Samsung vulnerability exposed with over 600 million devices affected worldwide
NowSecure security researcher Ryan Welton has exposed a security risk that affects over 600 million Samsung devices world wide. The risk comes from the pre-installed Swiftkey keyboard. Samsung gave the app system user privileges, which is one step away from root. The app cannot be uninstalled or disabled in the system.
“If the flaw in the keyboard is exploited, an attacker could remotely:
- Access sensors and resources like GPS, camera and microphone
- Secretly install malicious app(s) without the user knowing
- Tamper with how other apps work or how the phone works
- Eavesdrop on incoming/outgoing messages or voice calls
- Attempt to access sensitive personal data like pictures and text messages”
Samsung issued a patch to mobile network providers early 2015, but it is unclear if the carriers have provided the necessary update to patch the vulnerability at this point. Check the list below to check if your device is affected
| DEVICE | CARRIER | PATCH STATUS |
| Galaxy S6 | Verizon | Unpatched |
| Galaxy S6 | AT&T | Unknown |
| Galaxy S6 | Sprint | Unpatched |
| Galaxy S6 | T-Mobile | Unknown |
| Galaxy S5 | Verizon | Unknown |
| Galaxy S5 | AT&T | Unknown |
| Galaxy S5 | Sprint | Unknown |
| Galaxy S5 | T-Mobile | Unpatched |
| Galaxy S4 | Verizon | Unknown |
| Galaxy S4 | AT&T | Unknown |
| Galaxy S4 | Sprint | Unknown |
| Galaxy S4 | T-Mobile | Unknown |
| Galaxy S4 Mini | Verizon | Unknown |
| Galaxy S4 Mini | AT&T | Unpatched |
| Galaxy S4 Mini | Sprint | Unknown |
| Galaxy S4 Mini | T-Mobile | Unknown |
What to do:
- Avoid insecure wi-fi networks
- Use a different mobile device
- Contact carriers for patch information and timing
Source
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Samsung introduces Game Recorder+ at E3, allows game recording on Samsung devices
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As many gamers will know, the recording of game footage on Android is a generally arduous affair involving either root access or other hardware. Samsung, surprisingly, has a solution for users of its devices, announcing Game Recorder+ today during the festivities of E3 2015. Utilizing a UI overlay when games are running, and not requiring any root access, Game Recorder+ will allow Samsung devices users to record game footage at up to 1080p resolution.
Those who record gameplay for YouTube videos and such may be interested as the Game Recorder+ allows the front camera and microphone to be used to record your face and voice while your gameplay is happening – of course, an upload of YouTube is also just a touch away. If you have a Samsung Galaxy S6, S6 Edge, Galaxy S5, Note 4, S4, Note 3, or Note 2, and have between Android 4.1 and Android 5.0, you’ll be able to make use of this neat little app. Samsung hasn’t given much indication on when it’ll actually be available on the Google Play Store (and Samsung Apps), but we’re expecting to see something once the excitement of E3 has died down.
What do you think about Game Recorder+? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.
Source: Samsung Tomorrow via SamMobile
The post Samsung introduces Game Recorder+ at E3, allows game recording on Samsung devices appeared first on AndroidSPIN.
Reality check: rumors shouldn’t get your blood pressure up (Opinion)

When was the last time you read a post about a leak or rumor or heard about some new feature or product that was “in the works” and seemed too good to be true? Once upon a time (i.e. about 20 years ago) these kinds of stories were few-and-far-between, if only for the fact that traditional newspapers couldn’t make a habit of reporting gossip less they be devalued and branded as tabloids. When you heard something, it was usually a big deal, and seemingly of a more legitimate nature. Today however, there is no end to the waterfall of leaks and rumors. Everyone from an industry analyst to a factory worker wants to make a name for themselves and tell the world just what kind of R&D dream is being cooked up behind the scenes.
Here are a few of the stories and rumors that surfaced in the recent past:
Rumor: The Galaxy S5 Prime would have a QHD screen and be made of a liquid metal alloy. What actually happened: All the hoopla was arguably over the Galaxy Alpha, a device which had neither feature going for it, but instead had a 720p display and a metal frame to go with the plastic rear. Granted South Korea received a Broadband LTE-A Galaxy S5 which did in fact have a QHD screen resolution, but save for the Snapdragon 805, everything else was literally just as it was in the standard S5.
Rumor: Google would unveil Glass 2.0 at I/O 2015. What actually happened: unless there was some kind of behind-closed-doors presentation that no one has mentioned, the reboot of the wearable line has yet to occur.
Rumor: Samsung was going to acquire Blackberry (or HTC, or any other random company), What actually happened: Despite some investors arguably making some quick cash over the stock surge, absolutely nothing came to light.
The Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge were the subject of endless conjecture and speculation prior to their actual official announcement, yet continue to create rumors even months after release.
Rumor: The Android 5.1.1 update for the Galaxy S6 would include the ability to shoot in RAW (not unlike the LG G4 allows). What actually happened: the update has landed and RAW settings are nowhere to be found. The new rumor is that Samsung is saving it for an unveiling with the Galaxy S6 Edge Plus.
Rumor: The Galaxy S6 Active would include a bigger battery and microSD card support. What actually happened: the product was finally launched, without card support, but indeed with a bigger battery.
Rumor: The Snapdragon 810 has major overheating issues. What actually happened. LG opted not to use the SoC for its recent G4, NTT docomo started offering safety warnings to its customers, and Qualcomm has been on damage control seemingly 24-7. Meanwhile, several OEMs are shipping products with Snapdragon 810 inside, with more to come.
Rumor: Samsung is planning a 5.7 inch Galaxy S6 Edge called the Galaxy S6 Edge Plus. What actually happened: Nothing yet, as word has it the device won’t be announced until the fall.
Rumors are rumors
These are but a few of the countless rumors that circulate around the internet on a daily basis. Some include pictures, some come from alleged “interviews with sources”, some come from well-established leakers, some of which come from children of employees. In truth we often don’t know just who starts these claims: are they insiders, are they individuals, or are they deliberate corporate-sponsored plants used to serve marketing purposes?
One thing that we do know for certain, is that people believe these rumors, and are often very disappointed when they don’t pan out. Now, there’s nothing wrong in trusting unconfirmed reports – there are countless examples when rumors have indeed turned out to point to real products. And rumors are fun! Even when stories don’t pan out (either because there was no grounds to them in the first place, or because something changed), they create engagement and buzz. We’re social creatures and we love to gossip. And tech rumors are ultimately, just a form of gossip.
The problems start when people confuse rumors with actual developments and create expectations based on them.
Let’s stop for a second and think about this.
[Over]reacting to rumors
Samsung’s Galaxy S5 Broadband LTE-A was most certainly not what the rumor mill was suggesting, though the Korean version did at least have a QHD screen and Snapdragon 805. The all-metal body and such? Nowhere to be found.
When a random friend tells you that “so-and-so will happen” and it seems illogical, chances are you tend to write it off on-the-spot. The problem with the internet is two fold: on the one hand the news is written, and many people seem to put more stock in written words than they do on verbal communication. On the other hand, there is the more insidious problem of coverage. All takes is for one legitimate website, news organization, or individual to report a claim, and literally within minutes there could be a thousand-and-one mentions of it: Facebook posts, memes, subreddits, blogs… you name it. And that’s normal – the nature of the internet means that people are always connected, and always eager to learn, share, and discuss.
Even if something is totally off-the-wall crazy online, chances are it will snowball into a major point of discussion and/or someone will alter the story along the way to make it more interesting. Just try and get to the bottom of Michael Jackson’s involvement in Sonic the Hedgehog 3 for example. The biggest problem with these rumors, the Blue Blur included, is that we will never get an official answer, and as such the myth can grow and grow until it becomes a warped urban legend. The Snapdragon 810 issue in particular comes to mind, as even to this day (months after the chip was first available in the LG G Flex 2) the debate is still going on.
The image that started the Snapdragon 810 overheating controversy
Regardless of if you choose to believe it or not, some websites (Android Authority being one of them) don’t make it a point to publish and disseminate every single rumor that floats by their digital door. I, for example, have on many an occasion suggested stories that were turned down due to a lack of legitimacy, the biggest offender being those associated with benchmark scores for unannounced products, largely because they can be easily faked. Here at AA, we make a concerted effort to consider the source of the rumor, the nature of the leak, and the plausibility of the possibility. In the end, even we can’t be right 100% of the time, but we will always make sure to keep you (the reader) aware of the fact that the topic at hand is unconfirmed and therefore should be taken with a pinch of salt.
What does this mean for you?
Evan Blass (evleaks) shared this “leak” of the HTC One M9 long before the official unveiling.
The biggest problem with rumors is that they can damage the very things we actively seek to learn about, discuss, and enjoy. Anyone who was smitten with the idea of a Galaxy S5 Prime may have bashed Samsung for not coming out with the real thing, and for all we know that disappointment may have contributed to the relatively poor sales the device had. LG may have wanted to include the 810 on its G4, but after seeing the outcry over the alleged problems with the chip, made the decision to swap for an 808. Better yet, let’s consider the alleged leaks that Evan Blass shared for the HTC One M9 and how the final product was absolutely nothing like them whatsoever.
The latest scandal involves one of the rumors mentioned earlier, the ability to capture images in RAW with the Galaxy S6’s Android 5.1.1 update. This affair seems to stem from a tweet of a camera benchmark from MWC this past March , which was then given mass exposure via a tip covered in a blog post which was then reblogged all across the world. So just to be clear, Samsung itself made absolutely no claims or promises of anything. Still, this belief that the Galaxy S6 would be getting RAW support was so firmly vested among some individuals that they actually sought to criticize Samsung for not including it.
The camera on the S6 is already capable of taking some awesome pictures as is.
Let’s stop for a second and think about this. Commentators around the world are attacking a company for not including a feature it never promised in the first place, and then “failed” to deliver. I’m all for giving more to the people, but this just smacks of absurdity. Since when can we hold someone or something accountable for issues they aren’t responsible for, especially when we’re not even dealing with a bug fix here but instead a totally extra feature and one that has never been included in past Galaxy phones?
In truth, the only people we really need to be upset with is ourselves. Not the tips that started this, not the website(s) that reported the rumor, and certainly not Samsung. The blame is solely on our shoulders, for failing to remember that rumors are just that: rumors. No matter how legitimate they might seem, no matter how trusted a source might be, until a company officially goes on record and makes a statement, they really can’t be held accountable for issues like this. (Now when it comes to saftey concerns and such, that’s an entirely different situation).
Why we can’t always get what we hear (and want)
Instead of using a past example, let’s consider a recent report: Samsung is working on a dual-screen, foldable device going by the codename, Project Valley. As was correctly pointed out in the original story, there is absolutely no guarantee this supposed project will be shown outside of test labs at Samsung let alone ever see the light of day. And this is assuming it exists period, as we have no way of knowing who tipped SamMobile off to this story or how accurate said information was.
There could be a dozen reasons why Samsung might ultimately choose not to launch something like Project Valley. Perhaps it’s too similar in concept to the Sony Tablet P (and with all the usage problems as well). Maybe there are hardware or manufacturing issues. Perhaps the battery life isn’t sufficient. Maybe it was just a proof-of-concept type thing that was used to advance the current technology the company has. Heck, for all we know it could be because management would rather go with a different design.
The point is, we will never know if Samsung’s rumored folding devices will come to light, until some hard evidence that a physical product has been produced. We need not write them off completely, as there is a lot of discussion that is warranted about the future of form-factor, but let’s not jump ahead of ourselves quite yet.
Remember to relax

Save for a few rare examples, companies are primarily out to make money, and at the end of the day, it’s important to remember we are their source of income and our demands should be what they seek to meet. There is nothing wrong with wanting something, discussing our wants and needs, or even writing letters to complain when they aren’t met. A good product is only as good as the decisions and work that went into making it.
Still, we need to remember that all things must be taken in the context with which they exist: the Galaxy Note 5 simply won’t have a 4K display if the technology isn’t ready this fall and nothing will change that. For that matter, there might not be a Galaxy S6 Plus either, as Samsung itself hasn’t actually announced it yet, and until that point comes, technically speaking there is no obligation the company has to provide us with one.
I would have loved a liquid metal S5, I would have loved a Glass 2, I would have loved RAW support, I would have loved an Android Blackberry. To this day I still think HTC would have been better off using the Evleaks render of the M9. Still, I have learned to accept that rumors are just that: stories that are unconfirmed and may-or-may-not have had some truth to them. While it’s great to dream big, we must keep our expectations in-check less they dominate our thinking, our expectations, and our manner of processing that which we see and do. Now if you excuse me, I will go back to my corner and continue to lament the death of the ATIV Q, a product that was sadly anything but a rumor.
Samsung’s made an app that lets you record your mobile gaming
Recording games on your console or PC is pretty easy these days. But, what if your game of choice is on mobile? Search Google’s Play store, and there’s a bevy of apps promising to record your screen with ease. Sadly, most of them require you root your device, or simply look a bit dodgy. If you’re a Samsung user, there’s a legitimate choice that won’t require you meddling with your device — it’s called Game Recorder+. The app lets you record any game (along with your grinning mug, and commentary as you play it), and captures the game sound direct from the device, too. We’d find it even more useful if we could just record whatever we wanted, but this seems like a good start.
There are other features that should smooth out the whole experience. A “game boost” feature reckons it’ll optimize your phone’s memory while you play, and a floating menu widget lets you start recording without having to pause the game and go back into the Game Recorder+ app if you were already playing. Clips can be recorded in 1080p, edited/trimmed afterwards and uploaded to YouTube direct from the app. There is, of course, a massive catch: as alluded to already, you have to have a Samsung device to join the fun (currently Galaxy S6, S6 Edge, Note 4, S5, Note 3, S4 and Note 2 handsets).
Filed under: Cellphones, Gaming, Mobile, Samsung
Source: Samsung Tomorrow, Google Play
Here’s a temporary fix for the missing quick toggles on your Samsung Galaxy S6 or S6 Edge

Have you had any of your Samsung Galaxy S6 or S6 Edge quick toggles disappear? Though the phone came with these toggles available for the notification menu, many users are reporting the mobile data, hotspot and private mode toggles have been disappearing.
Sadly, there is no official fix just yet, but some Samsung customer service representatives and social networking accounts have been acknowledging the problem, so we can say it’s a widespread problem and hope Sammy is working hard to make things right. The Korean manufacturer has been telling users they can get the quick toggles back by performing a factory data reset, but that is hardly a solution – after all, chances are the toggles will just disappear again later on.
Thankfully, the Android operating system allows users to tinker their way around many issues and the guys at XDA Developers have managed to find a much less drastic solution. Some users figured downloading MultiWindow Toggle for Samsung from the Google Play Store. This app allows you to add and remove the MultiWindow function to the quick toggles. This is not a solution to the underlying problem, though, as it doesn’t help those who want the data, hotspot and private mode toggles.
Here is the fix!
Developers are resourceful, and proof of this is offered by senior member NimeniAltu, who managed to alter the application and add this functionality to said app. All you need to do is download the APK from the XDA Developers thread, install it and tell it to work its sweet magic.

Now all we have to do is wait for Samsung to come up with a permanent solution to this issue. I mean, those happen to be pretty important functions that went missing. There’s no excuse, nor is there reason for Samsung to purposely remove them, so hopefully the fix comes sooner than later.
How many of you guys suffered from this discrepancy? I have a Samsung Galaxy S6 review unit right now and I did notice the toggles are no longer there. Sound off in the comments! We would love to see how many of our readers were affected by this.
Samsung Galaxy A8 pictures leaked
After launching the Galaxy A3, Galaxy A5 and the Galaxy A7 earlier this year, Samsung is all set to bring a new addition to the Galaxy A series. Today, the very first pictures of the Galaxy A8 have been leaked online, showing us that the handset may have the same design as the Galaxy S6. The handset was initially believed to be China-specific but is now expected to be launched in various markets across Europe and Asia.
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As far as the specifications are concerned, the Galaxy A8 boasts pretty high-end spec’s. The Galaxy A8 is supposed to have 5.7 inch Super AMOLED display with a screen resolution of 1080*1920 pixels. For RAM and memory, the phone is said to have 2GB RAM and 16GB of onboard storage with the ability to expand the storage via the included micro-SD card slot. In the optics department, the phone is supposed to have a 16-megapixel rear facing camera and a 5-megapixel front facing shooter. You would be surprised to know that this phone is also said to have the fingerprint sensor, just like the Galaxy S6. The whole package is supposed to be driven by Qualcomm’s 64-bit octa-core Snapdragon 615 and a 3050mAh battery, which will be sufficient for a day’s use. The handset is also slated to have 4G LTE support, which is always a good thing to have for people who like streaming online content.
The device is expected to run on Android’s Lollipop 5.1 OS with TouchWiz on top. Though from the looks of the images, the phone is likely to be on the same toned-down version of Touchwiz as the Galaxy S6. There is no official word on a release date and or pricing yet. Overall, we think that the handset is likely to be placed in the mid-range category but with advantages of having fingerprint sensor.
Source
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Samsung Galaxy Young 3 leaks online
Many smartphone leaks have been piling up in recent months. All have been pretty high spec’d phones coming from famous brands. Well, today comes a brand new leak, this one courtesy of Samsung. An entry-level Samsung smartphone, the SM-G150 (this is the model number, not the actual name of the device) has started popping up in various places.
Samsung’s SM-G150 has shown up in IMEI listings, Bluetooth certifications and recently it was seen on Zauba import/export tracking site as being sent to India for testing. We know that the Samsung Galaxy Young 2 carried the model number SM-G130, and considering the model number of this leak is SM-G150, it can be safe to assume that this phone will be called the Samsung Galaxy Young 3.
The Samsung Galaxy Young 2 was released in October of last year and featured a 3.5-inch 320×480 display, 512MB of RAM with a 1Ghz single-core CPU. While not much can be expected from the upcoming Samsung Galaxy Young 3, it will mostly feature some upgraded specs like a bigger display, more processing power and RAM, a better camera all running on Android Lollipop hopefully.
Source
The post Samsung Galaxy Young 3 leaks online appeared first on AndroidGuys.
Tablets: why we don’t love them anymore, but (maybe) we should
Whether to tote a tablet is an interesting discussion.
These days, it seems most of the world is smitten with smartphones. Sales are up, prices are going down, and the competition has never been fiercer. The same can not be said, however, about their sizer ilk, tablets. With even Apple finding that sales are slipping, it’s quite clear there is something up with large screen devices. Ironically enough, if we travel back in time just a few years, there was no shortage of optimism. Fast forward to the recent past however, and trouble is looming on the horizon. Things have changed indeed, with companies like Samsung and even Google experimenting with 4:3 aspect ratios, and rumors circulating that 2015 will pass without the release of a new Nexus tablet.
In this piece, we’re going to take a look at the tablet market, try to understand just why tablets aren’t faring as well as smartphones, and point out some plausible, possible reasons why you might want to (re)consider using one.
Looking back (to go forward)
Almost unthinkable: The original Samsung Galaxy Tab P1000 had just one size and no home button. Its Gingerbread build even referred to itself as a “phone” in many cases.
First and foremost, before we can begin to understand just what’s going on with tablets, it’s necessary to understand where the device format has came from, at least with respect to Android. The first tablet mainstay to hit the consumer market was Samsung’s Galaxy Tab. The original Galaxy Tab, back when there was only one Galaxy Tab line/size, if one can believe it. The product was launched the same year Apple gave the world the original iPad, and in no small way, was Samsung’s attempt to not only establish itself as a major force to be recognized with in the device classification format, but to pre-empt rival Android OEMs and potentially take a piece of the lion’s share of the market Apple was then-enjoying.
The device was, at best, a 7-inch Galaxy S, and indeed the OS itself would occasionally “forget” it was running on a tablet and instead refer to the Tab as a phone. The fact that non-North American models could also make voice phone calls with the included cellular radio definitely did little to clear up the confusion. ASUS was arguably the next major player when it decided to release the first 1080p Android tablet. Motorola would follow shortly with its XOOM, the Nexus-that-never-was device that launched the much-maligned Honeycomb.
Despite the vast hatred of Honeycomb, I actually loved it. To this day the Motorola Xoom is my favorite Android experience ever.
Following Motorola’s “non-Nexus”, tablets more-or-less exploded, with established OEMs and non-brands alike trying to get in on the action. Asus had just released the Transformer, would later release the Transformer Prime which shocked owners when it received Ice Cream Sandwich quite quickly. Google itself made waves with the original Nexus 7 given the excellent price point (save for those who used eBay to buy the White-colored I/O Edition…) and great specs. By the time 2014 hit, the only real shake up in the tablet game was Samsung’s releasing a pair of products with a Super AMOLED display, the first time such technology was ever included on tablets larger than 7.7 inches.
Chances are you might (have) own(ed) or wanted one of the devices specifically mentioned above, or perhaps one that wasn’t. Either way, tablets were once big news, and it seemed like every one was racing to the bottom in their quest to sell as many as possible.
Tablapathy: why “no one” cares anymore
Now that we understand a bit about the general history of Android Tablets, let’s consider why it seems people don’t go for them with the same gusto that once rang true. Look no further than the following table (courtesy of IDC) to get a feel for the lengthening lethargy:
IDC Tablet Shippments Q1 2015
As you can see, tablet sales for Q1 decreased almost 6% year-on-year, mostly at the expense of the two largest players, Apple and Samsung. LG had a surprisingly strong boost with the release of the G Pad product line, though another mainstay, ASUS, faced the largest decline of all. What might be causing this?
The race for space
Unlike phones, which people carry with them and use daily, tablets are often seen as a “luxury” that extends only to the home and travel. Obviously, this doesn’t apply to everyone, but compared with the forced acceptance that carrying a phone means having it on you at all times, owning a tablet is something that need not go with you 24-7. While smaller devices are more convenient for say, using on the train during a commute to work, lugging around a 10.1 inch product, or dare I say, a 12.2-inch one, makes things just that much more cumbersome. On said crowded train, chances are you don’t have the luxury to make use of copious amounts of space, and thus the smartphone is enough. When you get home however, it’s much easier to use a tablet and prop it up on a sofa or kitchen table where you need not worry about a confined environment.
Size issues
Why is that a tablet in your hands? Nope, it’s just a big phone.
From my own personal observations here in Tokyo, for example, it’s shocking just how quickly tablets have vanished from visibility on the subway or train in the past few years. At one point the iPad and iPad Mini could be seen virtually everywhere, and even the Nexus 7 or a Fujitsu tablet. These days, it’s almost strange when someone is using a tablet if only for the fact that it’s so large. That largeness may indeed be a sizable reason why tablets sales are slagging. Once upon a time, when big Android phones were a scandalous 4.3 inches, the prospect of a 7-inch tablet, or especially a 10.1-inch product, were especially enticing. This was all the more true with something like ASUS’s second Transformer Prime, the first Android tablet to feature 1080p screen resolution. The experience was truly much more grandiose with a product that was potentially over twice-as-big as the phone you were carrying around on a daily basis.
In 2015 however, the phablet, once a word coined for Samsung’s hideously big Galaxy Note, can be seen everywhere, even on Google’s own Nexus line. Heck, I love the form factor so much that last year I spent several months rocking the Korea-only Galaxy W, a 7-inch phone. Still, for many people out there, a device like the Galaxy Note 4 is large enough to meet the needs of productivity and recreation, and if said needs are both met with one single product, why then would such a satisfied customer go out and spend money on something they don’t need.
The lack of motivation
Believe it or not, these are two completely different products. Can you tell which is the Galaxy Tab S 10.5 and which is the Galaxy Tab Pro 10.1?
Another problem tablets face is the need to buy another one, or specifically, the lack thereof. Phones are a daily necessity, and go with us everywhere. They are more likely to break or get damaged. A tablet that sits on the dining room table, on the other hand, is probably going to remain in relatively usable condition for years save for accidents or overly aggressive children. Unless we’re talking about the most die-hard of spec seekers, the vast majority of consumers simply won’t be interested in replacing a product that fulfills its uses sufficiently: “Sure a QHD display would be nice, but do I really need to spend the money when my 1080p looks fine?”
Therein lies the other main motivational problem: differentiation. Tablets release constantly, yet how much change can actually be made from product-to-product? Perhaps nowhere could this be seen best than to look at Cupertino’s small-sized embarrassment from 2014: there was almost no difference from the iPad Mini 2 and 3, save for the addition of Touch ID and a gold color scheme. With Android there tends to be a slight bit more inner upgrades (see the Galaxy Tab 3 vs Galaxy Tab 4, for example), but even then, it’s more of a spec-sheet situation than it is anything truly tangible to the masses. For someone who has paid $400-600+ for a tablet, specs really don’t matter when the thing is just going to “sit on the sofa all day”.
Pushing the envelope
While the true motivation behind Google’s unprecedented shape shifting shocker with the Nexus 9 might remain a mystery, it’s definitely a game changer.
Google sought to pose the tablet proposition in a new light late last year, when it unveiled the HTC constructed Nexus 9. The 4:3 aspect ratio was a dramatic change of pace from the 16:9 screen size that seemingly every OEM made use of. Things further advanced when Samsung announced the Galaxy Tab A series, also with a 4:3 aspect ratio, and now even Asus is in on the action. This may very well be an attempt to cash-in on iPad sales by emulating the viewing experience, but it could also simply be an attempt at trying something new just to revitalize the market itself. The size factor means that there is more space to view things such as websites, and as a result there are new perspectives in which OEMs could try and sell their devices. Samsung, for example, is clearly going to try and sell the Galaxy Tab S2 with its apparent 4:3 metal-build.
Still. There looks to be trouble in paradise, as mentioned earlier, rumor has it Google will not announce a new tablet this year, but instead two smartphone Nexus devices. This would make 2015 the first year since the start of the Nexus tablet line, not to receive such a device. (For those in need of a refresher, the original Nexus 7 launched in 2012, along the Nexus 10; then in 2013 the (newer) Nexus 7; 2014 was the year the Nexus 9 hit stores). Some are already lamenting the likelihood that there won’t be a Nexus 7 (2015 Edition), though in all probability the general public is likely to not notice anything whatsoever, with the endless supply of 7-inch products available, many of which have excellent specs and come at a reasonable price. Then again, if Google’s main objective was to get more OEMs to make tablets (thus translating to more revenue for Google via ads and whatnot) then it need not even care if there is a new Nexus or not, similar to what Microsoft was aiming for with its Surface tablet concept.
But let’s stop thinking of tablets as slates for a moment, and consider just what else they might be or become in the not-so-distant future:
This could be the future of the tablet, and indeed it might be the cure for the apathy facing the market.
The picture above was discovered a few days ago and may (or may not) be the rumored Project Valley that Samsung is said to be developing. What it is, however, is clearly a foldable tablet, and a rather sleek and realistic one at that (sorry folks, the whole Minority Report paper-thin newspaper concept is out of the realm of the real, for the time being). It’s very much a product that would have been right at home coming from Sony circa 2005. It’s also a tablet that would seek to redefine the very idea of what a tablet is, namely a rigid slate. A product like this could make a lot of waves and have a multitude of uses (especially with the right multitasking software) and very well ignite the world’s interest in the tablet form factor once again.
Wrap up (or why you should still want a tablet)
Truth be told, I am very much a tablet person. The experience is markedly different from that of a phone. It’s larger, more leisurely, and more legible. Truth also be told that I’m someone who lusts after any new piece of tech, thus tablets are simply another venue for which I can pursue a potential purchase.
But what about you, the reader? Why should you care about tablets? Well in truth, it’s hard to convince someone to get something they don’t see a need for, but allow me to try nonetheless:
Balancing act: Devices like the Xperia Z4 Tablet are so thin and light that despite their size, are hardly a workout to work out.
1. Tablets are great for those with bad eyesight, especially larger devices. While even a Nexus 6 might be great for a phone, those with poor vision will no doubt benefit from having a 10.1 inch device, all the more so if the font size is increased dramatically. They can make great presents for those more senior in age who might otherwise have trouble reading books.
2. Tablets are great for those with good eyesight. Even people with 20/20 vision can strain their eyes, and staring at a (relatively) small screen for excessive amounts of time is a great way to elicit such a reaction. Just imagine how much more enjoyable a 14 hour flight could be if, instead of squinting at a 5-inch display, you were relaxing while feasting your eyes on a 10.1 inch panel.
3. Tablets are great for those with kids. Once again, the large size factor makes them very easy for little children to interact with. There are also many tablet-specific applications for kids. Many OEMs have woken up to this potential market and have included (or rather, left in) the ability to have multiple user accounts on tablet devices, or even have dedicated “Kids Mode” themes or settings.
4. Tablets are great for consumers who don’t have a large phone. For all those people who prefer a smartphone to fall under the 5-inch category, having a tablet means having a totally different user experience, and given how then and light many of them are, lugging one around is seemingly a chore in principal, not in practice.
5. Tablets are great for people who want to keep “business and pleasure” separated. I, for example, opt not to install many games on my smartphone so as to diminish the potential battery drain that would result from any number of background processes running or alerts or whatever else might be going on. With my tablet however, I have all the games and whatnot installed given the device’s larger battery and screen size. In doing so, I also eliminate the potential for me to be playing any random game at work or elsewhere when my attention should be focused on the task at hand.
6. Tablets are great for business-oriented consumers. I will be the first to admit that typing on a phone is perfectly natural for me (heck, I’ve scribed several lengthy pieces like this on my phone before, believe it or not) but not everyone might agree. Typing on a phone can be cramped and a tedious process. A tablet on the other hand, is a much more spacious experience and indeed there are any number of business productivity suites that are, arguably, best optimized for use on a larger device. Likewise, unlike smartphones which typically have nothing more than Bluetooth keyboard options, tablets often have any number of “laptop-esque” docks created for them to make a much more traditional experience out of business productivity.
The Ultra Remix tablet Surfaced, and definitely has a dedication to business productivity.
7. Tablets are good for people who are concerned with battery life. Let’s face it, even the best smartphone is only as good as it’s battery, and as screen resolution gets higher and higher, the power needed to push those pixels also increases exponentially. Rumor even has it that 2016 may see 4K displays. Set your current device to 75% brightness, then watch a 10-minute YouTube video. Note how much battery charge has dropped. This, for example, is one reason I am loathe to do such things on a smartphone, because what happens if you need to make a call or type an e-mail at the end of the day, and the device is hovering around 5% of battery life. Sure, the Ultra Power Saving Mode features in some phones might solve the problem, but isn’t it great to have a device explicitly for watching movies and whatnot? All the more so given the copious amount of mAh the average tablet battery has.
These are but seven reasons why you might want a tablet, but they are far from the only ones. Given the somewhat controversial nature of purchasing a tablet, we would be most interested to hear what you have to say. Please feel free to take the survey below, and leave us a comment with your thoughts on tablets, or your own purchase history. Why did you buy a tablet, or why aren’t you interested in owning one?
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South Korea’s KT launches 1.17Gbps GiGA LTE

South Korea’s largest telecommunications company, KT, has announced the world’s fastest commercialized mobile data service, based on its GiGA LTE technology. By combining traditional LTE coverage with localized WiFi networks, the service is able to provide consumers with data speeds up to an incredible 1.17Gbps.
KT has 200,000 LTE base stations and 140,000 Wi-Fi hotspots installed across the country and hopes to have the majority of the population covered with GiGA LTE. Current high-speed multi-band LTE-A implementations tend to top out in the region of 300Mbps, making GiGA LTE up to four times faster than existing networks. Although real world traffic usage and handset speed restrains will lower the achievable results, speeds will certainly be noticeably faster than before.
As well as offering consumers higher data speeds, KT is looking to GiGA LTE to help accommodate future demands on network bandwidth, which is expected to increase up to 1,000 times by 2020. KT suggests that this will be as a result of 8K video content and UHD hologram services.
Rival South Korean mobile carriers SK Telecom and LG Uplus have also announced that they will be launching their own network technologies that make use of simultaneous Wi-Fi and LTE data connections later this month.
“Around five to six more high-end and mid-end Samsung handsets, compatible with the GiGA LTE, will be released in the latter half of this year along with some LG Electronics handsets,” – KT
Of course, consumers are going to need compatible smartphones to make use of the technology. The first supported handsets will be the Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge, which will begin receiving an update from today to make them compatible with KT’s GiGA LTE network. Other compatible handsets will be launched later in the year.
What is GiGA LTE?
GiGA LTE is part of the drive towards the still not fully defined 5G standard, which aims to increase available network bandwidth once again. Multi-antenna LTE-A technology was the first step down this road and combining long range wireless data transmission with high-speed local hotspot network access is what some envision for 5G.
KT has teamed up with Samsung Electronics for the past nine months to develop the GiGA LTE technology. Although we don’t have the exact details on how GiGA LTE works, you may recall that Samsung has been working on a similar type of aggregation technology for quite a while.
Samsung’s Download Booster technology showed us the possibilities available with aggregated LTE and Wi-Fi networks a while back.
The “Download Booster” feature found in flagship handsets like the Galaxy S5, Note 3 and Note 5 looks like the starting point for GiGA LTE. Last year US carriers chose to block network access to Samsung’s Download Booster, but they hadn’t invested in the infrastructure to offer consumers this type of network experience anyway.
The implementation of dedicated small node Wi-Fi signals is enabling KT to offer 1Gbps speeds to consumers over such a vast area. Samsung is most likely supplying the know-how on the mobile hardware and software side, to ensure compatibility with KT’s network and hotspots.
Qualcomm has also been talking a lot about this type of small node, big network concept for a while now and recently unveiled details on its own LTE-Unlicensed initiative. This aims to supplement LTE data with LTE-U small cell networks operating in the unlicensed 5GHz spectrum usually used by WiFi networks. Although hardware support across a range of carriers and network services is really needed to make LTE + Wi-Fi technology ubiquitous and suitable for a 5G standard.
Qualcomm has unveiled plans for its own LTE-U 5GHz based aggregation technology.
As usual, South Korea is leading the way with commercialized advanced mobile technologies, but GiGA LTE is a sign of things to come for all of us further down the line.
Galaxy A8 leaked: an all-metal “S6-esque” phone with mid-range specs
This device is actually, allegedly the Galaxy A8, even though it might first look to be a “Galaxy S6 Plus”.
Despite dealing with sales most other OEMs would salivate over, 2014 was arguably one of the worst years in recent memory for Samsung’s finances, in no small part thanks to the Galaxy S5’s less-than-stellar performance and aggressive competition in key markets such as China and India, where the Korean giant fell from its top spot. Having released the metal-framed Galaxy Alpha, Galaxy Note 4, and Galaxy Note Edge, the initially Asia-only “Galaxy A” series saw a single unibody frame making it the first product line that was truly constructed of premium materials. The Galaxy A3 and A5 were decidedly mid-range affairs; however, the johnny-come-lately Galaxy A7 was, in some ways, a Galaxy Note 4 Lite, with its otherwise top-notch specs and phablet sized form factor.
Only from the back does the Galaxy A-series design language appear, and separates the product from the S6 (visually at least).
It has long been rumored that Samsung would unveil a Galaxy A6, A8 and A9 to flesh out its anemic 2015 product line thanks to a trademark filing detected earlier this year. The first pictures of the Galaxy A8 (SM-A800F) have leaked via Nowhereelse.fr and it looks… surprisingly like a Galaxy S6 with a metal back.
Sadly, the internal specs are a decidedly different affair, with the current rumors pointing to a 5.7-inch SAMOLED Full HD screen, Qualcomm Snapdragon 615 Octa-Core CPU, 2GB of RAM, 16GB of storage, microSD, a 16-megapixel rear camera and 5-megapixel front shooter. LTE will be included, as will a fingerprint reader home button, and a sealed 3,050 mAh battery. Perhaps fittingly enough, the device is said to be shipping with Android 5.1.1 which should theoretically include the TouchWiz modifications we covered yesterday. The device is allegedly going to be sold in Asia and European markets.
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- The sides look almost exactly like the Galaxy S6 complete with the indentation.
- The other side of the A8.
- About the device (note Android 5.1.1).
Truth-be-told, when looking at the pictures of the Galaxy A8, it really is difficult to tell the difference between it and a standard Galaxy S6. The front glass has the exact same cut and shape as does the home button. The side (frame) is similar as well, complete with the indented, “sliced” decoration and buttons. It’s only when examining the back that the difference is clear with the metal replacing the S6’s glass and the lack of a heart rate sensor. There is certainly a bit of irony in considering how some critics of the S6 were attacking it for using a fragile material like glass (prone to shattering) instead of metal, a la the HTC One M9. For all those disappointed with the glass sandwich, the A8 would certainly look to be an appealing alternative, albeit with lesser hardware.
This almost looks like a Galaxy S6 “Plus” next to a Note 3, but it’s presumably the A8 next to the A7. The design language differences are quite apparent to say the least.
The reused design also creates both a proverbial problem, and possible predictive powers: with respect to the former, those who had hoped for the S6 to feature a unique design that wouldn’t be watered down with countless lesser products (thus diminishing the “value” of the S6) will inevitably be miffed to see a leak that looks a lot like what they lusted over. At the same time, given the substantial difference between the A3, A5, and A7, it’s possible that the A8 (and by inference, the A6 and A9 if they exist) are making use of a new level of design language from Samsung for 2015, and therefore the Galaxy Note 5 might be of a similar visual nature as well.
On a final note, while Samsung might deserve kudos for making the “metal Galaxy S6″ in design at least, given its 2014 finances and subsequent pledge to slim down its product lines for 2015, there honestly doesn’t seem to be much effort made in that department. The year is just half over, and Samsung has already released the Galaxy S6, S6 Edge, S6 Active, A7, E1, J1, and this leak suggesting there will be at least one more A-series device. Then there’s the rumors of a Galaxy S6 Edge Plus, and the Galaxy Note 5, along with the possibility of a Note Edge 2, and who knows what else. Even the tablet line seems to be business-as-usual with two-different variants of the Tab A (with S-pen and without), the just announced Tab E, and the pending Galaxy Tab S2.
Any thoughts on the Galaxy A8? Does it look better than the S6? Any takers, or at lease people interested in what the A9 might be?

















