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Posts tagged ‘Android’

6
Jan

Sony unveils a stainless steel SmartWatch 3


SmartWatch3_Stainless_Steel-e1420483221991-640x426

One of the best Android Wear smartwatches just got even better, with Sony unveiling their excellent Smartwatch 3 watch with a stainless steel band. If you haven’t read our review of the Smartwatch 3 then check it out, but one of our comments was the lack of additional wristbands, which now is completely addressed. Not… Read more »

The post Sony unveils a stainless steel SmartWatch 3 appeared first on SmarterWatching.



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6
Jan

BMW wants you to control your car’s features from a Samsung tablet


BMW Touch Command

BMW loves the idea of letting you control your car from mobile devices — so much so that it just teased some especially deep mobile integration at Samsung’s CES keynote. The automaker’s new Touch Command feature (hinted at in last year’s Vision Future Luxury concept) will let you use a Samsung tablet to operate many of your vehicle’s creature comforts. You can adjust the music, climate control and even the ambient lighting without having to reach for the usual in-car knobs or touchscreens. Neither BMW nor Samsung has said much about when you’ll get to try Touch Command for yourself, but here’s hoping that it arrives soon.

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6
Jan

Lenovo VIBE X2 Pro announced for that perfect selfie


VIBE X2 Pro 5

Selfies are a big thing, whether you like it or not, and Lenovo are embracing this trend with the Vibe X2 Pro, a smartphone that they are claiming delivers the perfect selfie everytime.

That’s largely due to the Lenovo VIBE Xtension™ Selfie Flash, which is a pocket-sized flash that plugs into the audio jack to give the user a quick way to create the perfect lighting conditions to capture a selfie.

The Selfie Flash works by using 8 diffused LEDs to supplement available light for natural color tones, even in low light condition. The rechargeable flash provides up to 100 selfies in a single charge to snap and share pictures day and night, while the 100% shutter sync times seamlessly to capture picture-perfect selfies.

The VIBE X2 Pro itself features a 5.3-inch FHD display with a 64-bit Qualcomm® Snapdragon™ Octa-Core processor that cutting edge performance and battery life, so Lenovo claim, as well as dual (front and back) 13-Megapixel cameras.

The Lenovo VIBE X2 Pro will be available beginning in April, 2015.



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5
Jan

Meet the G Flex 2, LG’s next attempt at making the perfect curved smartphone


Let’s face it: With its curvaceous body, low-res screen, self-healing tendencies and lousy camera, the original LG G Flex was a mixed bag if there ever was one. When it came time to craft the inevitable sequel, though, the Korean tech giant agonized over customer feedback for months to figure out what went awry and what was really important to people. The end result of all that brainstorming is the LG G Flex 2, and it shows — it’s dramatically better than the original in just about every way that matters.

One of the first lessons that LG learned? Bigger isn’t always better. The 6-inch pocket-buster of a screen that graced the original G Flex has been downsized to a more manageable 5.5-inch panel, but its resolution has been cranked up to 1080p in the process. That screen is all the more durable now thanks to a little chemical ingenuity on LG’s part — they took some normal chunks of Corning’s Gorilla Glass and basically burned it via chemical reaction to make it 20 percent more durable. While we’re talking durability, that self-healing feature that protected the G Flex’s back has returned with just a little more oomph: It used to take scratches about three minutes to disappear from the phone’s finish, but now we’re looking at a full recovery usually within 10 seconds.

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Physical design is one thing, but what’s probably most impressive is what’s thrumming away inside. The G Flex 2 is one of the first devices we’ve seen to come with one of Qualcomm’s octa-core Snapdragon 810 chipsets. Those 2.0GHz processor cores are partnered up with 2GB of RAM and support carrier-aggregated LTE Category 6 to boot — the G Flex 2 is meant to be a speed demon, no doubt about it. You’ll be able to choose from either 16 or 32GB of internal storage, and charging the thing shouldn’t take too long either; the included high-speed charger will get you from 0 to 50 percent in about 40 minutes. Oh, and remember the camera on the original G Flex? You probably don’t, because it sucked. Rather than reinvent the wheel this time, LG basically just plopped the G3’s 13-megapixel rear camera (complete with super-fast laser autofocus) into a new body.

So yes, on paper, the G Flex 2 seems like a more-than-worthy upgrade. But what’s it like to actually use? As far as first impressions go, the Flex 2 leaves a strong one — I find that the pictures I’ve taken just don’t do this flexible body justice. It’s just… lovely. The G Flex 2 is tremendously comfortable to press up against your face too (you know, when you actually need to use your phone as a phone), and the curve is meant to put the microphone much closer to your mouth than a regular candy bar design would. And as you might expect, I couldn’t get the G Flex 2 to so much as stutter during my brief time playing with it — it’s a little too early to make sweeping judgments, but it seems clear that the octa-core Snapdragon chipset is a potent one. Overall performance is helped by the fact that LG usually doesn’t futz with stock Android too much, and that still seems to be the case here. That means we’ve got a version of Android 5.0 Lollipop that isn’t overly encumbered by bloatware and visual cruft. Other than the upgrade to Lollipop, though, there isn’t a ton in the way of new software — the most notable addition is a peek feature that lets you pull down from the top of the display to catch a glimpse at the time and your notifications. Alas, it didn’t work terribly well on our (admittedly non-final) tester unit, but LG still has time to work out the kinks.

I’ll be honest: It was a little hard to leave that conference room. If the original G Flex was a test balloon meant to see how regular people would react to the notion of a weirdo, curved smartphone, the G Flex 2 seems like a supersonic jet, a leap forward in evolution that makes its predecessor seem like a chump. There’s still no firm word on when it’ll be released or how much it’ll cost when it does, but stay tuned — we’ll certainly bring you more as we get it.

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4
Jan

Xiaomi’s smartphone sales tripled in one year


Xiaomi Redmi 2

It’s no secret that Xiaomi had a banner year in 2014 and became one of the world’s largest smartphone makers, but now we know just how large. The Chinese company has revealed that it sold 61.1 million smartphones in 2014, or more than three times the 18.7 million it managed in 2013. It’s hard to compare that to rivals without getting more hard numbers, but it’s safe to say that this fledgling firm (it was only founded in 2010) is easily outperforming companies that are old hands at the smartphone game, like LG and Sony.

Xiaomi definitely isn’t making much profit on all those extra phones, though. Its sales “merely” jumped 135 percent in 2014, to 74.3 billion yuan ($11.97 billion). While that’s huge for a business that hasn’t even celebrated its fifth birthday, the data shows that the company is leaning on razor-thin profit margins and low-priced devices (such as the Redmi 1S and Redmi Note) to pull ahead. It’s no wonder that Samsung is hurting lately, especially in China — Xiaomi is willing to sacrifice a lot to achieve market domination.

As if to underscore the point, Xiaomi has already unveiled its first phone of the year, the Redmi 2. The 4.7-inch Android handset delivers a 64-bit capable (if low-end) Snapdragon 410 chip, an 8-megapixel rear camera, a 2-megapixel front shooter and dual-SIM LTE data for just 699 yuan, or $112. That’s a lot of phone for the money, folks. It goes on sale in China on January 9th, and there’s a good chance that it’ll be popular both in its homeland as well as Xiaomi’s other big markets, like India. You aren’t at all likely to see the Redmi 2 officially reach Western nations like the UK or US, but it probably won’t have to in order to become a rousing success.

Xiaomi Redmi 2 on its side

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Via: Reuters, TechCrunch, Engadget Chinese

Source: Hugo Barra (Twitter), MIUI

3
Jan

You can now play Flappy Bird on your Android Wear smartwatch, if you want! [APK Download]


Flappy-Bird-for-Android-Wear

I’m sure there’s an audience out there who crave to play that annoying Flappy Bird game on a tiny smartwatch screen, so this one’s for you. Android dev Corbin Davenport, the same guy that ported Minecraft and Doom to Android Wear, has achieved the same feat with Flappy Bird – the incredibly addictive, incredibly frustrating… Read more »

The post You can now play Flappy Bird on your Android Wear smartwatch, if you want! [APK Download] appeared first on SmarterWatching.


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The post You can now play Flappy Bird on your Android Wear smartwatch, if you want! [APK Download] appeared first on AndroidGuys.

3
Jan

Soon you can start Hyundais with an Android Wear watch


Oh, you use an app on your phone to start your car? How passé. Hyundai’s gearing up for CES by talking up an Android Wear app that’ll let you remotely unlock, locate and start your car with a tap on the wrist. Naturally, if you just can’t muster the energy to swipe on your smartwatch, you’ll be able to issue voice commands to get the job done, too. Isn’t the future grand?

While we’re not exactly surprised to see a major player like Hyundai embracing the ballooning wearables market, it’s definitely not the first company whose cars have bent to the whims of your watch. Android developer Matthew Patience whipped up a little Wear app of his own back in July that lets Tesla S owners fiddle with the sunroof remotely secure their rides… albeit without Tesla’s express permission. While that clever hack only worked for one car, Hyundai’s Wear app should play nice with several — any of the company’s BlueLink-enabled cars should listen to your commands, even ones as long in the tooth as the 2012 Sonata. For now companies like Hyundai are in the wearable-friendly minority, but somehow we don’t think it’ll be long before others start to see the light (especially since the Droidification of the automotive industry is already well underway).

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Via: The Verge

Source: Hyundai News

3
Jan

HTC Desire Eye review: in search of the ultimate selfie machine


HTC Desire Eye review: in search of the ultimate selfie machine

2014 was the year that the word “selfie” finally — and maybe unfortunately — found its way into honest-to-goodness dictionaries. Is it really any surprise, then, that smartphone makers are finally starting to upgrade their front-facing cameras? With the Desire Eye, HTC took a step back and wondered why a phone’s rear camera always had to be better than the one up front. Don’t our lovely mugs deserve the same sort of technical attention and affection as, say, our lunches? HTC (along with others like Oppo) has decided that yes, yes they do. When you look at things that way, the Desire Eye and its twin 13-megapixel cameras seems to be just the perfect compromise for wannabe mobile photographers and the truly vain. But is it really?

Hardware

I’ve got a tendency to be a little long-winded when it comes to device design, so here’s the TL;DR if you’ve got more pressing things to do: The Desire Eye’s got personality. It looks like an ice cream sandwich. I love it. Mostly.

Still with me? Right. That ice cream sandwich aesthetic is the first thing you’ll notice about the Desire Eye; our review unit is a two-toned affair, with a thick red stripe bisecting the rest of the phone’s snow-white body along its edges. Persnickety style mavens might disagree, but I adore the look (in your reviewer’s humble opinion, the alternate blue-and-teal version just doesn’t stick the landing). The second thing you’ll notice is that you’ve got two identical 13-megapixel camera pods sticking out of the phone’s face and rear, each flanked by a two-tone LED flash.

The next thing you’ll pick up on: how cumbersome the thing can be. My hands aren’t gigantic, but they’re not exactly small either, and the Desire Eye seemed thick — just wide enough to feel awkward whenever I picked it up. In fact, it’s not even about how chunky the thing is; with an 8.5mm waistline, it’s technically not even as plump as the 2014 Moto X at its widest point. Really, it all boils down to a design issue: Plenty of other well-received phones have similar thicknesses, but their sides and backs curve dramatically to nestle neatly into your hands and imbue the package with an overall sleeker feel. The end result is a phone that feels substantial in spite of its apparent slightness. The Desire Eye is not that phone.

What it is, though, is solid. HTC’s crafted a body out of polycarbonate, and the shell that forms the backplate sweeps up over the sides to give it a sturdy — if relatively light — feel. On the plus side, the material is sleek enough that you can easily slide the phone out of your tightest jeans pockets, though you might occasionally lose your grip on it like I did. We might not forgive these sins on a flagship, but HTC’s Desire line has always been aimed at a more modest market and those flaws seem just a little more forgivable with that in mind. The whole shebang is IPX7-certified too, so it’ll withstand dips in up to a meter of water for a half-hour before things really start to get dire. Curiously, though, the micro-SIM and memory card aren’t tucked under a battery you pry open with a thumbnail. This is one of those little cost concessions that actually works really well; you’ll never have to pry off a flimsy battery cover or scramble for a paper clip to access those all-important bits of plastic. Sorry, lefties: The placement of these slots means the volume rocker, the power button and the dedicated two-stage shutter button all sit on the Eye’s right side. We sympathize with your struggle.

Display and sound

Let’s not mince words: The Desire Eye is definitely meant to be a mid-range phone, and plenty of nerds will stop reading after they see someone invoke the “m” word. With all that said, the 5.2-inch 1080p IPS display we’ve got here (which, remember, is a touch larger than the HTC One M8’s) is surprisingly easy on the eyes. It’s big and spacious. Color reproduction seems vivid without being outright inaccurate and the viewing angles are accommodating even to people sitting at nearly oblique angles. And the kicker? The screen can be terribly bright if you want it to be (eat that, sunlight). With levels cranked up to the maximum, the Desire Eye easily outshines the more premium One M8 and its fancier Super LCD 3 panel. If I had to pick nits, there’s the very faint light that bleeds into the picture from the edges of the display, but it’s only really apparent if you’re looking at dark images in dim spaces. Don’t worry about it too much.

As usual, the speakers don’t quite live up to the high bar set by the Eye’s display. At first glance, there’s a decent shot you’d miss the speakers altogether since they’re dark and nestled right up against the edges of the screen. They’re subtle and well-hidden, but they’ll get the job done (and then some) when it comes time to binge on YouTube videos. That’s not to say they’re nearly as good as the speakers you’ll hear on other devices, though: They lack the oomph and depth you’ll get out of a One M8, and the sound issuing forth from the stereo pair isn’t as downright loud as the iPhone 6’s single speaker. Still, the fact that we’re getting some separation between channels means most things you’ll listen to will still probably draw you in deeper, even if the overall experience isn’t as loud or bass-heavy. Plug in some headphones, though, and we’re off to the races — HTC’s BoomSound audio tech does a commendable job livening up most things you’ll listen to on a regular basis.

Software

HTC fans — and even people who just casually read this site — could probably spot the company’s Sense interface from a mile away. It’s distinctive in its subtlety, a tough act to nail when it comes to laying extra bits on top of beautiful, beautiful stock Android. Anyway, the Desire Eye ships with a Sense-ified version of Android 4.4.4 KitKat, a flavor combination we’ve run into a few times already. (HTC has said that all of its current phones would get Android 5.0 Lollipop within 90 days as part of its Advantage program, so hopefully the wait won’t be too much longer.)

The laundry list of Sense’s software niceties include a Do Not Disturb mode that lets you define certain times you want to disable notifications and an Extreme Power Saving Mode that automatically shuts off all but the phone’s most vital functions when the battery dips below a certain level. BlinkFeed is still here, and it’s still really good at what it does. The elevator pitch, if you haven’t already heard it: BlinkFeed lets you customize your own personal news feed, culling content from websites and news sources and pulling pertinent data like calendar entries into a single spot. It’s still the most visually different element of HTC’s Sense experience, not to mention one of the most useful — a quick swipe right from the home screen takes you straight into your customized news feed, perfect for when you’re standing around with a few moments to kill.

The rest of the interface is as familiar and as unobtrusive as it’s always been… for the most part, anyway. AT&T being AT&T, of course, your eyes will get blasted by a full suite of preloaded carrier apps and shortcuts that can easily be deleted or disabled during a quick trip into the device’s settings. Don’t feel like traipsing into the depths of your device? You won’t have to, technically — HTC’s app launcher lets you completely hide certain apps from view, though for the sake of the relatively paltry 16GB of storage, you’re better off axing them completely.

Camera

There aren’t any UltraPixels here, folks. When it came time to cobble together the Desire Eye, HTC didn’t go nuts trying to reinvent the sensor — instead, it picked a pair of almost identical 13-megapixel cameras and plopped ‘em right in there (more on that later). You’d think that a phone so clearly keen on photography would pack a barnburner of a sensor (or in this case, two barnburners). Alas, while the cameras here definitely aren’t bad, anyone looking for truly excellent performance is going to walk away a little disappointed.

Let’s start with that rear shooter, shall we? Resolution aside, it’s got an f/2.0 aperture to suck in as many photons as possible, and a 28mm lens perched in front of the sensor. Just like every other smartphone camera out there, the photos I captured using the Desire Eye’s rear-facer were mostly well-saturated when the sun or a room’s lighting were playing nice, but the situation quickly gets hairy as things get dim. Typical, no? It doesn’t help that most of the pictures I took outdoors seemed a little dimmer and less vivid than reality by default — it took a few trips into the HTC Camera app’s settings to fire up HDR mode or tweak the exposure and ISO to my liking. It never felt like the Desire Eye took too long to adjust focus as I bounded from subject to subject; on average it took just under two seconds to figure out what it was looking at. That’ll seem downright glacial if you’re used to the sub-second focus times of the One M8 and the LG G3, but in practice it’s less of an issue than you might think. If this camera has committed any great sin, it’s that it doesn’t excite; it’s not great, but it’s not bad either. Most of the time I wouldn’t even get worked up about it, but when a company tries to play up a camera when it tries to sell a phone, I can’t help but expect more than just the status quo.

Front-facing cameras are always crap compared to the bigger, beefier sensor sitting on the other side of the phone, but not here. Well, mostly. It’s important to note that this shooter is configured just a bit differently to better suit the selfie experience: The slightly narrower f/2.2 aperture is offset by a wider-angle lens to help squeeze more of your friends into every shot. Other than that, the cameras should behave the same… but they don’t. I noticed a bit of extra fuzziness, a lack of clarity in photos taken with the front camera, even after I disabled the mildly hilarious Live Makeup feature. (Got blemishes? Not anymore!). Those shots also seemed a little warmer than the ones taken with the rear camera, a move that seems tailor-made to liven up your face even when you haven’t seen the sun in a while. I can live with that. Thankfully, the dual-tone LED flash does a respectable job brightening up your mug, and doing so without making you downright ghastly in the process.

That’s all great, but what of the software? HTC has gone to town with the shooting modes baked into the Eye, and some of them are funny or absurd enough to keep you from getting too upset at your soft photos. The best of them has you transplanting faces from one person to another, and the results are surprisingly natural — equal parts hilarity and absurdity with hardly any work involved at all. If your overriding concern is less about impeccable picture quality and more about owning a phone that’s fun to take pictures with, the Desire Eye shouldn’t leave you hanging.

Performance and battery life

So the Desire Eye’s eyes leave quite a bit to be desired, but what about the rest of the package? The brain of the operation in this case is one of Qualcomm’s quad-core Snapdragon 801 chips clocked at 2.3GHz — the very same one that you’ll find in its big brother the One M8 and Samsung’s Galaxy S5. Pair that processing power with 2GB of RAM and you’ve got an admittedly mid-range phone that sure doesn’t run like one. HTC might’ve played it too safe with those lackluster cameras, but at least the Desire Eye has more than enough horsepower to keep it relevant. During my time using it as my daily driver, the combination of the silicon thrumming away inside the Eye and HTC’s relatively light touch with the software made for a mostly smooth experience while poking around the phone. Swiping through long webpages? Switching between apps like a crazy person? All just peachy. It occasionally took a more pronounced swipe on the screen to switch between home screens, but now I’m just being nitpicky.

But let’s be real here: The first thing I did when I got my hands on the thing was to take it for few laps through Asphalt 8. Shooting a Dodge Dart down beautifully rendered winding roads was as smooth and polished as ever, and only rarely did any sort of minor visual hiccup catch my eye. Things didn’t change much once I jumped out of the car and switched into a couple rounds of automatically killing zombies in Dead Trigger 2. I’m probably in the minority who doesn’t find the game too meaty or fulfilling, but hey, it provided plenty of on-screen action and cutscenes for the Desire Eye to handle with ease.

HTC Desire Eye
Samsung Galaxy S5
HTC One M8 Samsung Note 4
Quadrant 2.0 23,800 24,714 25,548 24,425
Vellamo 3.0 3,119 2,715 2,878 1,808
SunSpider 1.0.2* (ms) 903 820 782 793
3DMark IS Unlimited 17,260 17,954 20,612 20,692
GFXBench 3.0 Manhattan Offscreen (fps) 10.3 11.5 11.2 18.8
CF-Bench 35,626 33,351 40,223 43,234

*SunSpider: Lower scores are better.

Now that we’ve established all that, here’s how the Eye stacked up to the competition. As you’d expect out of a very well-traveled chipset, there’s very little variance between what you can squeeze out of the Desire Eye and some relatively recent flagships. It still gets pretty thoroughly trounced by the Galaxy Note 4 (obviously), but the subjective truth of the matter is that most times you’ll probably struggle to tell the difference. I still wish it came with more internal storage out of the gate since about 5GB of the preinstalled 16 is consumed by Android itself, but the easily accessible memory card slot makes that reality much less troubling.

The Desire Eye draws its juice from a 2,400mAh cell that you can’t ever access, putting it right alongside devices like the 2014 Moto X in terms of battery size. In our standard battery-rundown test (for the umpteenth time: Screen brightness is set to 50 percent while the phone loops a 720p video and sucks down all the social notifications it can), the Desire Eye managed just under 10 hours before it finally succumbed to exhaustion. The One M8 can usually last for over an hour longer thanks to its slightly bigger battery, but at least the Eye can stick it out for a full workday and then some. With even more sparing use (say, over a quiet holiday weekend) you can expect the Eye to hang in there for about three days before it needs another stop at a wall outlet, and that’s without the Extreme Power Saver mode kicking in.

The competition

The Desire Eye’s biggest selling point — the twin cameras forever peering in two directions — means there isn’t really a direct competitor to this thing. Sure, you could shell out for a rather lovely Oppo N3 ($649) with its single, swiveling sensor, but that assumes you’re strictly looking for an unlocked device you’ve got to buy online. With its bigger 5.5-inch screen, 16-megapixel sensor and the included O-Click remote, though, it’s arguably even better-suited to mobile photography than the Eye is. Meanwhile, if you dig the Desire aesthetic and you’re operating on a budget, there’s always the Desire 610 to consider. It’s smaller and only packs an FWVGA (854 x 480) screen and a quad-core 1.2GHz Snapdragon 400 processor, but at $170 without a contract, it’s still worth paying attention to. On the other end of AT&T’s device spectrum are heavyweights like the LG G3, with its gorgeous Quad HD screen. Spec-wise, it’s right up there with the Desire Eye and the rest of the world’s current spate of flagship phones, but the combination of a great display and a more robust rear camera make it worth your time (especially since it’s just a hair pricier than the Eye).

And then there’s the obvious alternative: The upmarket HTC One M8. While it’s not a game changer in the way that its predecessor was, it’s still a lovely device thanks to that comfortable, curvaceous metal body and its reassuring heft. Yes, you’re giving up the ability to liven up your selfies with a front-facing flash, but, really, not everyone needs their selfies to look pristine. In fact, I’d go as far as saying you’re almost always much better off picking up an HTC One M8 instead, considering the usually teensy price difference between the two.

Wrap-up

In many ways, the Desire Eye is a wolf in sheep’s clothing — that is, it packs much of the same power as full-on flagship smartphones all in a package designed to keep prices down. More importantly, it’s very much a niche device, an offshoot of HTC’s evolutionary line that caters to folks who can’t bear the thought of a day without selfies. If anything, that’s why the cameras are so disappointing in their mediocrity. While it’s still sort of out there, the very concept of the Desire Eye could’ve absolutely shined if HTC fitted the thing with some more robust, capable shooters. As it stands, though, it’s a mostly great phone that stands up well to the rest of the pack, even if it doesn’t live up to its potential.

Filed under: Mobile

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2
Jan

BLU launches new 4G capable devices


studio5lte-1

4G is taking over the existing network bands due to the speed and flexibility it provides above 3G. But the problem is our old devices are not capable enough to run a 4G network and truth to be told, phone manufacturers include 4G capabilities mostly on their high-end flagship devices.

Drilling a hole in our pockets just for LTE is not very wise and contract phones are sometimes hard to bear with. BLU comes to rescue for such individuals. With their new Studio LTE series, they offer devices ranging from lowest to biggest in terms of hardware for every category of consumers all embedded with 4G chips.

They currently offer only three devices namely, Studio 6.0 LTE, Studio 5.0 HD LTE, Studio Mini LTE. All these devices have Snapdragon chipsets at the core and they have a pretty decent hardware. Not to mention they are all unlocked too. All I can say is that their highest end device that is the Studio 6.0 LTE offers specs a little superior to the HTC Desire 816 at a price little less than it ($279 to be precise).

You can find full specifications in the source link given below. Here is a little price sheet for you to follow.

Studio 6.0 LTE – $279

Studio 5.0 HD LTE – $199

Studio Mini LTE – $119

Source: PRNewswire


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2
Jan

Kodak jumps on the Android bandwagon with their own device


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The smartphone market rarely stands still and Kodak look to be embracing that by utilising Google’s Android OS. Kodak was spotted churning out plans for a new Android device to be announced in CES 2015.

Not only that, it seems Bullitt Group is going to partner with Kodak in releasing their own device. Bullitt is already an established manufacturer for making Android devices. The devices will flaunt best-in-class image management software and features along with great design and UI.

The devices will be aimed for, but not exclusive to, those who want a rich android experience without the overcomplicated tidbits of Android Ecosystem. Not only that, since this is Kodak we are talking about, you can expect the devices to carry with them bespoke image capture functionality and sharing tools.

Kodak also has future plans to release a tablet, a 4G handset and a connected camera in the second half of 2015. Though what ‘connected camera’ means remains to be seen.


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