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Posts tagged ‘iPhone’

28
Sep

Samsung Promotions has a new offer that pays your monthly payments until 2016



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Samsung really wants you to buy one of their phones. Last month, we saw Samsung’s attempts to steal iPhone users away from Apple with the Samsung Ultimate Test Drive, and now Samsung Promotions has back with another deal that still tries to steal iPhones users, but also users from other Android manufacturers as well. The deal is that if you buy a Samsung device – namely a 2015 flagship device – on a installment plan with one of T-Mobile, Sprint, Verizon or US Cellular, Samsung will cover the monthly repayment for that Samsung device until 2016 – i.e. for the next three months. The deal gets even sweeter if you’re changing over from an iPhone as Samsung will let you register your outgoing iPhone to get $100 Google Play credit.

Samsung PromotionsWe haven’t had a chance to take a look at the terms and conditions of the deal, nor do we know why AT&T isn’t available in this promotion, but it sounds like a pretty good deal if you’ve been sitting on the fence of a Samsung device purchase recently – it goes without saying that this deal is available in the US only. It seems that Samsung’s really paid attention to the latest surveys that have detailed the migration of Android users to iOS recently, and it’s clear that Android manufacturers should be doing a better job of trying to stop this rather than letting their hardware speak for itself.


What do you think about this latest Samsung Promotions offer? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

Source: Samsung Promotions via Droid-life

The post Samsung Promotions has a new offer that pays your monthly payments until 2016 appeared first on AndroidSPIN.

27
Sep

Video Shows Benefits of 2GB RAM in iPhone 6s


When Apple announced the iPhone 6s, they didn’t mention that the new iPhones carry 2GB of RAM, an increase from 1GB on the iPhone 6. The 2GB RAM was later confirmed in Xcode and benchmarks. This increased RAM allows the iPhone to keep more Apps and data active in memory.

iDownloadBlog recorded this video showing the difference between the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6s after loading several websites in Safari:


The iPhone 6s is able to keep more websites active in memory without requiring a reload when returning to the tab. The additional RAM should also allow more apps to remain active in memory without relaunching.

The iPhone 6s and 6s Plus just launched on Friday.


27
Sep

Latest iPhone screen bypass is tougher than the Contra code


Apple has just rolled out iOS 9.1, and it unfortunately has a flaw in tow that gives nosy techies a way to bypass your lock screen — yet again. YouTube user videosdebarraquito posted a recording of how the hack is carried out, as you can see below the fold. Similar to previous bypass techniques (and there were several), the latest one is also quite tough to execute: the hacker has to be fast enough to launch Siri after typing in five incorrect passcodes and before the device locks him out. The timing has to be perfect or else it wouldn’t work, but if it does, then he can jump into the clock app from Siri, then into Messages, Contacts and Photos.

That potentially compromises your friends’ and families’ details, private communications and images. Thankfully, Ars Technica says that the technique doesn’t always work. It might be because the other people who attempted it weren’t fast enough (we sure weren’t when we tried), but it could also be due to specific settings. To be safe, you can use a six-digit/letter passcode instead of four, disable Siri until the flaw gets fixed or make sure no random person touches your phone.

Via: Ars Technica

Source: videosdebarraquito (YouTube)

26
Sep

Hands-On With 3D Touch on the New iPhone 6s Plus


The standout new feature of the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus is 3D Touch, which Apple is billing as an evolution of Multi-Touch. The new feature allows the display to sense how much pressure is being applied, opening up new ways for users to interact with their phones. We went hands-on with the 6s Plus and explored what the feature is capable of.


3D Touch can be used both in and out of apps. Outside of apps, on the Home Screen, a user can press down on an app’s icon to quickly interact with the app. This feature is called Quick Actions. For instance, pressing on the Phone app allows you to quickly call a recent contact. Or, pressing down on the Camera icon allows you to quickly take a selfie.

Inside of apps, 3D Touch allows users to “Peek” and “Pop” into their content. For instance, within the Messages app a user can press down on a contact’s message thread to see their latest message and then press down harder to Pop into the thread to reply. Finally, 3D Touch can be used to turn the keyboard into a trackpad.

Apple notes that creating 3D Touch was “unbelievably hard”, and that the company had to work with Corning to create a new pliable iPhone cover glass. When the glass is pressed, the 96 sensors embedded in the backlight display to measure microscopic changes between it and the glass. The measurements are combined with the touch sensor to sync finger motion with images on the screen.

On first impression, users are enjoying 3D Touch. MacRumors forum member jsmith189 said he thinks it could become an integral part of navigating an iPhone.

I really enjoy the 3D Touch – while there aren’t too many apps that use it right now, I can definitely see it becoming part of my everyday ‘without thinking about it’ navigation.

Other users, like forum member Boardiesboi, note that the feature does take getting used to and that he adjusted the sensitivity on the feature so that it responds to lighter touches.

Users who prefer to use screen protectors on their devices shouldn’t hesitate to purchase one for the iPhone 6s or 6s Plus, as Apple marketing chief Phil Schiller confirmed in an email to 3D Techtronics that screen protectors would work with the new display technology as long as they comply with Apple’s design guidelines.

While 3D Touch is mostly compatible with Apple apps so far, third party companies are likely to embrace the new functionality in their apps in the near future. Today, Twitter updated its app to take advantage of the feature, allowing users to quickly access search or compose new tweets from the home screen.


26
Sep

iPhone 6s Plus Touch ID Much Quicker Than iPhone 6 Plus in New Hands-On Video


With the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus, one well-known hardware feature got a substantial upgrade: Touch ID. Apple improved the Touch ID sensor, allowing it to recognize fingerprints faster than it could previously. We went hands-on with the brand new iPhone 6s Plus and compared its improved Touch ID sensor to the one in the iPhone 6 Plus.


The 6s Plus’ Touch ID unlocks the phone almost instantaneously, taking a user straight to their Home Screen when they rest their finger on it. Comparatively, the speed of the 6 Plus’ Touch ID makes it seem like a two-step feature, first waking up the display and then taking a user to the Home Screen.

On first impression, some users think the new Touch ID is too fast, however. Reddit user MasterofLuiz notes that it’s so fast it affects how he usually uses his phone.

I can’t even click the home button to check the clock without it automatically unlocking the phone. It’s crazy

MacRumors forum member mykaluk has attempted to best the speed of the new Touch ID, attempting to tap the Home Button so quickly that it doesn’t read his fingerprint. However, he notes that the Touch ID is able to read the fingerprint every time.

Be sure to check out the iPhone forum to join the discussion about the two new phones and their new features, or visit the iPhone accessories forum to see how the new cases look on the new devices, or whether existing cases fit the new devices. If you’d like to find out which apps take advantage of 3D Touch, make sure to check out the iOS Apps forum.


26
Sep

Live Photos Shown Off In New Hands-On Video


One of the brand new features for the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus is Live Photos, which captures an additional 3 seconds of video around a still image and plays it through when a user 3D Touches the photo. We went hands on with the new feature and experimented with it.


To use Live Photos, a user just has to take a normal photo when the “live” icon in the upper center of the screen is lit up. The iPhone automatically captures 1.5 seconds of video before and after the photo and stitches it all together. Because Live Photos combines video and still images, the new format takes up double the space a regular photo would.

While reviewers were largely positive on Live Photos, first impressions from users haven’t been as kind. MacRumors forum member kungxpao said that he turned the feature off after a few test shots. However, some users see potential in the feature, like fellow forum member Conan86.

Live Photo is a great feature when you create them intentionally. I hope Apple would allow us to remove accidental “live” portions of a photo as I probably wouldn’t hold 3 seconds to take a photo every single time.

Only the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus can create Live Photos, but they are viewable on all iOS 9 devices and Macs running OS X El Capitan. Eventually, Live Photos will also be shareable on social media services like Facebook and Instagram.


25
Sep

iPhone 6s First Impressions: Touch ID is Super Fast, Live Photos Are a Gimmick and Rose Gold is Not Too Pink


We’re well into the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus launch day, which means people all over the world are receiving their devices either via delivery or from Apple retail locations. On the MacRumors forums, customers who have an iPhone in hand have started sharing their first impressions of the device, giving us a look at release reactions from the general public.

We’re highlighting some interesting tidbits and thoughts on the iPhones below, and we’ll link to a number of forum threads that are well worth checking out.

iphone6sboxImage via SmoveAL01
Initial reactions from customers receiving their devices are similar to the thoughts we saw in the first reviews. Customers are liking the new flagship feature, 3D Touch, and say Touch ID is a whole lot faster than it was on the iPhone 6. Some even think it’s too fast. From MacRumors forum member Conan86:

Touch ID is so fast that just tapping the Home Button to access shortcuts such as the Control Center or Swipe up for Camera would just unlock the device.

On the slight size increase, MacRumors readers feel that it’s definitely a noticeable change, with the iPhone 6s Plus and the iPhone 6s feeling heavier. With the addition of 3D Touch, the weight of the two devices jumped to 143 grams (iPhone 6s) and 192 grams (iPhone 6s Plus), up from 129 grams and 172 grams, respectively, in the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus.

iphone6sImage via tgwaste
A lot of new iPhone 6s and 6s Plus owners are unimpressed with Live Photos, and several have called the feature a “gimmick.” The new always on “Hey Siri” feature works great according to AppleRobert, PedCrossing says the Taptic Engine “feels fantastic” and “makes much less noise,” and JD2015 says the iPhone 6s Plus is “noticeably faster” than the iPhone 6 Plus. From forum member yep-sure:

Live Photos are a terrible gimmick. I just don’t understand the point. If you want a photo, you take a photo, if you want video, you shoot some video. All recent iPhones do this very well. Live Photo looks like a great high quality image, then it goes to a lower quality, choppy/low frame rate video for a few seconds. This is a feature that I would turn off immediately/never use.

In a thread on the Rose Gold iPhone 6s, readers are sharing their thoughts on the new color. Most people think the Rose Gold iPhone is less pink than they expected.

rosegoldiphoneImage via Bako-MacAddict
Of course, there’s still debate over its color, with reader asleep calling saying “It’s ‘no doubt about it’ pink in daylight.” From forum member Nazifur:

I don’t know what all these people were talking about earlier.
The rose gold colour is veryyy nice.

It’s definitely not that light pink pink… it has a copper look when you hold it in certain angle.

Over all it’s diffidently a mix of gold and pink which looks awesome.

New iPhone owners are also discussing which existing iPhone 6s and 6s Plus cases fit the new thicker, taller devices. The iPhone 6 Plus Silicone case fits the iPhone 6s Plus “perfectly,” and the Leather iPhone 6 case fits the iPhone 6s. Westcoastcyc helpfully points out that Best Buy has relabeled most cases as suitable for the iPhone 6 and 6s, so most cases will fit both devices despite the small size difference.

iphone6splusseidioiPhone 6s Plus in a Seidio Surface Case via Wangta
A full list of the threads cited above is included below, along with some additional threads that include interesting information on the two new devices.

iPhone 6s and 6s Plus First Impressions – Share Your Photos
Rose Gold iPhone 6s and 6s Plus Impressions
iPhone 6s Plus – First Thoughts
Will Old iPhone Cases Fit the iPhone 6s/6s Plus?
Cases for the Rose Gold iPhone 6s
Full Price AT&T Phone Comes Unlocked
Tim Cook Visits Georgetown Apple Store for iPhone 6s Launch
iPhone 6s Yellow Tint?
iPhone 6s and 6s Plus Dock Impressions

Make sure to check out the iPhone Forum to join in on the discussion about the two new iPhones, or visit the iPhone Accessories Forum for advice on which cases might look best with the new devices and which existing cases fit. For apps that take advantage of the new 3D Touch feature, make sure to check out the iOS Apps Forum.


25
Sep

Should Apple discontinue the 16GB iPhone?


Should Apple discontinue the 16GB iPhone?

In the wake of the launch of the iPhone 6S/6S Plus, the tech journalism sphere was awash with outrage about the continued existence of the 16GB iPhone. This bottom tier is “insulting,” in an era when most Android manufacturers now sell their flagship phones with at least 32GB of built-in storage. If it wasn’t intolerable before, they say, then the addition of live photos and 4K recording to these latest devices have rendered a 16GB iPhone with almost no usable space whatsoever. But is this a real point of concern, or some manufactured anger that masks a culture of entitlement? Devindra Hardawar and Dan Cooper try to hash this topic out without flipping any tables in the process.

Dan Cooper

As much as we may all feel differently, Apple does not owe any of us, at all, jack shit.

Take a look at some of these opinion pieces and the anger all seems to be centered on the idea that Apple owes us a 32GB iPhone when it clearly does not. Do you think it’s because Apple is one of the richest companies in the world that people feel so entitled to demand that it discount its most profitable products? I don’t imagine too many people being taken seriously if they suggested that McDonald’s should replace McDoubles with Big Macs and yet still only charge $1 for it.

It should come as no surprise to anyone that technology companies produce devices for less money than they charge to sell them. That’s how you create a sustainable business, and it’s not as if Apple is different from every other firm in history for acting this way. There’s no definitive figure, but it’s believed that the cost to produce an iPhone is roughly $200, with the remaining $449 of that $649 off-contract price going to the company. Does that make it a rip-off? Possibly, but nobody’s forcing you to buy it. There are figuratively hundreds of companies who will sell you cheaper devices, including Apple itself.

I guess the one stick that you can beat Apple with is that the Galaxy S6, which was released in March, can be had for $130 on a two-year deal with 32GB of built-in storage. I think that’s a false line of argument, since disappointing sales of this six-month-old device forced Samsung to slash the price. When it launched, it cost the same as a 16GB iPhone on a two-year deal, but clearly not enough people found it compelling enough to want to fork over that amount of cash. And yet, they’re more than happy to for a device that’s somehow inferior?

Devindra Hardawar

It’s really not about entitlement — at all. My hatred for the 16GB iPhone stems purely from the fact that it’s a shockingly low amount of storage for a premium device in 2015. Today, 32GB is pretty much the default now on other high-end smartphones, and many even offer expandable storage via microSD cards. Sure, 16GB made sense for the first few years of the iPhone, when apps didn’t take up much room and iOS wasn’t so bloated. But now that the iPhone has 4K video shooting, a 12-megapixel camera and apps are getting even bigger, it seems like a baffling limit.

Apple, of all companies, should be well aware that our smartphones are now our primary computing devices. And putting 16GB in a high-end smartphone today is like making someone buy a premium laptop with a hard drive smaller than 64GB. It was perfectly fine years ago, but it wouldn’t fly today. (Notice that the MacBook ships with 256GB of default storage, and the 11-inch MacBook Air has 128GB.)

The biggest reason I’m annoyed by the 16GB iPhone? It makes for a pretty terrible user experience, which feels very un-Apple. Once you’ve got a bit of music on the phone and your favorite apps, there’s not much room to store 4K video (which eats up 375MB a minute, according to Apple), and larger 12MP photos. Even if you’ve got around 12GB of space to work with, perhaps the most storage you can eke out of a 16GB iPhone when accounting for the size of iOS 9, that only leaves you around 32 minutes of 4K video. That may sound like more than enough for amateur home videos, but the issue is more about what your experience would be like a few months after you unwittingly snap up a 16GB iPhone, when the combination of text messages, offline media and 4K clips leads to constant “storage full” warnings.

I’m no fool; I understand the importance of Apple’s profit margins. And it’s pretty obvious that by having a size jump between 16GB and 64GB iPhones, Apple can push more discerning buyers toward more expensive models. It costs Apple around $200 to build a 16GB iPhone 6 (which sold for $649 at launch), according to IHS, and it’s just another roughly $20 to build a 64GB model. Considering that Apple can charge $100 more for the 64GB iPhone, that’s a pretty significant bit of profit. (CNET has a good breakdown of Apple’s build pricing.)

So sure, it makes sense for Apple to eke out as much profit as it can by keeping the 16GB iPhone around. But just because it can, doesn’t mean it should.

Dan Cooper

iOS occupies about 4GB of your iPhone’s storage, leaving most users with about 12GB for apps and media. For plenty of people, that would surely be enough for a couple of playlists, a movie downloaded from iTunes and a week or two’s worth of photos. If anything, I’d say that your ire is misplaced, because it’s not the storage limit that’s the problem; it’s how a lot of apps slowly fill our devices with junk cache data. For instance, Twitter and Facebook for iOS 8 are 63MB and 95.9MB when you grab them from the App Store. On my phone, both have bloated to a ridiculous 563MB and 386MB — a fault we can lay at the feet of the engineers who built those apps. If iOS apps were built with better cache management, then a lot of people’s storage-management issues would disappear overnight. The less said about the dreaded “other” section that pops up when you connect your phone to iTunes, the better.

Also, you say that Apple is making it impossible for users to take advantage of the iPhone 6S’ new features with just 16GB storage. If you wanted to use that iSight camera to record 4K video, you’d be able to save around 32 minutes of footage in ultra-high resolution. Now, if you’re a professional filmmaker, or someone who is expecting to shoot a lot of 4K clips, you won’t be doing so on a base-model iPhone. If you’re an amateur, then what exactly are you shooting that lasts longer than 32 minutes and is so important that you need to shoot it in 4K?

One thing I will concede is that I think Phil Schiller’s point about iCloud being the savior of 16GB iPhones is farcical. I’m always worried when executives talk about imagined solutions to problems that forget the practical needs of real, “ordinary” people. I can’t think of many people who regularly spend $120 a year for extra storage and have a data plan that wouldn’t penalize you for pushing and pulling stuff from iCloud on a regular basis. Google tells me that Schiller has a net worth of around $60 million, but telling people to “rely on the cloud” isn’t going to fly when your 1GB Verizon plan charges you $15 if you go over your cap by even a megabyte.

I have a confession: Until last year, I always bought the base model iPhone and, largely, that unit has come with just 16GB storage. Most weeks, on a Saturday, I would sync my device with my computer, buy third-party cache clearing apps and generally mother my device to make sure I didn’t run out of space. If I had been making more money, then I’d have probably plumped for the more expensive device, but I couldn’t, so I didn’t. A lot of people out there can’t afford to make that upgrade, and Apple produces a relatively low-cost device ($199 on contract) that can do what its more expensive siblings can do — you just have to be a bit judicious as to how you use it. Maybe that’s the point, because Apple’s lack of educating users as to how to effectively manage the iPhone’s storage is why iOS adoption has slowed.

Devindra Hardawar

I feel for you, Dan, I couldn’t imagine sticking with a 16GB iPhone over the past few years. I’ve got my preorder for the 128GB iPhone 6s in, because I’m already getting warnings about my 64GB iPhone 6 getting full. My usage habits probably aren’t very common: I like to keep a large library of personal music on my phone, along with a rotating playlist of offline Spotify tracks (both necessary for listening to music on the subway). Mostly, though, I wanted a phone that didn’t feel like it had any limitations. It’s just a shame to see Apple stick with arbitrary restrictions when it’s trying to convince us that new technology like “3D Touch” and 4K video are worth buying a new phone.

Dan Cooper

You’ve gotta cut your coat according to your cloth, and if you can’t afford that extra $100 (or $200) when September rolls around, then that’s that. As much as I’d love it if the world’s richest company whacked in more storage into the iPhone, it only really benefits people who are euphemistically called “power users.” I’d say that as technology journalists we both fall into that category, but I’d wager that plenty of folks — the same people who still get use out of the 2GB iPod Shuffle or 16GB iPod Nano — don’t sweat the storage.

The other thing I’ll say is that I know that we’ll see a 32GB base model iPhone at some point, and maybe 2016 is when that will happen. Apple has, traditionally, always waited until it could divine some benefit to a feature before adding it, like holding off on NFC until the 2014 iPhone 6 — a feature Android had in 2012. As apps become more powerful and space-hungry, the default will have to increase, but that decision will be Apple’s, and no amount of pressure will make that change come sooner.

[Image credit: Chris Velazco/Engadget]

25
Sep

iPhone 6s Plus Opens Apps Slightly Faster Than iPhone 6 Plus


As customers begin receiving the iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus around the world, the smartphones have quickly been subjected to unboxings, drop tests, teardowns, bend tests and camera comparisons. The latest is a speed test between the iPhone 6s Plus and iPhone 6 Plus that confirms the former is faster than its predecessor.

A9-iPhone6s
YouTube channel Mad Matt TV tested the speed of the iPhone 6s Plus and iPhone 6 Plus side by side based on opening apps and loading websites in Safari on each device at the same time. The results show the iPhone 6s Plus is faster than the iPhone 6 Plus, but the difference was minimal for most tasks and equal for others.


iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus are powered by a 64-bit Apple A9 chip and embedded M9 motion coprocessor that deliver up to 70% faster CPU performance and up to 90% faster graphics compared to the A8 chip inside the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus. The new iPhones also have 2GB of RAM, compared to 1GB for the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus.

While this video provides an early speed comparison between the iPhone 6s Plus and iPhone 6 Plus, more in-depth testing should provide more conclusive results. Geekbench processor benchmarks show the iPhone 6s has approximately 1.5x to 1.6x faster single-core and multi-core performance over the iPhone 6.

iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus are now available at Apple Stores and authorized resellers.


25
Sep

Hong Kong’s iPhone grey market cashes in on the 6s


Whenever a new iPhone launches in Hong Kong, local folks would seize the opportunity to make a quick profit from the grey market. They would get their brand new phones from either Apple or local carriers, and then sell them off to specialists who would later offer bulk orders to mainland Chinese buyers. The quicker they act, the more cash they get. The iPhone 6s and 6s Plus are no exception. This morning, I was the first customer to pick up my 128GB rose gold 6s Plus from a carrier store (the shop assistants even took a photo to mark the occasion), but I quickly sold it for HK$10,000 or about US$1,290 at the Sincere Podium mobile phone mall just around the corner. That’s roughly a US$250 profit based on the device’s local price, which isn’t bad at all.

In general, such iPhone opportunists prefer getting their devices directly from Apple, as they can then walk out of the Apple stores with the packaging still shrink-wrapped. On the contrary, getting an iPhone from carriers would require in-store activation, which would give grey market specialists an excuse to lower their offer; not to mention that you’d also have to buy a cellular plan to go with the device. Had I been able to up my 6s Plus from Apple instead, I would have gotten an extra US$65 for the intact shrink-wrap. I did try placing an order on Apple’s website two weeks ago, but as usual, it was near impossible to load due to heavy traffic. Clearly, many want in on the easy money.

Inside the shop that bought my brand new iPhone 6s Plus.

Hong Kong’s active iPhone grey market is largely fueled by the fact that mainland China imposes an import tax on foreign consumer goods, whereas Hong Kong doesn’t. In the case of the iPhone, China’s prices cost about 15 to 17 percent more than their Hong Kong counterparts, which is why smugglers do their best to dodge the so-called “Apple tax” at the Hong Kong-Shenzhen border. Of course, some eventually get caught because of their hilariously poor attempts. The more professional smugglers hide their goods inside vans, trucks and even boats, but even they get caught once in a while.

On launch day, the iPhone grey market trade-in prices may fluctuate by the minute, depending on the demand from mainland China and the number of units already received. Those specialists would use WeChat or make quick phone calls to check with whoever is in charge of their operation. After a quick observation in Mongkok and around the Apple Store in Kowloon Tong this morning, it’s clear that the new rose gold color is definitely a hit, though the trade-in prices are still much lower than what the iPhone 6 saw at launch last year.

Business is good for this street vendor in Mongkok.

According to ePrice, the first round of iPhone 6 Plus managed to rake in a profit of between a whopping US$1,110 to US$1,290 per unit in the grey market, which is a stark contrast to the measly US$250 I made with the 6s Plus today. The smaller 6s took a hit as well, making just US$90 instead of US$340 with the iPhone 6 last year; and that’s if you were even lucky enough to sell yours before the specialists stopped accepting the 6s. In Mongkok, crowds formed around some of the street vendors, mostly because they were waiting for the specialists to start accepting the 6s or the 16GB 6s Plus again.

The lower demand this time round comes as no surprise. Unlike last year, this time both Hong Kong and mainland China are on the list of first wave launch markets. And judging by the availability status on the earlier pre-order pages, Apple has allocated plenty of stock to mainland China, so it’s just a matter of whether the folks over there mind paying the slight premium. If it was Apple’s intention to cull the iPhone grey market, then it’s safe to say that it won this round.