’12 Days of Gifts’ Gives Oscar-Winning Scorsese Film ‘Hugo’ Today in U.S. and Canada, ‘Home Alone’ Internationally
As part of its 12 Days of Gifts promotion, Apple is making Martin Scorsese’s Academy Award-winning film Hugo free for all iTunes users in the U.S. and Canada. International customers receive Chris Columbus’ holiday classic Home Alone.
The movie is the most valuable gift that Apple has offered through the 12 Days of Gifts app, which will continue giving one gift per day through January 6th.
Users can get the movies either through the 12 Day of Gifts app, or by downloading the movie directly from the iTunes Store on their Mac, PC or iOS device. It’s likely that the movie will be free for today only so users are encouraged to download the film without delay.
Hugo received significant critical acclaim, making a number of year-end top-ten lists for 2011. The film won five Oscars for Best Cinematography, Art Direction, Visual Effects, Sound Editing, and Sound Mixing, and was nominated for six more including Best Picture, Director, Adapted Screenplay, Original Score, Costume Design, and Film Editing.
Welcome to a magical world of spectacular adventure! When wily and resourceful Hugo discovers a secret left by his father, he unlocks a mystery and embarks on a quest that will transform those around him and lead to a safe and loving place he can call home. Academy Award®-winning filmmaker Martin Scorsese invites you to experience a thrilling journey that critics are calling “the stuff that dreams are made of.” *Peter Travers, ROLLING STONE
12 Days of Gifts is a universal app available for free in the App Store. [Direct Link]![]()
Samsung Galaxy Gear 2 and Galaxy Band Set for MWC [Rumor]
Even though the original Galaxy Gear smartwatch was considered a sort of flop for Samsung, a sequel is already well in the works. There were rumors that Samsung would unveil the Galaxy Gear alongside the Galaxy S5, but new information is suggesting that Sammy will unveil it at 2014′s Mobile World Congress, along with another piece of wearable technology.
The Galaxy Band will be a new fitness checker you workout buffs will be able to utilize to help you keep up with your workouts. Samsung already showed interest in the fitness community with their pre-installed app, S Health, so the Galaxy Band will only take that further. MWC happens in Barcelona, Spain, between February 24th to the 27th, so not too for away to see if this information is accurate. Hopefully Sammy has designed the Galaxy Gear 2 with a little more style, and stepped away from the bulky design of the first one. Let us know your thoughts about this.
Source: Phandroid
The Original Doom Comes to Android
The year was 1993, and the world was introduced to a sci-fi action, first person shooter, that no one has ever seen before. That game was Doom, and it caused video game junkies to go wild, and parents to go crazy.
Players of Doom would assume the role of the space marine nicknamed the “Doomguy”, who has been sent to Mars for what would seemed to be a boring assignment. The station he is been sent to works on top secret technology experiments, such as teleportation, and something goes horribly wrong as you can guess. The portals that were open unleash something evil, and it is up to the Doomguy to fight his way out of the madness. Doom revolutionized the first person shooter, and many games would follow in its footsteps.
So now you can have the classic first person shooter in the palm of your hands, all for the price of free. Click the Play Store link below to grab it onto your device, for some demon shooting nostalgia. Let ua know how it runs.
Source: Play Store Link
12.2″ Samsung Galaxy Note Pro headed to AT&T, leak suggests
The 12.2-inch Samsung Galaxy Note Pro will touch down at AT&T in the coming months, says omnipresent leaker @evleaks. Bearing the model number of SM-P907A, the tablet is rumored to feature a 2,560×1,600 display, 3GB RAM, 32 GB of internal storage and a 9,500mAh battery. Expected to run Android 4.4 KitKat, the tablet will likely debut in the first two months of the year. Mobile World Congress seems a likely choice, perhaps around an Unpacked event.
The post 12.2″ Samsung Galaxy Note Pro headed to AT&T, leak suggests appeared first on AndroidGuys.
Tech’s biggest misfires of 2013
You can’t win ‘em all. The adage certainly holds in the fast-paced world of technology, where one small slip can put a damper on your entire year. Every year, among all of the celebrations of top gadgets and big news stories, we like to take a moment to acknowledge the other side of things. This time out, it’s a pretty diverse list, from flubbed Kickstarter launches to massive governmental privacy breaches and yet another really lousy year for one smartphone manufacturer. But don’t worry everyone; the year 2013 is nearly over.
Microsoft gets DRM-happy with the Xbox One

After nearly a decade between consoles, Microsoft’s Xbox One got off to a bit of an inauspicious start. What should have been a celebratory time for the gaming powerhouse was preceded by something of a muddled mess, thanks to a jumble of confusion surrounding the admittedly obtuse digital strategy put forth by Redmond. One thing was for sure: Gamers were pissed about the console’s DRM, most notably the 24-hour physical disc check-in for used games. The plan was even more problematic for those without access to a stable internet connection. Anyone who’s ever spouted that tired cliche about there not being any such thing as bad press has clearly never been on the wrong side of a video game flame war, and with its chief competition, the PlayStation 4, launching at virtually the same time, Microsoft saw fit to make a change.
Xbox head Don Mattrick took to the console’s official site to confirm that the gamers had won, thanking them for their “assistance in helping us to reshape the future of Xbox One.” It was a pretty sweeping reversal on a policy for which the company had seemingly been unwilling to budge. It’s tough to say how much of an impact such a policy would have ultimately had on the next-gen console’s sales, but with a price $100 greater than Sony’s offering already working against it, the added negative publicity certainly couldn’t have helped. In the end, plenty of zombies were shotgunned via the Xbox One — and isn’t that what really counts?
The NSA gets caught reading everyone’s email

Granted, it’s not as if all this went down in the 2013 calendar year, but given the sorts of revelations that were uncovered, we’d be remiss if we didn’t include it this time out. The question, then, is where precisely to start with the government agency’s laundry list of civil liberties violations? After all, while it’s likely that few were genuinely surprised that the government’s been doing this manner of snooping, the information revealed by Edward Snowden was shocking in precisely how deep, thorough and extreme the NSA’s collection methods were.
Given the nature of this here site, PRISM seems as good a place to start as any. One particularly incriminating slide highlighted the NSA’s information-skimming from the servers of technology’s biggest names, including Apple, Microsoft, Google, Yahoo and Facebook. After denying foreknowledge of such spying, a number of often adversarial companies teamed up for an open letter to the US government. As the saying goes, clandestine mass-electronic surveillance programs make strange bedfellows.
DMCA phone-unlocking ban is back in action

Remember that great exemption by the Library of Congress that made it legal to unlock your phone? Remember how it sounded too good to be true? Remember how unsurprised you were when the three-month window ended and the Copyright Office wasn’t exactly jumping to renew it. And while the legality of unlocking is still pretty murky, the situation raised alarms for pretty much everyone from the ever-vigilant Electronic Frontier Foundation to President Barack Obama. In fact, in September, the White House petitioned the FCC to require carriers to let consumers unlock their handsets.
Pretty Much Everything BlackBerry

Listen; we’re as sick of including BlackBerry on this last as you are reading about it — the company’s managed to make its way onto this list in some form or another since we started compiling it back in 2011. And while we’ve been holding out hope that the Canadian smartphone manufacturer would have turned things around by now, each new piece of news out of Waterloo seemingly confirms that it hasn’t quite found the bottom yet. By all accounts, it should have been a banner year for the company, wrapping up January by launching the long-awaited BlackBerry 10 with a bang. The release arrived with two new handsets — the Q10 and Z10 — and a complete rebranding for the company, finally shedding the stuffy Research in Motion moniker for the more familiar BlackBerry. Shortly after the announcement, the company’s newly named creative director (and sometime singer-songwriter) Alicia Keys tweeted from her iPhone. It wasn’t a make-or-break moment for the smartphone wars, but it was hard not to read the gaffe as symbolic of the company’s larger struggles.
In March, new CEO Thorsten Heins announced that the company wasn’t interested in targeting the developing world, and the following week, BlackBerry’s tone-deaf band was at it again with an Etta James parody announcing that the OS was finally ready to ship. When we got our hands on the new phones, it was pretty clear that they weren’t the game-changers BlackBerry was clearly gunning for. Revenue proved disappointing, as well, as the smartphone maker continued hemorrhaging jobs again and again. And as for the “budget” Q5, well, if you can’t say anything nice… In September, it was announced that the company had lost a billion dollars in a three-month period. Later that month, amidst much speculation, an Ontario-based financial holdings company was set to take over, only to have the deal fall through, instead opting for an investment, while ousting Heins, who joined the CMO, CFO and COO in the long line of Blackberry job losses. Just last week, it was revealed that the company’s continued financial woes put the kibosh on plans for two budget handsets.
New CEO John Chen has, naturally, remained bullish (if, understandably, grounded), projecting profitability by 2016. In the meantime, don’t be too shocked if BlackBerry winds up on another of these lists before it’s all over.
Ouya’s lukewarm launch

This one kind of hurts. Like many of you, pretty much everything about OUYA excited us, not the least of which was the prospect of a small hardware startup disrupting a gaming industry dominated by three giants. And heck, the company deserves some points for delivering a product at all, in an age when Kickstarted hardware projects feel like a crapshoot, at best. When the Android console finally launched, however, it was pretty clear that the first-generation console wasn’t ready to take on the heavy hitters.
By most accounts, the device still felt like a beta unit. The controller was a bit crummy and the game selection wasn’t quite there — hardly the sort of launch it needed to compete with the Nintendos, Sonys and Microsofts of the world. Since then, however, the team has been hard at work on improving the console’s overall experience, adding games, improving the controller, expanding storage (see above image) and even taking a break to mess around at E3.
Illustration by Greg Grabowy; Photos: National Security Agency (NSA) Director Gen. Keith Alexander (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta); Thorsten Heins, president and CEO of Research In Motion (AP Photo/Reinhold Matay)
Filed under: Cellphones, Gaming, Peripherals, Software, Mobile, Microsoft, Blackberry
FAA selects six sites for drone testing because flying robots are our future
One day, drones will be flying overhead… and it will be normal. But, right now, concern over the safety of allowing unmanned aircraft to roam freely in our airspace outweighs their groovy future potential. Which is why the FAA today, following a mandate by Congress, has selected six test sites around the US for the purpose of studying UAS (unmanned aircraft) and eventually integrating them safely into our heavily trafficked skies. Research on UAS will now be carried out at facilities operated by The University of Alaska, Texas A&M University, the state of Nevada (an obvious choice, really), North Dakota’s Department of Commerce, New York’s Griffiss International Airport and Virginia Tech — all chosen for their geographical and climatic diversity.
Each partner will carry out testing in key research areas highlighted by the FAA: sense and avoid, command and control, ground control station standards and human factors, airworthiness, lost link procedures and interface with air traffic control. The results of which will go towards developing regulations for “commercial and civil use” (yes, you will one day own and operate a drone). But just because the FAA’s given a greenlight to further UAS testing, that doesn’t mean you’ll see drones whizzing about in our skies anytime soon. The agency’s stressed that this is just a test and not an invitation to tempt fate in our national airspace system.
Filed under: Robots
Samsung intros 8Gb LPDDR4 Mobile DRAM for next-gen smartphones
Samsung on Monday announced a new form of memory chip for smartphones, tablets, and other mobile devices. In specific terms, the module is an 8Gb, low power double data rate 4 (LPDDR4) DRAM chip on a single 1GB die. In general terms, it’s a much faster memory module than what we’re dealing with today.
With the new chip, Samsung will focus on the premium mobile market including large screen UHD smartphones, tablets and ultra-slim notebooks that offer four times the resolution of full-HD imaging, and also on high-performance network systems.
These chips offer “50 percent higher performance” while using “approximately 40 percent less energy” than the current stuff. According to Samsung, four of these can be combined to create a single 4GB RAM module and that volume production is expected in early 2014.
Sounds like we might look forward to 4GB RAM in the Samsung Galaxy S5, no?
The post Samsung intros 8Gb LPDDR4 Mobile DRAM for next-gen smartphones appeared first on AndroidGuys.
Samsung Galaxy Gear 2 rumored for Mobile World Congress
A Galaxy Band is also expected in the new year
That Samsung is already working on a successor to the Galaxy Gear smartwatch shouldn’t come as much of a surprise. We actually heard a few months back that such an animal was already in the works. But, as to when it’s going to be released has not been made clear. According to the Korea Herald, the next-gen wearable should debut at Mobile World Congress.
Another device expected from Samsung for the MWC is the Galaxy Band, which is reportedly a health and fitness wristband with which can monitor physical conditions such as pulse and blood pressure.
In addition to the Galaxy Gear 2, we are advised to look for a Galaxy Band fitness tracker in the new year. As you might expect, the device would track and sync your workouts, steps, and other health-related details.
Samsung has historically held an Unpacked event around the annual February event so we expect that for 2014. With rumors suggesting that Samsung has a bunch of smartphones, tablets, and other devices due in the first half of the year we should look for a big introduction at one, maybe two, events.
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Purported Original iPhone Prototype Sells on eBay for $1499
An alleged prototype version of Apple’s original iPhone has sold on eBay for $1499, with the device appearing to be in excellent condition and containing signal strength measurements etched on the rear casing. The device is also shown running Apple’s internal diagnostic software.
I am selling a very rare original iPhone engineering prototype. These were used to test the iPhone’s various features. To do so, a special test software was installed, which is still running on the device perfectly.
This is device is especially rare, as it shows the initial iOS version installed and the signal strength values etched on the back. This was done by Apple internally and is guaranteed genuine.
The authenticity of the device has not been confirmed, and similar signal strength etchings do not appear to have been seen on other prototypes, but the device does lack the standard regulatory text on the rear casing that would be present on a non-prototype unit. A reddit user claims to be the buyer of the device, but it has not yet been delivered to allow for further testing of its authenticity.
It is not unusual for prototype Apple devices to appear on eBay, and many of these auctions are quickly removed, presumably at Apple’s request. This auction was able to be completed, perhaps due to having been posted for only two days and having ended through a “Buy It Now” purchase well ahead of the scheduled ending time.![]()
Apple and Samsung Said to Resume Settlement Talks Over Patent Dispute [iOS Blog]
Apple and Samsung have reportedly resumed settlement negotiations over their ongoing patent-infringement dispute, according to The Korea Times. A source from the Korean Fair Trade Commission (FTC) told the newspaper that the two companies are in “working level discussion” about a potential deal, adding that Apple and Samsung are attempting to narrow differences over royalty payments.

Samsung still prefers to sign a comprehensive “cross-licensing” deal, allowing the world’s biggest smartphone manufacturer to access all Apple’s design-related, some standard-essential and commercial patents; while Apple is asking Samsung to pay over $30 per device for Samsung’s patent violations, which Samsung thinks is “too much,” said another Samsung official who is familiar with the issue.
The report also states that Samsung Mobile CEO Shin Jong-Kyun may fly to the United States to discuss patent issues with Apple CEO Tim Cook early next year. Last year, Cook met with Samsung CEO Choi Gee-Sung to discuss the subject, however, those talks reportedly failed because Samsung would not accept Apple’s demand for patent royalties. Both companies also met face-to-face in Seoul earlier this year, but there was said to be “no indication” of an imminent agreement as the discussions failed to progress.
Apple and Samsung have been in a long, ongoing legal battle that started in 2011, with the first U.S. trial awarding $1 billion to Apple in 2012. However, a judge voided nearly half of that amount in March, with a jury in the damages retrial last month ruling that Samsung is to pay Apple $290 million for willfully violating multiple patents. A second infringement lawsuit between the two companies will also be held on March 31, 2014, with a separate injunction trial centering around Apple’s call for a U.S. ban on Samsung products potentially preceding it.![]()












