When will LG’s smartphone patience run out?
LG is happy to announce that, thanks to its home appliance and entertainment divisions, it’s made a record quarterly profit. But the company is less delighted to concede that its mobile division has suffered another weak quarter, ostensibly down to lukewarm sales of the LG G5. But LG’s problems run a lot deeper than just an underwhelming flagship: It hasn’t booked a profit since the second quarter of 2015. Even then, it was making a measly 1.2 cents in profit on every handset it sold, which wasn’t much to write home about.
Of course, LG’s mobile division has been written off before. Back in 2013, profits fell off a cliff, but the company was able to pull back from the brink the following year and make some cash once again. But there’s a substantial difference between what happened then and what’s going on now. Firstly, this drop is deeper and longer than the last one. More importantly, the smartphone market is radically different from how it was just a year or two ago.
IDC has published its latest research on the state of the smartphone industry and the results don’t bode well for companies like LG. Growth has effectively stalled, mirroring reports from earlier in the year claiming that the smartphone boom is effectively over. The issue is simple: Everyone who can afford a smartphone already owns one, and they aren’t worried about upgrading on a fixed, 24-month cycle. People are holding onto their devices for an average of 30 months, because most decent handsets don’t turn into hot garbage precisely 730 days after buying it.
Lg handset sales vs. operating income
Samsung, LG’s Korean rival, has been able to ride through the rough tides to see its quarterly shipment volumes increase. But for the most part, a lot of the handset business is now being subsumed by a handful of Chinese companies. As a result, once-hallowed brands like HTC, LG and Sony no longer make “top five handset makers” list, having been replaced by Huawei, Oppo and Vivo, the latter two of which have the same parent company, BBK Electronics.
Those three Chinese companies managed to ship 32.1, 22.6 and 16.4 million handsets in the last three months, a combined total of 71.1 million smartphones. LG, which is backed by an enormous manufacturing conglomerate and has significant brand recognition, managed just 13.9 million in the same period of time. These firms are even stealing Apple’s lunch, whose shipments dropped 15 percent since the same quarter in 2015.
iCharts
LG has said that it’s working on a new V-Series device, which is likely a follow-up to the V10 from last year. That phone earned some middling praise when it first came out, but even so, is one new handset likely to recapture LG’s fading glory? These days, almost all smartphones are good enough, and it’s not as if highly profitable flagship devices have a monopoly on exciting features anymore. If most people are satisfied with a OnePlus 3 that costs $399, then why spend another $50 or so on a G5?
Unlike HTC, LG is backed by an enormous manufacturing conglomerate, so it’s not likely it’ll need to ever pull out of the smartphone business. But there’s a question as to how long its leadership will tolerate triple-digit losses before taking action. Sure, Nokia, Blackberry and others all hung on for years of pain, hoping that things were about to turn around. But history has shown that it’s difficult to pull out of a death spiral once you’re already in one.
Perhaps it won’t be long before someone decides to scale back its mobile arm to Sony-esque proportions, releasing one or two devices each year to keep the factories working. What’s clear, however, is that a lot of these companies that were once considered pillars of the Android market have found themselves slow to adapt to a new world order.
Source: IDC, LG
Google Play gives Android app developers more categories
Two months after giving VR its own category, Google Play will soon expand the list of Android app subcategories with additional general interest ones, allowing developers to more accurately slot theirs. Here’s the full list of new ones: Art & Design, Auto & Vehicles, Dating, Events, Food & Drink, House & Home and Parenting. Ideally, the increased specificity will improve the relevance of Google Play’s search results.
They’ve also renamed a few of the old subcategories to avoid confusion with the new, so ‘Transportation’ is now ‘Maps & Navigation’ while ‘Media & Video’ will now be ‘Video Players & Editors.’ The change will go into effect over the next 60 days.
Source: Android Developers Blog
Runkeeper’s Running Groups keep you motivated
If you have running buddies, you know the advantages they bring — they’ll encourage you to run when you’d otherwise slack off, or when you just have to one-up a friend. And Runkeeper knows it. The Asics-owned developer has updated its Android and iOS apps with a Running Groups feature that, unsurprisingly, promises to keep you off the couch. As many as 25 people can participate in challenges (such as distance or the most runs), and there’s a group chat to either motivate your pals or trash-talk them when you emerge triumphant.
As VentureBeat observes, the tricky bit is getting everyone to settle on a single running app. You may use Runkeeper, but what if your friends use Endomondo or Nike+ Running (which, we’d add, already has a social feature)? Of course, that’s really the point. If Runkeeper can get you to settle on its app for your running circle, it’s going to get a few new users in one shot. Not that you’ll necessarily complain, especially if you find that solo runs just aren’t cutting it.
Source: Runkeeper Blog
OnePlus 3 ‘Soft Gold’ edition arrives in understated luxury
About a month after releasing Engadget’s favorite sub-$400 phone, OnePlus is classing up the solid, budget-minded OnePlus 3 with a new, “Soft Gold” color variant. “This isn’t your typical gaudy gold smartphone,” a OnePlus staffer wrote in the subtweet-heavy product announcement. Instead of a jewel-encrusted piece of hardware, OnePlus has gone for a toned-down, “low-profile take on gold” to match the phone’s budget-friendly price.
Naturally, the new color comes with all the same build quality and impressive horsepower we’ve come to expect from OnePlus, plus the Soft Gold edition sports a luxurious-sounding finish that feels “reminiscent of holding fine, silky-soft sand.” The new limited edition is available today in the US, and in other regions starting on August 1st.
Twitter for Android gets a much-needed night mode
White and blue might be Twitter’s official look, but it’s not exactly eye-friendly at night — fire up the official mobile app in the dark and you’ll burn your retinas. Mercifully, that won’t be a problem from now on. Twitter for Android now includes an optional night mode that, as you’d suspect, changes the palette to less eye-searing shades of dark gray. This isn’t a new feature in Twitter clients by any stretch (Tweetbot says hi), but it’s helpful if you prefer to use the official app. As for iOS? While there’s no mention of a night mode yet, it’s likely coming in the near future.
Now on Android! Turn on night mode to Tweet in the dark. 🌙https://t.co/XVpmQeHdAk pic.twitter.com/vrIDEM22vO
— Twitter (@twitter) July 26, 2016
Source: Twitter (1), (2)
Prisma’s neural net-powered photo app arrives on Android
When Prisma Labs said you wouldn’t have to wait long to use its Android app outside of the beta test, it wasn’t joking around. The finished Prisma app is now readily available on Google Play, giving anyone a chance to see what iOS users were excited about a month ago. Again, the big deal is the use of cloud-based machine learning to turn humdrum photos into hyper-stylized pieces of art — vivid brush strokes and pencil lines appear out of nowhere. Give it a shot if you don’t think your smartphone’s usual photo filters are enough.
Via: The Verge
Source: Google Play
Google Play starts showing apps’ actual download sizes
Google Play now displays the actual storage space a whole app or an upgrade will take up, so you don’t accidentally download anything too big. If an update is only 2.91MB, it will show that exact figure right there in each app’s detail box. That will give you the chance to reconsider your download or to free up some space before getting a particularly large game or VR experience.
Besides displaying more accurate file sizes, Google also tweaked its Play Store algorithm to make updates even smaller. Most Android apps (98 percent of them) only download changes to their APK files when you update them, and those new files merge with the old ones. The updated algorithm will make those updates up to 50 percent smaller.
Finally, Google’s improved compression algorithms will reduce big games’ file sizes, which could be as huge as 2GB, by around 12 percent. Those with high-end phones might not get much out of these changes, but they could make a big difference for those who own more affordable devices with limited storage.

Source: Android Developers Blog
Cyanogen reportedly cuts jobs as it changes course
The Cyanogen team formed a company with hopes of becoming the third major mobile platform, but it looks like the custom Android developer is scaling back its ambitions. Sources speaking to both Android Police and Recode claim that Cyanogen is making “significant” job cuts, laying off about 20 percent (around 30 people) of its staff. Reportedly, this is part of a “pivot” that will focus on apps, rather than an entire operating system like Cyanogen OS. Whether or not that involves the firm’s MOD platform, its Apps Package or something else isn’t apparent.
Chief executive Kirk McMaster turned down Recode’s request for a comment, so we wouldn’t expect either confirmation or immediate answers as to what’s coming next.
A change in direction wouldn’t be completely shocking. Although CyanogenMod is still a staple of the Android enthusiast world, Cyanogen OS hasn’t had many customers. You probably know Cyanogen’s ill-fated partnership on the OnePlus One, and the rest of its deals haven’t exactly set the world on fire — a one-off Lenovo phone and the cheap-but-cheerful Wileyfox Swift are among the examples. Simply put, many device makers are content with either creating their own Android variants or going with stock software. There may not be a large market for licensing a custom Android release from someone else.
Source: Android Police, Recode
Download the Chffr app for free to help self-driving cars learn
Self-driving cars are undoubtedly part of the future of owning an automobile, and George Hotz’s company Comma.ai is making it easier than ever to get involved.
Hotz’s Chffr app (available only to Android users for now) actually helps teach autonomous cars how to better drive and understand human behaviors while doing so. You simply download the app, mount your phone on your windshield and leave the app open as you drive around as usual. Data collected while you go about your day will be uploaded to Comma.ai’s servers.
When you use Chffr you receive Comma Points, which are accumulated on the bottom right of the app’s screen. It’s unclear as to what you get for accumulating said points at the moment, but perhaps it’ll all pay off with a cool surprise in the future.
If you’re interested in cultivating the self-driving car movement, download the app here (available for beta testing) now.
Via: CNET
‘Candid,’ the anonymous chat app, enforces civility with AI
If Twitter, 4Chan and Reddit are any indication, people will exploit even the barest of anonymization to be complete and utter asshats online. Just look at the recent attacks against Ghostbusters star Leslie Jones, or Reddit’s self-induced purge of racist, xenophobic and bigoted chat groups. Fully anonymized social services like Whisper or Yik Yak, where unidentifiable mobs can unceasingly bully other users, are no better. An app called Candid, which launches today, is designed to fight this unacceptable online behavior with artificial intelligence.
Developed by a pair of former Google project leads, Candid (the company) has developed a natural language processing system that analyzes every piece of posted content and flags inflammatory items for removal — things like hate speech, threats and slander. Off-topic posts are moved to more appropriate sections, so you won’t have to dig through political discussions to read about NASA’s mission to Mars.
Candid (the app) is available free on both iOS and Android. Similar to Yik Yak’s location-based function, each Candid user will see a personalized feed of posts and content based on their “education, employment, interests and neighborhood,” according to the company’s press release.

Interestingly, you can even sign up using your Facebook account to seed the app’s Group suggestions. That seems counterintuitive, though Candid’s stringent privacy rules account for this. All personally identifiable data — including IP address, precise location data and Facebook contacts — are encrypted with a one-way hash before they reach the company’s servers. That hash cannot be decrypted by Candid — or anyone else, for that matter. What’s more, closing or abandoning an account permanently deletes all that encrypted data from Candid’s servers.
Oddly, though, the app also requires users to provide their phone number during the initial account setup. The app even sends a two-step authentication code to confirm that the number is real. That data are encrypted like everything else Candid collects but it feels strange and out-of-place to request that right off the bat, especially from an app that sells itself on anonymity.
Once you get through the initial setup, Candid offers a number of mechanisms to maintain the user’s privacy. For example, the app applies a new, continually randomized username like “Curious Rabbit” or “Creative Lemur” to every new post. The app also gently coerces users to be polite by awarding various badges like “Explorer,” “Giver” or “Gossip” for positive posts, but will slap a “Hater” tag on people who are consistently negative.
This process, according to Candid’s PR team, is entirely automated. A “lot of factors contribute to getting the hater badge,” a rep told me, “including the number of negative comments and posts based on sentiment analysis, number of down votes a user gets and the number of posts from the user that were taken down. Posts that are taken down by the system are reviewed by a human.”

Additionally, Candid has a system in place to first identify potentially unsubstantiated rumors through its algorithmic AI, which are then verified by a person using web and Twitter results. Any rumors deemed to be false are quickly removed, while true statements — such as news leaks — remain. Similarly, if the system sees that a poster is threatening self-harm, it will issue a push notification to him or her with the number for a local crisis helpline.
So what do you get when an AI automatically scrubs your internet forum of all offensive content? Turns out, it’s banality. The test feeds that I created during my time using the service felt like a disembodied comments section, regardless of the groups that I subscribed to. While you can add external links to posts, very few of the 600-plus beta testers appear to do so. This leaves you reading strings of random, disconnected thoughts with very little context. You won’t find inflammatory content (kudos for that) but the discussions filling that void are far from riveting. Most posts echo the same shallow hot takes you’d find on YouTube or Reddit, just without the overt xenophobia and misogyny.
What’s more, there isn’t much actual discussion going on within these posts. Granted, that may be because there are only a few hundred beta testers, but most replies to posts resemble those in a YT comment section — people talk at each other, often in non sequiturs, rather than with each other. Or perhaps it’s like The New York Times comment section: There’s plenty of civility, sure, but it’s generally devoid of real interaction. Groupthink is also an issue once you delve beyond the broadest of groups. The overarching Politics Group offers a variety of thoughts and opinions but once you get into the Republican and Democrat groups or the Sanders, Clinton and Trump groups, views expressed within them become increasingly myopic.

At a more basic level, I can’t figure out the intrinsic value or benefit this app is really supposed to provide its users. Outside divulging state secrets or posting the details of a damning business deaI — which I am willing to bet nobody reading this post has ever been in the position to do — I fail to see why one would need to go to these anonymizing lengths. If anything, this app encourages disingenuous behavior. I could go on there and make threats against the president’s life if I felt like it, with virtually no reprisal outside having the system eventually flag and delete the post. I mean, if you feel you have to shield yourself behind multiple digital walls just to toss that gem of an opinion out onto the internet, write it down in a journal instead, scream it into a pillow — or maybe just keep it to yourself.



