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10
Jan

Verizon Raises Smartphone Upgrade Fee to $30


Less than a year after introducing a fee for customers upgrading their smartphones, Verizon has raised the the price of said fee from $20 to $30, reports The Verge.

The fee change was quietly implemented last week alongside the discontinuation of two-year contracts for existing customers. Those customers previously had to pay a $40 fee when activating a new contract and purchasing a new device, while the fee has been $20 for device payment plans and outright purchases from Verizon.

With two-year contracts no longer available, all customers will now pay $30 when upgrading their smartphones on the Verizon network. A separate activation fee when purchasing a new line also applies.

According to Verizon, its upgrade fees help to cover “increasing support costs” from customers switching their devices.

Verizon also recently told clarified its data usage policies for unlimited customers, notifying employees that customers who use over 200GB per month will be forced to move to a tiered data plan.

Tag: Verizon
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10
Jan

Apple Allegedly Partnering With Carl Zeiss for Augmented Reality Glasses


Apple and German company Carl Zeiss AG are working together on a pair of augmented reality smart glasses that could be announced as soon as this year, claims well-known blogger Robert Scoble in a Facebook post.

According to Scoble, a Zeiss employed allegedly confirmed the partnership between the two companies in a conversation that took place at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nevada last week.

Zeiss’ booth at CES. Image via Robert Scoble
Scoble questioned the Zeiss employees at the show after noticing Zeiss had a booth in the augmented reality section of CES without showing off an augmented reality product. He believes Apple forced Zeiss to keep quiet about an upcoming release.

Exclusive news: Apple and Zeiss working together on augmented reality optics. […]

A Zeiss employee confirmed the rumors that Apple and Carl Zeiss AG are working on a light pair of augmented reality/mixed reality glasses that may be announced this year. (I thought it was next year but now that I saw this I believe it will happen this year).

It’s not clear how reliable Scoble’s information is, but previous rumors have suggested Apple is working on a set of smart glasses that would connect wirelessly to the iPhone and display images and other information to the wearer.

Apple is said to have contacted suppliers about the project, which appears to be in the exploratory prototyping phase of development. While Scoble believes the glasses could be released in 2017, previous information points towards a 2018 or later release.

Apple has a full team dedicated to AR/VR research and exploring how the technologies can be incorporated into future products. Multiple times over the past year, Tim Cook has said that Apple has a deep interest in augmented reality. “AR can be really great. We have been and continue to invest a lot in this. We’re high on AR in the long run,” he said in July.

Related Roundup: Apple VR Project
Tags: Robert Scoble, Zeiss
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10
Jan

2018 Toyota Camry Release Date, Price and Specs – Roadshow


10
Jan

Flir Duo Release Date, Price and Specs – CNET


Flir has been making thermal imaging devices since the late-70’s. In recent years, the company added its technology to smartphones and smartphone accessories. And this week at CES 2017, Flir showed off another adaptation of its technology: a thermal camera for drones called the Duo.

The Duo is tiny — about the size of a GoPro. It has two cameras: one a 1080-pixel HD camera, and the other a thermal-imaging camera. The thermal images represents heat in form of colors — orange is hot, blue is cool. You can easily switch between cameras, but the real magic comes when you use the combined mode. This overlays details from the HD camera onto the thermal photograph. It makes for a very sharp thermal image.

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While there are many cameras capable of being used on drones, the Duo is the first thermal camera to be designed for such a purpose.

Patrick Holland/CNET

Such cameras can be used in a variety of manners: flying over farm property checking irrigation piping, finding lost animals, checking solar arrays for hot spots, or recreating scenes from the film “Predator.”

The Duo is aimed at consumers for commercial use. But there is a second Duo camera called the Duo R targeted for professional use. (The “R” stands for radiometric.) This allows pros to get accurate temperature readings from individual pixels of a thermal image.

Because of its Go-Pro-like form factor, the Duo cameras can be used on any drone that can mount a GoPro. However, Flir has teamed up with the company Autel — for non-Autel drones, you have to use the Flir UAS app.

The Duo costs $999 (which converts to £820 and AU$1,365) while the Duo R is $1,299 (which works out to £1,065 and AU$1,775) Both are available for purchase now.

All the cool new gadgets at CES 2017
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Chrysler Portal concept at ces 2017

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10
Jan

2018 Honda Odyssey Release Date, Price and Specs – Roadshow


10
Jan

2018 Lexus LS 500 Release Date, Price and Specs – Roadshow


10
Jan

NIssan Vmotion 2.0 concept Release Date, Price and Specs – Roadshow


10
Jan

Volvo is testing self-driving cars with real families


Picture a self-driving car test in your head and you probably see an engineer or two scrutinizing data… and no one else. Everyday people, if they’re present at all, tend to be relegated to the back seat. Volvo is trying something different: it just revealed that it’s conducting autonomous vehicle tests with an ordinary family, the Hains from Gothenburg, Sweden. The four-person household is convenient for marketing, of course (we care about people!), but they serve an important purpose: they’ll help Volvo understand how non-engineers deal with self-driving tech. How do they react when the car switches between manual and autonomous modes, and what do they do at those times when they aren’t taking the wheel?

The Hain family will be an important part of the Drive Me project, which has Volvo collaborating with private and public allies on large-scale self-driving tests (up to 100 vehicles) in Gothenburg. The more input they provide, the more likely it is that Volvo’s planned 2021 launch of fully autonomous cars will go off without a hitch. Your car may not only transition to hands-free mode more gracefully, but do more to accommodate the other things you’d do in the car. Like, say, talking to your family.

Source: Volvo

10
Jan

Holocube by Merge VR was the coolest surprise from CES


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Holocube is incredibly cool, and one of our biggest surprises.

Holocube surprised us — a lot. It’s a VR accessory for any Google Cardboard user, made by the company responsible for one of the most colorful Google Cardboard clones you’ll see on shelves in stores. Holocube doesn’t require Merge VR to use it — in fact it doesn’t even require an Android phone. Truly anything that runs Cardboard apps can take advantage of this new accessory. What does it do, you ask? In a way, it does whatever you want it to.

Holocube uses the camera on your phone to turn this little cube into an Augmented Reality playground. In the brief demonstrations Merge was giving, Holocube could turn into a heart, a brain, and a mini Minecraft world you could rotate in your hand and populate as you see fit. Merge claims you can do just about anything with Holocube if you’re willing to write the apps for it, and their demonstrations suggest that’s going to be fairly easy to do.

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The idea is to combine VR and AR with this simple cube, and to pull this off Merge is reaching out to developers with the promise of an open API and a significant user base. Considering Merge is one of the few simple VR headsets that found a spot on shelves at Best Buy, there’s a good chance they have the numbers to prove there’s plenty of people out there ready to treat Holocube like an impulse buy and jump on it when released later this year. That means it’s likely to have a healthy selection of apps and games to go with it when you’re finally able to buy one yourself.

10
Jan

It’s OK to be excited about Nokia making Android phones


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We expected a Lumia running Android. What we got might be even better.

The return of the Nokia name in the smartphone world when the Nokia 6 was announced by HMD Global wasn’t really a surprise. In December 2016, HMD Global announced that they would be releasing multiple Android products under the Nokia brand starting in early 2017. It appears that HMD Global, a company that includes several ex-Nokia/Microsoft execs, was created to produce these new Nokia phones. The actual manufacturing will be handled by Foxconn subsidiary FIH Mobile — which also acquired Microsoft’s feature phone division in early 2016 — but the design and software come from HMD using the Nokia brand.

It’s a little confusing. But in the end, we had ex-Nokia people who wanted to keep the name alive after the Microsoft acquisition and sale. That would be pretty cool because Nokia made some incredible phones. An N9 or Lumia 1020 running Android would be really interesting, and inside I think that’s about what most people looking forward to an Android-powered Nokia phone were expecting. And these aren’t even the first Nokia phones to run Android. Those had a little of that Nokia mojo in the design and construction.

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You can see some of that Old Time Nokia in there, but the N6 also looks a lot like almost any other phone running Android. The big curves and substantial body are toned down, and seeing it in black makes me wish it also came in green or orange like a “proper” Nokia phone. But mostly I’m excited to see what they can do with a thin black slab of aluminum to make me like it enough to remember who made it. That’s the goal of every design team. I’ll dismiss all the comments from people who have never seen or held it when they tell me it’s boring. I’ll decide after I take it out of the box. I’ve been waiting for this.

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The Nokia 6 is a phone made specifically for the Chinese market. Dual-SIM, low price, no Google applications or the Play Store. We can’t automatically say that anything they might release in the west will be similar. The specifications will certainly be higher (so will the price) and the interface and application suite will be different once it’s fine-tuned for the western audience. But I’m pretty sure the design of these unannounced phones will be similar to the Nokia 6.

The new Nokia is going to be judged at every turn by people who loved the old Nokia.

And look for Nokia/HMD to be modest and not try to compete with the mega-priced flagship phones of 2017. The phone(s) we see in Europe and the Americas will be positioned as the best phone you can buy under $600. That’s a market slot that has huge potential, and companies like OnePlus and ZTE have set a high bar here. I can’t wait to see how Nokia plans to compete. A $245 phone shipping with Android 7 is a great start.

One thing that’s for sure is that Nokia has a huge fanbase around the world who will look twice at anything the company releases. When HMD Global announced that they would be building Nokia phones exclusively in December 2016, CEO Arto Nummela had this to say:

Today marks a happy and important day for HMD. Nokia has been one of the most iconic and recognisable phone brands globally for decades. The excitement of re-introducing this much-loved, well-known and trusted brand to smartphone consumers is a responsibility and an ambition that everyone at HMD shares.

We see this as a brilliant opportunity to solve real life consumer problems and to deliver on the quality and designs that the Nokia brand has been always known for. Our talented and passionate team is uniquely placed in this modern setup to deliver our promise of reliable, beautifully crafted and fun Nokia phones for consumers across the globe.

Nummela has been a part of Nokia since 1994 and was appointed as VP of Microsoft Mobile Devices Sales when the company was bought out by Microsoft. He understands that there are people who are waiting to buy a new Nokia phone, and why that matters to the company. Those people are also going to be expecting something that was worth the wait, and you only get to make the first impression that one time. Starting in China — where the market for a good cheap smartphone grows every year — will bring in a few dollars and serve as a test bed for a more expensive product in other regions. There’s just more risk and higher stakes in the western market right now, especially when you have fans with high hopes and strong opinions.

Knowing how to be successful — deliver a consistent experience that’s fun to use and support your products — isn’t difficult. The execution is a lot harder. I’ve got high hopes for Nokia in the Android space and hope to see something that lives up to the Nokia name. Even if it won’t be another N9.