ZeroLemon 10,000 mAh solar battery, $26

Given the feedback we’ve received from our readers regarding its big brother, we’ve decided to showcase a smaller and slimmer version of the ZeroLemon solar-powered battery pack, …
You no longer have to carry a Windows Phone if you want to quickly copy receipts and meeting agendas for the sake of your notes. Microsoft has just released Office Lens in both finished form for iOS and a preview for Android, letting you use your device of choice to turn photos into usable documents. The experience is familiar if you’ve tried the app before — all you have to do is get a good snapshot, and the app will convert the output into OneNote-friendly text and image formats. Both Office Lens releases are free, so don’t hesitate to give them a spin if you’d rather take pictures than jot down memos.
Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, Microsoft
Via: Office Blogs
Today, HTC BlinkFeed has been replaced in the Play Store by another one of the company’s apps. This one, however, houses more than just BlinkFeed. The new Sense Home app acts as an umbrella for BlinkFeed, Themes, Sense widgets, and the launcher. All these apps and services are already found on the new One M9, but owners of the One (M8) are able to take advantage of them. This means that both One (M8) and One M9 owners have the ability to customize themes for their devices. Most items can be changed on the One (M8) as they would on its successor, but there are some limitations. That will change once Sense 7 rolls out to last year’s HTC flagship.
Hit the break for the gallery and download links.
Come comment on this article: HTC BlinkFeed merges into Sense Home, works with the One (M8) too

While Samsung gives us three different storage configurations for the Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge, the HTC One M9 is shipping with only one storage option, though it does have the advantage of a microSD slot. However, for those in HTC’s home country of Taiwan, a larger 64GB option has now arrived, retailing for NT$23,900 or $767.42. That’s a premium of about $67 over Taiwan’s 32GB model.
Aside from double the storage, the 64GB One M9 is otherwise the same as the 32GB model we’re seeing internationally. The One M9 64GB option will be offered both in HTC’s stores and through Chunghwa Telecom outlets in Taiwan. But what about the rest of the world? Focus Taiwan says HTC has absolutely no plans to introduce the model to other markets.
While it’s true that combining the 32GB model with a 128GB microSD card still gives One M9 users considerably more usable space than Galaxy S6 users will have, this still feels like a missed opportunity. MicroSD expansion is great, but it’s also not as fast, and we’re sure there are quite a few soon-to-be HTC One M9 users that would consider paying $50 – $75 more for double the internal storage. At the very least, HTC could throw us a bone and release an unlocked/dev version with 64GB storage.
What do you think, should HTC consider releasing additional storage variants of the One M9 internationally, or is having a microSD slot more than enough?
The European Commission is gearing to launch antitrust charges against Google over alleged anti-competitive practices.
Following more than five years of investigation and three unsuccessful settlement attempts, the European Commission, EU’s top antitrust authority, appears to be in the final stages of preparing formal antitrust charges against Google.
Google, which holds up to 90 percent of the search market in Europe, has been facing accusations of anti-competitive practices, including using its dominant position in search to funnel traffic to its own properties, rather than competitors’, “scrapping” content from news and media sites, and imposing unfair restrictions to companies that look to operate on its platforms.
According to sources cited by the Wall Street Journal, the EC is currently asking companies who have filed complaints against Google for the permission to publicize information that they supplied to the Commission confidentially. People familiar with the flow of antitrust investigations tell WSJ that this is a sure sign that the Commission will soon file formal antitrust charges against Google.
An eventual antitrust lawsuit would be the biggest since the famous suit against Microsoft, which the EC found guilty of anti-competitive behavior in promoting Windows and Internet Explorer. Microsoft paid $1.8 billion in fines and agreed to change its practices.
To be clear, there’s still time for Google and the EC to reach a settlement, though European leadership seems to favor formal charges over a settlement. And, even if Google is charged in an antitrust case, a settlement can be reached at any time. These type of affairs tend to drag on for years; if the EC finally decides to fine Google, it can slap the search giant with the equivalent of up to 10 percent of its annual revenue.
While Europe has been taking a more aggressive stance against Google, the Mountain View company had similar issues across the Atlantic. The FTC decided not to open an antitrust case against Google, but the decision has been controversial even among the regulator’s staff.
Popular third-party keyboard SwiftKey for iOS is being updated today with an interesting new feature called Tap Map, which gives an inside look at how the app works. With Tap Map, users can see how the SwiftKey AI adapts to their typing patterns to help them make fewer typos.

The Tap Map, similar to our heatmap on SwiftKey Keyboard for Android, shows how SwiftKey uses artificial intelligence to adjust the keys on your keyboard ‘behind the scenes’ to better fit your typing style. For example, if you typically hit the right half of the F key when you’re aiming for G, the shape of G on your Tap Map will probably be larger and skewed to the left.
SwiftKey is hoping users will share their different Tap Maps on Twitter, and has promised to give prizes to the tidiest and sloppiest SwiftKey users.
Today’s SwiftKey update includes usage statistics, letting users see data on how much they’ve typed, how far they’ve Flow-ed, and how many words have been predicted and corrected. It also includes information on how much a user’s productivity has been improved through the SwiftKey keyboard.
Along with the new usage information, there are also three new language packs available in SwiftKey, including Arabic, Hebrew, and Farsi.
SwiftKey can be downloaded from the App Store for free. [Direct Link]
Microsoft today announced the launch of the Office Lens app for iPhone, following its debut on Windows Phone last year. Office Lens turns the iPhone into a portable scanner, much like popular scanning app Scanner Pro, but it has the ability to upload scanned documents to both OneNote and OneDrive, making them accessible on all devices.
Office Lens‘ scanning capabilities are already built into Microsoft’s OneNote app for iOS, but today’s Office Lens release is a standalone app. It’s able to scan things like business cards, notes, restaurant menus, whiteboards, receipts, and more.
Office Lens is able to detect the corners of a document that’s being photographed, which allows it to automatically crop the image to the right size. It also cleans it up images and enhances them for better readability, and it can even straighten images taken at an angle.
The app includes optical character recognition (OCR) to make receipts and scanned documents searchable via key word in OneNote or OneDrive, and it’s able to convert images of paper documents and whiteboard notes into Word documents, PowerPoint presentations, and PDF files.
There’s also an option to automatically generate contacts when business cards are photographed, and images scanned can be inserted into OneNote or OneDrive in different formats, including DOCX, PPTX, JPG, and PDF. Images can also be saved, exported, and shared.
Microsoft’s Office Lens for iPhone app can be downloaded from the App Store for free. [Direct Link]
Given the feedback we’ve received from our readers regarding its big brother, we’ve decided to showcase a smaller and slimmer version of the ZeroLemon solar-powered battery pack, SolarJuice.
That’s right, with the SolarJuice battery pack from ZeroLemon, you’ll be able to take all of your gadgets with you no matter what the terrain. With the ability to charge up to 3 devices at once, weather-resistant design and the built-in LED flashlight, you’ll be able to harness the power of the sun to keep you connected to your digital world. Whether you’re going out into the wilderness for a hike, setting up a campfire in the mountains or just venturing into the concrete jungle for a taste of the nightlife, you never want to be without power. Compact and easy to carry for travel, SolarJuice retails for $50 but AndroidGuys readers can add this essential to their arsenal for just $26.
See more at deals.androidguys.com

Given the feedback we’ve received from our readers regarding its big brother, we’ve decided to showcase a smaller and slimmer version of the ZeroLemon solar-powered battery pack, …

In a bid to integrate virtual reality (VR) to day to day life, LG is giving away Google Cardboards for free with the G3. Google Cardboard can be paired with LG G3 to play various VR games and …

Feeling jealousy when your friends whip out their fancy new tablets at get-togethers? Smiling through the pain as they swipe through photos of their recent trip to the Carribean while you try to …

There are often times when I feel like an old prison guard with a huge loop of keys at the hip weighing me down from one side. If you’re anything like me, you’ve got more keys than …
The post ZeroLemon 10,000 mAh solar battery, $26 appeared first on AndroidGuys.
I recently called bullshit on T-Mobile for its new coverage maps. T-Mobile responded.
Yesterday I spent some time talking with Grant Castle, T-Mobile’s VP of Engineering and QA to better understand the way the data in those maps is sourced.
Mr. Castle took my pointed criticism in stride; he’s accustomed to it, working as he does for telecom’s most outrageous, salty CEO.
Mr. Castle admitted up front that the engineering models that his company and other cellular carriers use to determine coverage maps aren’t perfect, but says that T-Mobile’s goal really is to improve accuracy by incorporating customer data into the matrix as well.
The problem with coverage maps is that they just don’t tell the whole story.
It turns out that when you install the T-Mobile My Account app on your phone, you’re given the option of sending diagnostic info (anonymously) to T-Mobile. Castle explains that the app occasionally collects signal strength measurements, which are then transferred to T-Mobile. The app also distinguishes what type of technology was used during that signal strength measurement (LTE versus Wi-Fi Calling, for example).
It’s that data which T-Mobile is incorporating into the new maps. Anywhere you see a hexagon on the map is a confirmed data point derived directly from that sort of information.
Not every bit of customer-derived data is incorporated into the maps, according to Castle. T-Mobile waits until it has what Castle calls “a statistically valid number of samples” before incorporating it into the maps.
The problem with coverage maps is that they just don’t tell the whole story. Just because an area may have 4G LTE coverage doesn’t necessarily mean you can do anything with that coverage. I often see one, even two bars of 4G LTE on my iPhone 6 (connected to T-Mobile’s network), but I’ll still time out when instant messaging or trying to connect to the Internet.
Here’s a practical example: I get one bar of 4G LTE coverage from the parking lot of my wife’s work, also in the same town we live in. We often share a car, so I’ll pick her up at the end of the day and try to let her know I’m there by texting or calling her. Her work, and the commute home, is in the dark magenta coverage area we see on this new T-Mobile map:
If I can actually connect when I call, I’m amazed. If I can be understood, it’s almost miraculous. Forget about actually using data. Just the other day she called me from the parking lot, and I couldn’t understand a word she was saying. Yet she technically had a 4G LTE connection.
Here’s another: Because in-house coverage for T-Mobile is so poor, and because Wi-Fi Calling by design prevents you from using some Handoff features like Call Relay, which I depend on, we don’t use Wi-Fi Calling in my house. Instead, my family and I rely on a free T-Mobile-provided signal booster in order to use our phones in the house. Without it we’re lucky to get one bar anywhere in the house.
T-Mobile still has significant technical challenges before it.
With the signal booster propped in an upstairs window, we get four or five bars continuously. So all the data we’re reporting to T-Mobile show a strong, healthy 4G signal. Even though that’s not reflective of what anyone off my property line is going to see, or indeed even what I see when I walk into my back yard or my driveway and try to make a call.
T-Mobile still has significant technical challenges before it. The company is trying to bolster rural coverage, and a particular weakness of T-Mobile, indoor coverage, by deploying cell transmitters that operate on a 700 MHz radio band. AT&T and Verizon both use 700 MHz and have much better indoor and outlying area coverage than T-Mo. That’s taking time, and it’s a patchwork effort because of problems with digital video broadcasts in some areas. What’s more, not all phones T-Mobile sells or supports work with the 700 MHz LTE band it’s deployed, including the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus.
From my perspective, I remain a T-Mobile customer for a few reasons: First and foremost, I pay a lot less for T-Mobile service than I did for AT&T, and get a lot more for the money.
Second, I genuinely like my interactions with T-Mobile support people: Their customer service and tech support folks really have gone above and beyond to help when I’ve needed it.
Third, despite my local connectivity woes, I’ve seen T-Mobile coverage improve dramatically in my area over the past two years. It’s not perfect, by any stretch, but it is getting better.
And finally, I enjoy supporting the scrappy upstart: I like how disruptive T-Mobile has been to the competition, and I like being in their corner.
I just wish T-Mobile’s marketing wouldn’t get ahead of their engineering. Because no one likes being lied to. And based on what I read in the discussion thread on my last editorial and what I heard from you on social media, neither do you.
Am I off base? Is T-Mobile just doing what every other carrier does? Sound off in the comments and let me know what you think.
Switfkey will show users on iOS just how erratic their typing is with Tap Map, a new feature available now.
In the latest update, Swiftkey has introduced some new features to the popular custom keyboard for iOS, such as Tap Map, usage stats, and additional language support. Swiftkey is all about improving your typing accuracy, and the new tools give users visibility of their typing habits. Tap Map will show users where they are pressing on the screen, and how Swiftkey uses artificial intelligence (AI) to accommodate their habits. Behind the scenes the keyboard will adapt based on the information collected to give the most accurate typing experience possible.
In addition to Tap Map, Swiftkey is going to begin showing usage stats on iOS. Android users have previously been able to see how many taps they have saved, or how many words were corrected, and this is now making the move over to iOS as well.
Typing stats give you facts and figures about how much you’ve typed, how far you’ve flowed, and how many words have been corrected and predicted so far using SwiftKey. The info in both your Tap Map and your typing stats is based on data that the app has been recording since you downloaded SwiftKey – check out how far you’ve come!
Lastly, the update brings support for Arabic, Hebrew and Farsi, which is something many users have been requesting. Swiftkey will be dishing out prizes to the best and worst Tap Maps, to participate Tweet yours with the hashtag ‘#tapmap’. The update is available now on the App Store, and if you are not already using it be sure to give it a shot at the link below.
Amazon seems determined to inch its way into every aspect of our lives. The company already has a phone, a set-top box and an entire line of tablets. But what about when you’re nowhere near any such devices? Earlier this week Amazon introduced Dash, allowing you to order household products with the touch of a button. However, last year Amazon also released the Echo, a wireless speaker that doubles as a voice-activated personal assistant named Alexa. Need to play music, search the web or — wait for it — order products from Amazon? Ask and Alexa will make it happen. If having a virtual servant didn’t already make you feel posh, it should be noted that the Amazon Echo ($199, or $99 currently for Prime members) is still an invitation-only product, making units hard to come by. Thus, we turn to our readers to find out if Alexa is your go-to gal, or if this is a waiting list you’re better off skipping.
“A sleek, modern design that is attractive and requires very little space.”
At first blush the Echo is rather attractive, with JoshuaLawson admiring its clean design and mohan37 saying it “looks slick on the countertop.” But you can’t just place it on any table or counter. As skyward01 notes, the Echo needs to be plugged into an electrical outlet, which “limits the locations where the Echo can be positioned.” Aviator4468 does feel it’s “a very handy gadget” to have in your living room or kitchen.

As a speaker, JoshuaLawson says the Echo “performs very, very well” and the excellent sound quality was the first thing he noticed. Mohan37 says the “highs are crisp, and lows are decent” for a speaker this size, and skyward01 finds it “does not distort even at high volume.” But if you just needed a good speaker, there are plenty of cheaper options available.
“I can use the voice command function from across the room without any issues.”
The real reason to buy an Echo is for its voice-recognition features, a virtual assistant that goes by the name “Alexa,” though you can rename her. This is particularly handy if someone in your household is named Alexa or something similar; skyward01 reported that the Echo would often respond when his wife Melissa’s name was called. Fortunately, al1885 “only experienced a handful of wake-word misses from Echo in about a month” and found Alexa’s voice rather pleasant.
In action, mohan37 says that the “voice recognition is excellent” and that Alexa “parses things amazingly accurately” though she “may not be able to act on everything you say.” While users like floridaman1942 and al1885 were excited by Echo’s potential, other users were hamstrung by its limitations. Skyward01’s family found themselves repeating their requests quite often, and he says Alexa “didn’t live up to the hope of the intelligent personal assistant that was presented in Amazon’s video about the Echo.” MolonLabe says Alexa’s “limited speech recognition and rigid speech rules are shoddy,” while JoshuaLawson noticed that “you can ask her to define or describe something from Wikipedia, but ask her a question that would require contextual understanding and you get nowhere.”
“I can listen to the news, weather and music without getting out of bed.”
However, there are a few bright spots, and mohan37 says that “the shopping list has already helped streamline trips to the store between my wife and I.” He’s also noticed that “general knowledge questions seem to go pretty well,” as well as a few Easter eggs of note: Star Trek fans should try asking for “tea, Earl Grey, hot.”
The Amazon Echo isn’t quite a must-buy yet, but plenty of users are excited for its potential. Mohan37 feels that “one of the most exciting things about Echo is knowing that it’s growing” and floridaman1942 thinks it can be “a great tool for shut-ins, people confined to beds or wheelchairs, people with eye problems or short-term sick people.” Indeed, in spite of his rather disappointing experience with the device, skyward01 says the Echo’s potential is “genuinely amazing” though its current novelty “wears off quickly.” And, while he says we aren’t there yet, JoshuaLawson feels the Echo is a sign that “we’re on our way to the future.”
Filed under: Misc, Household, Portable Audio/Video, Amazon