Thursday 13 June 2013

Apple’s Samsung's first 4G LTE smartphone

Starting April 28, the DROID Charge, Samsung’s First 4G LTE smartphone, will be available for purchase through Verizon Wireless. he phone comes with a  4.3-inch Super AMOLED Plus display, rear-facing 8-megapixel camera with LED flash and front-facing 1.3-megapixel camera that can be used for still photos as well as video chats. A 1 GHz application processor powers the device and an HTML 5 Web browser "maximizes high-speed 4G LTE smartphone connectivity for faster downloads and graphics processing
                               
Omantel announced the launch of the all new and most anticipated Samsung Galaxy S4 LTE one of the many smartphones that is compatible with Omantel's state-of-the-art 4G network which was introduced by Omantel as the first provider of 4G LTE in the Sultanate.                                                                                            
                                                   
Commenting on this announcement, Shadli Thabit Albdulsalam Senior Manager Product Development at Omantel Consumer Unit said, "We are excited to offer this stunning device to our customers enabling them to enjoy features that the so-called "Life Companion" provides. Omantel always seeks to enrich the experience of its customers by providing them with the latest smart phones and devices that are compatible with the 4G network. We are proud to be the first provider in the Sultanate as well the one of the first providers in the region to launch Galaxy S4 LTE.

The white curtains just lifted here at the Samsung booth at CES to unveil the Samsung 4G LTE Smartphone. This Verizon LTE-ready beast touts a Super AMOLED Plus display, runs Android 2.2 with TouchWiz and features a front-facing cam. android phone On the rear it's got an 8 megapixel auto-focus shooter and mini HDMI on the hip. We're busy sorting out details and grabbing more pics. Stay tuned!

Virgin Mobile subscribers are sure to be excited at this tidbit of news— the popular prepaid carrier has announced the arrival of the Samsung Galaxy Victory 4G LTE smartphone to its Android lineup. That’s right friends— Virgin Mobile has announced one of its first 4G LTE smartphones for its customers. The Galaxy Victory 4G LTE will arrive with modest features including a 1.2GHz dual-core processor, 4-inch display, a 5MP rear-facing camera + 1.3MP front-facer and Jelly Bean 4.1 loaded up.While the specs aren’t anything to sneeze at, the device will arrive both online and at retail stores for a mere $300 in mid-March.

Virgin Mobile today announced that the Samsung Galaxy Victory 4G LTE has joined the carrier's smartphone portfolio. Priced at  the Android 4.1 Jelly Bean handset is Virgin Mobile's first LTE smartphone.Also available through Sprint, the Samsung Galaxy Victory 4G LTE includes a 1.2GHz dual-core processor, 5-megapixel rear camera (HD video capture) and a front-facing 1.3-megapixel camera.

But other vendors will participate in the LTE push, such as Nokia, HTC, Motorola, Blackberry, Huawei, ZTE, and Pantech. Growth in LTE smartphones will be driven by demand in such countries as the U.S., the U.K., Japan, China, and South Korea."It is clear that 2013 will be the year of 4G. LTE smartphone shipments worldwide will exceed a quarter-billion units for the first time," Neil Mawston, executive director at Strategy Analytics, said in a statement. "Multiple operators and multiple phone vendors will be launching dozens of LTE models across numerous countries worldwide.

Wednesday 12 June 2013

Apple unveils latest smartphone iPhone 5

Apple Inc.slimmed down the iPhone and stretched its display, while packing it with new features to regain momentum in the smartphone wars.At an event in San Francisco on Wednesday, the world's most valuable company unveiled the iPhone 5, a sleek new device with updates including a sharper camera, a faster processor and compatibility with wireless carriers' fastest  networks.But the gadget was short of never-before-seen features, said some observers, demonstrating Apple's growing reliance on its suite of services and software to maintain the iPhone's status as the U.S.'s top-selling smartphone.

The new iPhone 5 is displayed during an Apple special event in San Francisco, the United States, Sept. 12, 2012. Apple on Wednesday unveiled iPhone 5, its latest generation of smartphone that features bigger display and support for faster wireless network.                                                                    
                                                                 
San Francisco Sept.12  Apple on Wednesday unveiled iPhone 5, its latest generation of smartphone that features bigger display and support for faster  wireless network, at a media event in San Francisco.Now today we're taking it to the next level,making a huge leap,Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook said at the event.
                                                       
The thinner,lighter handset is called smartphone iPhone 5 and costs $199 to $399. It features a casing made of glass and aluminum, a chip that can process commands more swiftly and a 4-inch screen -- compared with 3.5 inches on the earlier models. Apple also revamped its mobile software,adding three-dimensional mapping, closer integration with Facebook  Inc.and improvements on the  voice-recognition tool.

Coming almost a year after the death of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, the next iPhone is the first hardware redesign of the product since 2010. After popularizing handheld touch-screen devices that offer swift Web downloads and a range of games, entertainment and productivity tools, Apple is seeking to gain an advantage over competitors including Samsung Electronics

The new iPhone 5 is displayed during an Apple special event in San Francisco, the United States, Sept. 12, 2012. Apple on Wednesday unveiled iPhone 5,  its latest generation of smartphone that features bigger display and support for faster wireless network.

The iPhone 5 looks similar to previous models but has a larger screen and is lighter and thinner than the iPhone 4S. Most Popular iPhone The company says the larger screen will make it easier to check and send e-mails and to view Web pages with the phone in your hand.The phone also comes with a new, faster processor called the Apple A6, which connects to mobile carriers with a  connection, making for speedier Internet browsing.

As expected, Apple unveiled its latest next-generation iPhone today at a press event in San Francisco.Will Oremus has the latest over on the Future Tense blog, and  will have more on the product launch over on main Slate later today.

Saturday 8 June 2013

Samsung Galaxy S III Jelly Bean upgrade in October

Samsung will deploy an Android 'Jelly Bean' 4.1 update to its flagship Galaxy S III handset next month, the manufacturer has said.Apparently hoping to improve on the snail-like pace at which it updated the Galaxy S II, the Jelly Bean upgrade will come just around four or five months after the device went on sale. A week or so ago, Samsung said it had sold 20 million of the handsets in the first 100 days of availability.The news that the Samsung Galaxy S III would get Jelly Bean in October came via our sister site , which received a categorical statement from Samsung.
                                                             
                           
As that piece also noted, the  version of the S III that  will launch later this year will come with Jelly Bean from the start.Android 4.1 is pretty similar to Android 4.0, with one notable difference: the addition of the Google Now personal assistant feature. Google Now is in some ways a rival to Apple's  and also extends Google's semantic search efforts onto mobile devices.

Samsung Galaxy S III owners will only have to wait one more month to get their device upgraded to Android 4.1 Jelly Bean.  on Tuesday reported that Samsung’s premier smartphone will finally be getting Jelly Bean in October, months after it was first announced at Google.Upgrading a big-name device such as the Galaxy S III should do wonders for Jelly Bean’s adoption rate, as Google  says that less than 2% of all Android devices currently use the latest version of its operating system

Sprint's the first US carrier to get the long-awaited Jelly Bean (Android 4.1) upgrade to the Samsung Galaxy S III. Featured as an  update, your device may start seeing it as early as today. Don't worry too much if this doesn't happen right away; experience has shown us that these large-scale can be a lengthy process spanning the course of a couple weeks. android phone Feel free to shout out in the comments if your device has already prompted you for the update. The press release is found below.

AT&T today confirmed that the Android 4.1 Jelly Bean update is now available for the Samsung Galaxy S III.The update is available via the Samsung  update software; it will not be offered as an over-the-air download, Samsung said.Those who do not have can get it via Samsung's website. Once installed, Galaxy S III users should visit Samsung's support site, connect the device to the PC, and follow the steps at the bottom of the page.

Samsung has confirmed that will be bringing Android 4.1 Jelly Bean to its flagship Galaxy S III in the U.S., and users shouldn't have to wait too much longer for it.The South Korean electronics giant posted a chart (below) on its official support site listing which of its U.S. smartphones are expected to receive an update to Google's latest mobile operating system, dubbed Jelly Bean. The chart notes that the update is "coming soon" for the Samsung Galaxy S III through all major U.S. carriers — Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and U.S. Cellular.

Samsung's flagship Android smartphone, the Galaxy , will be updated with the latest version of Android in October, the company announced.Android 4.1 or Jelly Bean brings numerous improvements, including smoother user interface, improved accessibility, expandable notifications, improved camera and voice search, among other updates.

Android Smartphone Developments At CES 2013

There weren't many smartphone announcements at CES 2013, but most of them were for Android phones and here they are, including one phablet. Pantech, Sony and Huawei all announced phones — some exclusively for the Chinese market — and Intel released a CPU and reference platform optimized for Android and also designed for low cost in emerging markets.
                                                         
                                     
There hasn't been much action on the smartphone front at CES 2013 in Las Vegas. Most of the Android devices have been in refrigerators, cars and other such devices, not phones and tablets. But there were a few Android phone announcements.
                                             
The highlights:     

  • Pantech announced the Discover phone, which they market as a less-expensive alternative to the Samsung Galaxy S3
  • Huawei showed 2 Android phones, including the more interesting Ascend Mate, with a display large enough to qualify as a phablet.
  • Sony's Xperia Z has a slick design, including water-resistance.

Intel is getting into the mobile phone processor market with a chip and reference design targeting Android phones for emerging markets.Despite the lack of dazzle, CES 2013 nevertheless gave us an important preview of things to come, and the direction smartphone development will take in the coming year.

Intel today unveiled at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas a new  Atom-based Android* phone that it says uses lower power and is designed for low-cost smartphones. The phone is very high in performance/cost ratio and offers eye-catching features and performance capabilities. In Live video streamed presentation, Mike Bell, general manager of Intel’s mobile and communications group, said“At Intel, we believe high-end smartphone features should be within everybody’s reach,”Intel had three design wins for this new  higher performance budget Android platform, formerly "Lexington" which Acer, Lava, and Safaricom will be shipping phones based on the platform this quarter, in countries “across the world.”:

Move over SwiftKey. Best For i-phones A challenger has appeared and it's aiming to bring even better predictions than we've seen before.  This one, named Fleksy, touts predictions that are so accurate, you can type without looking at the screen. In fact, the company says that even if you get every single letter wrong, it can still tell what it is you meant to type. This is pretty impressive. Of course that means the developers need to take it one step further

Nearly half of all American adults now own a smartphone, and the innovation on display at CES showed just how far these devices have come. Handsets are getting thinner even as their screens are getting bigger, prices are coming down, and the threat of water damage is being conquered with new waterproofing technology.Read on for the most exciting smartphones unveiled at CES 2013.When we first heard about the Yota phone, a 4.3-inch Android phone with a grayscale e-Paper display on the back, we were puzzled but intrigued by the concept. But after seeing a working prototype at CES, we’re excited about the new range of use cases this second screen presents.The back screen can serve as an eReader, an always-present alert system or a post-it note for your digital life.

Thursday 6 June 2013

Samsung's New Flagship Android Phone The Galaxy S III

Overall, I think Samsung makes the best Android phones.That's part of the reason why it sells more than anyone else. It's also why when Samsung launches its new flagship "Galaxy" phone every year, it's a very big deal. This year, we have the Galaxy S III, the third-generation of Samsung's popular Android line. Like its predecessors, the Galaxy S III sets the standard for what an Android phone can and should do. Everyone else seems to be playing catch up.The Galaxy S III launches this month on all four carriers. I've been testing one for a few days now, and I really, really like it. Keep reading for the full review.

Design                        
 After years of releasing one blocky Android clone after another, it's refreshing to see Samsung pay more attention to design this time around.The Galaxy S III's design is dominated by its 4.8-inch display. That may sound too big compared to the iPhone's 3.5-inch screen, but Samsung was able to keep the phone's bezel super thin so its body is still a reasonable, pocketable size.It feels like the screen is floating in your hand when you're holding the Galaxy S III Android Phone. And like all Samsung displays, the photos, text, video, and graphics look super crisp and bright. It's tough going back to a phone with a tiny screen after using the Galaxy S III. It's that good.Other than that, the overall design is sleek and smooth. You won't find a straight edge on the Galaxy S III, which makes it a delight to hold.And best of all, Samsung finally broke with tradition and released the Galaxy S III with the same design on all carriers. (In past Galaxy phone releases, each carrier sold a variation of the base model with different screen sizes and other hardware.) Now for the downside: I'm disappointed that Samsung still covers its high-end phones in plastic. You can tell the phone's designers tried to mask the cheap materials by giving the phone a glossy finish, but as soon as you grip the Galaxy S III you know it's not built with the same quality and care as the iPhone or even the BlackBerry Bold.

Using It
The Galaxy S III is Samsung's first smartphone to launch with the latest version of Android, "Ice Cream Sandwich," out of the box. That makes it the only Samsung phone you can buy right now with the best features Google's mobile operating has to offer. But Samsung made some additions of its own to Android. The Galaxy S III has a bunch of special Samsung-only services, Cheap android phone but I'm going to go over the most important ones.With a double tap of the Galaxy S III's home button, the S-Voice app launches. The interface is nearly identical to Siri's. You can ask it for the weather, to send a text, find nearby restaurants, launch apps, and a bunch of other tasks

Performance
The Galaxy S III will be available on all four major carriers (plus U.S. Cellular), but each network has its own quirks. I tested the AT&T model, which runs on the carrier's 4G LTE network, the fastest wireless standard available. The Verizon model also has LTE. Sprint's model will have LTE, but the carrier's network isn't live yet. Finally, T-Mobile's 4G network is plenty fast, and even rivals LTE speeds in certain cities.Battery life, at least on the AT&T model, was atrocious. I barely made it through a day of normal use. One day, I didn't have much time to look at my Galaxy S III, so it was in standby almost the entire time I was at work. When I checked it before going home, I was already at 50% battery life. I was down to 30% by 9 p.m. The back of the phone also gets super warm, even if you're just checking your email or browsing the web.But overall, the Galaxy S III has the hardware to back up its impressive software features. It's powered by a dual-core processor, which is a bit slower than the special quad-core processor the international version of the phone has. But it does the job. The GSIII never choked on me, even when I was streaming HD video or playing games.