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28
Mar

Want a free year of Office 365? Bring your iPad to a Microsoft Store


Microsoft's Office 365 iPad promotion

If you’re enamored with Office for iPad but don’t want to fork over $70-plus per year for the necessary Office 365 subscription, you’ll want to make a beeline to your local Microsoft Store this weekend. Microsoft has launched a promo that will offer a free year of Office 365 to the first 50 people who bring an iPad to a given retail location from March 28th through March 30th. You’ll undoubtedly have to hustle if you want to take advantage of the deal, but the trek could be worthwhile if you like the idea of giving Office an extra-long trial run.

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Via: ZDNet

Source: Microsoft (Facebook)

28
Mar

Android 4.4.3 spotted running on Nexus 5 and Nexus 7


Android 4.4.3 spotted running on Nexus 5 and Nexus 7Over the last few weeks, the evidence that the next iteration of Android KitKat, Android 4.4.3, is on its way to being released is mounting. Last we heard, LlabTooFeR suggested that the software update would be addressing a well-known Nexus 5 camera bug, and today, myce.com is reporting that Android 4.4.3 has been spotted running on the Nexus 5 and Nexus 7.

Android 4.4.3 spotted running on Nexus 5 and Nexus 7According to the report, Android build KTU83 has been spotted running on the Nexus 5 and another build, KTU79, has been seen on the Nexus 7; this fits the naming convention that Google generally uses for its Android builds, and it also supports the existence of the KTU72B build that LlabTooFeR spotted last week. According to the report, the ‘U’ in the build name suggests that Android 4.4.3 is targeted for release in Q1 2014, so we should ideally be getting news about a release very soon.

How soon do you think Android 4.4.3 is going to be released? And what would you like to see in this software update? Let us know what you think in the comments.

Source: myce.com

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28
Mar

Foodini is a 3D printer for everything from burgers to gnocchi


Who wants a 3D printer for just candy when you can have one that prints a five-course dinner instead? That’s the idea behind Foodini, a new 3D printer that takes fresh ingredients and turns them into a culinary masterpiece. The device can do things like make custom ravioli, your own unique crackers or cookies, or even an intricate dark chocolate vase (if you just have to print candy). Its creations are made by filling the printer’s “food capsules” with fresh ingredients and then inputting a recipe for the device to create. Foods can be printed in just a few minutes and eaten right away (if they’re made from pre-cooked materials) or cooked after printing. Foodini is currently seeking funding on Kickstarter to manufacturer its first run of the printers. $1,000 gets you in line to get one in January 2015, and a $2,000 investment can have you throwing your first printed dinner party by October of this year.

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Via: TechCrunch

Source: Kickstarter

28
Mar

HTC One Max on Sprint gets its turn at Android 4.4 KitKat


HTC One Max close up

HTC has been upgrading its normal-sized smartphones in the US to Android 4.4 KitKat for a little while; now, the giant One Max is getting its turn. Sprint has started rolling out the OS update to the 6-inch behemoth as of today. As with earlier upgrades, the One Max isn’t getting Sense 6. This is more of an under-the-hood tweak whose most conspicuous additions (besides KitKat itself) are new Bluetooth device profiles and cloud printing support. Verizon hasn’t pushed out a corresponding KitKat upgrade to its One Max variant, but HTC says the patch is in certification — here’s hoping that it comes relatively soon.

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Via: MobileBurn

Source: Sprint

28
Mar

Microsoft Paying Apple 30-Percent Cut on In-App Office 365 Subscription Purchases


Microsoft is paying a 30-percent cut to Apple on Office 365 subscription purchases made within the Office for iPad apps released today, in line with Apple’s in-app purchase requirements required of other brands reports Re/code. This was previously a sticking point between the two companies, and was rumored to be a large part of why Microsoft wouldn’t release Office on the iPad.

However, Microsoft’s new CEO, Satya Nadella, is apparently more willing to work within Apple’s requirements than ousted CEO Steve Ballmer. Year-long Office 365 subscriptions are available for in-app purchase for $100, with the subscription good for downloading Office on up to five tablets and five computers, Mac or PC computers, and Android, Windows or iOS tablets.

Microsoft Word for iPad

Indeed, Microsoft does offer Office 365 subscriptions within the just-released Word for iPad and the other Office apps and, yes, it is paying the 30 percent cut, Apple confirmed to Re/code. Microsoft declined to comment on the matter.

Apple has taken a hard line with all manner of publishers that want to sell things, even subscriptions that go well beyond the iPad content — if anything is sold in the app, they have to use Apple’s method and hand over 30 percent.

Apple CEO Tim Cook tweeted to welcome Office for iPad to the App Store, with Nadella tweeting back that Microsoft was “excited to bring the magic of Office to iPad customers”. During Nadella’s press conference today, he said the company was looking to “empower people to be more productive” and to “do more across all devices”.

Microsoft Office for iPad is a free download from the App Store, with Office 365 Home Premium available for $10/month or $100/year good for five tablets and five computers, with an Office 365 Personal subscription good for one computer and one tablet coming later this year for $7/month or $70/year.

There are also separate business options available as well, with billing based on total seats.

Microsoft Word for iPad [Direct Link]
Microsoft Excel for iPad [Direct Link]
Microsoft PowerPoint for iPad [Direct Link]

    



28
Mar

Office Mobile is now completely free to use on Android and iPhone


Office Mobile for Android on the HTC One M8

Today’s Office news isn’t all about the iPad. Microsoft now lets you use Office Mobile completely for free on both Android and the iPhone; if you’re a home customer, you can both edit and read documents without paying for an Office 365 subscription. The gratis apps are ultimately meant to encourage use of the desktop and iPad clients, where you do need to pay for full access. Even so, it’s hard to object to having another free tool for tweaking company reports while on the move.

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Via: Android Central, Office Mobility Blog

Source: Google Play

28
Mar

With iPad app, Microsoft begins to move out of the office


ipad

Microsoft finally announced a version of its Office productivity suite for the iPad today, and it’s a solid, functional set of apps. As we say in our review, “Office for iPad is elegantly designed, with a robust feature set and intuitive layout.” And it’s free, as long as you’re only interested in reading or viewing docs, that is. Want to edit that spreadsheet, or create your own PowerPoint deck? You’ll need an Office 365 subscription, starting at about $10 a month. That may seem steep compared to the price of some other iPad productivity apps, like Apple’s iWork suite, which is free for some iPad users. But that price includes the full desktop versions of the Office suite, which you can install on up to five computers.

Desktop versions? Computers? Who still uses those things? That’s a question Microsoft has been grappling with for the past few years, and it’s one of the biggest challenges facing new CEO Satya Nadella, who made his first public appearance in his new role as part of today’s event. Office has long been one of Microsoft’s biggest sources of revenue; in the company’s 2013 fiscal year, business software brought in $25 billion. And Office is still used by as many as 90 percent of businesses, according to one recent study. But that doesn’t mean Microsoft isn’t worried about the future of its cash cow.

Office is, despite today’s launch, primarily a product designed to be used on traditional PCs. But PC shipments have been dropping for years, and 2013 saw the steepest plunge ever, with a decline of almost 10 percent. Mobile devices now outsell PCs, and other than the small number of tablets running Windows 8, they don’t support the full version of Microsoft Office. And cloud-based services like Google Apps appeal to users with multiple devices, who know they can access the latest version of their work anywhere, and effortlessly share it with anyone. That’s why today’s Microsoft event, despite being teased and leaked as the Office for iPad launch, was as much about Office 365 and enterprise cloud services as anything else.

Office 365, along with its online components and mobile apps like the new iPad version, is Microsoft’s attempt to hold onto the productivity software business even as the market around it is rapidly changing. Designed to appeal to corporate IT managers who might be tempted to switch to Google Apps, small businesses that want industrial-strength software without the overhead of a support team and consumers who can’t bear to give up those complex Excel macros, Office 365′s subscription plan is a good deal when compared with Office’s traditional pricing model, if you make full use of the entire Office suite on multiple desktop and mobile devices and upgrade to each new version on schedule.

However, for users who rely primarily on mobile devices, or computers like Chromebooks, which now account for 20 percent of laptop sales, Office 365 is a harder sell, and Office for iPad isn’t going to help there, at least not on its own. If you don’t use 365′s desktop components, there’s little incentive to pay for access to the online versions or Office for iPad, especially when other apps, which can read and write Office docs, are available for free. But that dynamic may change, especially as paying for premium versions of other cloud-based services becomes more common. Evernote estimates that as many as 25 percent of its customers convert to its premium service over time, and Google has managed to sign up 5 million businesses for the premium version of Google Apps.

Office 365 isn’t the only piece of Microsoft’s cloud strategy, and Nadella, who ran the company’s cloud business before ascending to the CEO role, spent as much time today talking about enterprise services and developer tools as he did about Office for iPad. But Office has long been the product, even more than Windows, that defined the company for millions of consumers and business customers around the world. Today’s launch shows that Microsoft is making an effort to address the new realities of a productivity software market being driven by mobile devices and cloud storage.

Analysts who follow Microsoft see Office 365 subscription revenues approaching $3 billion a year in the near future. That’s a far cry from Microsoft’s $25 billion business software revenue, and the company is now in the middle of a delicate balancing act, as it tries to transition to the new cloud- and mobile-based world, without cannibalizing its existing, and still highly lucrative, desktop business. The fact that Nadella is now in the driver’s seat seems to indicate that the company knows which direction to take. The only question is, can Nadella get there fast enough?

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28
Mar

Facebook aims to connect the world with ‘drones, satellites and lasers’


Following the hubbub of its recent acquisition of virtual reality firm Oculus VR, Facebook has just announced something slightly more altruistic: a team dedicated to bringing basic internet access to everyone in the world. Simply dubbed the Connectivity Lab, the crew is a result of Internet.org, a global initiative Mark Zuckerberg introduced back in August of last year. In collaboration with Ericsson, MediaTek, Nokia, Opera, Samsung and Qualcomm, Internet.org has reportedly already helped three million new people in Philippines and Paraguay get online. But a lot remains to be done, which is where Facebook’s Connectivity Lab comes in. Its goal? To develop new connectivity platforms for internet delivery, which apparently includes “drones, satellites and lasers,” according to a statement from Zuckerberg.

To that end, the Lab is staffed with some of the best minds in aeronautics and communications technology from institutions such as NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab and Ames Research Center. Today, Ascenta, which is perhaps most well-known for its deployment of the Zephyr solar-powered UAV, has also joined the team. The idea behind this ambitious approach is that different population densities would require different methods of internet delivery. More restricted areas, for example, might be best served by a long endurance aircraft similar to the Zephyr, while satellites might be best elsewhere. Additionally, the team wants to use free-space optical communications (FSO), which essentially lets these drones and satellites transmit data by sending invisible laser beams. It all seems incredibly complicated, which is why Facebook has released a video (see below) to explain the whole thing.

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Source: Facebook, Internet.org

28
Mar

WD unveils a truly portable Thunderbolt drive for performance junkies


WD My Passport Pro Thunderbolt drive

There are already a few portable hard drives that take advantage of Thunderbolt’s brisk performance, but they have to plug into a wall outlet — not very convenient when you’re in the field. Western Digital is fixing that discrepancy today by unveiling the My Passport Pro, the first dual-drive Thunderbolt storage that takes its power solely from Intel’s high-speed port. The drive isn’t the fastest we’ve seen at about 233 MB/s, but it’s still quick on its toes; it can copy that giant video project to your MacBook Pro in roughly half the time it would take on USB 3.0. If you’re the sort who would rather not go hunting for power sockets while editing outside of the office, you can grab the My Passport Pro right now for $300 with 2TB of capacity, or $430 in 4TB form.

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Source: Western Digital (1), (2)

28
Mar

HTC reveals octa-core Desire 616 in China



HTC just released the all new HTC One, a device that created an excitement in the world of Android. But they are not stopping there; as the company just revealed yet another Android powered phone in China; which is known as the Desire 616. It is HTC’s first ever phone with octa-core processor, but it will be limited to Asia.

desire-616-1Desire 616 comes with a 5-inch 720p display, MediaTek’s 1.7GHz octa-core processor, 1GB of RAM, 8 megapixel camera and Android 4.4.2, topped with HTC Sense 5. The design of the device is not that outstanding, but I guess HTC is just planning to target small markets with this phone, and also it might come with an affordable price tag. More details will be revealed when HTC will officially launch it.

Are you planning to grab it? Let us know in the comment box below.

Via: Phandroid

The post HTC reveals octa-core Desire 616 in China appeared first on AndroidGuys.