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5
Nov

A week with FreedomPop in the UK: you can’t argue with free


Between the four main carriers and numerous tier-two operators in the UK, we’re spoilt for choice when it comes to picking a mobile network. And yet, we’ve now got another new player to consider that does things a little differently. FreedomPop’s mobile service launched towards the end of September (it’s already established in the US), with its main attraction being a completely free, barebones tariff. Though it sounds too good to be true, the “Basic 200” plan gives you 200 minutes, 200 texts and 200MB of 4G data each month, gratis. So… what’s the catch? Well, there isn’t one really, as long as you stay within those allowances. FreedomPop does intend to make money, of course, through overage charges, value-added services and its paid SIM-only plans. While many of you may well be awaiting delivery of a FreedomPop SIM, I managed to take the service for a test drive last week, and this is how I fared.

5
Nov

Amazon UK Prime members get free same-day deliveries


Amazon Delivery

In its bid to get more products to customers quicker, Amazon UK has today added another delivery option for customers. Prime Same Day offers (you guessed it) same-day delivery on one million products, as long as you’re already signed up to the company’s £79 annual membership. Unlike Prime Now, which costs £6.99 and gets your items to you within an hour, Amazon’s new shipping option is free.

Source: Amazon UK

5
Nov

Sony’s entry-level Alpha A68 has ‘4D focus’ for low light


Sony just reminded us that it makes more than mirrorless and compact cameras by launching the Alpha A68, an A-mount model with a 24-megapixel APS-C sensor. As with Sony’s APS-C Alpha A77 II and full-frame A99 models, it uses a hybrid electronic OLED viewfinder with 100 percent coverage and “faithful color reproduction,” according to Sony. That’s complimented by a 2.7-inch TFT LCD that tilts 135 degrees up and 55 degrees downwards. The killer feature is the translucent mirror, which allows for what Sony calls “4D Focus” — a 79-point phase-detection AF that works continuously at up to 8fps, even in low-light. Slideshow-339147

5
Nov

Samsung begins rolling out Android 5.1.1 Lollipop to Galaxy Note 10.1 2014 (WiFi)


samsung_galaxy_note_101_2014_white

Samsung tablets are often left out in the cold when it comes to firmware updates, it isn’t unknown for one of its flagship tablets to be 2 or even 3 versions of Android behind Google’s latest release. I’m sure that owners of the Galaxy Note 10.1 2014 edition will understand where I’m coming from seeing as that device has languished on Android 4.4.2 KitKat since its launch (unless you had the T-Mobile variant). There is cause to rejoice for some, though, because the Android 5.1.1 Lollipop update is finally available to download for the SM-P600 (WiFi) variant.

The Android 5.1.1 firmware update comes in at around 1.3GB and is aimed at the Spanish model with the PHE product code. The update has a build date of October 23, with a change list number of 101969629 for what its worth. Because Samsung doesn’t hand out change logs, it’s virtually impossible to figure what they have changed or fixed in the new firmware.

If you have the Spanish version of the SM-P600, it might be worth your while going into Settings, About Phone and tapping the Software Update tab to see if the update is available. If it isn’t (or you have a model from a different region but with the same model number) and you are impatient, you can always just download the firmware(here) and flash it manually via Odin.

 

Source: SamMobile

Come comment on this article: Samsung begins rolling out Android 5.1.1 Lollipop to Galaxy Note 10.1 2014 (WiFi)

5
Nov

LG begins updating G4 to Android 6.0 Marshmallow in South Korea


LG-G4-Android_6.0_Marshmallow-Upgrade

It isn’t long ago that LG began pushing the Android 6.0 Marshmallow update to the G4 in Poland, although that was then temporarily halted due to technical problems. Despite that, LG has started updating G4 handsets in its native South Korea to the latest version of the Android operating system. 

LG is rolling out the Marshmallow update to G4 handsets with the following model numbers: LG-F500K, LG-F500L and LG-F500S. The update includes Android 6.0 features such as the Doze power-saving function, the new app permissions manager that lets you control how apps access your phone, and improved notifications. A couple of pre-installed apps have also been renamed, with Q+ to Memo Capture, and LG Bridge becoming LG AirDrive. Besides being based on Android 6.0, the update also features various tweaks and improvements.

 

Source: LG

Come comment on this article: LG begins updating G4 to Android 6.0 Marshmallow in South Korea

5
Nov

Watch two ‘Jetmen’ fly alongside an A380 superjumbo


We’ve seen Swiss daredevil Yves Rossy (aka Jetman) fly his carbon fiber jet wing over Rio, and, more recently, in tandem above Dubai with his protege Jetman Vince Reffet. The latest video from the fearless aviators sees Rossy and Reffet share the skies with something a little bigger — an Emirates A380 airliner. The flight takes place, once again, over the Palm Jumeirah and Dubai skylines, as the duo no doubt give the A380 pilot constant heart palpitations as they deftly manoeuvre around the plane (y’know, with its jet intakes and all that).

Source: Jetman, XDubai (YouTube)

5
Nov

DJI buys stake in high-end camera firm Hasselblad


Drone maker DJI has purchased a stake in Hasselblad, the company best known for medium-format still cameras and pimped out, overpriced Sony rebadges. The move is a bit of a head-scratcher, because we don’t see a lot of synergy there — Hasselblad’s H-series cameras are far too heavy for drones and most models don’t even shoot video. Furthermore, DJI recently unveiled its own drone-ready Micro-Four-Thirds camera. Nevertheless, DJI can certainly afford the minority share it purchased in Hasselblad, and now sits on the company’s board of directors.

Source: Hasselblad

5
Nov

Kirin 950 announced: What you need to know


Huawei HiSilicon Kirin

Mobile chip developers have been lining up their next generation hardware for a few months now and Huawei’s HiSilicon has just announced its new high-end Kirin 950, and it’s a beast.

We’ll start with the main processing components, the CPU and GPU. The Kirin 950 is the first SoC based on ARM’s big.LITTLE technology to make use of four Cortex-A72 and four Cortex A53 CPU cores, combined with a Mali-T880 GPU for some serious all-around performance.

Architecturally, it’s quite a fair comparison to make to the octa-core A57/A53 big.LITTLE chips that have proven popular this generation. The Cortex-A72 found in the Kirin 950 offers an 11 percent performance boost and 20 percent reduction in power consumption when compared with an A57, while HiSilicon is boasting a 100 percent increase in GPU performance over its last chip that used a Mali-T760.

ARM Cortex A72 reduced power

Power consumption should see a notable improvement as chips move over to ARM’s Cortex-A72

Some of these gains also come from the chip’s move on down to TSMC’s 16nm FinFET manufacturing process, marking another industry first for the Kirin 950. This puts the chip ahead of this generation’s Snapdragon 810, which was produced at 20nm, and on par with Samsung’s 14nm process. It is also a notable jump from the Kirin 930’s 28nm design.

Huawei has also done some major work on task scheduling and eking out additional performance. As many mobile tasks are burst like in nature, the Kirin 950 employs Heuristic Scheduling Algorithms (HSA) to predict when to boost performance for these type of workloads without causing the chip to overheat. As a result, HiSilicon boasts that the 950’s boost performance is up by 100 percent compared with its predecessor, while continuous performance is up by 56 percent. The Kirin 950 also includes support for LPDDR4 memory and is designed with ARM’s GIC500 controller and a new bus to tie the system together.

Co-processors and more

The Kirin 950 certainly has it where it counts in terms of performance capabilities, and it is packed full of extra features too.

4G LTE is included as standard, as is support for VoLTE for enhanced call quality. VoLTE is expected to arrive at China Mobile by the end of 2015, so the Kirin 950 and other chips in the line-up will be ready to take advantage. The new RF chip also supports more bands from 450MHz to 3.5G, which satisfies roaming demands.

ARM Silicon CPU SoC HiSilicon-1

The Kirin 950 is manufactured on TSMC’s 16nm FinFET process, rivalling Samsung’s 14nm chips.

Huawei has also implemented a new co-processor technology on the chip, which it calls the i5. The chip is based on ARM’s high performance Cortex-M7 microcontroller. This extra core can share resources with the main A72 and A53 CPU cores and is designed to quickly power up the main CPU cores when they are needed using an “always-sensing mode”, while also allowing a very low power sleep state. Overall, HiSilicon estimates that idle power has been reduced by 90 percent, from 90mA to just 6.5mA. The i5 co-processor can also be used to provide real-time location services, by combining GPS, WiFi and sensor positioning.

Huawei has also introduced its own image signal processing technology with this chip. The Kirin 950 supports 14-bit dual ISPs, allowing for a 960MPixel/s throughput, dual 13 megapixel sensors or a single 31 megapixel sensor. The integrated DSP also boasts fast facial recognition technology that can detect up to 35 faces in an image.

With new chips from Qualcomm and Samsung expected to hit devices next year, high-end handsets packing the Kirin 950 look set to offer some serious competition.

Show Press Release

文档名称 文档密级
2015-11-5 华为保密信息,未经授权禁止扩散 第1 页, 共4 页
Key Messages of Kirin950 Press Briefing
On November 5, 2015, Huawei showcased its latest smartphone SoC, the Kirin950, at
a press briefing in Beijing.
1. Kirin SoCs powers 4G+ commercialization around the world
In June 2014, Huawei released the world’s first 4G+ SoC, the Kirin920, and the first
LTE+ smartphone, the Honor 6. Today, all Kirin 900 series chips can support 4G+,
including the Kirin920, Kirin930, Kirin950. More than 50 percent of smartphones in
China are powered by Kirin SoCs today.
2. Kirin950 supports VoLTE, delivering a better HD voice experience
With the debut of the Kirin 930, Kirin SoCs continued to enhance the user experience
on 4G+ networks. The Kirin 930 further optimized 4G+ Internet browsing and the Kirin
950 now delivers an HD voice experience to users via 4G+ networks.
Upgraded 4G+ networks and increased bandwidth have created more opportunities
for HD voice applications. Voices can be transmitted with higher integrity, making
them sound more realistic. Kirin 9xx SoCs support VoLTE technology, which has
doubled the voice sampling rate, increased the spectral range by 100 percent,
improved video call quality by 10 times, and enabled users to make calls while surfing
the Internet. Compared with legacy voice technologies, Kirin 950 VoLTE delivers a
much higher call quality and much lower network latency, to better meet the needs for
multi-party calls and ensure call quality.
To provide users with a better voice experience, the Kirin SoC team worked with
leading mobile operators in China, Europe and Korea to complete a two-year VoLTE
test. CMCC’s VoLTE commercialization pace is the fastest in China. Kirin950 received
the earliest VoLTE verification from CMCC. China Mobile has announced that VoLTE
will be put into commercial operation across its entire network by the end of 2015, and
Kirin 920/930/950 SoCs support VoLTE. Among VoLTE devices put into commercial use
lately across various provinces, the Kirin 920-based Mate 7 is a benchmark model.
3. Kirin 950 achieves a breakthrough in energy efficiency.
Managing power consumption is one of the smart phone industry’s biggest challenges.
Kirin SoCs take a balanced approach to managing performance and power
consumption, and the Kirin 950 has achieved breakthroughs both in performance and
user experience compared with its predecessors.
3.1 16nm FinFET plus process technology
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The process technology is the foundation for user experience. The Kirin 950 is among
the first SoCs to employ the 16nm FinFET plus process node, and is the first SoC in the
industry to commercialize the TSMC 16nm FinFET plus technology. The
commercialization of the 16nm FinFET plus technology faced major challenges:
􀁸 The number of transistors on a single chip has increased from 2 billion to 3
billion, thus doubling the difficulty of metal interconnection
􀁸 The 3D transistor structure makes the process much more complex
􀁸 The photolithography limitation entails the dismantling of the mask, thus
increasing the mask layers by nearly 30 percent
􀁸 The number of design constraints has increased from 10000+ to 40000.
The decision to move to a cutting-edge process means overcoming many engineering
challenges before commercialization. At the end of 2013, the Kirin SoC team started to
work closely with TSMC to solve the mass production issues for the advanced process.
The process taped out in April, 2014 and entered mass production in January, 2015.
3.2 Outstanding performance
To achieve a breakthrough in performance, Kirin 950 features the industry’s first ARM
4*A72+4*A53 big.LITTLE architecture and its new MaliT880 GPU. Compared with A57,
the performance of the new ARM Cortex A72 core has improved by 11 percent, and its
power consumption has decreased by 20 percent. The graphic rendering capacity of
Kirin 950’s new GPU ARM MaliT880 is 100 percent higher than its predecessor, and its
GFLOPS is also 100 percent higher than its predecessor. In addition, the Kirin 950’s
new architecture also includes a new LPDDR4, a new GIC500, and a new bus and FBC
applications, providing the Kirin 950 with a more powerful hardware performance
foundation.
3.3 Fine tuning
Kirin 950 focuses on the user’s actual performance experience. A study shows that
quick responses and smooth operations are two key factors that affect user experience.
Quick responses depend on an SoC’s boost performance, while smooth operations
depend on its continuous performance. The Kirin SoC team optimized boost and
continuous performance. When the user triggers an operation, the SoC can respond to
it within 100ms, thus enabling a quick-response experience to the user. In active mode,
each frame can be rendered within 1/60 second to deliver a smooth-operation
experience.
In addition to its powerful hardware performance, the Kirin 950 employs Heuristic
Scheduling Algorithm (shortened for HSA) to fine-tune the system to address
Android’s native issues and two performance requirements: when the boost
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performance is required, it can make an accurate prediction and recover quickly; and
in normal scenarios, it can make most accurate performance predictions without
generating additional heat. Compared with its predecessor, the Kirin 950’s boost
performance has improved by 100 percent, and its continuous performance has
improved by 56 percent.
4 i5, the co-processor, enable chip-level intelligent positioning
The Kirin 950 contains a newly upgraded i5 co-processor which is based on the latest
M7 cores. Compared with M3, the performance of M7 has improved by 4 times, making
it the most powerful co-processor in the industry. As the tiny core of the Kirin 950’s
innovative big.LITTLE plus tiny core architecture, i5 can collaborate with big A72 cores
and little A53 cores to share resources. Under the intelligent scheduling by the main
system, when the master CPU is required, i5 in always-sensing mode can quickly wake
up the main CPU, thus greatly reducing the CPU start-up time. The i5 can put the
phone in always-sensing mode with an ultra-low power, and can receive data from
sensors continuously even if the phone is in sleep mode. Its power consumption is
much lower than that of the main CPU.
The algorithmic strength of a location service is much higher than that of a calculator
application. Specifically, its real-time requirements for floating point arithmetic cannot
be fulfilled by the previous M4/M3-based solutions. The M7-based i5 processor is
highly scalable in terms of architecture, making the Kirin 950 the first SoC that can
provide real-time location services for combined GPS, base station, WiFi and sensor
positioning in indoor environments, on viaducts and among buildings. It is a
hardware-based solution, reducing the power by 90 percent from 90mA to 6.5mA.
5 The self-developed ISP enhances Kirin 950’s camera feature.
With the Kirin 950, Huawei has introduced its own ISP technology to achieve a
premium level of performance. It supports 14bit dual ISPs, increasing the throughput
by 4 times to 960MPixel/s for quicker focusing. It also supports online dual 13M Pixel
Sensors, up to a 32MPixel Sensor, and can collect more complete image information.
The dedicated image post-processing DSP can deliver the best image quality and
effects. It integrates a high-end FD for fast and accurate face scanning, which can
identify up to 35 faces continuously in automatic face-scanning mode.
6 A new in-house RF chip supports more bands for global roaming.
Huawei’s new in-house RF chip provides features that could only be delivered by two
previous-generation chips. A single chip can support carrier aggregation with higher
integration and lower power. Compared with its predecessor, the new RF chip
supports more bands from 450MHz to 3.5G which satisfies roaming demands in more
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countries.
It is reported that Huawei’s latest flagship deviced based on Kirin 950 will be launched
soon.

5
Nov

BBC Store lets you buy and download classic TV shows


Before iPlayer existed, VHS tapes and DVDs were one of the few ways to rewatch BBC shows. Unless you caught a rerun or had diligently prepared the VCR, that is. These days iPlayer reigns supreme, but catchup is limited to a 30-day window — so there’s still a reason to buy your favourites on DVD, Blu-ray or digitally. Today, the BBC is embracing the latter form with BBC Store, a new site that lets you buy, download and watch its best programming. Roughly 7,000 hours of TV is available at launch, including shows that have never been available digitally before, like Dad’s Army and Morecambe & Wise.

Source: BBC Store

5
Nov

Explore New Zealand’s ‘Great Walks’ with Google Street View


Heaphy Track between  Perry Saddle Hut and Gouland Downs Hut

If you want to take a trip to Middle Earth tonight but don’t have a passport, Google’s got you covered with a new addition to Street View. The internet juggernaut’s partnered with New Zealand’s Department of Conservation to use Google Trekker to create some pretty rad 360 degree panoramas of the country’s most stunning vistas, the “Great Walks.” It isn’t the first time Mountain View’s gone someplace that inspired a movie before, and hopefully it won’t be the last. The real question here is if that’s an ent moot off in the distance or just your eyes playing tricks on you.

Source: Google Lat-Long, Google Maps