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8
Jan

Bang & Olufsen are showing off their new bluetooth headphones, the BeoPlay H8


Wired headphones are still going to offer the best possible audio experience, but as people become more and more mobile the case for a decent pair of wireless headphones becomes increasingly clear. This year at CES the folks from Bang & Olufsen are showing off their new line of wireless over the ear headphones,which have been dubbed BeoPlay H8.

Aside from the classic design and high end build materials, which lets be honest is expected from Bang & Olufsen, the headphones are entirely touch responsible. The volume controls and track management happens with swipes and taps, and the battery life on these headphones promise 14 hours of high quality playback on a single charge.

As bluetooth headphones go the BeoPlay H8 certainly gets points for being pretty and functional, but whether or not you are willing to part with $500 is an entirely separate matter.

8
Jan

Bang & Olufsen are showing off their new bluetooth headphones, the BeoPlay H8


Wired headphones are still going to offer the best possible audio experience, but as people become more and more mobile the case for a decent pair of wireless headphones becomes increasingly clear. This year at CES the folks from Bang & Olufsen are showing off their new line of wireless over the ear headphones, which have been dubbed BeoPlay H8.

8
Jan

HTC looking to expand in connected devices and entertainment in 2015


HTC_Desire_Eye_Back_HTC_Logo_TAHTC is promising a stellar 2015 for consumers and with renewed growth from its mid-range devices and expansion in 2014, the company is looking to expand even further by diving into other areas of technology. At CES this week, HTC announced that it will be expanding into entertainment and connected devices (smart appliances, etc) while renewing its commitments in both wearables and digital imaging.

While HTC didn’t show anything off at CES, (be sure to check out all our CES coverage here) the first products of this new expansion should start rolling out to consumers sometime this year. As for as specifics were concerned, HTC was pretty vague.

Even with the expansion, the company faces tough competition from competitors like Xiaomi, Apple, and Samsung, and HTC will still continue to focus on smartphones. Even as it gradually moves into a more personal tech company versus that of a smartphone company. There’s concern about HTC expanding in light of this competition. However, as HTC’s VP of Creative Laps group told Re/code there really isn’t another option.

“That’s a fair question, but I think the reality is that we have to do these things,” he said. “Not because we’re going to run out of money at any moment but because no matter how well we do on the phones, we recognize that in the medium to long term, it’s important for HTC to be in these other categories.”

However, Bamford was aware of the risks and accepted them.

“It’s going to be very difficult, I think, for HTC to make great phones and great emerging devices and great software and services, but it’s just a challenge we have to take on,” he said. “And HTC has never shied away from risks and challenge, so we’re diving into it head first and we’re having a lot with fun it.”

HTC’s promising consumers that there will be surprises in 2015, this expansion could very well be a part of it. What are you hoping to see from HTC in 2015?

source: Re/code

Come comment on this article: HTC looking to expand in connected devices and entertainment in 2015

8
Jan

Android 5.0 update for the One M8 will start rolling out in 1-2 weeks


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According to LlabTooFeR, who is well in the loop about HTC related information, the One M8 will start receiving its Android 5.0 update within the next two weeks. He mentions that EU and WWE (Worldwide English) regions will be the first to get the update, but there’s still no word on when the American carrier variants of the handset will receive the coveted update.

This is pretty much everything he mentions in his tweet with no word on whether there will be any new additions to the Lollipop ROM. But earlier leaks have given us a good idea of what to expect from the Android 5.0 ROM for HTC flagships, so there are barely any surprises left. While we expect there to be some Material Design elements with the ROM, HTC will maintain its stock theme and make some improvements to the look and feel of the home screen.

We expect to get more word on this new ROM over the coming weeks.

Source: @LlabTooFeR – Twitter

Come comment on this article: Android 5.0 update for the One M8 will start rolling out in 1-2 weeks

8
Jan

AT&T Mobile Share Value customers get free rollover data


at&t logo

AT&T customers now get to carry over their unused data from one month to the next.  They used this concept years ago to mobile minutes, when most plans had limited minutes, the main difference being the rollover data is good for one month whereas minutes were good for a year.  I am not complaining about rollover data only being good for one month because there are usually only one or two months out of the year when I might possibly need more data and that’s usually when I go on vacation or head home for the holidays and spend more time on cellular vs. WiFi.  If you’re in a plan where you are constantly watching your data, my suggestion for you is to move up to the next plan.  Data watching is no fun and implementing rules for your family is even less fun.

I have the 30GB family plan that I share with my siblings, which means if we used 20GB, we get to carry over 10GB to the next month.  In the next month, we will have the extra 10GB, but use our first 30GB so the 10GB is only used to protect from going over our limits.

Users will automatically be enrolled in this feature so no need to call AT&T and bug them unless you enjoy talking to customer service.  The rollover data plan starts January 25th and is applied to all users of the Mobile Share Value plan.

Source – AT&T



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8
Jan

Apple Seeds OS X Yosemite 10.10.2 Build 14C94b to Developers


Apple today seeded a fourth beta of OS X 10.10.2 Yosemite to developers, nearly four weeks after the previous beta release. The interval between seeds was slightly longer than usual for recent updates, presumably due to the holiday pause.

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The new beta, build 14C94b, is available through the Software Update mechanism in the Mac App Store and through the Mac Dev Center.

Apple continues to ask developers to focus their testing on Wi-Fi, Mail, and VoiceOver. Wi-Fi in particular has been an issue for some OS X Yosemite users since the operating system’s October launch, and OS X 10.10.1 released in November failed to resolve all of those problems.



8
Jan

When competition is bad for consumers


competition shutterstock Shutterstock

“Competition is not only the basis of protection to the consumer, but is the incentive to progress.”

So said American President Herbert Hoover and it’s still a popular idea today. In theory, the companies competing for our cash have to outperform their rivals to secure it. Competition is supposed to drive them on to brave new innovations and ensure that prices fall. In practice it’s debatable whether this is always the case.

There’s no doubt that some level of competition is healthy, in that it drives us on to achieve more. Many of the top OEMs divide internal divisions or project teams and play them off against each other to hit new heights. We’re also undeniably seeing a race to the bottom in terms of pricing in the smartphone market right now.

On the other hand, there’s a clear lack of innovation in smartphones. Designs have stagnated. Competing standards are holding back new developments like wireless charging, the smart home, and mobile payments. Competition is not always good for consumers.

Copying rivals

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Few companies in any industry are genuinely focused on doing something new. Probably the most pernicious influence of that keenly felt competition is the need to keep an eye on what your rivals are doing. Any success they have must be emulated. That’s how we reach a situation where countless manufacturers are producing smartphones, but they all look extremely similar and have virtually identical features and functionality.

It’s a given that any successful product is going to dictate new directions and competitors will copy elements of it, or sometimes even rip it off wholesale. But at some point that copying habit goes beyond what has actually been successful with consumers. Companies can’t afford to be late to the party and so they start emulating everything their rivals are doing. They are being guided by their competition and spending huge amounts of money to try and gain an edge with incremental improvements to existing standards.

Instead of forging ahead with new innovations companies begin to focus on how they can protect what they produce. Time and resources plowed into patents and legal teams are diverted from the creative end of the business where you need huge investment to produce great products. But if you’re fundamentally risk-averse then it’s much cheaper to copy a successful idea and build on it than it is to come up with a new one.

A lack of agreed standards

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The focus on ownership of the idea and the refusal to collaborate with others is holding back lots of technology. There’s no doubt that this is thoroughly negative for us as consumers. Why hasn’t wireless charging gone mainstream? There’s a demand for it, the technology is getting there, but the major players have been slow to come together and establish standards. It looks mercifully as though this may be starting to happen now, but the lack of agreement has stunted this industry so far and robbed us of a life with fewer wires.

Mobile payments is exactly the same story. There are so many different services out there that the entire industry is confusing for consumers and for retailers. The trouble is that mobile payments are going to offer up a small fee for every transaction for whoever provides the underlying system. It’s a potentially vast sum which is why everyone wants to stick their finger in from the OEMs, to the platform providers, to the carriers, to the new and old guard of payment providers.

Instead of evangelizing about these new technologies and teaching consumers what they can do and why they’re better than the plastic we currently use, companies are locked in a battle trying to secure networks of partners and exclusive deals to lock out the others.

The same lack of collaboration and determination to own the industry looks set to blight the smart home next. Will you be able to put together a system with the best components in home automation that actually works together without buying some expensive piece of software to act as the glue?

Closed ecosystems

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Set the interests of the tech giants aside for a moment and think about this from the consumer perspective. Why can’t we just buy the best products as determined by us and have all of our digital content work across all of them? Why can’t rival systems be synced together? Why can’t we have universal standards for accessories?

The idea that your library of apps and purchased content can’t travel with you to a new device looks increasingly like blackmail. You’re never going to get the best possible experience if you have to buy all your devices from one company. How much energy are these companies putting into closing their ecosystems down and avoiding cross compatibility?

Competition is supposed to boost quality and choice. Closed ecosystems seem like the opposite of that.

Where’s the creativity?

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Companies get used to planning in terms of their rivals all the time and closing things down. These attitudes become deeply ingrained over time. The agility and creativity you need to come up with new innovations is stifled by huge, overbearing corporate structures. There’s a reason that most of the giants of tech buy in their new ideas now. They lack the atmosphere internally to come up with them and it’s easier to acquire a startup and assimilate them.

Most of the genuine innovation in tech today is coming from small companies and the growing crowd-funded movement that can catapult someone with a good idea into business. If they gain any measure of success then the lucky ones get bought out, the unlucky ones have their idea copied by a company with a much bigger marketing machine that rolls in, undercuts them, and takes over the market.

Without startups and crowd-sourcing where would the new ideas in tech be coming from? The very competition that was supposed to drive progress is now stifling it. The sad thing is that collaboration between rivals can be mutally beneficial. Perhaps instead of focussing on what the competition is doing, it’s time that companies concentrated on what consumers want.

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8
Jan

iRobot’s CTO wants bots that will map and interact with your home, not drones


The future for Roomba maker iRobot isn’t in the sky, it’s continuing to innovate on the ground. In a chat with iRobot CTO Paolo Pirjanian at the Engadget CES stage today, he dove into his vision for where the company is headed. And, surprisingly enough, drones aren’t part of the picture — even though they’re all the rage now. Instead, Pirjanian says he’s looking forward to building smarter and taller robots that will be able understand and interact with their environment. The keys to that dream are indoor GPS and 3D mapping, both of which he says iRobot is “keenly working on.” Those futuristic home bots will be able to do things like collect and bring a tray of food to the elderly, or create an accurate map of everything in your home, so it’ll know if you left your keys on the kitchen table.

We’ll see some of mapping and interaction innovations in the Roomba and Mint (the company’s square floor cleaner, developed by Pirjanian’s former outfit) over the next few years. And while iRobot’s future machines will have to get taller to effectively interact with humans, don’t count on them taking humanoid forms. Pirjanian stressed there are plenty of other forms they could take in our chat, and iRobot CEO Colin Angle doesn’t think much of human-like robots. They’ll be more R2-D2 than C-3PO.

iRobot’s Ava 500 and RP-VITA video collaboration robots gives us some idea of what the company’s more advanced bots could look like. They’re tall, have large screens and cameras at eye-level, and they have advanced navigation capabilities. Give it some articulating arms and it could just end up being your new roommate.

Check out the full interview with Pirjanian below.

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Filed under: Robots

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8
Jan

Apple seeds new Yosemite 10.10.2 beta build to developers


Apple has started seeding a new build of the 10.10.2 Yosemite beta today. As is usual, it isn’t entirely clear what fixes the update brings, but the build number is bumped up to 14C94b and Apple is asking developers to focus on areas concerning Wi-Fi, Mail, and VoiceOver.

Developers and those in Apple’s public beta track can check for build 14C94b through the updates section of the Mac App Store now.