Apple invented a material that hides your iPhone’s antenna lines
Not a fan of the iPhone 6’s less-than-flattering antenna lines? Neither is Apple, apparently. The company has filed for a patent on a composite material that looks like anodized metal, but still allows wireless signals to get through. You’d get a cleaner-looking phone (or computer, or tablet) without watching your reception take a nosedive. It could be used to blend other surfaces into a device, too, such as the trackpad on a laptop.
As with most patents, there’s no telling whether or not the folks at 1 Infinite Loop will use the invention in shipping devices. It often has clever workarounds, after all — look at the new MacBook, which is nearly entirely metal despite depending almost entirely on wireless connections. However, you shouldn’t be surprised if future Apple gadgets use this to incorporate wireless technology (such as NFC, a key factor in the iPhone 6’s design) without creating eyesores.
Photo by Will Lipman.
Filed under: Cellphones, Laptops, Tablets, Mobile, Apple
Via: Business Insider, iClarified
Source: USPTO
Rumour: Samsung to release the Galaxy Note 5 in August to avoid competing with new iPhone?
It’s the season for Galaxy Note 5 rumours, and along with this year’s handset sporting auto-ejecting S Pens, dual edges as well as a bigger display, we have rumours about the launch date of Samsung’s premier phablet. While the Samsung President, Jong-Kyun Shin, denied that the launch of the Note 5 would be brought forward to July, he never mentioned August, did he?
You can probably guess where today’s rumour is going. Basically, a news report out of Asia has said that the Note 5 will be brought forward to August in an attempt by Samsung to get to market before Apple releases its inevitable iPhone 6S/6S Plus smartphones. This has come about because Samsung is apparently in talks with Taiwanese carriers, allegedly to release the Note 5 in Taiwan earlier than usual in order to offset the impact of the iPhone launch.
The previously denied rumour intimated that the Note would be announced in July, this rumour says August. To be honest, it would be a shock if Samsung was to change the tradition of announcing the new edition of its Note range at the IFA in Berlin in September. A fair question would be, does the Note range have anything to fear from the iPhone?
Do you think that the Note 5 will eschew tradition and be announced earlier in August? I’m pretty sure we’ve seen this sort of rumour almost every time a new Samsung flagship is on the horizon, that it must be launched early or the iPhone 109S Super Plus will steal all of its sales. I would take a huge pinch, nay, a bag of salt with this rumour. I believe Samsung will stick with tradition and announce the new Note handset at the same time and place it does every year, the IFA in Berlin in September. But, I wouldn’t complain if it was released earlier than usual, would you?
Come comment on this article: Rumour: Samsung to release the Galaxy Note 5 in August to avoid competing with new iPhone?
Shoot RAW photos on your iPhone with this tiny camera
Apple’s keen to remind the world how great the camera on the iPhone 6 is with its new “Shot on iPhone 6″ billboards. But, some mobile photographers want more. That’s where the new DxO One comes in. It’s tiny camera that attaches to the iPhone’s Lightning port. It shoots RAW images with a 20.2 MP one-inch CMOS BSI sensor behind an f/1.8 32mm equivalent lens. The One can shoot independent of the iPhone, but when attached with the companion app launched, it turns the iPhone into a large viewfinder with the same manual controls found on a DSLR. The camera is available for pre-order now in the US for $599 and will ship in September.
When attached to an iPhone or iPad with a lightning port, the camera rotates plus or minus 60 degrees and when flipped over, takes the most important photo of all, the selfie. While the camera stores RAW photos on a microSD, it sends JPEGs to the attached iOS device so you can post them to your favorite social network. For low-light situations, the Super RAW feature shoots four RAW photos of varying exposures and merges them. It’s a fancy name for high resolution in-camera HDR.
Frankly, it’s a fancy little camera for someone that wants better photos without lugging around another camera. The One fits easily in your pocket and will finally let you take those photos in the club without everything looking all grainy. That’s what Instagram filters are for.
Filed under: Cameras, Handhelds
Source: DxO
Ello’s ad-free social network comes to the iPhone

When Ello came into the social networking scene late last year as an ad-free alternative to Facebook, it was pretty barebones in terms of features. That didn’t stop it from gaining hundreds of thousands of users in a few short days and around a million new sign-ups in under a month. Ello’s growth has slowed since the initial hype, but its feature set has blossomed — search and notifications are much better, you can now post videos from YouTube and audio from SoundCloud and there are now ways to block bothersome users. You can also now “love” posts so you can revisit them later. A couple of weeks ago, Ello even removed its invitation-only restriction. Today, it’s making an even bigger announcement. Before, its mobile presence was limited to your phone’s browser. But now, at long last, it has an app.
I had a chance to try out an early version of the app for a few hours and I liked what I saw. The interface is clean and minimalist with a simple black and white aesthetic, which is very similar to how Ello is on the web. There are five menu bar options at the bottom which will take you to one of five sections: Discover, Notifications, your Friends / Noise feeds, your own profile and a compose screen. The menu bar disappears when you scroll down any one of the sections; you can bring it up again by scrolling back to the top.
Perhaps the most interesting section is the Discover tab, which shows you a list of interesting posts curated by the folks at Ello. At the very top of the page is a link that implores you to “Find & invite your friends”, which essentially hooks up the app to your phone’s own contacts list if you give it the permission to do so. You can also then search for your friends either by name or email address (that is, only if they want to be found). CEO and co-founder Paul Budnitz tells me that you don’t have to worry about Ello storing any of that information. “We hash and encrypt all your contacts,” he says. “You’re not sharing any data with us. None of that gets stored on our servers.”
Most of the other sections are pretty self-explanatory. Notifications now lives in its own tab instead of getting lumped into the friends stream. You can even enable real-time alerts whenever you get a new comment. As before, your following feed is split into Friends and Noise — the former lets you see entire posts while the latter gives you smaller previews, for a quicker scan. You can edit your profile right from the phone and you can also easily check out your list of “loved” posts. And in addition to composing text, you can also snap a photo or grab one from your library and upload the full resolution image to your page. Searching for users seems pretty fast as well.

While it’s easy to laugh off Ello’s late arrival to apps, I can actually see why it decided to do that. Ello was very rough around the edges in the beginning — performance was laggy and search was almost non-existent — and it makes sense for the team to focus their efforts on making the core desktop experience better before turning their focus on mobile. “We launched it on desktop only because most of our users were artists,” says Budnitz, explaining that long-form content and large photos are best when viewed on a computer. But the community has been growing and Budnitz and his crew finally felt that Ello could sustain more people coming in. It used to be just artists and creatives, he says, but now there are people posting cat photos and sharing everyday moments. It was time.
Budnitz also gave me a brief insight into how Ello plans to make money. He says that starting early next year, Ello will be rolling out a social commerce initiative so that anyone — be they brands or just everyday folks like you and me — can sell stuff on their streams. All you would need to do is to take a photo of something, draw a box around it with an arrow pointing to it, add a price and post it. Your followers will then be able to buy that item directly from the stream just like you can on Etsy. Budnitz is positioning this as a great tool for independent artists and small businesses, but you can use this as a garage sale tool of sorts as well. Budnitz says that he hopes to integrate it with Apple Pay too. He also wants to extend this to music and software downloads and even booking appointments with your massage therapist. And, of course, Ello will take a small percentage cut of sales.

Yet, it remains to be seen if Ello will actually catch on outside of just a few early adopters and that initial community. Most of my friends who jumped on Ello months ago have stopped using it. The last post I see on my feed was over a month ago. I’m not sure if a mobile app will change their usage all that significantly.
At the end of it all, however, Ello is still holding on to its core mission statement of not having ads and keeping the community relatively small. The team is mostly run out of Denver and Vermont and only has around 28 employees. “We don’t want to become another Wal-Mart social network,” says Budnitz. “We’re not here to sign up everyone in the world.”
The new Ello app is rolling out for iOS first, but will come to Android and Windows devices later this summer.
Filed under: Internet
Source: Ello
Apple nixes Monster’s licensing over Beats lawsuit
Monster’s lawsuit against Beats Electronics last January has come back to bite it now that Beats is an Apple subsidiary. The Wall Street Journal reports that Apple has killed Monster’s official licensing agreement deader than that reported Beats WiFi speaker. Monster has been producing licensed accessories (lightning cables, headphones and whatnot) since 2005. Plus, it’s reportedly paid more than $12 million in licensing fees since 2008 for the honor of selling “Made for iPhone/iPod/iPad” devices, some of which retailed in Apple stores.
Chief counsel for Monster, David Tognotti, told the Wall Street Journal that Apple terminated the companies’ agreement on May 5th citing it no longer being “mutually beneficial” due to the lawsuit. The lawsuit itself stemmed from Monster CEO Noel Lee accusing Beats’ co-founders Jimmy Iovine and Dr Dre of fraud regarding the potential proceeds of its sale to Apple. The lawsuit is ongoing. Monster will continue to sell of its remaining stock of products until September. “It shows a side of Apple that consumers don’t see very often,” Tognotti told the WSJ. “Apple can be a bully.”
[Image Credit: Getty Images]
Filed under: Apple
Source: Wall Street Journal
‘Transistor’ takes its sci-fi swordplay to iPhone and iPad
Dig Transistor‘s blend of hack-and-slash action, role-playing elements, and sci-fi storytelling? You no longer have to sit down in front of your console or PC to give a shot. Supergiant Games has released Transistor as a universal app for both iPhones and iPads, so you can carry on the adventures of Red and her giant, intelligent sword when you’re on the move. The mobile title has a new touch-oriented control scheme, although there’s also an optional “Classic Controls” option if you’d prefer gamepad-like input. There’s no mention of an Android version, but we wouldn’t count on one when Bastion hasn’t received an Android port so far.
Filed under: Cellphones, Gaming, Tablets, Mobile
Via: iMore
Source: Supergiant Games, App Store
iOS 9 code hints at an iPhone with a front camera flash
Like it or not, selfies remain A Thing — and there are signs that Apple is about to embrace those narcissistic photos through a hardware upgrade. Programmer Hamza Sood has discovered code in iOS 9 which suggests that the next iPhone’s front camera will get a flash (increasingly common on camera-centric phones), so nighttime won’t prevent you from putting yourself in the frame. You could also see some big improvements to video and software-only features, including 1080p recording, 240 frames per second slow-motion capture and panoramas for those extra-wide group shots. There’s no guarantee that any of these features will make the cut in future devices, but they hint that Apple is eager to move past the creaky 720p front cam it offers today.
Photo by Will Lipman.
iOS 9 is hinting at future device front cameras having: 1080p resolution, 240fps slow mo, panoramamic capture, flash pic.twitter.com/NkMjdsUZEX
– Hamza Sood (@hamzasood) June 10, 2015
Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, Apple
Via: 9to5Mac
Source: Hamza Sood (Twitter)
Snapchat for iOS switches cameras with a double-tap
If you’re recording a Snapchat clip on your iPhone, it’s now much easier to show friends both your handsome face and whatever you’re looking at. The video messaging service has updated its iOS app with a feature that switches between the front and rear cameras with a double-tap of the screen. Snapchat is also tackling some of its security woes by optionally sending an SMS code to make sure that it’s really you signing in. There’s no mention of a corresponding Android upgrade, but it’s easy to see that coming soon.
[Image credit: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images]
Filed under: Cellphones, Internet, Mobile
Source: App Store
Apple News app brings ‘beautiful’ personalized content to iOS
Today at WWDC Apple announced a Flipboard-like news curator called, wait for it, Apple News. Like Facebook’s Instant Articles push, it includes articles specifically built for the app by partners like ESPN, the New York Times, Wired and others, but can also pull in content from elsewhere on the internet. The New York Times will push 30 free articles through the app every day, while other partners like ESPN will bring videoclips and infographics. As we’ve seen throughout the event, Apple is pushing privacy as a feature, promising your preferences won’t be used in other Apple services.
Developing…
Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, Apple
Apple Pay is reportedly coming to the UK this summer
Apple Pay’s tap-to-buy service might not be confined to the US for much longer. The Telegraph‘s sources hear that Apple will use next week’s Worldwide Developer Conference to announce the UK launch of its mobile payment service this summer. Reportedly, the company will flick the switch sometime in the next two months. It’s not clear exactly which companies have signed up, but 9to5Mac claims that big bank Lloyds TSB is a launch partner; MasterCard, meanwhile, says that it’s “absolutely ready” for an Apple Pay debut in Great Britain. There’s no word of a similarly quick introduction for other countries (sorry Canada), but it’s evident that Apple wants to spread its shopping tech far and wide before rivals show up.
Filed under: Cellphones, Internet, Mobile, Apple
Via: 9to5Mac
Source: The Telegraph












