How to Enable Two-Step Verification for Apple ID [iOS Blog]
Apple introduced an additional layer of security for iPhone, iPad and Mac users a few years ago by rolling out two-step verification for Apple ID accounts. Two-step verification prevents anyone from accessing an Apple ID account, even if they know the password, by requiring a four-digit verification code sent via SMS or Find My iPhone. When you enable two-step verification, you must register at least one trusted device capable of receiving SMS text messages.
Once activated, two-step authentication is required when managing your Apple ID through My Apple ID, signing into iCloud, or making iTunes, iBooks or App Store purchases from a new device. Apple has also expanded two-step authentication to iMessage and FaceTime, requiring users to input an authentication code from a verified device on accounts that have two-factor verification enabled to prevent unauthorized entry attempts through both services. Read more 
5 Android apps you shouldn’t miss this week! – Android Apps Weekly
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Sponsor: Tiddalick
[Price: Free]
Our sponsor this week is Tiddalick. This game has you feeding a hungry frog using quick reflexes. It’s fast paced and addicting and the premise is great for both adults and kids. It’s also free with no in app purchases so there’s literally no harm in trying it out plus there is Google Play Games support! We’d like to thank developers Good Game Group for their support of Android Apps Weekly!


Welcome back to Android Apps Weekly! Here are your headlines this week:
- Microsoft has officially bought Sunrise Calendar for $100 million.
- Today Calendar developer Jack Underwood has implemented some hilarious anti-piracy measures in his app.
- Google Drive is giving away 2GB of free storage. Microsoft is giving away 100GB of free storage (for 2 years).
- Joe Danger is coming out on Google Play and Amazon Appstore sometime in 2015.
- Xposed Framework is coming to Lollipop “soon”, according to the developer.
Don’t forget to check out this week’s newsletter for a complete list of headlines, updates, and new Android apps and games releases! Why not subscribe while you’re there? And now here are five Android apps you shouldn’t miss this week!
Skype
[Price: Free]
Skype received a big update this last week that allows you to send photos to offline contacts that will receive upon getting online again. Along with the photo sharing, there were also some bug fixes and performance improvements but otherwise it’s same old free video and chat platform we all know.


HERE Maps
[Price: Free]
The popular Nokia alternative to Google Maps received an update this last week for both Android and Windows Phone. The update includes significant improvements to a whole bunch of places around the world including support for new countries, better graphics for rivers and lakes, and updates to other countries.

SlingTV
[Price: Free app / $20/month subscription]
DISH turned heads this last week with the release of SlingTV. This gives you 20 television stations for $20 a month including ESPN, TBS, TNT, Cartoon Network, and others. You can also get some additional sports and kids channels in $5/month packages. Sadly, no major hockey channels but the service looks good.

businesswire
Limbo
[Price: $4.99]
Limbo is a new 2D horror game where you must solve puzzles, dodge obstacles, and search for your lost sister. The graphics are minimal black and white and the design plays a huge part in the atmosphere of the game. It’s $4.99 but currently rocks an astounding 4.9 rating in the Google Play Store.

ScreenPop Lockscreen Messenger
[Price: Free]
ScreenPop Lockscreen Messenger is an app that does exactly what the name says it does. It’s a photo-based messaging service where messages are delivered directly to your lock screen. It’s an interesting concept that looks really fun but do keep in mind that there’s almost no security. However, messages disappear as soon as you unlock the device or reply.

Wrap up
If we missed any great Android apps or games news, let us know in the comments! Also, don’t forget to subscribe to the Android Apps Weekly newsletter for news straight to your inbox!
Motorola extends online promotion through February 17
Motorola last not shot out emails advising that its Valentine’s Day weekend promotion will be extended a few more days. Indeed, you can now save a sizable chunk of money on products through Monday, February 17.
This sale has been extended! You now have until 11:00 a.m. CT on Tuesday, February 17 to take advantage of this awesome deal.
Take $100 off a purchase of $499.99 or more, or $35 off a $249.99 purchase.
Although not everything is available under the promo (excludes Nexus 6, Moto X 2014 for Republic Wireless, and Motorola’s Extended Service Plan), there’s plenty of great stuff to be had.
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Samsung starts teasing “The Next Galaxy” in new Twitter campaign
Samsung has just kicked off a new teaser campaign entitled “The Next Galaxy” with a Twitter post and video. The 17-second clip gives very little away about the device in question. In fact, it doesn’t show anything at all. The movie is simply intended to get us all excited for its upcoming flagship smartphone, and, we have to say, its succeeded. We can’t wait to see what the South Korean company comes up with.
Anyway, if you want to see the teaser video, hit the break below.
I am #TheNextGalaxy. Be inspired by my vision at #Unpacked. https://t.co/Qu3e4L2DEg
— TheNextGalaxy (@SamsungMobile) February 13, 2015
Come comment on this article: Samsung starts teasing “The Next Galaxy” in new Twitter campaign
Next Windows 10 desktop build won’t be out next week, but current one to be updated
Microsoft’s next major build of its Windows 10 desktop preview won’t likely be released next week, but the company does plan to release an update for the current 9926 build in that time frame.
Hasbro wants you to help design a new Monopoly board
In a world where most people chill out with Minecraft and Candy Crush, it’s hard to get excited about a board game. Perhaps that’s the point however, since Hasbro is hoping that we’ll get misty-eyed with nostalgia about the family arguments that ensue from playing Monopoly. The game’s 80th birthday is rapidly approaching, and so the company is teaming up with Buzzfeed to ask the denizens of the internet to help design the next version of the game.
In travel-themed version of the game Monopoly: Here & Now, users visit cities of the US or the world, collecting passport stamps. Users will be asked to vote on which US cities will be eligible for the America-only edition, as well as global locations for the, er, global version that’ll be sold everywhere else. If your city isn’t mentioned, March 3rd and March 9th is “Wild Card Week,” where people can write-in specific locations and encourage others to do the same. The folks over at Buzzfeed will be tallying all of the votes, as well as, presumably, creating .GIF-filled lists of reasons why we should vote for Adamstown over Medellin, for instance.
Filed under: Gaming
Source: Buzzfeed / Vote Monopoly
Anandtech’s Snapdragon 810 preview: no overheating issues spotted

The launch run up for Qualcomm’s new flagship Snapdragon 810 mobile SoC has been plagued with rumors and speculation regarding performance and overheating issues, despite numerous rebuttals from Qualcomm and mobile manufacturers partners. Fortunately, AnandTech has put Qualcomm’s latest high-end chip through its paces, giving us the closest look yet at what sort of performance we can actually expect from the Snapdragon 810.
For a quick recap before we delve into some of the most interesting results, the Snapdragon 810 is Qualcomm’s first ARM Cortex-A57 and A53, big.LITTLE based SoC and the first 800 series chip to depart from the company’s custom Krait CPU design. The SoC’s CPU is a closer match to Samsung’s Exynos 5433, however there are some big differences in the broader SoC design, and not just limited to the use of Qualcomm’s new high-end Adreno 430 GPU and LPDDR4 memory. Qualcomm is also making the move to TSMC’s 20nm manufacturing process, bringing with it additional energy efficiencies.
See the spec table below for a quick comparison.
| SoC | Snapdragon 810 | Snapdragon 805 | Exynos 5433 |
|---|---|---|---|
| CPU | 4x Cortex A53@1.56GHz
4x Cortex A57 r1p1 @1.96GHz |
4x Krait 450@2.65GHz 4x512KB L2 cache |
4x Cortex A53 r0p1@1.3GHz 512KB L2 cache 4x Cortex A57 r1p0 @1.9GHz |
| Memory | 2x 32-bit @ 1555MHz LPDDR4 24.8GB/s b/w |
4x 32-bit @ 800MHz LPDDR3 25.6GB/s b/w |
2x 32-bit @ 825MHz LPDDR3 13.2GB/s b/w |
| GPU | Adreno 430 @ 600MHz |
Adreno 420 @ 600MHz |
Mali T760MP6 @ 700MHz |
| Process | TSMC 20nm SoC | TSMC 28nm HPm | Samsung 20nm HKMG |
CPU & Memory
We’ll start with the CPU results, the component at the center of the performance and overheating rumors. AnandTech ran a series of benchmarks using the Qualcomm Snapdragon 810 Mobile Development Platform (MDP) tablet. In summary, performance can vary somewhat depending on the test, but overall the Snapdragon 810 makes its way towards the top of most of the results. GeekBench 3 results show roughly a 30 percent increase in performance over the Snapdragon 805 and similar performance to Samsung’s Exynos 5433, as you would expect.
However, the Snapdragon 810 CPU seemed to struggled in the WebXPRT test, with performance ending up somewhere around the level of the much older Snapdragon 801 and far behind the Exynos 5433. Worryingly, AnandTech was unable to run the test multiple times to double check the result and suggests that some thermal throttling or other issues could still be present.
Oddly, the Snapdragon 810 also shows some poor results when the SoC’s memory is put through its paces. Performance shows no real gains over the Snapdragon 805 or Exynos 5433, despite the supposedly higher bandwidth available. Instead, the available bandwidth appears similar to many existing products, while the memory latency test falls far behind expectations. This could account for some of the other CPU test result anomalies, and we will have to wait and see if this problem persists in consumer grade products.
When running overall system benchmarks, the results are again somewhat mixed, but average out well overall. A point worth noting is that web and system Basemark OS II scores are some 20 percent lower than the Galaxy Note 4’s Exynos 5433. Perhaps this is one of the reasons Samsung is reportedly dropping orders for the Snapdragon 810.
One interesting difference between Qualcomm and Samsung’s implementation of the ARM Cortex-A57 and A53 big.LITTLE core arrangement is power and task scheduling, which is important for efficiently delegating tasks between the eight CPU cores. Samsung has implemented the ARM and Linaro developed Global Task Scheduling, while Qualcomm has opted for its own window-based system instead. There’s a lot more about the specifics in the original article, but the takeaway is that Qualcomm’s solution is superior overall and could help level the performance and energy differences as Samsung moves to an even smaller manufacturing process, even though it does have its own drawbacks. Some of these gains come from specific optimizations made for Qualcomm’s chip, while ARM’s reference scheduler has to work with a wider range of core options.
Despite falling short in some tests, the Snapdragon 810 offers up noticeable CPU performance improvements from the previous 805 and 801 generation, but the SoC is not going to leap miles ahead of competing chips on the market. Fortunately, there doesn’t appear to be any obvious issues with heat or performance, but there is clearly room for further optimizations come final grade consumer devices.
GPU
Qualcomm is also throwing in its latest and greatest Adreno GPU into the Snapdragon 810. The Adreno 430 promises a 30 percent increase in performance over the Snapdragon 805’s Ardeno 420, despite both clocking in at 600 MHz each.
The first selection of 3DMark 1.2 results show that the Adreno 430 is capable of even greater performance improvements, showing up to a 65 percent increase in performance and coming in right behind the Google Nexus 9’s impressive Nvidia Tegra K1 Kepler GPU. However, physics performance comes in considerably behind older Snapdragon based devices, which may have something to do with the hit and miss CPU performance detailed earlier.
The Snapdragon 810 MDP tablet comes with a 4K display and Qualcomm appears to have been targeting this ultra-high resolution with its latest GPU. However, the “onscreen” GFXBench 3.0 benchmark show that silky smooth performance at this resolution remains out of the Adreno 430’s reach, although it can rival the performance of the Adreno 330 in 2K display devices such as the LG G3.
“Offscreen” tests give us a more independent look at how GPU’s compare with one another, and the Snapdragon 810 manages a 33 percent improvement over the 805 in Manhattan and 16 percent in T-Rex benchmarks, and boast similar gains over the Exynos 5433’s Mali T-760 GPU.
AnandTech also tested a range of GPU attributes to identify where performance improvements had been made between the Adreno 430 and 420. The result found that ALU performance was up 46 percent and shader focused based tasks showed around a 30 percent performance improvement, while other GPU elements showed no significant performance improvements.
Overall then, the Snapdragon 810’s Adreno 430 GPU looks to offer a significant performance improvement over last generation SoCs, and is probably the chip’s biggest area of improvement. However, real world performance is likely to depend on the type of workload, with some scenarios possibly showing little improvement over the Adreno 420. As expected, smooth 4K performance is still off the table this generation.
Both CPU and GPU performance looks to be in-line with what is expected from the 810’s technology, although memory issues and hit and miss CPU results are somewhat worrisome. The chip likely won’t be as far ahead as the competition as previous high-end Qualcomm SoCs, but Qualcomm’s leading integrated modem technology is still likely to make it the company of choice for most mobile manufacturers. Fortunately, rumored major overheating issues do not appear to have manifested in the (almost) finished product.
Candy Crush Saga Players Spent Over $1.3 Billion on In-App Purchases in 2014 [iOS Blog]
Candy Crush Saga may have reached peak popularity, with quarterly spending declining over the past eighteen months, but that hasn’t stopped the sweet-swapping puzzle game from raking in the cash. Candy Crush Saga players still spent over $1.3 billion on the game in 2014 alone, according to The Guardian, with dollars being used towards in-app purchases such as extra lives, extra moves, color bombs, lollipop hammers and gold bars.
Candy Crush Saga continues to be the third-highest grossing app in the United States, closely trailed by Candy Crush Soda Saga at sixth overall. The game has gained a cult-like following since launching on the App Store in June 2013, following in the footsteps of other smash-hit games such as Infinity Blade and Angry Birds. The game was most lucrative when it pulled in $551 million during the third quarter of 2013.
The latest financial numbers from King, the developer of the game, reveal that Candy Crush Saga represented 45% of spending on the company’s games during the final quarter of 2014, the first quarter in a long time that the iconic title did not make up the majority of its revenue. King has been working to diversify its gaming portfolio so that it relies less on Candy Crush Saga to remain profitable. The company had 356 million monthly unique users playing its games last quarter.
Earlier this week, Apple introduced a new category on the App Store to promote games without in-app purchases. The “Pay Once & Play” section offers a range of titles that are organized into the following categories: Recent Releases, Blockbuster Games, and App Store Originals. Some of the featured titles include Thomas Was Alone, Minecraft – Pocket Edition, Hero Emblems, Threes, Blek, and Goblin Sword.
Samsung working on 24×7 live chat support for customers
If you own a Samsung device and reside in Malaysia, Taiwan, Singapore, the Philippines, or New Zealand, you’ll soon have the ability to chat live with a Samsung representative at all hours of the day, any day, for support on your Samsung products.
The app, Galaxy Life, will soon be receiving an update that allows for this 24×7 live chat support. Also mentioned is that there will be a gold tier service for owners of flagship devices, but what services are rendered in that tier have not been disclosed.
The Galaxy Life app currently offers many deals and vouchers for residents of those five countries, including rewards to restaurants and theatres.
No word on when or if we may see this customer service feature expanded to other global markets.
Source: Amanz.my via SamMobile
Come comment on this article: Samsung working on 24×7 live chat support for customers
HTC One (M9) specs and accessory list now confirmed
We have seen numerous leaks regarding the specs of the HTC One (M9), but they are now confirmed. At the same time we also have the full list of accessories. There isn’t anything too surprising here, but this information might be helpful if you’re still working through whether you want to grab the Galaxy S 6 or the One (M9) this spring.
It’s also been confirmed that there will be a developer edition in the U.S. that will be compatible with AT&T and T-Mobile.
The phone will launch in Asia, Canada, U.S., Europe, Africa, UAE, Russia, Turkey, and China(Mainland). For the U.S., it has been confirmed to be available at AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon Wireless.
Phone Specifications
- 5-inch FHD (1920 x 1080) display *Still a question mark here
- Qualcomm Snapdragon 810 MSM8994 processor
- 3GB DDR4 RAM
- 32GB or 64GB ROM
- 20.7MP Main Camera with Dual LED Flash
- 4MP UltraPixel Front Camera
- BoomSound
- Bluetooth 4.1
- micro SD Card slot
- 2840mAh Battery
- Support VoLTE, Carrier Aggregation and LTE Category 6 up to 300Mbps for Download, 50Mbps for Upload
- Android 5.0.2 with Sense 7.0(TBD for Android version)
Accessory List
- HTC DotView 2(with more abundant colors than M8’s) – HC M231/232
- Clear Case – HC C1153
- Stand Case – HC K1150
- Waterproof Case(has IP68 rating) – HC C1152
- Waterproof Headset – RC E250
- Headset 2015 – MAX 500
- HTC BoomBass with WiFi support(Old phones are also can use if the phone updated to Sense 7.)
- Screen Protector – SP R230
So what do you think? I am not loving the size of the battery.
source: Upleaks
Come comment on this article: HTC One (M9) specs and accessory list now confirmed
















