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30
Jan

Could the LG G4 sport a 3K display?


Verizon_LG_G4_lg-vs999_Leaked_Document_3K_Display

The LG G4 (LG-VS999) was spotted in a leaked document. That in itself is no big deal, but what is interesting is the display resolution, which is 2880 x 1620.

It’s believed that this device is headed to Verizon since the Verizon G3 had a model number of LG-VS985. Now interestingly enough the AT&T version (LG-H810) was spotted in a UA profile a few days ago with an expected resolution of 2560 x 1440.

So one of two things is going on here. Either Verizon is going to get a better version than AT&T or the leaked document is fake.

We probably won’t see the G4 until May, so it’s certainly not out of the question that LG could offer a 3K display, but I need a little more evidence.

source: MyLGPhones

Come comment on this article: Could the LG G4 sport a 3K display?

30
Jan

Google Finishes Short of Q4 Expectations, Grows 19%


google-money-featured

Google just released its Q4 earnings report today, and some investors may be a little less than pleased. The tech giant finished with less growth than originally predicted, but still managed to bring in a revenue of $18.1 billion and earnings per share of $6.88. The net income was $4.76 billion, which is also an improvement over $3.38 billion from Q4 last year. The full year brought in $66 billion for Google, up 19% from 2013; this includes the sale of Motorola to Lenovo.

Just how much did Google underperform in Q4 when compared to predictions, you may ask? Wall Street expected a revenue of $18.5 billion, so about 2% under. A worse stat was the earnings per share of $6.88 instead of the predicted $7.13—under by 3.5%.

While there could be many explanations to the results (Google frequently underperforms when compared to estimates), we won’t know anything more conclusive until Google releases more info about the specifics.

Do you own Google stock? Let us know what you think about everyone’s favorite tech company’s latest results in the comment section to get the conversation going.

Source: Google

Come comment on this article: Google Finishes Short of Q4 Expectations, Grows 19%

30
Jan

Google is Making Skin to Test for Cancer


Google-Health

Google has been known to get involved in some unusual projects, like Google Glass, Project Ara, and self-driving cars. However, the goings-on at its life sciences division take the cake in terms of unusual endeavours. Google has been working on a bracelet that can detect cancer cells. The idea is still being tweaked, so don’t be expecting any miracles within the next few years, but the evidence is pleasing at this point.

The way the device works is after a pill packed with nanoparticles is swallowed, the particles circulate throughout the body on the hunt for cancer cells. Once they find some, they light up and make their way under the bracelet, which they are attracted to by magnets. The skin had to be made to simulate real human arms in order to test the prototype in action. Many skins were made to represent multiple types of dermal characteristics: thick, thin, light, dark, (etc.)

This does sound like a tool from Star Trek, so you can be forgiven for being a little bit skeptical. To help remove some of that skepticism, watch the video below from the Atlantic and learn more.

Click here to view the embedded video.

Via: Engadget

Source: The Atlantic

Come comment on this article: Google is Making Skin to Test for Cancer

30
Jan

Celebrating 15 Years of Mobile Nations!


15 Years!
 
On September 9th, 1999, the origin story for Mobile Nations began when VisorCentral launched from my student apartment at University of Florida. Immediately the website became a fixture of the Handspring Visor online community by delivering high quality and reliable news, articles, reviews, and an active forum.
 
While today the Visor is a relic — *I'm sure many of our younger readers have never even heard of it before* — 15 years later we are stronger than ever delivering the same experience that made VisorCentral a success. Over the years we have navigated the many shifts in mobile platforms, with sites like TreoCentral and webOS Nation (formerly PreCentral) following VisorCentral as Palm ushered in the modern smartphone era. Today, Mobile Nations reaches over 32 million readers every month through Android Central, iMore, WPCentral, CrackBerry and our newest site, Connectedly
 

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30
Jan

Announcing the winners in our 15 Years of Mobile Nations contest!


15 Years of Mobile Nations!

September 9th, 2014, marked 15 years since the Mobile Nations story began, with the launch of Visor Central. A lot has changed in mobile tech in the years since, but one thing definitely has not — the passion of this great community. The response to our anniversary article was fantastic, and I want to thank each and every one of you for the congratulations and support you shared. It truly means a lot.

We celebrated the day by recognizing our ten longest, still-active members and also by holding a contest where two members from each of our active communities could each win a $150 gift card to be used towards the purchase of their next phone. And the usernames of the lucky winners are….

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30
Jan

A webOS smartwatch from LG would prove just how right we were!


webOS smartwatch from LG. Yes, reallly.

If you can dream it, you can do it.

Source: The Verge

30
Jan

Just what is mynewpalm.com?


Just what is mynewpalm.com?

Well, this is all together something unexpected. If you point your browser to palm.com, which you might do for nostalgia's sake from time to time, no longer are you redirected to the HP webOS museum website. Instead it, along with every other palm.com address, now redirects to "mynewpalm.com". After years of languishing away under HP, something's happening here.

Digging in with the handy tools at domain name service Whois reveals that mynewpalm.com was registered by the blandly-named company "Corporate Service Corporation". On their website they advertise as being a "Digital Brand Services" company, specializing in digital brand protection. One may think that'd mean doing things like registering potential mis-typings of web domains (go ahead and type gooogle.com with three 'o's into your browser and see where that takes you). Okay, that's interesting.

But dig a little further and look at the most-recent website associated with HP and webOS: gr.am. And, yep, it turns out that the domain name of the short-lived/never-born Gram subsidiary was also registered by CSC. Huh.

So what's the plan with mynewpalm.com? Could HP be resurrecting the Palm brand? After all, the sale of webOS to LG was only of the OS assets and employees — HP kept the Palm branding. It's been a full three years since HP pulled the plug on webOS devices, but even then the Palm brand only held equity among its fans, and for a lot that equity was in nostalgia.

HP's current handheld strategy has been a disappointing line of oversized Android deviced destined solely for developing markets like India. Perhaps the Palm brand could see a revival, but we hope that if HP's planning on doing such a thing, they give the name the justice it deserves. We are, after all, talking about a brand that ushered in the PDA, smartphone, and seamless multitasking eras.

What do you think HP has in store with mynewpalm.com? It's gotta be something, right?

Thanks to Remy X, Preemptive, and lc_lol in the webOS Nation Forums!

30
Jan

HP is shutting down webOS cloud services — including backups, device set-up, and the App Catalog — on 15 January 2015


HP is shutting down webOS cloud services — including backups, device set-up, and

Well, it was bound to happen eventually, and now we know exactly the day when HP will flip the switch on the webOS cloud services servers: 15 January 2015. Just barely six years after the Palm Pre was introduced at CES 2009, HP plans to shut off their last remaining expenses related to their disastrously-managed webOS experiment. The date also falls just short of two years after HP sold off their webOS assets to LG. It's a sad, but not unexpected day. And when the 15th of January does come, all webOS cloud services will go offline.

What all does that entail? Here's what you won't be able to do on a webOS device come January 15th:

  • Backups
  • Restore
  • New device set-up
  • Password recovery
  • App Catalog app downloads
  • App Catalog app updates
  • App Catalog app restores
  • webOS system updates (you know, if you've for whatever reason not updated in the past three years…)

It's unsurprising to have this come to pass, and we're at least thankful that HP is being forthright and transparent about it. As they say in the FAQ:

Shutting down webOS cloud services is part of an orderly end of life program.  HP announced the end of webOS devices (phones and tablets) over 3 years ago but the services were kept running to allow customers to continue to have a richer user experience.  The user count has dwindled to the point where it is no longer viable to keep the services running.

It's a sad day, and it'll be a sad day yet when the 15th of January comes and those servers go dark.

But in the meantime, the webOS Nation App Gallery is still up and running. Yeah, we know, we're still here. Any developers interested in moving their apps over to the App Gallery are welcome to do so and can request access to submit apps here (select "Submit Homebrew App" as the category). We know it's not the same as the App Catalog and we don't have a system in place for payments, but what have you got to lose at this point?

For those of you that are wondering how you'll manage in a post-App Catalog world, check out our guide for installing Preware on your webOS device.

Source: HP webOS Developer Center

30
Jan

There’s now an old Palm logo on mynewpalm.com… whaaaaat?


There's now an old Palm logo on mynewpalm.com... whaaaaat?

What. Is. Happening?

Two weeks ago we found out that palm.com was redirecting to mynewpalm.com. It was weird to see activity on the old domain after so many years of silence, and now thanks to a heads-up from @LuneOSfans we've seen another update: the orange globe palm logo.

There was plenty of speculation about what was going on here, with nothing really concrete. The domain was registered by the same company that registered by the same company that managed the registration for gr.am. But what was going on with the Palm redirect? Perhaps somebody had purchased the Palm name and was setting it up for their new ocean-view condominiums or something.

WP Central

But now if you visit, you get a Palm logo with the cycling text underneath of "Coming soon" and "Smart move" (set in the Copperplate font, so sorry about that). It's a repeating mp4 video (here's the file) and nothing more right now (there's nothing hiding in the source that we can see).

It's worth noting that this is the second-to-last Palm logo. They dropped the circular orange background and went with just the angular wordmark from inside well before the HP purchase. But maybe that old logo's being used for nostalgia's sake, to tug at our heartstrings.

Either way. What. The. Hell?

30
Jan

AT&T to acquire Nextel Mexico for $1.875 billion


AT&T plans to acquire Nextel Mexico for $1.875 billion in an effort to create a massive North American Mobile Service area that will be able to offer wireless access to 400 million people. The news comes a few months after AT&T announced plans to buy another Mexico-based wireless carrier, Iusacell, for $2.5 billion.

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