AT&T Introduces New Mobile Share Value Plans With More Data
AT&T today announced that the carrier plans to introduce a couple of new Mobile Share Value Plans beginning tomorrow, further expanding data bucket options for its customers while simultaneously cutting the prices of a few existing data storage options. Customers will have new options like 2GB ($30) and 5GB ($50), but those who opt-in for a plan with 15GB or higher will get unlimited talk and text to Mexico and Canada.

“There’s never been a better time to be an AT&T customer,” said David Christopher, chief marketing officer, AT&T Mobility. “Tomorrow, we roll out new plans for everyone, including a plan that gives 50% more data than on our most popular plan. And we’re not done yet.”
The announcement today sees the price of the 15GB plan cut from $130 to $100, alongside the 20GB plan getting reduced down from $150 to $140. The company notes that larger-size plans like 25GB, 30GB, 40GB and 50GB are also available, and business customers can get plans that go up to as much as 200GB.
All of the plans being announced tomorrow cover the same benefits and options under AT&T Next, which allows users to pay for their phone in monthly installment plans of 12, 18, or 24 months. AT&T mentions briefly that “select locations” still provide two year contracts for $40 per line, but the company is in obvious motions to begin supporting subsidized contracts less and less as they pivot to a focus on Next’s installment plans.
We’re giving away 50 OnePlus 2 invites

Last month OnePlus formally announced the long-anticipated sequel to the OPO, boldly proclaiming it to be a 2016 flagship killer. Lofty word choice aside, the OnePlus 2 is easily one the best flagships out there for under $400, packing specs that are almost on the same level as flagships that cost nearly twice as much. The biggest downside to the OnePlus 2, however, is the return of the invite system.
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While the invite system is reportedly improved this time around, you still have to wait in virtual line to buy the phone. This is especially difficult considering there are already roughly two million folks waiting for an invite at this point. Thankfully, that’s where we come in.
OnePlus has graciously handed us 50 invites to give away as we see fit, and what better way than to give them away to our readers at random? Entering is simple, just remember that you must enter before the giveaway ends on Wednesday, Aug 19 at 11:59pm PST.
It is also important to remember that if you win an invite you’ll still have to purchase the OnePlus 2, you just won’t have to wait in line any longer. The base 16GB version will set you back $329, or you can get the 64GB model with 4GB RAM for $389.
Have a question about the OnePlus 2? Ask us anything in our forums.
Google can spot friends nearby and tell if you’re glad to see them
Are you happy that Google’s new Play Services software for Android developers is out? If not, one of the new features may tell you to turn that frown upside down. Google’s latest APIs for Android apps include “Mobile Vision” face detection and “Nearby Messages” notifications. Mobile Vision works with video or still images to detect faces at any angle or orientation and determine if a person is smiling or has their eyes closed (see the video, below). Google points out, however, you won’t be able to go all Enemy of the State, because it’s not a facial recognition app.
The other main feature is Nearby Messages that lets you “find and communication with mobile devices and beacons based on proximity,” according to Google’s Magnus Hyttsten. It’s an extension of the “Nearby Connections” services that finds people around you so that you can game with them on mobile. The new service can spot devices using WiFi, Bluetooth and even ultrasonic sound to allow users to share messages, collaborate on content or vote on something. It also includes a beacon API, working in much the same way as Apple’s Beacon to find local services and information.
The new features are cool, but a bit creepy, security-wise — nowadays, folks are understandably paranoid about things like proximity detection and face tracking. We hope that Google implements the necessary security measures, but it’s been in the news lately for not doing that.
Filed under:
Cameras
Tags: apps, Developers, FaceDetection, Google, video
Fitbit adds Cortana support, Xbox One app coming this year
Fitbit’s updated its Windows app for Windows 10. The app features all-new Live Tiles, pushes notifications to the Action Center, and supports Cortana voice commands. Saying things like “Fitbit, I ate chicken for dinner” or “Fitbit, I went for a three-mile run” will see Cortana automatically logging that activity. The app supports the entire Fitbit range, including its smart scale, and, as it’s a universal app, it’ll also eventually play nicely with other Windows 10 platforms. That means it’ll come to both Windows 10 phones and — for the first time — the Xbox One console later this year.
Although third-party support for Microsoft’s mobile platforms has been limited at best, Fitbit has always worked to ensure its devices work with Windows. Apps are already available for Windows 8.1, Windows Phone 8.1, and Windows RT. You’ll have to wait a little for the mobile and console versions, but you can check out Fitbit’s new app at the Windows Store now.
Filed under:
Gaming, Wearables, Software
Via:
VentureBeat
Source:
Fitbit (PDF), (Windows Store)
Tags: app, cortana, fitbit, update, voicecommands, windows10
Younger version of Jupiter provides clues to planet formation
It’s likely not the first time you’ll hear scientists compare an exoplanet to Jupiter. According to a team of astronomers, though, this one called the 51 Eridani b isn’t only similar in size — it’s “very much what models suggest Jupiter was like in its infancy.” 51 Eri b, which has an atmosphere rich in methane, was spotted using the Gemini Planet Imager’s new instrument mounted on the Gemini South Telescope in Chile. The instrument is as big as a small car, was made to filter out atmospheric turbulence and was optimized to spot faint planets next to bright stars. This exoplanet, for instance, is a million times less luminous than its host star, which is only 20 million years old or so; our own sun is already 4.5 billion years old.
So, how exactly does 51 Eri b resemble the biggest planet in our solar system? To start with, it’s only twice the size of Jupiter, whereas the ones discovered in the past were around five times as big. Also, scientists suspect that it formed the same way the gas giants in our solar system did. The other Jupiter-like exoplanets are all too hot, but 51 Eri b has a temperature of 800 degrees Fahrenheit and is considered “cold” like Jupiter, which has an average temp of 234 degrees.
It could be because just like our gas giants, it first formed a rocky core for a few million years before it started attracting gases. Other planets are likely hot, because they pulled in gases too quickly. The astronomers are hoping that this young exoplanet can help them better understand how our gas giants formed around the sun. But before that, they hope to spot it again in September as it reappears from behind its star — just to make sure it’s really a planet.
[Image credit: Danielle Futselaar & Franck Marchis/SETI Institute]
Filed under:
Science
Source:
Lawrence Livermore National Library, Berkeley
Tags: exoplanet, jupiter, nasa, space
The realities of a $50 smartphone
As mobile networks kill off phone subsidies, users might now begin to appreciate just how much their new smartphone really costs. It’s an even bigger problem in the developing world, where relatively few have the cash to buy even a mid-range phone like the Moto G. Google attempted to remedy the problem with Android One, but the first generation of “affordable” devices were far too expensive. That’s why the company is pledging to get the cost of a smartphone down to just $50 — a price that, right now, seems impossible to achieve. If Google can do it, however, it’ll be able to connect countless people in countries like India, the Philippines and Turkey. Fifty dollars isn’t a lot of money to put together a device, so what sort of phone can you get for the money?
“If you had asked me this a year ago, I would have said that it was impossible.” Wayne Lam is the principal telecoms analyst for IHS, a financial company that looks at the technology market. As part of the experiment, he offered to cook up a hypothetical device that, if someone built it today, could probably be mass-produced for under $50. He worked out that the upper limit for a bill of materials would be around $42, and worked backward to build out a spec list from there. It wasn’t pretty, since “any time you put a constraint on the design, like a maximum price, you end up having to make compromises.”
Display: $8

The most expensive individual component in your smartphone is probably the display, and a 5-inch-plus Quad HD panel alone can cost up to $100. Samsung makes its own screens and could only cut the price of the curved, 5.1-inch unit that sits atop the Galaxy S6 Edge down to a reported $85 (with the standard S6 display going for about $24 less). If that’s a first-class ticket, then the $50 smartphone will probably be traveling in coach, or maybe freight — or maybe just paddling to its destination in a coracle.
Lam suggested that the most likely display for our affordable smartphone would be a 4- to 4.5-inch FWVGA (854 x 480) panel. That’s the same screen that you would have found on Sony’s Xperia M from 2013, spec nerds. According to Lam, the display would account for roughly 15 to 19 percent of the $42 bill of materials, which we work out to be about $7.98. If you wanted to push your luck, you could swap that out for a 4.7-inch HD display, although the cost would skyrocket to closer to 30 percent of the cost: $12.60.
Design: Free

The trick to designing a low-cost smartphone, according to MediaTek’s VP of corporate marketing Siegmund Redl, is making use of a reference design. That’s when a company (in this case Google) lays out a blueprint for what a cheap device could, or should, be and leaves the manufacturer with the task of building it. As he explains: “The manufacturer no longer needs to worry about the basic underlying technology, but can solely concentrate on the industrial and feature-add design.” If you’ve ever wandered into a Best Buy and wondered what the difference is between all of those $150 smartphones, the likelihood is: not much. That’s because the majority of them are based on the same reference design, albeit with a few tweaks depending on the generosity (or not) of the company in question.
System-on-a-Chip: $10

The most important thing a smartphone needs is the tiny portable computer that resides beneath the steel, plastic and glass. Most high-end phones come with a name-brand chip from an outfit like Qualcomm or NVIDIA, with the most prominent right now being the Snapdragon 810. That’s the chip that you’ll find inside the HTC One M9, OnePlus 2 and LG G Flex2, among others, and it costs a pretty penny.
You’re not going to find one of those inside your $50 smartphone, which is likely to run on a chip from a second- or third-tier firm like MediaTek or Allwinner. It’s not as if it’s just a CPU, either, since these systems-on-a-chip combine everything that you’d need to run a phone. Let’s take MediaTek’s MT6582 as an example, since it was the basis for the first generation of Android One devices when they launched last year.
This unit packs in a 1.3GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A7 CPU, Mali 400 graphics, a HSPA+ modem, WiFi, Bluetooth, GPS and FM radio. This same product is also capable of supporting 8-megapixel cameras and has enough power to push pictures for a 1,280 x 720 HD display while recording full HD video. If that all sounds a bit too jargon-y for you, then the short version is this: It may be cheap, but it’s no slouch.
The bottom end of the chip-manufacturing world is highly competitive, and no company would go on the record to reveal how much they’d charge for a comparable system. We did, however, speak to one source familiar with the matter who revealed that they’d expect to pay around $10 for this sort of budget system. It’s important to note that this figure doesn’t include either storage or RAM, two of the more expensive individual components that you’ll find inside a smartphone.
RAM and storage: $10

Flash-based memory is one of the most competitive markets in the smartphone-manufacturing world, and nobody was prepared to talk to us, even off the record, about the costs involved. That’s why we’re forced to rely upon IHS’ calculations for how much it costs to produce the RAM and storage inside Samsung’s Galaxy S6 Edge. According to the firm, 3GB of LPDDR4 SDRAM and 64GB of eMMC NAND storage would set you back $27.50 and $25, respectively.
By comparison, most of the first-generation Android One devices shipped with 1GB RAM and 4GB storage. If we assume everything else is equal, we can work out that 1GB of RAM would cost roughly $9, with 4GB storage being priced at about $1.50. From this, we can be fairly sure that these two components together would probably round out to $10. It also goes some way to explaining why low-end smartphones still ship with microSD card slots while their higher-end rivals sacrifice them in exchange for more onboard capacity.
Battery and cameras $5

What are the other two things you always look for when buying a smartphone? The battery and camera, and we went back to Lam to ask what he expected these two components to go for. In his calculations, a 1,600mAh unit would come to roughly 5 percent of the overall price, or $2.10. On the imaging front, a 5-megapixel primary camera and a 2-megapixel forward-facing unit would take up a similar share of the bill, bringing the cost for both parts to around $5.
The rest: $9

If we’re working from the idea that the materials can cost no more than $42, we’re left with $9 to turn these components into a smartphone. That’s barely enough to get a satisfying meal at McDonald’s, let alone be able to source useful sensors, audio equipment, antennas and housing required to build a device. You could borrow some cash from the leftover $8, of course, but from that budget you’ve got to cram out packaging, marketing, transportation, logistics and maybe have a few cents left over to pay your employees. On the upside, Google reportedly coughed up $1 billion to help subsidize the first generation of Android One devices — but that couldn’t have lasted long in a country like India, with a population of 1.2 billion people.
If this thought experiment has revealed anything, it’s that there’s no such thing as a profit in the Android world any more. You know it’s true when a company as notable as HTC is considered to be effectively worthless and LG makes just 1.2 cents in profit for every device it sells. Samsung may continue to earn a profit, but it’s an exception rather than the rule, and one that may not hold true forever.
Profit, however, has long since ceased to be the goal for the majority of these companies, and instead it’s all about scale. It’s the idea that if you flog enough devices cheaply enough, you’ll have a broad customer base that will come back to you in two or three years’ time. Hopefully, then, when device prices are cheaper and some of your weaker rivals have collapsed under their own weight — maybe then you can squeeze a little cream from the top of the milk. Of course, it’s a false hope, since “price-conscious” buyers will simply move on to the next big thing, and you’ll be left fighting off angry letters from the bank.
These manufacturers, of course, will break their backs in the hope of bringing smartphones to India, but they won’t benefit too much from it. Google, however, can sit back and relax, writing a check every now and again while it waits for all of these new users to roll in.
[Image Credits: David Paul Morris / Bloomberg via Getty Images (Sundar Pichai); Stephen Lam / Getty Images (Android One phones); iFixit (Samsung Galaxy S6 Teardown); Getty (Hardware icons); Tsering Topgyal/AP Photo (India crowd)]
Filed under:
Cellphones, Mobile, Google
Tags: Android, AndroidOne, Budget, google, mobilepostcross, uk-feature
New LG Nexus 5 2015 renders flesh out this year’s version
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Unlike previous years, we think we’re getting a pretty good idea of what the LG Nexus 5 2015 is going to look like. After a leak of its dimensions and another of its cases, this latest leak gives us render of the Nexus 5 2015 to take a look at, and we have to say it looks pretty good. As suggested from the leaked case photos, there are two circular holes in the back of the device – one is obviously the rear camera, but it’s suspected that the other is a rear mounted fingerprint scanner. Adjacent to the camera are suspected to be the LED flash and likely a laser sensor which is going to give the Nexus 5 2015 something akin to LG’s magic focus. Check out a few more of the render images below:
As the rumours suggest, the renders also include a USB Type-C port at the bottom of the device. All this is thanks to @onleaks and @uSwitchTech who presumably worked together to create the following video:
Who likes the look of the LG Nexus 5 2015 as its depicted in these renders? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.
Source: uSwitch, Twitter via TalkAndroid
The post New LG Nexus 5 2015 renders flesh out this year’s version appeared first on AndroidSPIN.
Project Ara market pilot is being “re-routed”, more updates incoming
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In a continuation of the shake-up after Alphabet become the parent company of Google, the Twitter account for Project Ara has piped up, sayings its market pilot would be “re-routed” after it was originally planned to get tested in Puerto Rico. We’re not entirely sure why the pilot needed to be moved at all, but I’m sure we’ll find out in due time, particularly as the tweets included phrases like “this is not goodbye”.
Market pilot re-route. Stay tuned for more details. #ProjectAra #recalculating
— Project Ara (@ProjectAra) August 13, 2015
More updates coming your way next week. Stay with us. #ProjectAra
— Project Ara (@ProjectAra) August 13, 2015
Project Ara was left with Google after Motorola was sold to Lenovo – in case you don’t know what Project Ara is, it is the development of a fully modular smartphone where any part of the hardware can be swapped out or upgraded. Sounds perfect in theory, and we’ve been eagerly waiting to see if the device cuts it in the real world. I guess we’ll have to wait and see what Project Ara has to say about its future plans in the coming weeks.
What do you think about Project Ara’s comments? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.
Source: Twitter (1), (2) via engadget
The post Project Ara market pilot is being “re-routed”, more updates incoming appeared first on AndroidSPIN.
mypa looks to supercharge your contacts when they call your smartphone
mypa is a new app available for Android devices that presents users with an “intelligent calling screen” that hopes to make the incoming call and contacts screens on your smartphone useful. mypa says the most important question that may spring to mind when you have an incoming call is “what unfinished business” do you have with the caller? Their app hopes to help you answer that question.
When a call comes in, the app shows information like the last time you communicated with the contact, what was the conversation about, is there some task that is supposed to be completed, or is there a pending point of discussion. The whole idea is to help you be more prepared with a quick glance at the screen in the few seconds you have before answering an inbound call.
On the back end, mypa also gives users tools to generate actions and tasks that result from a call. Quickly setup a meeting, schedule a follow-up, or create a task to be completed.
mypa can also more intelligently manage your contacts by doing things like finding duplicates, identifying bad email addresses, or helping you find where someone works.
You can get mypa from the Google Play Store using the link below.
Click here to view the embedded video.
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Why not to buy the Samsung Galaxy Note 5
We can understand that you are fairly excited about the newly launched Samsung Galaxy Note 5, and want to grab it as soon as it gets available on your carrier or the nearest Samsung store. We, however, have a word or two of caution for you. While the phablet packs some of the best hardware ever seen in a smartphone along with a clickable S pen and a physical keyboard accessory, it lacks some basic features that could prove to be a deal breaker for you.
It packs a smaller battery than the Galaxy Note 4
Perhaps the compact size of the new Samsung phablet could be blamed for the company’s failure to fit a bigger battery. But it was quite a surprising decision on Samsung’s part to downgrade the Note 5’s battery size despite having faced the flak for small batteries in its current flagships, the Galaxy S6 and the Galaxy S6 Edge. It will be interesting to see how much screen on time the Note 5’s 3,000 mAh battery will be able to give especially since it features a big 5.7-inch Quad HD Super AMOLED display. Its predecessor came with 3,200 mAh battery with a similar screen size and display resolution.
Its battery is not removable
Naturally, you would like to carry an extra battery if your phone doesn’t have one that lasts an entire day upon heavy usage. But no, Samsung has decided to take away even that option from the Galaxy Note 5. Its glossy glass back is pretty, but you can’t remove it to swap batteries. Trust us, it is all part of Samsung’s bigger conspiracy of not wanting us to leave our homes or workplaces in order to keep our phones alive.
There is no microSD card
The new Note phablet is only available in 32GB and 64GB variants, and there is no microSD card slot available onboard in case you decide to expand it. So, be sure to pick the Note 5 with maximum storage you can afford during the time you buy it.
No IR blaster
If you buy a $700 phone, you want it to make your life easier, but apparently the Galaxy Note 5 lacks even the infrared blaster that its predecessor and current flagships enjoy. So if you reach out to your Note 5 in the middle of the night to control the air conditioner or TV, you are likely to regret you decision of buying it in the first place.
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