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Wednesday, August 28, 2013

When I Actually Wear Google Glass



So far most of what's been written about Google Glass has been united by one commonality: It's been written from the perspective of someone who had to wear Glass. Because they were going to write about it. But here's when you'll actually want to wear it. Or at least, when I do.

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First US-Made Smartphone Just As Cheap To Produce



This is, without a doubt, the best way to show up your rivals that claim making products in the USA is too expensive. Hopefully Apple and other American companies take notice and bring jobs back to the U.S. (not that Jobs, real jobs).

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T-Mobile reportedly blocking employee vacations for September 20, fuels iPhone launch rumors



The reason that retail stores blackout vacation dates is to ensure that the entirety of the staff is available to assist customers. With iPhone launches being so high-profile, it would make sense for carriers to make sure that all employees are available to sell the new devices.

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HTC One Max’s fingerprint scanner seemingly confirmed in new leaked photos



Apple’s next-generation iPhone 5S will reportedly feature an embedded fingerprint scanner that will be one of the phone’s key differentiating features, but it might not be the only top-tier handset on the market with fingerprint scanning technology for very long.

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Able-HD 17-inch portable monitor kit makes dual-screen more convenient



If you’re used to the flexibility of multiple monitors at home or in the office, switching to a single monitor can often feel incredibly limiting. Able-HD thinks they have the solution with a portable 17-inch monitor that is thinner and lighter than an iPad.

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Lenovo Announces New ThinkCentre AIOs and Desktops



Lenovo sent out word today that they’ve updated their ThinkCentre offerings, with four new models. The new models feature optional multi-touch screens, improved cable management, and new mounting options courtesy of the ThinkCentre UltraFlex Stand.

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Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Samsung to unveil Android-powered smartwatch in 8 days, beating Apple to the market »

Samsung to unveil Android-powered smartwatch in 8 days, beating Apple to the market »:
Samsung will unveil its Android-running smartwatch in Berlin on September 4, beating Apple to a market that the Cupertino company has been rumored to be pursuing for at least 10 months.
Which means the Samsung rumors were true, at least.
Samsung’s executive vice president for mobile, Lee Young-hee, announced the impending launch in an interview with KoreaTimes today. The new Samsung smartwatch will be called the Galaxy Gear, putting it under the same brand label of Samsung’s top-selling smartphones and tablets. It will not have a flexible display, but will “enhance and enrich the current smart mobile experience in many ways,” Young-Lee said.
If that’s the case, the Samsung smartwatch likely fits into the dashboard or console category of smartwatch, not the the multi-function category. Dashboard-style smartwatches are mainly more-accessible screens for alerts and notifications from connected devices such as smartphones, while multi-function smartwatches often include sensors and capability to measure health and fitness activity, among other things.
Which means that Apple may still have a wide-open niche to fill with iWatch.
Apple CEO Tim Cook was recently spurred to speed up by Apple’s board, after pre-announcing almost six months of no new Apple product launches back in April of this year. As a result of that excess of deliberation, the company’s international sales have drooped, its global iPhone market share is sliding, and its once-unassailable tablet lead has been chopped in half.
Apple is rumored to be announcing a new product in September, perhaps on the tenth. That, most likely, will be the company’s new iPhone 5S and the colorful, cheaper iPhone 5C. But it’s possible that Apple is preparing a massive, integrated unveiling of many new products, a la the October 23 Apple Event last year.
If so, there’s an outside chance we could see the iWatch unveiled right after the Galaxy Gear.
A Juniper Research report, coincidentally released just this morning, suggests that Samsung and Apple’s entrance into the smartwatch market will boost device adoption to 36 million by 2018. But that will only happen if Apple does indeed release a smartwatch product alongside Samsung’s new Gear.
Tech evangelist Robert Scoble is pretty sure Apple will, and that it will be a hit.
“It’s going to be geek jewelry, and normal people are going to want it because it’s probably going to be very beautiful looking, and it will be a new thing to show off, and I now have a new display for my mobile phone,” he told me last week.
While Samsung has not provided more details, the Gear likely sports a 2.5″ display, uses Bluetooth to communicate to Samsung smartphones, and may have NFC for syncing and authentication. Interestingly, the watch will likely sync with a Samsung app that is not available from Google Play but instead must be downloaded from Samsung’s own app store.
Which would make this smartwatch yet another attempt by Samsung — along with Tizen, its own smartphone operating system — to ween itself from Google and Google Play.

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Apple iWatch rumored for 2H 2014 launch, priced between $149-$229 »

Apple iWatch rumored for 2H 2014 launch, priced between $149-$229 »:
Apple iWatch Release Date
It looks like Samsung will beat Apple to market with a smartwatch by at least nine months or perhaps even longer. A new report from Digitimes cites an analyst at Kuala Lumpur-based CIMB Group in stating that Apple's "iWatch" will likely launch in the second half of 2014. In the meantime, Samsung's Galaxy Gear has been confirmed for a September 4th unveiling and it is expected to be released sometime in October. The report states that Taiwan-based ODM Inventec is expected to land at least 60% of Apple's smartwatch orders, which could amount to 19% of the firm's total profit in 2014. The iWatch will launch with a price tag starting between $149 and $229 according to the report, and the unnamed CIMB Group analyst expects 2014 shipments to reach a whopping 63.4 million units.

Galaxy Note 3 leak reveals impressively thin 2.2mm bezel »

Galaxy Note 3 leak reveals impressively thin 2.2mm bezel »: galaxy-note-3-bezel-leak
Samsung’s 5.5-inch Galaxy Note 2 pushed the limits of what is comfortable in a human hand, even for fans of big phones. Now, a recently leaked photo shows that in the upcoming Galaxy…

Samsung exec confirms Galaxy Gear and Note III announcement on September 4th as images start to leak (updated) »

Samsung exec confirms Galaxy Gear and Note III announcement on September 4th as images start to leak (updated) »:
Samsung exec confirms Galaxy Gear and Note III announcement on September 4th as images start to leak updated
The cat's out of the bag, and a rogue Samsung executive is the one who's been untying the strings. During a chat with the Korea Times, Samsung's Lee Young-hee blabbed that we'd see both the Galaxy Gear and the Galaxy Note III being announced at IFA on September 4th. The mobile VP added that the oft-rumored "wearable concept device" wouldn't come with a flexible display and will be a companion gadget for your smartphone -- but declined to offer any more detail about what we can expect from the flagship phablet. Never mind, however, because pictures purporting to be of the Galaxy Note III's front have emerged over on HD Blog, and you can catch a full gallery down at the source.
Update: Here's even more pictures purporting to be of the Note III from ETradeSupply. The site is claiming that the third generation device will measure in at 5.69-inches. [Thanks, Lucas]
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Via: SamMobile, Sonny Dickson
Source: Korea Times, HD Blog (translated)

Monday, August 26, 2013

OLPC XO Tablet review »

OLPC XO Tablet review »:
OLPC XO Tablet
In late 2007, One Laptop Per Child launched its "Give 1 Get 1" program. While the do-gooder organization had originally shrugged off suggestions that it should offer its XO Laptop as a commercial product, OLPC finally gave in, letting consumers get their own device for a $399 donation (that price also paid to send one to a child in a developing nation). Unveiled back at CES, the Android-powered XO Tablet marks OLPC's first proper foray into the consumer space, with the device available for $149 at major retailers like Walmart and Target. So is it any good?
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Dell intros new Latitude business laptops, including a flagship Ultrabook (hands-on) »

Dell intros new Latitude business laptops, including a flagship Ultrabook (hands-on) »:
Dell intros new Latitude business laptops, including a flagship Ultrabook (hands-on)
Fun fact: the XPS 13 Ultrabook we liked so much also happens to be one of Dell's best-selling products. It's been so successful, in fact, that even large corporations have been thinking of issuing it to their employees (you know, instead of all those other black boxes). Of course, they can't really do that -- the XPS 13 wasn't built with businesses' security needs in mind -- but all their begging and pleading did get Dell thinking. Why not make something similar that's secure enough to pass muster with the IT guys?%Gallery-slideshow73368%
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HP expected to regain status of largest notebook vendor, say Taiwan makers »

HP expected to regain status of largest notebook vendor, say Taiwan makers »: Hewlett-Packard (HP) is expected to see notebook shipments in the third quarter of 2013 increase 15-20% on quarter while Lenovo is expected to see a sequential drop of 7-9%, therefore HP will regain the first rank among notebook vendors, according to Taiwan-based supply chain makers.

Digitimes Research: Android may lose its competitiveness in the entry-level segment »

Digitimes Research: Android may lose its competitiveness in the entry-level segment »: The Android platform's gradually increasing demand over hardware specifications is expected to endanger the platform's share in the entry-level segment as hardware prices are gradually dropping and it is becoming more difficult for players to create an Android-based product at a low price, according to Digitimes Research.

AUO to showcase new technology at Touch Taiwan 2013

AUO to showcase new technology at Touch Taiwan 2013: "AUO to showcase new technology at Touch Taiwan 2013
Press release; Alex Wolfgram, DIGITIMES [Monday 26 August 2013]
AU Optronics (AUO) has announced its participation in Touch Taiwan 2013 (International Touch Panel and Optical Film Exhibition 2013) from August 28-30. With "Picture the Future with Innovation" being the theme, AUO will showcase a variety of ultra-high resolution, innovative value-added display applications, and high efficiency integrated touch solutions to unveil a touch of the future with cutting edge display technologies, according to the company. In terms of high-end TV applications, AUO will showcase 65- and 55-inch Ultra HD wide color gamut (WCG) TV panels offering Ultra HD resolution, fine and stereoscopic images."

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Sunday, August 25, 2013

The core of Apple’s problem is Tim Cook, Scoble says (interview) »

The core of Apple’s problem is Tim Cook, Scoble says (interview) »:
The core of Apple’s problem is Tim Cook, Scoble says (interview)
John Koetsier/VentureBeat
Tech evangelist Robert Scoble is a lot of things to a lot of people.
The prolific blogger, tweeter, and speaker has over half a million friends on Facebook, is in a massive 4.1 million circles on Google+, and has another 350,000 followers on Twitter. He carries three phones and wears two motion-sensing wristbands. He’s written one book on social media and is publishing a second on wearable technology and ubiquitous information shortly. He’s the chief Glasshole, a former Microsoftie, and current startup liason officer for Rackspace. He probably meets more startups and founders of companies both giant and tiny than anyone else. His first act of evangelism was to get Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak to donate $40,000 worth of Macs to his college in 1989.
And he’s got a pretty good view of what’s happening to Apple, Google, and the entire mobile industry, an industry that’s undergoing massive change.
moto x colors
From slow and ugly beginnings six years ago, Android has risen to surpass Apple’s iPhone and capture 80 percent global market share. Phones have long been won by Android, but Apple’s iPad was recently still the king of the tablets, until iPad’s market share was chopped in half. And while critics argue that the high end of the market — and the only end that matters — is still Apple’s, others are saying that this is just Macs vs. PCs all over again.
All of which has led to Apple’s board finally waking up and telling CEO Tim Cook to speed up.
Scoble was once first in line for the Apple iPhone, but he’s now using Moto X and Samsung Android-based smartphones. I met him at the Grow Conference in Vancouver last week and talked to him about tech, Apple, Google, iPhone, Android, and everything in between.
VentureBeat: Global iPhone share is way down. Does iPhone still matter?
Robert Scoble: The iPhone is still dramatically important. If I was doing a startup company for mobile, I would still do iPhone first. But even among San Francisco cool kids, Android is growing.
It used to be the case that Apple was the only brand for the tech passionates. Now, partly because of screen sizes, openness, and choice, Android is growing.
Gold iPhone 5S leakBut a lot of people forget about the stores – even me, when I started saying that Apple is going to struggle. Apple has hundreds of stores around the world that are beautiful, and they have a distribution system, and a staff of 40 or 50 people that will help you.
That’s significant.
As long as Apple stays “up” enough, I think most people won’t switch off of Apple. But there are lots of people in the world who can’t afford Apple. The new Firefox phone is now $30 in Spain, with a subsidy. I understand why they’re selling.
I happen to be fortunate: I live in San Francisco, and I can afford a $600 phone. Or two of them!
VentureBeat: You’re using Android mostly, but you also have a Nokia. What do you think about Windows Phone?
Scoble: I hate Windows Phone.
I don’t like the utility of it, and there’s no way to change that. They force you to take their look, and you can’t skin it, can’t change it. Right now it’s reminding me about birthdays every day – there’s a lot of ugliness. [Scoble has 5,000 friends -- the maximum -- on Facebook.]
HTC 8XT Windows PhoneMore importantly, it’s Windows, and the app ecosystem isn’t there. The cool kids aren’t using it, and until the cool kids start using it, I don’t believe in it. And the app developers don’t put the love into it. The best developers are going to dream about doing something cool and putting it on iPhone because that’s where the money is.
This is what Steve Jobs understood: Brands are defined not by the best thing on the product but by the worst thing. He always asked me to look at the back of the product, the back of the iMac, saying ”look at how beautiful the back is.” Very few people understand that you’re defined by the thing that you can’t see.
Android’s not there, either – sometimes I try to make a call, and it just doesn’t work. I can’t get my wife off of iPhone: iPhone works … it’s clean, and it’s beautiful, and it doesn’t bite you.
For me it’s not as exciting or innovative on the top end, but the bottom end is higher.
Microsoft has 16 billion-dollar businesses. When you think about that, it’s mind-blowing, right? But they’re boring! Now the iPhone team alone is bigger than Microsoft, and Windows Phone has 4 percent market share.
How the world has changed!
VentureBeat: Cook has started to take some heat recently. Talk to me about that.
Scoble: I think he has two problems.
First, let’s be honest, Steve Jobs pushed that company hard. Really hard.
Tim Cook gives the thumbs up at D11
Dylan Tweney/VentureBeat
Tim Cook gives the thumbs up at D11
My next-door neighbor was on the first iPhone team, and he told me he almost killed himself working for Steve Jobs because he demands so much from you. He did not take substandard performance, and he would keep you up, and he would call you on a Sunday when you’re having family time … and essentially randomize your whole life.
And he was “god,” and when he did that, it was “god” calling!
So having the company relax a bit and sort of cruise after that’s gone is sort of understandable. Now you have to get the company back in hardcore mode, but some of the talent has left. They’re starting up a startup, or left for Flipboard, or working for Facebook. They’ve lost some of their intellectual capital and they have to replace that and go out and recruit the new hottest kids.
But the second issue is Tim.
Tim just doesn’t hit me as a guy who’s excited about the future. Ballmer is the same way, or even worse. For Tim Cook … I just don’t know that he’d be talking to me about Google Glass and excited by that, if he wasn’t at Apple.
He just doesn’t come across like he’s a product guy who’s trying to cut through the forest in a new way.
Steve had that innate sense of what would make an interesting product, and even when he bashed something … like he would say nobody is going to watch a video on an iPhone, he did it in a way that made you feel like he’s sort of right, the screen sort of does suck, and the battery life sort of does suck, but I do want to watch on my iPhone, and I could see how he could fix that.
He still kept your belief that he knew where the future was going. Tim hasn’t yet had that connection, that sense.
To be fair to Tim, he hasn’t built the Apple II and Pixar and Next. He’s a supply chain guy who built an organizational dynamic.
But he needs to change that belief in us, that he can be the guy who can discern where the future’s going.
VentureBeat: Can he be that guy?
Scoble: I don’t think so. I don’t think people can be taught in a year or two to be that guy.
Sergey Brin wearing Google Glass.
Sergey Brin wearing Google Glass.
The next question is, is there someone inside Apple who can be that guy or girl? Someone who can become the product person that we have that relationship with that we see as running Apple and bringing that innovation out.
There are a few people there who are candidates, but we haven’t seen that engine kick over.
I’ve had lunch with Google cofounders Larry [Page] and Sergey [Brin], and they talk about products, and they make me believe they really understand – and they care, and they understand where the future’s going.
For example, they can have a really long argument about what we just got put on our wrist [a sleep and energy monitoring health bracelet]. Is that going to be successful? They could have a real in-depth conversation about the future, but Tim just doesn’t come across like he’s all that futuristic. So it makes the company boring.
VentureBeat: What does that mean for Apple?
Scoble: The thing that we’re bitching about is: Is Apple Apple, or is Apple Microsoft?
It’s OK, I guess, to be a Microsoft and to be a highly profitable money-generating machine … but it’s not what Apple is. We grew up seeing Apple doing something new and different.
Let’s put it this way: Tim is going to run one of the most important companies ever. I don’t see how he’s going to lose profits or even market share that much.
But Woz and Jobs introduced a new product to the world — sort of like this Google Glass — and made it work, and made an ecosystem and a new business happen that no one else saw, and we miss that in Apple. We want Apple to see a new product that’s not obvious and keep surprising us, and keep coming out every three or four or five years and really doing something like ‘Whoa, I didn’t expect that … and I want it.’
VentureBeat: What about iWatch?
An iWatch prototype
An iWatch prototype
Scoble: Now even “normal” people are wearing more devices like Nike’s Fuelband, Fitbits, or Jawbone Up. It’s now acceptable in the normal world to wear something smart on your wrist.
Soon, Apple’s coming out with iWatch, apparently.
Even if it’s next year, it’s going to be geek jewelry, and normal people are going to want it because it’s probably going to be very beautiful looking, and it will be a new thing to show off, and I now have a new display for my mobile phone.
It probably will have a sensor to study how active you are, and play some health games with you — or a new kind of wrist-action Angry Birds or something [Laughing] … maybe a little Ping-Pong game. If you have a display that goes all the way around your wrist and you have a three-axis sensor, you can think about all sorts of new little video games you can put on there.
Pebble’s doing some of the R&D in this space, but let’s be honest, Apple has a brand and distribution and the best supply chain in the world.
VentureBeat: Apple is taking a long time to come out with new iPhone models, cheaper models. Why?
Scoble: Steve put some DNA into that company.
He liked to keep the number of products down. It’s easy to explain, and it’s clean, and it’s beautiful. When you go to the Apple store and they announce a new model, there’s one phone, and one poster on the wall, and one line, and you don’t have to think about do I get this phone or that phone. [Laughing]
Meanwhile, on Android you have to think about it. Do I want one with this screen, or that screen, a superbig screen, a huge camera, do I want this brand, do I want LTE? There are so many choices.
Google Glass
Jolie O'Dell/VentureBeat
Google Glass, up close.
VentureBeat: You’re wearing Google Glass, you curate news for Glassholes. What do you think is the future of Glass?
Scoble: Google Glass has 600,000 times more computing power than the Apollo missions. Now it’s 39 grams and on my face! In other words, you have a Cray supercomputer on your face, and it will cost $300.
This is the first consumer device that knows where I’m looking and where I’m aiming, and also the first that you’re forced to talk to because it has no real keyboard, no real touchscreen. It’s a very interesting product, and all the sensors are fully on, all the time. People at Google are starting to wear them with custom Warby Parker frames, the women are starting to wear them with cool-looking feminine frames, not these masculine ones.
I’m pretty excited about where Google’s going – I think it will be a product that will stand up for decades as the launch of a new genre.
It’s an Apple II — a product that takes us to a new place. And we thought Apple had a lock on that kind of innovation! It turns out that’s not true – they’re playing defense, and I’ve moved my world over to Google.
I was first in line for the iPhone, but I’m not a fanboy of any company — I’m in favor of anything that’s best of breed.
Right now, this is best of breed.

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Jabil reportedly to enter notebook and smartphone manufacturing businesses »

Jabil reportedly to enter notebook and smartphone manufacturing businesses »: US-based electronics manufacturing service (EMS) provider Jabil Circuit reportedly plans to enter the notebook and smartphone manufacturing businesses, as the company recently started headhunting talent from Taiwan- and China-based notebook and smartphone players, and hiring engineers through its subsidiary Green Point, according to sources from the upstream supply chain.

PC players eager to enter the wearable IT device market »

PC players eager to enter the wearable IT device market »: Seeing wearable IT devices gradually becoming popular, most PC brand vendors and ODMs have established R&D teams to develop related products and expect the devices to enjoy surging demand in the first half of 2014, according to sources from the upstream supply chain.

New Micron to see market share surpass SK Hynix, nearly on par with Samsung, says DRAMeXchange »

New Micron to see market share surpass SK Hynix, nearly on par with Samsung, says DRAMeXchange »: Following the closing of its acquisition of Elpida Memory, the new Micron Technology group's DRAM wafer volume will reach up to 350,000 units per month, which is significantly higher than SK Hynix's 270,000 and close to Samsung Electronics' 360,000, according to DRAMeXchange.

Top five vendors in China account for 20% of global smartphone shipments, says Canalys »

Top five vendors in China account for 20% of global smartphone shipments, says Canalys »: Canalys has published its final second-quarter-2013 smartphone shipment estimates by vendor for the 50-plus countries that it tracks. Some 238.1 million units shipped in the second quarter, an impressive 50% on-year increase. And while Samsung and Apple grew their shipments by 55% and 20% respectively to maintain first and second place, both lost share to Chinese vendors. Lenovo, Yulong and Korean vendor LG completed the top-5 vendors. Collectively, the five Chinese vendors shipping the most devices worldwide (Lenovo, Yulong, Huawei, ZTE and Xiaomi) made up 20% of the total market, up from less than 15% a year ago.

NAND flash prices to return to growth in September-October »

NAND flash prices to return to growth in September-October »: NAND flash contract prices are expected to rally between September and October thanks to growing demand ahead of new phone and tablet launches as well as back-to-school demand, according to sources at memory module firms.

New Supermaterial Carbyne is the World's Strongest Material, Beats Out Graphene and Diamond | Inhabitat - Sustainable Design Innovation, Eco Architecture, Green Building

Carbyne, supermaterials, graphene, diamond, nanotechnology, nanotubes, green technology, nanomechnical systems, green materials, lightweight materials, nano-structures, microlenses, sensors, strongest material on Earth, scientific study, research paper
New Supermaterial Carbyne is the World's Strongest Material, Beats Out Graphene and Diamond | Inhabitat - Sustainable Design Innovation, Eco Architecture, Green Building:

A new research paper published on Arxiv describes in detail the properties of Carbyne, a supermaterial that is stronger than graphene and diamond, and that can be synthesized and stabilized at room temperature. Carbyne is stiffer than anything that scientists have seen before, and it could potentially have a wide variety of applications in nanomechanical systems and electromechanical devices.

Read more: New Supermaterial Carbyne is the World's Strongest Material, Beats Out Graphene and Diamond | Inhabitat - Sustainable Design Innovation, Eco Architecture, Green Building 



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