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4
Jun

Samsung Galaxy S6 Active specs confirmed


A few hours ago, a render of the Samsung Galaxy S6 Active leaked out and it went live on Samsung’s official website for a brief moment, after which it was taken down. It seems Samsung is ready to make an announcement anytime and is readying to send out the press release.

samsung galaxy s6 active

Unsurprisingly, the Samsung Galaxy S6 Active was listed with AT&T branding, complete with specs and manual. It features the same hardware as the Samsung Galaxy S6, the only difference being the rugged body of Galaxy S6 Active.

The model that was listed is SM-G890AZWAATT Samsung Galaxy S6 Active AT&T, Camo White color. It sports a 5.1-inch 2560 x 1440 Super AMOLED Quad HD display, weighing in at 138 grams having physical dimensions as 5.65″ x 2.78″ x 0.27″. The battery is 2550 mAh, debunking the earlier rumored 3,500 mAh unit.

Other specs like 3GB RAM, 32GB internal memory (non-expandable), an octa-core processor, 16 MP rear camera, a 5 MP front-facing camera and a heart rate monitor are common to both the Samsung Galaxy S6 and the S6 Active. It runs on Android 5.0 Lollipop, but we expect it to be upgraded to Android 5.1 soon after release.

Like its predecessor the Samsung Galaxy S5 Active, the Samsung Galaxy S6 Active is dust and water resistant but with an upgraded IP-68 certification, covering 1.5 meters of submersion for 30 minutes.

For those of us feeling a little adventurous on the weekends, it comes with a dedicated Active button in the top left of the device. It triggers the Activity Zone app which includes barometer, weather, compass, and S Health information. The button can also be customized to perform other functions, such as taking photos.

There is no word from Samsung or AT&T on the pricing or availability of this device but we should hear about it soon.

Are you looking forward to buy the Samsung Galaxy S6 Active? Let us know in the comments below.

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The post Samsung Galaxy S6 Active specs confirmed appeared first on AndroidGuys.

4
Jun

The USAF found and flattened an ISIL base because of selfies


This picture released by Edwards Air Force Base 02

According to Air Force Gen. Hawk Carlisle, a USAF intelligence team with the 361st ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance) Group in Hurlburt Field, FL, uncovered a meaty piece of intel during their routine sweeps of Islamic State-related social media accounts. Apparently someone took a selfie outside of a headquarters building and posted it online. Guess what happened next (you read the headline, right?).

As Gen. Carlisle explained to Defense Tech:

The guys that were working down out of Hurlburt, they’re combing through social media and they see some moron standing at this command. And in some social media, open forum, bragging about the command and control capabilities for Daesh, ISIL. And these guys go: ‘We got an in.’ So they do some work, long story short, about 22 hours later through that very building, three JDAMs [Joint Direct Attack Munitions] take that entire building out.

The USAF hasn’t released many other details and is specifically keeping the location of the former HQ under wraps. Bottom line, don’t post pictures of your secret base in public forums because someone with airstrike capabilities could be reading.

[Image Credit: AFP/Getty Images]

Filed under: Internet

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Source: DefenseTech

4
Jun

Leaked trade deal stops countries from saying where your data goes


World flags (but mostly from Europe)

There’s been a fair share of leaked trade deals raising hackles in recent memory, but the latest could have some big repercussions for your data privacy. WikiLeaks has slipped out details of the in-progress Trade in Services Agreement (TISA), and one of its clauses would prevent the US, European Union and 23 other nations from controlling both where your data is stored as well as whether or not it’s accessible from outside of the country. Germany, for example, couldn’t demand that Facebook and Google store residents’ account information on local servers.

The pact might also be bad news if you’re a big fan of open source programs. One article would ban countries from requiring access to the code of “mass-market” software in order to provide services related to that software. A TISA partner could still use Linux, OpenOffice and other software with easy-to-dissect code, but it couldn’t require that kind of software.

Negotiations for TISA are happening behind closed doors, and it’s not clear whether or not these measures would make the final cut. However, they’re definitely problematic. The restrictions on exports would prevent Russia-like control over data that makes it easier to censor and snoop on your communications, but they’d also make it hard to stop your info from traveling overseas. Likewise, while the open source clause would allow for more flexibility in software, it also risks weakening security by making it harder to check for spy agency back doors. As a whole, the agreement’s tech-related elements favor businesses over privacy rights and transparency.

[Image credit: Getty Images]

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Via: Ars Technica

Source: WikiLeaks

4
Jun

Samsung Pay delayed until September


samsung-pay

Mobile payments are the latest trend to be fiercely contested by mobile OEMs with the likes of Apple and Google offering their own mobile payment systems. Samsung introduced its Samsung Pay mobile payments service alongside the Galaxy S6 at Mobile World Congress in February but has been forced to delay the launch until September.

Samsung Pay was meant to launch next month but Bloomberg reports that the Korean manufacturer has had to push the launch back its initial launch plans. In a call to investors today, Samsung Executive Vice President, Rhee In Jong, said the service will launch with the company’s next high-end mobile device, which  is expected to be the Galaxy Note 5. While it is initially launching Samsung Pay in the US and Korea, the company has confirmed that it will start rolling out in other markets – including Europe, China, Australia and South America – later this year.

A look at mobile payment’s big three: Android vs Google vs Samsung

To build its payment solution, Samsung bought LoopPay inc to help develop the technology and built Samsung Pay in conjunction partnership with MasterCard and Visa on the new service. One feature that aims to set it apart from other payment solutions is that it does not require a in-shop contactless payment solution to work and instead, is compatible with 90% of magnetic strip card readers.

Claire Kim, an analyst at Seoul-based Daishin Securities Co, said:

“The new service will likely be deployed on its next Galaxy Note device. The key is how fast Samsung will be able to expand the service to lower-end devices.”

Apple launched Apple Pay alongside the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus in September last year and since then, it has steadily increased its share of the mobile payments market. Apple Pay is limited to the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus – along with the company’s first wearable, the Apple Watch – but despite this limitation, the service is close to owning 10% of the market.

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Apple Pay won’t be the only challenger to Samsung Pay as last week, Google announced Android Pay during its I/O 2015 keynote. The new payment system will launch later this year alongside its new Android M platform and turns any smartphone application into a wallet that can be used in both physical and online shops. Android Pay will be compatible with around 700,000 stores in the US, allowing it to pose a very real challenge to Samsung‘s aims for Samsung Pay.

Google I/O 2015:

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Samsung hopes that 15 to 20 percent of its smartphone customers will use the service and as the largest smartphone manufacturer, these targets should help reverse the company’s financial decline. Whether the delay will prove costly remains to be seen but its compatibility with existing infrastructure should certainly be a positive for the Korean manufacturer.

4
Jun

Google Camera version 2.5 update brings a new focusing animation and more


Google Camera AA

Now that the Android M developer preview has been released to the masses, we’ve had a good chance to look through many of the features that the new version of Android brings to the table. While you’ll need the dev preview installed on your device to try out most of the new features for yourself, it’s looking like folks who are still running an older version of Android can get their hands on the newest version of Google Camera that comes bundled with the preview.

Read more: Diving into Android M

Google has just released an update to its official Camera application, which brings a few minor, yet notable changes to the app. For starters, a new focusing animation is present in the version 2.5 update, which is a nice change from the rotating circle that we saw in older versions.

Screenshot_2015-06-03-16-30-21

Additionally, HDR mode is much faster this time around, and a nice little confirmation sound has been added after you snap a picture in this mode. Google has also added in a thumbnail of your most recent picture near the Settings button. In previous versions, you were able to select the quality of your Lens Blur shots, with the option to choose from low or normal quality. Google has taken this option out, so now all Lens Blur shots will be taken at the same quality and speed.

The update is rolling out now to the Google Play Store, and you can head to the link below to grab the latest version. Do you see anything else new in the update? Let us know in the comment section if you do!

Get it on Google Play

4
Jun

Redesigned Apple TV Not Ready for WWDC Debut


Despite early rumors suggesting Apple would introduce a redesigned Apple TV set-top box at its Worldwide Developers Conference in June, it appears the device will not be ready to debut at that time. In a report covering what to expect at WWDC, The New York Times’ Brian X. Chen writes that Apple has postponed its plans because the product is “not ready for prime time.”

Yet one much ballyhooed device will be absent from the conference: a new Apple TV, Apple’s set-top box for televisions. The company planned as recently as mid-May to use the event to spotlight new Apple TV hardware, along with an improved remote control and a tool kit for developers to make apps for the entertainment device. But those plans were postponed partly because the product was not ready for prime time, according to two people briefed on the product.

Apple has not introduced a revamped version of its Apple TV since 2012, leading to years of rumors and speculation about the company’s plans for the device. Since 2013, nearly every Apple event has been targeted as the venue where we’ll see a new version of the Apple TV, but no product has materialized as of yet.

appletv
According to the most recent rumors, Apple is currently working on a new version of the Apple TV that will include ambitious additions like a full App Store that supports apps and games, Siri support, and an SDK for developers. It is also said to include an A8 chip, an increase in internal storage, and a touch-based remote.

There is no word on when the Apple TV might debut, but it’s possible that it could be introduced later this year alongside Apple’s rumored subscription television service. Apple was said to be targeting a WWDC launch for its TV service, but those plans were also delayed as the necessary deals are not yet in place.

With its subscription television service and set-top box off the table for the Worldwide Developers Conference, the event will focus on iOS 9, OS X 10.11, and the company’s new Beats-based streaming music service. The Apple Watch will also be a major focus, with Apple planning to debut native Apple Watch apps as shared by Jeff Williams last week.




4
Jun

Huawei Anniversary Bundle Deals


To celebrate the first anniversary of their US website, smartphone giant Huawei is offering great deals on some of their products for a limited time period.

huawei anniversary bundle deal phonesIn the Huawei Anniversary Bundle Deals, they are offering a discount of $50 for buying any of these smartphones: Huawei P8 lite, Huawei Ascend Mate 2 and Huawei Snapto. That’s not all, they are also providing a Net10 SIM card along with a $50 airtime card that provides 30 days of unlimited* Nationwide Talk, Text and Data Plan with the first 3GB data at high speed (data at 64KBPS thereafter). Now, isn’t that great!

huawei anniversary bundle deal bluetooth speakerSo, that’s a $100 discount, until now. Yes, there’s more! Huawei knows the music junkie inside all of us and has decided to throw in a free Huawei Bluetooth dual stereo speaker worth $99.99 with the purchase of one of the smartphones listed in the sale!

$200 worth of savings. What more could one want? Of course, you want more and Huawei knows it. If you buy their all new Huawei P8 lite smartphone, you get a free snap on cover to protect your phone from those little ‘accidents’.

This amazing offer is only on for 72 hours exclusively for registered email subscribers on GetHuawei.com. Time is running out guys. Go! go! go!

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The post Huawei Anniversary Bundle Deals appeared first on AndroidGuys.

4
Jun

Online video poised to outsell DVD purchases this year


Believe it or not, the surge in online streaming options from Amazon, HBO, Netflix, Hulu and others have yet to outsell DVDs. That’ll change this year, though. In a new report from consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers, money spent on video downloads and streaming subscriptions in the States will surpass DVD sales and rentals for the first time in 2015. In terms of hard numbers, online video is set to increase 13 percent and rake in $9.5 billion while physical DVD sales are expected to drop to $7.8 billion. What’s more, in 2017, the online sales figures are projected to hit the $12 billion mark, which would surpass the US box office tally for theaters. DVDs are hanging tough thanks in part to services like Redbox and Netflix’s disc option, but the format stands to meet the same fate as CDs: Music streaming outsold physical CDs last year, and is poised to overtake digital sales within three years.

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Via: Bloomberg Business

Source: PricewaterhouseCoopers

4
Jun

The Android M Preview makes for a surprisingly usable daily driver


Late last week, I fired my up Mac’s Terminal, pecked out a few half-remembered commands, looked them up, typed them out more slowly and that was that. After a few moments of silent finger-crossing, I was the proud owner of a Nexus 6 running the Android M Developer Preview. I then did something I didn’t really expect to: I turned off my iPhone and made the snap decision to use Android M — unfinished as it is — as my main squeeze until Google I/O came to an end. The show’s long over by now, but I’ve still (mostly) left my iPhone off to see how this highly incomplete version of Android stands up in day-to day-use. And you know what? For something that’s very clearly a preview, it doesn’t make for a bad daily driver.

First things first (and this should go without saying): Don’t install the Android M preview and expect to see all the whiz-bang features from the keynote working in perfect harmony. They won’t, mostly. As was the case with the Android L preview from last year, this isn’t a build meant for wowing your iOS devotee friends. It’s about giving developers an early chance to hook their apps up to Google’s modified vision, so Android Pay, Direct Share and almost all the rest are nowhere to be found. The most crushing omission in my book is the lack of Now on Tap, a conceptually dead-simple feature that provides an informational Now card based on what you say or what’s on screen. I fell in love so hard with this feature that its absence is almost palpable — some might call it creepy, but I’m more than happy to let Google decide what I want before I can.

So what is there to pay attention to? Well, there’s a revamped app launcher, for one. Instead of the discrete cards displaying your apps you swiped through in Lollipop, you’re now left with a scrolling list with apps lumped together by name. The four apps you use most often live in an ever-changing top row that does a good job keeping up with your changing moods. The quick-launch bar also makes an appearance whenever you type something into the Google Search widget, although I can’t honestly remember the last time I needed to search for something online and jumped into one of those apps instead. If you dig into the developer settings, you’ll also find a System UI tuner that — for now — only lets you rearrange the Quick Settings slots that live above your notifications shade. Device makers like LG have let us fiddle with these little bits for ages now, and it’s nice to see Google take inspiration from what others have already done to Android. (You could also be a contrarian at look at this as Google cribbing notes from OEM innovation, but that’s a debate for another time.)

One of Android M’s other big draws is its much smarter take on app permissions — the days of agreeing to permissions before you’d even used an app are over, or at least they will be down the road. You’ll still have to sign off on a manifest of permissions requests, but you can jump into the Apps menu in the settings to manually disable certain permissions. Sorry Airbnb, you’re never touching my camera again. As you can see in the above screenshot, Android is going to nag you; after all, most of the applications you’ll try this trick on won’t play nice.

I left most of my apps well alone, but I spent more than enough time coming to grips with Google’s improved sound and notification controls. You see, in the days before Lollipop, you could crank your volume all the way into a vibration-only mode, and one more click would make the phone completely silent. Now, with M, that one last click brings you into a Do Not Disturb mode that you can play with from the Quick Settings shade. Android’s original implementation felt damned-near perfect, but M’s is a step in the right direction: More often than not I’d just leave things in Priority Only mode so I could filter everything but work messages.

Beyond all that lies mostly minor changes: Your lockscreen font is a hair thicker than it used to be, and swiping from the left corner of your locked phone’s screen brings up Google’s Now voice interface instead of the dialer. If M’s insistence on white interface elements is doing a number on your retinas, you can fire up a dark theme… but that only changes the way the settings menu appears.

Now, let’s take a moment to step beyond what’s new: How well does Android M as a package actually work? If you used the Android L preview as your daily driver right out of the gate last year, you were in for world of potential, unstable hurt. That’s not at all the case this time: My sacrificial Nexus 6 generally ran as well as it did before I started fiddling with it. Almost about all of my apps were peachy after re-install, though you’ll run into lagginess and force quits more frequently than before you took the plunge. Some users have reported that their 64GB Nexus 6s were only reporting 23GB of storage space, but you can apparently fix that with a spin in the command line. Just par for the course, chums.

Thing is, when M works well, it works really well, which makes those moments of computational confusion stand out even more. Case in point? My T-Mobile LTE connection worked like a charm, say, 90 percent of the time. There were a few puzzling moments when I’d see the cell signal indicator go completely dark and my connection would go dead even though I had full service just moments before. Sometimes a quick restart would coax the connection back to life, but more often than not I just had to wait for it to decide to work again. Oh, and once or twice while using the Nexus 6 as a mobile hotspot, I kept getting routed to Google Ireland whenever I tried searching for something — I still haven’t figured that one out. None of these issues have gotten to the point that I’d call them dealbreakers, but they’re probably just enough of a headache to keep novices away.

As I’ve mentioned, If you can scarcely wrap your head around a command line, you probably shouldn’t muck around with Android M yet. It’s far from finished, and it strips away the sort of polish you’d want out of a device you carry around on the regular. Here’s the kicker, though: If you don’t mind the occasional (and usually very temporary) headache, the Android M developer preview makes for a thoughtful, mostly stable day-to-day companion. When I first fired it up, I was more surprised at how whole it feels rather than how incomplete it actually is. Several days in, that feeling hasn’t disappeared.

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4
Jun

New Apple TV hardware reportedly won’t show up at WWDC, either


Apple TV second-generation

Apple’s oft-rumored streaming TV service won’t be the only thing going AWOL from the Worldwide Developer Conference next week, it seems. New York Times sources say that 1 Infinite Loop has scrapped plans to unveil revamped Apple TV hardware (along with a matching remote and app development kit) at the gathering. Reportedly, the new media hub just wasn’t “ready for prime time” — it’s still coming, but you’ll have to wait. There’s no mention of when it’ll show up. Assuming the leak is accurate in the first place, though, history suggests that Apple could wait until September (when it usually starts releasing its big products for the year) to debut its next-generation set-top box.

Filed under: Home Entertainment, HD, Apple

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Source: New York Times