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19
Jun

Nexus 6 won’t be made by LG, according to a company executive


Nexus 6

The Nexus 6 is a device of much rumor at the moment. While the last two Nexus smartphones were made by LG, as well as the only Nexus tablets, company communications director Ken Hong recently said he didn’t know anything about the it, when they were usually informed.

“That can mean two things,” Hong said. “Either I got ignored, or we simply won’t be making [the Nexus 6].”

Hong also said that Google determines how many are to be made, so usually when they are asked, they then deliver that many devices.

Recent rumors have suggested that the new Nexus device would be based on the LG G3, but at this point, who knows if one is even coming at all.

The device is rumored to make an appearance at Google I/O next week.

Via: PhoneArena

The post Nexus 6 won’t be made by LG, according to a company executive appeared first on AndroidGuys.

19
Jun

iFixit tears down OnePlus One, not the simplest to repair


oneplus-ifixit

You’ve got to love iFixit who always takes a new device whenever it’s released and tears it down part by part, giving a score on its repairability.

The new OnePlus One, currently only available by invite, was just given the iFixit teardown treatment and was given a score of 5 out of 10, with 10 being the easiest to repair.

While the One was praised for having no proprietary screws and only one screw head type, which decreases the cost of tools for repairs, and fairly modular components that will allow for less expensive replacement parts, there were a few issues that lower its score:

  • Slight adhesive used on the battery and several cables.
  • With its connector trapped under a plastic panel and several screws, the battery is more of a chore to replace than necessary.
  • The LCD and digitizer glass are fused together and must be replaced as a single part, and they require heat to remove from the midframe.

OnePlus may have made a “flagship killer” with a killer price and specs, but it certainly doesn’t seem to be the easiest to repair on your own if anything should happen to it when you get your hands on one.

For the full teardown, head to the source below.

Via: iFixit 

 

The post iFixit tears down OnePlus One, not the simplest to repair appeared first on AndroidGuys.

19
Jun

Sunrise intros new apps


Screenshot 2014-05-12 17.28.18

Sunrise, a free calendar made for Google Calendar and iCloud, just introduced apps, adding the ability to connect Songkick, Evernote, Github, Asana and TripIt to your calendar.

If you needed another way to connect all of your apps and view them in one place, look no further.

Sunrise said that with Songkick connected, it brings your concerts directly in your calendar, allowing you to see where concerts are taking place on a map.

“You can select which calendars you can want to see, only the events you’re tracking or all the events for a given city!”

If you connect the others, you can see and edit your Evernote notes, have full two-way synchronization between Github or Asana, with any changes in Sunrise reflected in Github and Asana in real-time, and with TripIt, all travel plans will be synchronized in your calendar as well.

Support for more apps will be added in future updates.

Source: Sunrise

The post Sunrise intros new apps appeared first on AndroidGuys.

19
Jun

Bluetooth LE Adapters Don’t Enable OS X Yosemite’s ‘Handoff’ on Older Macs


Over the past few days, we’ve been exploring some of the system requirements for Apple’s Continuity features such as Handoff, noting that an apparent requirement of Bluetooth LE support for Handoff would leave out a number of older Macs that are otherwise compatible with OS X Yosemite.

mail_handoff
In discussing the limitations for Handoff support, some MacRumors forum members suggested that adding an inexpensive third-party Bluetooth LE adapter to an older Mac might be enough to add support for the feature. Unfortunately, several forum members have discovered that this does not appear to be the case.

One forum member has shared details of their testing, noting that in tests with a 2010 MacBook Air that does not include built-in support for Bluetooth LE, adding IOGEAR’s Bluetooth 4.0 USB Micro Adapter works out of the box to add Bluetooth LE support to the machine, but does not enable support for Continuity features such as Handoff or AirDrop.

bt_adapter_continuity
System information for 2010 MacBook Air with IOSGEAR Bluetooth LE adapter
While OS X Yosemite remains in beta testing and things could change before final release, it appears that Bluetooth LE support alone is not sufficient to enable Handoff and that Apple is instead enforcing a stricter requirement for built-in Bluetooth LE support, perhaps by defining specific models that are able to use the feature.

Beyond Handoff, Apple is also adding a number of other features under the Continuity umbrella, not all of which require Bluetooth LE support. For example, the new phone relay feature that will allow users to make and receive iPhone calls right from their Macs relies on Wi-Fi rather than Bluetooth, meaning that more devices should be compatible with this feature and it is likely to work over longer distances.

OS X Yosemite and iOS 8 are scheduled to launch to the public in the fall of this year, likely around the September-October timeframe.



19
Jun

BlackBerry is getting Amazon’s catalog of 200,000 Android apps


BlackBerry Z10

BlackBerry users haven’t exactly had an abundance of apps to choose from lately, due in no small part to the once-legendary phone maker’s dwindling market share. However, the company just reached an app library deal with Amazon that could give you a reason to hang on to that Q10 or Z30. When BlackBerry 10.3 launches in the fall, it will have access to the Amazon Appstore’s catalog of 200,000-plus Android apps — you’ll have little trouble finding Minecraft, Netflix and other big-name titles.

BlackBerry’s own app library isn’t going away. However, you can’t count on the official media stores lasting for much longer; BlackBerry World’s music and video sections are shutting down on July 21st. While you’ll still have access to your existing purchases, you’ll have to look to third-party services for anything new. That’s unfortunate if you regularly shop for flicks and tunes from your phone, but the larger Android library might help mitigate the loss.

Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, Amazon, Blackberry

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Source: Inside BlackBerry

19
Jun

‘R.B.I. Baseball 14’ hits Xbox One and PlayStation 4 on June 24th


We knew MLB would eventually bring R.B.I Baseball 14 to the Xbox One and PlayStation 4, but now there’s an official date. Today, the league announced that the classic title is coming to Microsoft and Sony’s new consoles early next week, on June 24th. Now don’t expect R.B.I Baseball 14 to match the looks of, say, MLB 14: The Show — the fully remastered game is more about being easy for anybody to quickly pick up, while still maintaining a fun edge to it overall. Just as it is priced on Xbox 360 and PS3, R.B.I. Baseball 14 will also be $20 on Xbox One and PS4 when it arrives in a few days time.

Filed under: Gaming, Home Entertainment, HD

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Source: MLB

19
Jun

The oPhone Duo lets you send aromas when pictures aren’t enough


It used to be that if you wanted to remind your far-flung paramour of those heady, sun-soaked days spent puttering around on the beaches of Ko Pha Ngan, you had to send a picture. Maybe you’d paint a portrait with your words, if you were feeling especially creative. How passé. We live in the future — that’s why you’ll soon be able to tag your missives with aromas meant to evoke what text and images can’t.

That’s all thanks to what creators David Edwards and Rachel Field call the oPhone, a concept that combines a bit of (forthcoming) odor-spurting hardware and a mobile app that lets you pair & send photo messages with smells. The oPhone has been kicking around for a little while now — a prototype was recently demoed at a Wired event in London last year — but the team has brought the nascent product to Indiegogo in hopes of bringing those smell-ssages to the masses. The idea is simple enough: you snap a picture with the companion app (which appears to be iOS only for now) and select a, well, smellscape to go with it. Once that message is delivered, the app triggers the release of those aromas from a curious base station that houses eight interchangeable olfactory reservoirs called oChips.

$149 will net you the requisite base station and starter set of oChips, and future expansion packs will run you about $20. If we’re being real, that’s not an insignificant amount of money to spend on something that seems unabashedly nutso. Then again, it seems the oPhone by design isn’t meant to appeal to the intellect — it wants to tug at your heartstrings through one of our most potent, primal senses. It’s another way for someone you care about to touch you at a distance, and maybe in this age of remote relationships, that’s worth the asking price.

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Via: Yahoo Tech

Source: oPhone (Indiegogo)

19
Jun

Watch out: fake EA social accounts are swiping World Cup fans’ logins


Fake EA Sports Instagram account

Internet scams certainly aren’t new, but they’re kicking into high gear now that the World Cup has many people eager for some futbol. For example, Malwarebytes has spotted a fake EA Sports account on Instagram (fake accounts have been on Twitter for a while) that lures FIFA 14 gamers with promises of free team members. If you’re tempted enough to click through, you wind up at a plausible-looking phishing site that asks for your EA Origin and Xbox Live credentials — do that and you’ll quickly lose control of both logins. There’s no guarantees that Instagram or authorities can shut the Instagram account (or any other nogoodnik) down for good, so the best defense is a healthy dose of caution: always double-check an offer if it seems too be good to be true, no matter where it comes from.

Filed under: Internet

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