, well, everything. That sort of shift in public perception could only help when it comes to pushing hardware products in the future, especially if Google really does end up creating ambitious new devices on its own. Rumors of a hi-res Chromebook Pixel have more or less petered out (thanks in large part to the incredibly sketchy way that its supposed existence was revealed), but the furor it caused shows rather nicely that there’s interest for that sort of high-end Chrome computing experience.

    And to return the whole issue of Google Glass, the notion of carving out small retail locations to highlight new and novel Google-powered experiences isn’t without precedent. Consider Google’s Fiber Space in Kansas City — while it’s set up to provide in-person customer support for Google Fiber’s growing number of users, it’s also meant to showcase what the Fiber service is capable of. It’s a very pretty little area that Google has put together and it already plays home to at least a few Chromebooks, so it’s not inconceivable that Google would take that concept, tweak it a little, and transplant it into some “major metropolitan areas.”

    Still, if true, this retail crusade would be a pretty drastic little about-face for Google. Google Shopping’s Sameer Samat told AllThingsD just this past December that the company doesn’t “view being a retailer right now as the right decision,” so either this is all bunk, or Google’s having to adjust to the sea change more rapidly than it expected.

  • Samsung to launch new attack on Nokia with REX series phones

    Samsung REX Feature Phone
    Samsung (005930) has already been mopping the floor with Nokia (NOK) in the smartphone market and now it looks as though it plans to attack Nokia’s turf in the feature phone market as well. Samsung on Thursday announced the REX series, a new line of feature phones that are stylishly designed to look like cruder versions of the Galaxy S III, and that run on a Java-based operating system with Samsung’s own TouchWiz interface on top.

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  • U.S. Cellular plans to cover 87% of customers with 4G LTE by the end of 2013

    U.S. Cellular 4G LTE Coverage
    U.S. Cellular (USM), the eighth largest wireless provider in the U.S., on Thursday announced additional markets to its 4G LTE portfolio. The company plans expands its LTE coverage to more than 3,800 new cities and towns in 2013. U.S. Cellular currently covers 61% of its user base with its high-speed network and hopes to increase that number to 87% by the end of the year.

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  • Can you see me now? Video messaging and the future of communication

    Technology is enabling us to get ever closer to the ideal of casual and seamless face-to-face communication over long distances. In fits and starts we’re pulling in more tools and options for communicating and getting us closer to a video-based ideal thanks to better devices and faster broadband connections.

    Skype is reportedly testing video messaging options for mobile users today. The service would let people leave a video-based message for their friends. I can see a whole new variant on the “wish-you-were-here” picture messages I send that could involve panoramic views or the local soundscape (good for concerts and birdcalls, bad for when I’m in New York City).

    A few weeks ago, Twitter launched Vine, to let people record 6-second videos and post them easily from their mobile, and Facebook is testing a voice messaging application that will let you leave a voice-based message for friends from Facebook. While the Facebook example isn’t video-based it drives home the larger point: Our web interactions are pushing forward to mirror our real-world interactions as much as possible, which means that our bandwidth demands and our mobile devices need to keep up.

    Vine Twitter screenshot video social sharing

    On the mobile device side, we’re doing fine. Processing, cameras and microphones on smartphones are enabling us to record quality videos, voice and images. In the case of images we even have enough processing power for some editing. But on the bandwidth side, it’s unclear if we’re going to have the capability to share our efforts. That’s why on the wireless and wireline side we need to keep adding capacity and lowering costs. Conducting a video call today sucks up a lot of bandwidth, but there are ways to reduce the impact on the network and drive down costs for consumers and the operators.

    When I look at the increasingly visual nature of the web and the influx of video options for communication I realize that we can finally escape the limits that technology has imposed on how we communicate over long distances. Letter writing, postcards, voice calls and even static web pages are poor substitutes when you want to share an experience with someone, and they are substitutes that are driven by the limits of the technology at the time. Many of those limits are no longer there.

    Adapting to this will require us to ditch centuries of habits and preferences, but it opens up much higher quality ways for people to communicate. We will still drag these other forms of communication into our video-based future but we’ll be able to choose when an email makes the most sense or when we’d rather stick with voice.

    As I scroll down the pages of an online catalog, I am grateful that I have the bandwidth at home to load pictures quickly so I can see the details in the product. I can’t wait for the ability to see things in 3D — or even set up a quick video call with someone who is near the product for a closer look.

    I assume my six-year-old daughter — who refuses to take phone calls from people she loves unless there’s a video component — will resort to voice only for strangers and business-related conversations. Getting to that point means more work needs to be done to seamlessly integrate the options available to people much like Apple has done with FaceTime on its platform, and then to spread that to all platforms.

    Companies like Skype, BlueJeans Networks, Polycom, and countless others are all trying to make this real as are the people pushing for the WebRTC standards. Right now it’s a mish-mash of standards, platforms and options, but video will coalesce into something that as simple as picking up a phone or mailing a letter is today.

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  • With 20% Of Reservations Filled, Mailbox Goes Down So You Can Enjoy Your Valentine’s Day

    Freedom-sign-500x250

    Last week’s hot app, Mailbox, is currently down. In very RIM-esque fashion, the startup’s servers are not forwarding mail, resulting in a very quiet Valentine’s Day. I’m pretty stoked about it. I think this should be a feature.

    According to Mailbox’s twitter page, the company is busy fixing the problem. They quickly issued a couple of official responses but one is not very helpful. This one details the problems, stating that they are seeing intermittent issues with our servers syncing mail and new mail created will not be lost.

    Mailbox launched with much fanfare last week. I love it. It’s the perfect cross between Mail and Gmail. However, today’s outage is what I fear the most.

    The app’s novel features work because email is routed through Mailbox’s servers. Thus, if and when these servers crash (like right now), the mail is no longer forwarded to the app.

    Since the app generated so much interest before it launched, the company instituted a reservation system, purposely limiting the amount of users (and strain) on its servers. Mailbox told us in a statement this afternoon that they received over 900,000 reservation requests and have so far managed to fill 20 percent. This is the first outage since the launch last week.

    But think about it. Today is Valentine’s Day. It’s a day you’re supposed to enjoy with your sweetheart. I’m about to head off to my son’s kindergarten Valentine’s Day party. I won’t be distracted now. I’ll be able to participate like a good dad. Thanks, Mailbox! I love you even more right now.

    In other news Mailbox’s reservation line is also paused.

  • Scosche Adds To Your iPhone 5 And iPad Charging Options With New Lightning Line

    strikeLINE PRO

    Once upon a time I thought I would be very short of charging solutions for my iPhone 5 thanks to the switch to Lightning. Now, for various reasons, I have an abundance of Lightning cables. One might even say an overabundance. But they do lack variety, and that’s what a new line of charging accessories from Scosche aims to address.

    The new Scosche line offers both 5W and 12W dedicated car and wall chargers, an industry first for Lightning cables. The car chargers in particular are a nice addition to the line, since they’re designed to be low-profile with curled cables to keep them out-of-the-way when not in use, which has an advantage in a car versus a combination standard-issue Lightning cable combined with a car outlet adapter.






    Finally, a retractable model fills out the new line, hiding a 3 foot charge and sync cable that remains coiled in a small package when not in use. I know a lot of gadget aficionados who will appreciate a Lightning version of this design, which has propagated like an unchecked bunny population in ideal mating circumstances over the past few years.

    The Scosche cables range in price from $24.99 to $34.99, and are available from Scosche’s website and also from AT&T, Wal-Mart, Staples, Fry’s and other retailers soon. They’re MFI-certified, too, which means Apple has given sign-off on their designs, unlike a lot of the knock-off chargers and cables coming from Chinese accessory manufacturers. I may already have an overabundance of cables, but let’s be honest, you can always have more.

  • A Surface Mini Could Wake Up Windows Phone 8

    surface-family

    I love the idea of the Surface: compelling hardware, striking form factor, and, in the case of the Pro, smart compromises to offer a good value. But the products fail to live up to their promise. They have first generation bugs. But maybe a low-priced Surface with a smaller screen could finally help bring the Surface promise to life. It just better run Windows Phone 8 and not Windows RT.

    Yesterday at Goldman Sachs Technology & Internet Conference on Wednesday, Microsoft CFO Peter Klein spoke to the Surface and Microsoft’s ability to scale to different form factors. As John Paczkowski lays out, Microsoft could build a Surface Mini.

    Both Windows 8/RT and Windows Phone 8 could handle the task. With both options comes compromises, though.

    “We can have the same core code base driving form factors from four inches all the way up to 27-inch ones and everything in between,” Klein said. “So I think we are well set up to respond to demand as we see it. We can deliver a versatile set of experiences across form factors, whether they’re four-inch, five-inch, seven-inch, 10-inch or 13-inch.”

    Windows 8 requires beefy hardware but can run any Windows application. Windows RT has an extremely limited marketplace of apps and it doesn’t seem to be improving with time. The task seems best suited for Windows Phone 8 even though it’s far from a blockbuster hit yet.

    Microsoft’s latest mobile OS is still struggling. It’s fighting for third place against BlackBerry. Android and iOS are simply out of reach. Consumers might not be buying the smartphones en mass, but that doesn’t mean it’s not a fantastic user experience.

    I love Windows Phone 8, but I wouldn’t use one as a daily driver. The user experience is beautiful. It’s slick, intuitive, and would scale nicely to a larger screen. It doesn’t require serious computing hardware, allowing for tablets with thin form factors and longer battery lives.

    Microsoft might not be alone in developing a 7- to 8-inch tablet. Nokia has been said to be working one as well with its reveal coming as soon as next week at MWC.

    Even with a beautiful hardware and wonderful OS, it’s pretty clear that a Windows Phone 8 tablet would struggle to gain traction. Even though WinPhone 8 is growing, the platform’s app ecosystem is pretty weak. Developers are not flooding the Store with apps. The platform is relatively unknown to most consumers. And another Microsoft-made tablet platform could be detrimental to the entire operation.

    Microsoft is in a precarious situation. It can no longer rely on third parties like HP and Asus to advance its software. The company clearly feels its hardware needs to lead the charge. The first generation Surfaces are good, but not good enough. A smaller form factor model could help rejuvenation the brand once it goes stale in a few months.

  • Apple Patents A Volume-Based Solution To Shaky Smartphone Camera Syndrome

    Apple - iPhone 5-1

    A new patent filing uncovered by AppleInsider today shows that the company is still thinking about ways to upgrade the smartphone camera experience and deliver the best possible pictures you can get on a mobile phone. The invention would make it so that as soon as you open up the camera app on your iPhone, iPod touch or iPad, the device starts grabbing full-resolution pics and storing them to a memory buffer, meaning when you finally push the shutter you’ll have a wealth of different images to choose from.

    The design would use continuous image capture to try to improve quality, and to compensate for what are currently essential failings in the way mobile photography works. For instance, Apple’s patent describes how when taking a photo, the camera’s virtual “viewfinder” shows a partial resolution version of what’s being captured, and then when the shutter is pressed there’s a delay as it switches to full resolution mode to actually take the pic, which means what you see is not often what you get. If camera software begins immediately snapping high-res photos and storing them to a temporary cache, it should be able to match the proper frame with the moment a user intended to capture.

    Apple’s system would select from the buffer of photos based on timing, but also on quality. It would score images automatically based on factors like contrast, resolution, dynamic range, exposure time and more to try to logically derive which is the best, most in-focus shot. The device will then purge the memory buffer after a certain amount of time, or when it hits a pre-set threshold to clear room for future captures. In one of the embodiments, the user is given a full resolution preview to approve or deny immediately after the photo is taken, and then presumably presented with other options.

    It’s a technology that could easily be integrated into iOS without much outward change, but it would likely merit some fanfare from Apple if it were already in use, especially now that Android and other OEMs are beginning to compete more aggressively for consumer attention with advancements to onboard mobile camera tech. And others in the industry are already using similar technology to accomplish different things: BlackBerry 10′s face selection for Z10 camera pics is one example, and Nokia uses much the same technology in its own Windows Phone 8 devices, after it acquired the company that created the system in the first place.

    Picking the best of multiple exposures is one way to improve on mobile camera tech, but it’s not the only means. There are plenty of other improvements which could make considerable differences, including Lytro, which is clearly interested in licensing its selective focus tech to OEMs once it’s ready. But the camera is an area where iterating quickly can have a big impression on consumers with each successive hardware generation; improving things on either the hardware or software side is imperative if Apple wants to keep ahead of the game, and this patent (filed in October of 2012) indicates it’s actively working to make sure that happens.

  • Why Valentine’s Day needs data centers

    It’s a happy Valentine’s Day if you’ve found a match on an online dating site. But it could be a tough day for IT people at Match, eHarmony, OKCupid and other sites, which might face traffic booms as antsy users scramble to find last-minute dates.

    There’s certainly plenty of demand for the services. In 2009, CIO reported that more than 40 million Americans had tried online dating. In September 2012, 1 in 10 internet users frequented an online dating site, according to a December 2012 report from comScore.

    Sites vary as to the times of year when traffic peaks. The number of unique visitors to eHarmony.com increases 45 percent on Valentine’s Day, and the boost continues until the end of the month, a spokeswoman wrote in an email.

    The biggest day of the year for Match.com registrations isn’t Feb. 14; it’s actually Jan. 2. “Then we get another big spike after the Valentine’s Day holiday, so this weekend will be another spike,” a spokeswoman said. And for Zoosk.com, the peak comes on Dec. 26, while traffic is consistently heaviest in January.

    How do engineers accommodate all the traffic and not sacrifice performance?

    For eHarmony, it was a matter of scaling out infrastructure. “The systems over the years have been expanded to absorb large spikes to all the main areas and events on the site, such as posting photos, communication requests and the interactions with the mobile apps,” the company spokeswoman wrote.

    Computerworld reported in 2009 that eHarmony had 4 terabytes of user information in storage for 20 million users. That comes from responses to the site’s Relationship Questionnaire. The spokeswoman did not immediately have current figures available.

    Match.com was storing 70 terabytes of user data for more than 1 million subscribers when Microsoft published a case study on the dating service last March. Until May 2010, Match.com was updating user information on 110 Microsoft SQL Server servers across two data centers in the United States. In order to keep profile updates timely — less than two seconds — the company began distributing the updates across the servers, rather than update the entire dataset at once.

    Valentine’s Day isn’t necessarily the high point of the year for Facebook. Jay Parikh, Facebook’s vice president of infrastructure engineering, cited Halloween as one of the highest times of year for photo uploading, as my colleague Stacey Higginbotham reported. When Facebook demand spikes, servers stocked with flash memory in the data center instead of hard disk drives and tapes ensure consistently high performance with a wide variety of data — and there’s plenty of room for storage, too. Facebook’s flash-only database servers, codenamed Dragonstone, feature 3.2 terabyte flash memory cards from Fusion-io. Flash memory might come in handy at dating sites’ data centers, too — the Dragonstone flash memory became part of the Open Compute Project last month.

    Feature image courtesy of Shutterstock user 3Dstock.

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  • New iOS 6.1 Security Flaw Grants Limited Access To Phone App, Photos, Email, Messages, FaceTime

    ios-6-logo

    With just a few quick steps, it’s easy to open the phone app on any locked iPhone running iOS 6.1. From there a person has full access to the photo library, can edit contacts, send emails, text messages or even make a FaceTime call. It’s so easy that it’s downright silly.

    As shown in the video here, the process involves holding down the power button and aborting an emergency call. It worked for me although the timing is tricky.

    The flaw causes the phone to load the phone app, giving anyone full access to the dialer, contact list, voicemails, call history and photos by editing a contact. An email or text message can be sent by sharing a contact. FaceTime is accessible through the contacts as well.

    Update: Apple has reached out to TechCrunch with the following comment:

    Apple takes user security very seriously. We are aware of this issue, and will deliver a fix in a future software update.

    The exploit is fairly easy to access but the timing is tricky.

    • From a locked iPhone running iOS 6, load the emergency dial screen.
    • Press and hold the power button and then hit cancel.
    • Make a fake emergency call — I dialed 112 like in the video.
    • Hang up immediately.
    • Hit the power button to put the phone back in standby.
    • Hit the home button to bring up the lockscreen
    • Hold down the power button and at the three-second mark, hit the Emergency Call button.
    • Keep holding the power button until the Phone App comes up.
    • Hit the Home Button and release as if you’re taking a screen shot.

    The last bit is the hard part. The timing needs to be just right. It took me about 20 minutes to get the timing down.

    While new to iOS 6.1, this isn’t the first time a simple workaround has resulted in similar access. A comparable exploit was found in iOS 4.1. 

    Apple will likely address this exploit rather quickly. It’s a massive backdoor to some of the iPhone’s core functions.

  • Google Now widget arrives for Android 4.1 devices

    Google Now Widget
    Google (GOOG) on Wednesday updated its Google Search application for devices running Android 4.1 and higher to include several new features. The application now offers a home screen and lock screen widget for Google Now, the company’s award-winning personal assistant, and also includes access to movie passes from Fandango, ratings and reviews from Rotten Tomatoes, real estate listings from Zillow, a new music button and support for U.S. college sports. The Google Search app is available for free from Google Play.

  • Mobile phone sales shrank in 2012 mainly on Nokia and LG’s big declines

    Mobile Phone Sales Shrink
    For all we’ve heard about the “mobile revolution,” in recent years, it may surprise you to learn that mobile phone sales actually shrank in 2012. Gartner reports that total handset sales totaled 1.75 billion units in 2012, a slight drop from the 1.77 billion handsets sold in 2011. Although this may seem puzzling, the reason for this decline becomes clear once Gartner breaks down handset sales by vendors and shows that Nokia (NOK) and LG (066570) are primarily to blame. Overall, Nokia sold 334 million phones in 2012, a 21% decline from the 422 million phones it sold in 2011, while LG sold 58 million mobile phones in 2012, a 33% decline from the 86.4 million it sold in 2011.

    Continue reading…

  • Interest in BlackBerry 10 surges while iPhone loyalty slips

    BlackBerry Owner Loyalty
    The latest YouGov report on smartphone brand perception and purchase intent is out, and this one is a keeper. According to the data, the proportion of BlackBerry owners planning to purchase a new BlackBerry (BBRY) within six months has rocketed from 18% to 43% since the spring of 2012. Over the same time period, the same number for iPhone owners has slipped from 92% to 85% while the number for Samsung (005930) Galaxy owners has ticked up from 46% to 53%. The interesting part here is how close the BlackBerry purchasing intent level is now to Galaxy’s level. One could argue that the iPhone slippage was unavoidable in the period after the iPhone 5 launch and before the rumor mill on the new models kicks into high gear.

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  • HP will reportedly turn to Android for next-generation mobile devices

    HP Android Tablet Smartphone
    After its failed acquisition of Palm and abandonment of webOS, Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) will now reportedly look towards Android to power its next-generation of mobile devices. Sources speaking to ReadWrite claim that the company is planning to release a high-end tablet that will be equipped with NVIDIA’s new Tegra 4 processor and powered by Google’s (GOOG) mobile operating system. It was also reported that HP may launch an Android-powered smartphone, however earlier comments from CEO Meg Whitman indicated that a new handset won’t be released in 2013. The news of HP’s migration to Android comes shortly after the company launched a new computer based on Google’s Chrome OS. HP’s high-end Android tablet will reportedly be announced soon.

  • HP Reportedly Working On Android Smartphones And Tablets, Despite webOS Failures

    hp-touchpad-android-600x476

    HP is looking into getting back into the mobile hardware game, according to a new report from ReadWrite which the Verge says is being confirmed from their own sources. HP famously bought webOS and then brought a tablet to market based on that Palm-developed platform, the TouchPad, which ended up being a dismal failure that the company shut down very quickly.

    HP had also launched a smartphone, the Veer 4G based on webOS, but that also proved ineffective at capturing the attention of consumers. The company is apparently still looking to get back into the hardware game after a hiatus spanning a couple of years, however, with a new tablet featuring an NVIDIA Tegra 4 processor, which ReadWrite pegs for an imminent announcement, and is also considering Android-based smartphone for future development. Verge reports that the timeline sounds good, but scheduling could change for a tablet launch.

    After HP CEO Meg Whitman took over, she announced that the company would ultimately offer a smartphone to keep up with the fact that for many in the developing world, such a device is now their first and maybe only computer. That launch isn’t planned for 2013, however, Whitman later stated.

    But back in late 2011, Whitman did make statements to the effect that HP could create webOS-powered tablets again in 2013. While these reports suggest webOS is likely off the table, HP could stick to Whitman’s target plan of fielding a tablet device based on a mobile OS this year, but one based on Android instead of its own product, which it has since open-sourced.

    It shouldn’t come as a surprise that HP would dip its toes back in the mobile hardware pool even after suffering such a reversal the first time around. The fact is that mobile is where the computing industry is going, and Apple’s iPad is almost singlehandedly propping up the sagging fortunes of traditional mobile PC form factors like notebooks. And HP missed earnings expectations in Q4 2012, thanks in part to a continuing “decline in hardware.”

    A tablet isn’t a panacea for HP, however. The Android tablet market still has yet to find a champion that can compare to the iPad’s popularity, and there is plenty of competition out there for buyer attention. Fielding a device that impresses above and beyond what’s already out there, at a price point that turns heads is a basic requirement for Android tablet success at this point, from HP or from anyone else.

  • LG unveils 5.5-inch Optimus G Pro, which looks exactly like Samsung’s Galaxy Note II

    LG Optimus G Pro Specs Release Date
    LG (066570) on Wednesday confirmed the much-rumored Optimus G Pro smartphone. The company revealed that the handset, which looks awfully similar to Samsung’s (005930) Galaxy Note II, will be equipped with a 5.5-inch full HD 1080p display and a quad-core processor. LG also highlighted the use of curved class on the phone, which it said gives the handset a “2.5D” effect. Earlier rumors suggested that the device may also include a 3,140 mAh battery, 2GB of RAM, 4G LTE connectivity, 32GB of internal storage, a microSD card and a 13-megapixel rear camera. LG said that the Optimus G Pro is will launch in some markets by the end of February.

  • New purported Galaxy S IV details emerge

    Galaxy S IV Specs S-Pen Support
    Earlier rumors suggested Samsung (005930) would ditch its traditional home button and navigation keys on the Galaxy S IV, and that it may also include an integrated S Pen stylus. According to a new report from Korean publication Digital Daily, this will not be the case. The company is said to have decided to keep the home button in a last-minute decision and also ruled that the S Pen stylus will remain unique to the Galaxy Note line of devices.

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  • Apple to reportedly start building the iPhone 5S in March, launch set for June

    Apple iPhone 5S Rumor
    Jefferies & Co. analyst Peter Misek packed a ton of Apple (AAPL) information in his latest research note, including updates on Apple’s long-rumored television set and its more recently rumored “iPhablet.” On tidbit that we shouldn’t overlook, however, is that Misek’s supply chain sources say that they’re slowing down iPhone 5 production to prepare for production of the next-generation iPhone 5S starting in March. Per Barron’s, Misek says that Apple is aiming to launch the newest version of the iPhone in June, likely during its annual Worldwide Developers Conference. Although there is a chance that the 5S could be delayed until July, Misek thinks this is unlikely because components-wise there are “few changes for the iPhone 5S vs. the iPhone 5.”

  • Apple Loses iPhone Trademark Exclusivity In Brazil As Regulator Delivers Its Ruling

    gradiente-iphone

    Apple has officially lost exclusive rights over the use of the iPhone trademark in Brazil, according to the BBC. The news was telegraphed earlier via a leak that said Brazil’s regulatory body was planning to side with IGB Electronics S.A. in the case and revoke Apple’s exclusive ownership of the term “iPhone” as it relates to electronic devices.

    The Brazilian Institute of Industrial Property (INPI) explained to the BBC that its decision only applies to handset devices, and that Apple can still sell its own iPhone with that name in Brazil, unless IGB exercises its option of suing for complete, exclusive control over the trademark. Apple wanted full exclusivity, the INPI told the BBC, on the grounds that IGB had not used the trademark until December of 2012. That’s when the Brazilian company released an Android-based handset also called the iPhone.

    IGB had registered the name a full seven years before Apple’s device made its first appearance, however. Apple is appealing the ruling, according to the INPI, and for got reason given the growing contribution Brazil makes to Apple’s bottom line. IGB also earlier expressed interest in the idea of selling the trademark to Apple for its exclusive use, but it looks like Apple wants to continue to explore its options through regulatory channels before sitting down at the table with the Brazilian company.