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9
Jan

AT&T reportedly steps away from deal to sell Huawei phones


This is a big setback for Huawei’s plans to expand in the U.S.

Strong rumors have swirled for weeks that AT&T would soon start to carry and distribute high-end Huawei phones, marking a big move for the Chinese manufacturer as it tries to get a strong foothold in the U.S. market. But at CES 2018, as Huawei and its sub-brand Honor both make announcements about international releases of their phones, Wall Street Journal is reporting that AT&T has backed away from the deal with Huawei.

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It was almost a foregone conclusion that Huawei would partner with a U.S. carrier early in 2018, with the expected launch device being the new Huawei Mate 10 Pro. According to WSJ, the announcement of the carrier partnership and phone launch was set for January 9 here in Las Vegas. It isn’t known why the deal broke down, but the implication is that it was AT&T that backed away whereas Huawei was bullish on an entry to the U.S. market with a carrier partner.

Huawei’s options for making a splash in the U.S. are surprisingly dwindling.

Toward the end of 2017 there were also heightened expectations that Huawei’s other brand, Honor, would also see a U.S. carrier debut with the View 10 and 7X. At an Honor-focused CES 2018 event in Las Vegas this week, representatives said that for the Honor brand the immediate future in the U.S. was centered around improving its online sales of unlocked phones and customer support for those devices, with announcements of a carrier partnership coming later on down the road. With these new details about an AT&T deal falling through now coming out, this all makes a bit more sense.

With this setback and the expectation that Huawei wouldn’t partner with either Verizon or Sprint for a device launch on account of their legacy CDMA networks, it leaves Huawei with very few options for making the splash in the U.S. it initially intended to have.

Huawei Mate 10

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9
Jan

Planet Gemini hands-on: The dream of the 90s is alive in Vegas


The Planet Gemini feels like a device from some alternate universe where the Personal Digital Assistant never died. Its eyeglass-case chassis evokes the old Sony Tablet P, while its miniature QWERTY keyboard suggests a laptop that stumbled into a shrinking machine. But its closest relative is probably the Psion PDA from the 1990s — a device beloved as much for its powerful scheduling software as for its robust physical keyboard.

The Planet Gemini is no mere throwback. It’s available in Wi-Fi and 4G versions (for both GSM and CDMA networks), it dual-boots Android and Linux, and you can even make phone calls on it. Planet says the Gemini is meant for bloggers, longform writers and other creators who live and die by a physical keyboard, and it’s easy to see why it’d be a tempting purchase for such folks. Still, it’s hard to envision many people ponying up for a device that slots in somewhere between the smartphone and laptop, yet professes to replace neither.

Of course, you don’t need to imagine it; you can just head on over to Planet’s Indiegogo page to see how many customers have already devoted their dollars to picking up a Gemini of their own. If you’re keen to join them, the device is available for $299 or $399 in Wi-Fi and 4G versions, respectively, with units already in production. The Planet Gemini ships to early backers later this month; deliveries will continue into the spring, at which point I’ll hopefully follow up with a full review.

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9
Jan

Lenovo’s Smart Display is the Google Assistant-powered Echo Show we’ve been waiting for


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It’s time for Google Assistant to branch out, starting with displays in the home.

Google Home and Amazon Echo match up in both the small and medium speaker segments, but the hardware offerings start to diverge from there.

Amazon has clearly taken the lead with screen-toting assistant speakers with its Echo Show and Echo Spot, with no response from Google in the category. That is, until now.

Leave it to Lenovo of all companies to make a direct competitor to the Echo Show running Google Assistant: it’s called the Lenovo Smart Display, and it has just been announced at CES 2018. But this isn’t just a Google Home with a screen — it’s so much more.

At its most basic level, the Smart Display combines the experience of having a Google Home and a Chromecast-connected TV — but in a single device. It offers 100% feature parity with Google Home, but has the added benefit of being able to display information similar to the way it would show up on your TV if you asked your Google Home to send something visual to a Chromecast.

The Smart Display comes in two screen sizes, 10 and 8 inches, but the design and capabilities are the same in either aside from the larger version having a great bamboo back. From the front, it’s very inviting with a soft white plastic frame surrounding the display and speaker. The unique wedge shape looks funky at first, but then you realize it lets the Smart Display stand vertically just as comfortably as horizontal it makes sense. A set of rubber feet and rather substantial weight — 2.2 or 2.6 pounds — keep it stable with touches, intentional or not.

So let’s talk about how the Smart Display actually works, because it’s quite clever. At its core, it’s running Android Things, which is Google’s Android build designed for these IoT type of products that don’t need to run a full-fledged Android system (as some would have in the past) but still have lots of useful smart home hooks and a custom interface. It’s clear that the Smart Display is just the first of many Assistant-powered devices that will use this interface, as Google will standardize it across devices just as it has done with Assistant on smartphones, tablets, speakers and TVs.

Think of a Google Home and a Cast-enabled screen linked together.

The always-on ambient screen is literally just the same “backdrop” experience as a Chromecast — it can pull from Google Photos or a variety of other sources, configured in the Google Home app. It’s waiting for the “Hey Google” wake word, including personalized results based on your trained voice, but you can also tap the screen once to be taken to the main “home screen” of sorts. Here you’ll see upcoming events and reminders, plus cards for ongoing tasks — whether that’s a timer, current weather, directions to an appointment, ongoing media controls or just about anything else. This is the only place where you could actually launch experiences by touch — everything else is accomplished by voice.

And of course, you can just talk to the Smart Display just like a Google Home — but you get far more in response. Any regular search-style knowledge questions come back with responses in both text/images and voice. Ask for a video and it plays right away in YouTube. Ask for directions, get an interactive map (and directions sent to your phone). Set reminders, timers, appointments and more, and get confirmation both on the screen and audibly. There is, of course, the cliché demo showing step-by-step cooking instructions, and little games that you’ll play once to impress your friends and never touch again.

Sound-wise, there’s an array of microphones to listen to commands from a distance just like a Google Home, plus a big 10W speaker that’ll sound just as good. A front-facing camera is designed to work with Duo right out of the box, calling both phones and other Smart Displays, and Google’s open to the idea of having other applications — video calling or otherwise — be able to access the system just as they do now on Google Home. There are hardware volume keys along one side, and even a physical camera cover to squash privacy concerns.

The devices we were able to see and use were clearly not finished in either hardware or software, which isn’t surprising considering the release is slated for mid-summer. Despite that, the hardware looks and feels fantastic. It’s light, inviting and unassuming, particularly in the smaller 8-inch size. The screen isn’t fantastically bright or clear, but for the distance you’ll be using this at in a home with good lighting it’ll do well. The pricing is right, at $199 for the 8-inch and $249 for the 10-inch, bookending the current Echo Show price.

For those who want the security and accessibility of having a display to work with, it’ll be a small price bump over the $129 Google Home to get something that truly feels like more of a home hub to then be augmented by Google Home Minis elsewhere. This is absolutely a growth area for Google, and Lenovo is simply the first partner out the gate with it.

More: With expansion to screens and cars, Google Assistant is officially everywhere

Google Hardware

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9
Jan

With expansion to screens and cars, Google Assistant is officially everywhere


Google Assistant is moving into more places in and outside the home.

When Google debuted the Assistant at I/O in 2016, it was this tiny little feature inside a little-used messaging app called Allo.

But by the time it expanded to Pixel phones and the Google Home speaker later that year, we knew that this wasn’t some fly-by-night project the company would later abandon, but a line-in-the-sand statement on the future of computing. Or maybe it was just a way to get back at Amazon’s not-so-slow encroachment into the smart home space. Either way, Google Assistant was a big deal.

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At CES 2018, Google is taking even more steps towards Assistant ubiquity, both with its physical presence at the show and its multitudinous announcements surrounding the nascent smart home space.

Google not only sold six million Home speakers during the holiday sales period but it has positioned the cloud technology as the one-stop shop for Google’s widely-used Knowledge Graph, which encompasses everything from search to maps to shopping.

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The Lenovo Smart Display appears to be what the Amazon Echo Show wanted, but failed, to deliver.

Today, Assistant is debuting in two more important places: screens, and cars. On the screen side, the Lenovo Smart Display is the first of many Assistant-focused products that can show rather than tell. YouTube videos, recipes, maps, Duo video calls, and everything else one can do on a tablet can be recalled using voice on a stationary and attractive showpiece that also doubles as a speaker.

Though Google says it worked extensively with Lenovo on the industrial design of the Smart Display, which comes in two sizes and debuts this summer, other similar (and likely cheaper) products will be forthcoming in the months ahead from JBL, LG, and Sony.

Cars are also getting in on the Assistant through Android Auto support. While it’s been possible up to this point to call on Google in the car using voice, Google has reworked the way Assistant communicates with Android Auto, both through the app and in-car displays. Some cars can even use Assistant on the phone or inside the home to lock and unlock doors, check fuel levels, and more. The future is here, and it’s weird (and awesome).

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Finally, Google is expanding Assistant further into existing categories, including TVs and headphones. Television makers like LG, Changhong, Funai, and Haier will integrate Assistant into their custom operating systems this year, while Android TV-powered sets from TCL, Skyworth, and Xiaomi will gain the same functionality through updates.

Ultimately, Google wants Assistant to be a consistent experience wherever possible and is leveraging its relationships with hardware companies all over the world to make it happen. If last year’s CES was the year of Alexa, Google Assistant is dominating the conversation in 2018. While some of the products appear underwhelming or may not come to market at all, that Assistant is expanding to more form factors is a big deal, especially given that it is available in far more countries than Amazon’s Alexa platform.

Get used to saying “Hey Google” a lot more often.

Google also appears to be doubling down on “Hey Google” as a call sign for the Assistant; in briefings given to Android Central throughout the week, representatives from Google and other companies demoing products didn’t use “OK Google” at all, and actively encouraged us to start using the less formal greeting going forward. It’s not quite as catchy as “Alexa”, but it’s an improvement.

Google says that Assistant is now running on 400 million devices around the world, and that number should reach a billion within a year. To make the platform more enticing, it is consolidating its disparate commands under the name “Actions”. In a blog post, Google described the reasoning for the change:

Since the Assistant can do so many things, we’re introducing a new way to talk about them. We’re calling them Actions. Actions include features built by Google—like directions on Google Maps—and those that come from developers, publishers and other third parties.

A new directory makes it easy to check whether one’s smart home products or apps work with Assistant, and should help drive sales of those products as well.

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In the meantime, if you’re in Las Vegas for CES this week, you can catch a glimpse of Google’s Assistant ambitions while riding the monorail.

Actually, don’t do that.

9
Jan

The Lenovo Smart Display is the first Google Home I might actually buy


The Lenovo Smart Display is a Google Home with a built-in screen – and that makes it the very first Google Home I might consider buying. While you still control it primarily with your voice, the touchscreen lends much more versatility to the notion of a home assistant: you can check on the Nest Camera monitoring your baby room, start a Duo call with your Pixel-toting friends, or stream the latest video from your favorite YouTuber (ahem). Yes, those are all blatantly transparent house ads for Google’s own products, but more importantly they’re things that are difficult or impossible to do on the Smart Display’s principal competition, Amazon’s Echo Show.

The Lenovo Smart Display with Google Assistant will come in 8″ and 10″ sizes when it debuts this summer, with prices starting at $199 and topping out at $249. Check out the MrMobile hands-on and Android Central’s own take, and let me know in the comments if you’d like to see my traditionally mobile-only coverage fleshed out with a Lenovo Smart Display review later in the year!

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9
Jan

Android Oreo is now on 0.7% of devices, but Marshmallow is still king


Android Oreo is very slowly but surely climbing in numbers.

Google releases the Android Distribution numbers once per month to let developers know which OS versions to target, and January’s numbers are now available. Not surprisingly, Marshmallow is still on top with 29.7% of the Android pie.

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Oreo did make some gains, though. Android 8.1 is making its first appearance with 0.2% of the Android marketplace, while Android 8.0 stayed at the same 0.5% it was at last month. Nougat is still in second place with 26.3%, with Lollipop at 25.1%. KitKat and Jellybean lost marketshare, while Ice Cream Sandwich and Gingerbread are still somehow hanging on.

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As we move through CES and into MWC, we’ll see more phones announced running Oreo, with last year’s devices like the Galaxy S8 and OnePlus 5T getting their updates to Oreo in the next few months. Once that starts happening, Oreo’s marketshare will take off.

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9
Jan

HyperX memory improves your PC’s light show with infrared


Many PC enthusiasts use light-up RAM to add a flair to their systems. But creating a proper, synchronized light show isn’t always easy. Even if you have the right motherboard, compatible RAM and the necessary software, there’s no guarantee of a harmonious display. HyperX wants to fix that: it’s introducing new Predator DDR4 modules that can use infrared light to sync their RGB illumination. There’s no guesswork and no external cables — you can just assume your lights will pulse together using power directly from the motherboard.

If you prefer the more conventional route, HyperX is promising compatibility with existing RGB control software from ASUS, Gigabyte, MSI and others. You should also see support from case makers like In-Win.

The new Predator memory ships sometime in the second quarter of the year. HyperX hasn’t divulged pricing or configurations, but it’s reasonable to presume that this will carry a premium like other RGB memory sticks. You’re paying for decoration on top of gaming-friendly memory, and that rarely comes cheap.

Click here to catch up on the latest news from CES 2018.

Source: HyperX

9
Jan

Samsung brings Knox security to smart fridges and TVs


Samsung’s Knox security is no longer limited to running on phones and tablets. The tech firm has announced that it’s integrating Knox across its connected devices, including TVs, appliances and even digital signs. As on mobile gear, it combines hardware and firmware updates to catch attempts to compromise a device.

The company hasn’t said exactly how widespread Knox support is at the moment, or when it will reach hardware that doesn’t already have the technology. There’s plenty of incentive to make it as widely available as possible, mind you. Now that many of its devices are connected, it could also have many more security risks on its hands. You don’t someone to compromise your entire home network by hacking your fridge. Although this doesn’t mean your smart home will be impervious to attack, it could eliminate obvious weak points.

Click here to catch up on the latest news from CES 2018.

Source: Samsung

9
Jan

Smartenna+ emulates seven TV antennas to find the best OTA signal


Believe it or not, some people still get their television signal over the air (OTA) from antennas. It’s one way cord-cutters can watch local television without purchasing a cable subscription. Getting good reception, though, can be tricky. Channel Master’s new Smartenna+ is an amplified, indoor TV antenna that uses in internal computer processor to analyze the signals at your home and choose the best one for you.

Made by Ethertronics, the antenna has seven different antenna reception patterns, which is like placing seven antennas around your room to pull in a good broadcast signal. It can also adjust the reception pattern with the touch of a button, which means you don’t have to adjust any rabbit ears to get a better signal. “The continued growth of cord cutting has created a market boom for TV antennas, but getting good indoor reception can be a frustrating experience,” said Ethertronics’ COO Vahid Manian in a statement. “By incorporating Active Steering, Channel Master has delivered a breakthrough product in SMARTenna+ that brings a level of performance and convenience to indoor TV reception that has never existed before.”

Click here to catch up on the latest news from CES 2018.

9
Jan

Samsung introduces autonomous driving platform called DRVLINE


Today at CES, Samsung unveiled DRVLINE, a hardware and software platform that will allow car makers to create customized, technologically advanced autonomous vehicles. Many platforms are an all-or-nothing solution, which forces users to adopt the entire package en masse, without any sort of customization. DRVLINE, however, allows vendors to swap and customize individual components, building the vehicle to their specifications, as well as allowing for rapidly evolving technology.

“Building an autonomous platform requires close collaboration across industry, as one company cannot deliver on this enormous opportunity alone,” said Young Sohn, the president and chief strategy officer of Samsung. “The challenge is simply too big and too complex. Through the DRVLINE platform, we’re inviting the best and brightest from the automotive industry to join us, and help shape the future of the car of tomorrow, today.”

The first DRVLINE initiative will be a camera that features lane departure warnings, adaptive cruise control, collision warning and algorithms that can deliver warnings about pedestrians. The system will start shipping this year.

Samsung is working closely with Harman, which it acquired in early 2017, on this initiative. Other car-focused tech products include the industry’s first 5G-ready antenna to allow for fast data connections. Additionally, the Digital Cockpit is a new way to interact with the tech inside your car. It’s focused on balancing convenience with safety, and will connect to your smartphone to provide personalization. It’s a scalable solution that will bring together car controls and the current status on a center screen (or across multiple screens, depending on how premium the integration is).

Click here to catch up on the latest news from CES 2018.

Source: Samsung (1), Samsung (2)