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Posts tagged ‘Samsung’

31
Dec

Daily Roundup: Tech’s biggest misfires, Samsung’s 110-inch UHDTV, 2013 in review and more!


You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

Tech’s biggest misfires of 2013

2013 was filled with highly anticipated product launches and big news stories, but it had a few hiccups as well. Click the link to take a trip down memory lane to relive tech’s biggest controversies of the year.

Samsung’s 110-inch Ultra HDTV

Samsung’s larger-than-life Ultra HDTV is on sale, for those who can afford it, anyway. The Associated Press reports that this monster’s price tag comes to a whopping $150,000. Follow the link for more details.

Archos to debut smartwatches at CES

In just a few weeks, Archos will debut a selection of smartwatches at the Consumer Electronics Show. What’s more, at least one of these “Pebble-like” devices will cost under $50. Click the link for more information.

2013 in review

As the new year swiftly approaches, Engadget takes a closer look at the biggest triumphs, breakthroughs and failures of the past 364 days. From the Netflix explosion to the rise of wearables, we’ve got you covered. Click through to take a look.

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31
Dec

Chromebooks overtake Android tablets and Macs in US business sales


Estimated US retail computer sales

Chrome OS is at last gaining some momentum — among US businesses and schools, anyway. The NPD Group reports that Chromebooks represented 9.6 percent of all computing devices sold through American commercial channels in 2013, or enough to surpass the market share of Android tablets, Windows tablets and MacBooks. Google’s rise put the squeeze on traditional computers, which dropped from 77.8 percent of the commercial space to 63.7 percent this year. NPD researchers don’t believe that the PC is going away, but they note that the most successful companies diversified their gadget lineups. Samsung’s combo of Android and Chromebooks helped it jump to 10 percent share of commercial sales in 2013, while PC-focused builders like HP took a bruising; it’s clear that one-trick ponies won’t thrive in the workplace for much longer.

NPD's top personal computing brands in 2013

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Via: Electronista

Source: NPD Group

30
Dec

The biggest stories of 2013: Console wars, Bitcoin’s boom and the NSA’s very bad year


2013 was a bust! Or so we’ve been told. Whether you follow that line of thinking or reflect on the last 363 days in a more optimistic light, it’s clear the year wasn’t all big breakthroughs and great triumphs. This was the year of government surveillance revelations, fallen giants and lackluster product releases. But it was also the year Netflix took on the studios, patent reform became a real priority in DC and two new game consoles hit the scene. No, we won’t be riding our hoverboards into the sunset at the close of 2013, but the stories that rocked the industry had a profound impact not only on technology, but also on society as a whole. So let’s raise those half-empty glasses and make a toast as we recap the year that was: Here’s to the glassholes!

The NSA’s very bad year

Former NSA contractor Edward Snowden took online privacy concerns to a whole new level when he leaked documents to The Guardian, proving the agency tapped into user data from Apple, Facebook, Google and others as part of its larger PRISM surveillance program. Companies initially denied knowledge of the NSA’s activities, but Snowden’s additional leaks showed that this was more than an isolated incident: The agency collected bulk call records from Verizon and other carriers thanks to a warrant from the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.

Further revelations revealed the UK government also used PRISM to gather data on internet companies; the NSA’s spying covers as much as 75 percent of US online traffic; and custom software allows the government to sort collected data by country. Of course, this is only what we know so far.

Though President Barack Obama claimed that PRISM collected only metadata (rather than listening to your phone calls) and that internet monitoring pertains only to “those outside the United States,” the leaks put both the government and internet companies on the defensive. Google petitioned the FISA court – with no success — for the ability to release aggregate numbers of government data requests, and a presidential task force is currently exploring an overhaul of the NSA program. In the meantime, sites are trying to appease reluctant users with transparency reports and additional file encryption. Oh, and Mr. Snowden remains one of America’s most wanted during a one-year asylum in Russia, which he accomplished with the help of Julian Assange and the larger WikiLeaks team. Sarah Silbert

tl;dr The NSA has your number, and yours, and yours and yours, too.


Microsoft’s mega-tough transition

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer speaks at the company's annual shareholders meeting Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2013, in Bellevue, Wash. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

Microsoft’s vision for itself and the road ahead is clear: It has designs on becoming a “devices and services” company. Steve Ballmer, Microsoft’s outgoing CEO, has repeatedly said as much from the moment he announced his seemingly forced “retirement” in late August and throughout all the subsequent Nokia-acquisition news. The Redmond-based tech giant is in the midst of a difficult transition; one that Ballmer couldn’t quite engineer. As it clamors for an ever-increasing slice of the mobile market — a roughly 4 percent share it wants to quadruple — and folds in much of Nokia to do so, the company’s left to ponder just who will effectively lead that charge.

The Redmond-based tech giant is in the midst of a difficult transition; one that Ballmer couldn’t quite engineer.

Though Microsoft’s $7.35 billion purchase of Nokia’s devices and services business — patents and mapping tech will simply be licensed — may seem to outsiders as if it’s following Apple’s vertical integration, that doesn’t mean it’s abandoning support for Windows Phone manufacturers. On the contrary, Microsoft believes it needs to create a halo Windows Phone product to drive adoption of the platform, which could in turn attract more manufacturer interest in the number three mobile OS. And let’s not forget about Nokia’s Asha line. Microsoft’s already laid bare its intentions to reach “the next billion” in emerging markets and with Asha under its belt, it’s positioned advantageously to do just that. Now it just needs a CEO to see it through.

Much of the press’ speculation has focused on Stephen Elop, former Nokia CEO and future head of Microsoft’s Device and Services division, as candidate numero uno for the role. And given its new slant toward a unified Windows platform and its push for a “first-rate Microsoft phone experience,” the charismatic and able Elop does seem a fitting choice. But it’s not a guaranteed coup, as other potential candidates have surfaced, most notably Ford CEO Alan Mulally and two internal picks: Enterprise head Satya Nadella and Skype’s Tony Bates. Whoever the board finally decides upon, we know that a conclusion to this CEO succession saga is still a ways off, as the board’s issued a vague “early part of 2014” target to conclude its search. Just don’t be surprised if that date slips even further into the future. Joseph Volpe

tl;dr Ballmer’s out; Nokia’s in.


Wearables make a play for the mainstream

Google seemed to open the floodgates of consumer curiosity with the release of its first dev-focused version of Glass this April, and there was one question on everyone’s lips: Is that thing recording? Of course, there were a number of other notable gadgets in the category and a number of other unanswered questions. Among them: Is the world ready for wearable computers? It’s clear that manufacturers are, with Sony, Samsung and Pebble all offering their own takes on the smartwatch, a slew of new fitness trackers hitting the market and the promise of the Oculus Rift and similar headsets capturing the imagination of gamers everywhere. Even Apple’s Tim Cook has his eye on the market, dubbing wearables “very interesting” in an interview with AllThingsD — sounds familiar, right?

Despite the onslaught of head-mounted and wrist-friendly devices, it’s still early days. Google has yet to release a consumer version of Glass; the much-rumored iWatch is still just that; and Oculus VR still hasn’t committed to a release date. That’s not to say we won’t see head-mounted displays on every Tom, Dick and Harry in the coming years, or that mainstream interest in wearables doesn’t exist, but most of the devices we’ve tried on are still dependent on the smartphones many of them aim to eliminate. The limitations don’t stop there. Detractors have pointed to the actual wearability of most of today’s wearables — despite the fashion industry’s fetishistic embrace — and limited functionality has positioned them as playthings of the wealthy and truly nerdy. Christopher Trout

Deep Dive: Living with Glass; Gaming the system: Edward Thorp and the wearable computer that beat Vegas; Google Glass review; Oculus Rift: Follow the saga; Sony SmartWatch 2 review; Pebble smartwatch review; Samsung Galaxy Gear review

tl;dr Like it or not, the glassholes have arrived.


Bitcoin Ballin’

SALT LAKE CITY, UT - APRIL 26: A pile of Bitcoins are shown here after Software engineer Mike Caldwell minted them in his shop on April 26, 2013 in Sandy, Utah. Bitcoin is an experimental digital currency used over the Internet that is gaining in popularity worldwide. (Photo by George Frey/Getty Images)(Photo by George Frey/Getty Images)

In 2013, Bitcoin’s value against the dollar skyrocketed, suddenly thrusting the nascent system into the spotlight. At the start of the year, one Bitcoin was worth around $20, but by the end of November, it was more than $1,000. The most famous names involved with the system are the Winklevoss twins, who have plowed a reported $11 million into Bitcoin in the hope of making a fortune when its value rises even higher. With the advent of Bitcoin ATMs, people can even walk in off the street and swap their cash for the digital money.

Before it went mainstream, however, Bitcoin had a reputation for being used by the more nefarious of internet citizens. Unregulated, difficult to trace and without a central bank to keep things in check, it’s very easy to buy and sell goods without interference, which explains why it was the currency of choice for the now-defunct online black market, Silk Road. With increased notoriety comes the interest of governments, and when Fed chief Ben Bernanke says that Bitcoin may have “long-term promise,” it seems as if regulation isn’t far behind. Recently, China moved to block people from buying Bitcoins with yuan in an attempt to control the nation’s planned economy — causing the currency’s values to plummet from a high of more than $1,000 to less than $500 in the course of a few days.

At the start of the year, one Bitcoin was worth around $20, but by the end of November, it was more than $1,000.

Bitcoin differs from regular currencies in two ways. Firstly, there’s a total limit on the number of coins that can be created through “mining,” and secondly, if a coin is destroyed, there’s no way to get it back, forever reducing the total liquidity of the Bitcoin economy. Now, while dropping a few coins down a drain won’t cause you to go bankrupt, feel sorry for Briton James Howells, an early Bitcoin adopter who accidentally threw out the hard drive that contained his coinage. By the time he realized his mistake, around $8 million worth of BTC was crushed at the bottom of a Welsh trash heap.

While 2013 saw Bitcoin make headlines, 2014 will determine whether or not it’s a flash in the pan. Not only does it need to fend off the threat of rival currencies, but it also has to deal with the pressures of maturing into a stable and useful currency as both profiteers and governments begin to pull the system in two very different directions. Whatever happens, money will never be the same again. Daniel Cooper

Deep Dive: Primed: The rise (and rise?) of Bitcoin

tl;dr The digital currency captured hearts, minds and the Winklevoss twins.


Cracking the Carrier Model

This year marked the beginning of the end for carrier subsidy models in the US, and it all started with “Crazy Eddie” himself, T-Mobile CEO John Legere. Until 2013, the carriers remained steadfastly committed to the traditional subsidy-pricing model in which you get a discount on the phone when you agree to a multi-year contract. T-Mobile, however, made a few key changes to its plans: You can now pay off your phone in monthly increments and the carrier lets you upgrade to a new phone much sooner. The “UnCarrier” strategy (as the company calls it) became quite popular, and the result was infectious — before the end of the year, the other three national networks had come up with similar plans. Unlike T-Mobile, though, its competitors chose to offer that option alongside the traditional postpaid plans. A win for consumers who like choice, we suppose.

What’s more, carriers like T-Mobile and AT&T now promise discounts on monthly service when you’re either out of contract or you’ve paid off your device. This is fantastic news for anyone who’d rather procure their phone or tablet from outlets outside of carrier stores. Additionally, there are so many more unlocked devices sold at affordable prices now: The Nexus 5 delivers flagship phone features for a mere $350, while the Moto G offers tempting value for $179, and the Nokia Lumia 520 proves that cheap Windows Phones can still be solid performers. All of these, as well as new Firefox OS phones, low-cost Asha devices and others, are setting the stage for what should be some intense competition in 2014 for emerging markets like China and India. Brad Molen

tl;dr You can hate the phone company a little bit less now.


PlayStation 4 vs. Xbox One and the year Valve Attacked

At this time last year, Microsoft’s Xbox One and Sony’s PlayStation 4 were still “Durango” and “Orbis,” respectively. Nintendo’s Wii U was still in the spotlight — even selling well in early reports — and Valve had yet to officially unveil its “Steambox” at CES 2013. This year was transformative and evolutionary for gaming, with not just new consoles from entrenched players, but also major moves from players across the spectrum: Valve, Oculus VR, NVIDIA, Razer, OUYA and myriad others.

In January, we called 2013 “The Year That Valve Attacks.” That turned out to be truer than we expected. With the exception of Android gaming consoles, every other major volley in 2013 came with at least a dash of Valve’s handiwork. From NVIDIA Shield’s streaming tech playing nice with Steam, to Oculus VR’s direct work with Valve and the Steam Machines/Controller hardware initiative, this year marks more than an attack by the Bellevue, Wash.-based game company — it’s the beginning of a new era for PC gaming altogether.

Of course, next-gen console coverage consumed much of our time this year. The two boxes are out now and we’ve reviewed each — spoilers: Both the Xbox One and PlayStation 4 are pretty OK! — but let’s not forget all the ballyhoo leading up to their November launches. There’s the obvious (Microsoft’s DRM debacle, Sony’s YouTube cheek), the unfortunate (Watch Dogs delayed, late releases in Asia, $500?!) and the downright nasty (both consoles are paperweights before major day one updates).

We’ll assuredly see even more balkanization of gaming in 2014. Apple and Google have yet to really go after traditional gaming. Oculus VR’s retail headset is on the way, and Avegant’s competition isn’t far off either. Heck, in just over a week, we’ll see what Valve’s bringing to market with help from third-party PC makers in Steam Machines. Like late December 2012, we don’t have a perfectly clear view of the year ahead. What we can see, however, is more exciting than ever. Ben Gilbert

Deep Dive: 2013: The Year Valve Attacks; Xbox One vs. the PlayStation 4: A battle over services, not chips; Xbox One Review; PlayStation 4 review; How the internet ruined game consoles

tl;dr It’s all about the consoles, except when it’s not.


Netflix is the new black

It’s easy to find Netflix’s low point: that mid-2011 decision to go all-in on streaming, and spin off discs-by-mail as its own business under the Qwikster brand. After a sudden drop in subscribers, however, things are looking up and 2013 will be remembered as the year Netflix cemented its place as a major industry player. Outbidding several traditional TV networks for House of Cards gave it the centerpiece for a lineup of original programming that changed its reputation. It’s hard to imagine anyone calling Netflix — the home of several series up for prestigious Primetime Emmy awards — “rerun TV” anymore.

It’s hard to imagine anyone calling Netflix — the home of several series up for prestigious primetime Emmy awards — “rerun TV” anymore.

Viewer demand for Netflix has led to partnerships with several pay-TV services in Europe for placement alongside traditional channels. There are rumors that Netflix is pursuing similar deals in the US, as it chases the revenue stream of entrenched competitors like Time Warner’s HBO. This year, Netflix passed HBO in customer count, and a second go-round for series like HoC and Orange is the New Black will be taken as seriously as anything cable channels produce. On the flipside, former video-rental king Blockbuster has trailed in its transition to the internet and announced in November that it’s closing most of its remaining retail locations.

Netflix’s subscriber base has made it a must-have for anyone launching a device that plugs into your TV — even new consoles from Microsoft, Sony and Nintendo. Now it’s using this industry clout to push a new DIAL protocol that makes streaming video on TV as easy as launching its app on your phone or tablet. Next year, its slate of original programming will include shows tied to the Wachowskis and Marvel superheroes, while in Europe, it will be the first place to watch the new Breaking Bad spin-off. Amazon and Hulu are gearing up to provide some competition with new original shows of their own, but as Netflix expands into comedy and documentaries, its lead is only getting bigger. With more than 40 million paying customers, in-demand content and a reach that spans across countries, the question for 2014 is if Netflix will go from complementing existing channels to completely replacing them for a larger number of its viewers. Richard Lawler

tl;dr Qwikster who?


BlackBerry’s last gasp

Thorsten Heins, president and CEO of Research In Motion (AP Photo/Reinhold Matay)Thorsten Heins, president and CEO of Research In Motion (AP Photo/Reinhold Matay)

For BlackBerry, 2013 was supposed to be a turnaround year. It was finally going to make smartphones that could compete with the best from other mobile platforms. Unfortunately, the past 12 months have been anything but pleasant for the folks in Waterloo. BlackBerry 10′s inaugural devices, the Z10, Z30, Q5 and Q10, weren’t popular enough to stem the tide of customers jumping to rival products. The firm wrote off billions of dollars in unsold BB10 devices, and its quarterly shipments dwindled from 6.9 million a year ago to 1.9 million in its most recently concluded quarter. In its heyday, BlackBerry had a fifth of the market and fended off powerhouses like Apple and Google; it’s now left fighting for survival in niche markets.

Poor sales only served to fuel the corporate drama that began in 2012. Executive departures and layoffs were all too common at BlackBerry in 2013, and the once fiercely independent company spent months courting potential buyers. Even that didn’t go smoothly, however. The phone maker ultimately settled for selling itself to its largest shareholder, only to lose the deal weeks later. Thorsten Heins’ ouster in the wake of that failure was less of a tragedy and more of an inevitability. He had come to the CEO position in early 2012 to streamline the company and keep pace with nimbler rivals, but he was ineffective in reversing the firm’s decline.

Still, there is some hope left for the one-time mobile giant. New CEO John Chen is taking a different tack than his predecessor: He has a long-term plan to restore profitability, and he’s focused on growing the company rather than slimming it down. A decision to hire two key executives in December was a welcome relief from the mass exodus of the past two years. BlackBerry remains on extremely shaky ground at the end of 2013, and Chen may serve as little more than a crisis manager trying to make the best of a very bad situation. Still, he’s the first outsider to take the helm in nearly 30 years and he may represent the sort of fresh thinking that BlackBerry needs. Jon Fingas

Deep Dive: Back to BlackBerry; RIM: A brief history from Budgie to BlackBerry 10; Cracking up: A brief history of BlackBerry’s fall from smartphone dominance

tl;dr And BlackBerry still can’t get it right.


Rethinking the Troll Toll

Odds are, you’ll have to pay the troll toll if you have anything to do with consumer electronics these days. Which is why we’re closing out 2013 with another round of patent reform winding its way up Capitol Hill. This time around, the Innovation Act, which already has the House of Representatives’ stamp of approval, aims to change the legal rules governing patent lawsuits to discourage trolls from filing them.

Under the current laws, trolls can file suit against small businesses and end users who simply sell or use products that allegedly infringe, as opposed to the company that manufactured them. Additionally, trolls don’t currently have to specify exactly how a company has infringed their patents — which makes it easier to accuse folks of infringement. The Innovation Act would let manufacturers stand in for end users and retailers in court, require trolls to specify how their patents are being infringed, reduce the costs of discovery and force those who file suit and lose to pay for the legal costs of those they accused.

In 2011, Obama signed the America Invents Act in an attempt to improve the US patent system and curb the number of patent suits clogging court dockets (and, consequently, Engadget’s pages). It did not have the desired effect. The two years since have seen more patent lawsuits filed than ever, and a disproportionate number of such cases — 62 percent of those filed in 2012 — involve patent assertion entities, aka patent trolls. So, here we are, waiting to see if this new round of reforms can have the desired effect and reduce that number.

Of course, it’s not just the quantity of patent lawsuits that’s the problem. There’s also the matter of quality — patents being granted when, maybe, they shouldn’t be. A troll without valid patents can’t cause any courtroom trouble, after all. The patentability of software has long been at issue both in the tech world and the legal world. And, late this year, the Supreme Court finally decided to weigh in on the issue when it agreed to review a case about patentability of software. Suffice to say, we won’t know whether lines of code should persist within the purview of patent law by the time Baby New Year shows up, but we should get our answer at some point in 2014. Michael Gorman

tl;dr Patent trolls a dying breed?


Capturing Higgs boson

The decades-long search for the Higgs boson came, more or less, to a happy ending in 2013 when Peter Higgs and Francois Englert were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics “for the theoretical discovery of a mechanism that contributes to our understanding of the origin of mass of subatomic particles.” While a preliminary announcement came in the summer of 2012, it wasn’t until several months later, in March of this year, that CERN was finally confident enough to declare the new elementary particle it had discovered was indeed the Higgs.

To call the discovery monumental would be an understatement. Scientists didn’t simply identify a new fundamental chunk of matter. The existence of the Higgs boson would seem to confirm the existence of the Higgs field, an important aspect of the Standard Model of particle physics. It would also explain why some elementary particles have mass — through interaction with the field — when other evidence suggests they should be massless. Initial reports held that the Higgs was “exotic” beyond scientists’ expectations, but further analysis showed that it was actually quite mundane — for a boson, anyway.

There’s still much, much more work to be done. Study of the Higgs boson and field could lend insight into cosmic expansion, and has implications for the so-called cosmological constant problem. The cosmological constant is, for those that don’t know, a mysterious force that Albert Einstein suggested counteracted gravity, which he eventually abandoned, calling it his “greatest blunder.” The idea has since been resurrected following the discovery that our universe is not just expanding, but also accelerating. And, of course, there are the countless researchers out there now looking for a practical application for the discovery. All of this work will need even more powerful tools, however, and so CERN shutdown the Large Hadron Collider and its many multi-story detectors to give them a healthy upgrade. (Though, its PR department is still plenty active.) Terrence O’Brien

Deep Dive: Primed: The smashing science behind particle accelerators; Into the heart of CERN

tl;dr Physics, y’all!


Illustration by Greg Grabowy. Photos: Steve Ballmer (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson); Bitcoins (George Frey/Getty Images); Edward Snowden (AP Photo/The Guardian, Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras); Higgs Boson (CERN)

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30
Dec

Samsung Galaxy Gear 2 and Galaxy Band Set for MWC [Rumor]


samsunggalaxyvgear2-galaxyband

Even though the original Galaxy Gear smartwatch was considered a sort of flop for Samsung, a sequel is already well in the works. There were rumors that Samsung would unveil the Galaxy Gear alongside the Galaxy S5, but new information is suggesting that Sammy will unveil it at 2014′s Mobile World Congress, along with another piece of wearable technology.

The Galaxy Band will be a new fitness checker you workout buffs will be able to utilize to help you keep up with your workouts. Samsung already showed interest in the fitness community with their pre-installed app, S Health, so the Galaxy Band will only take that further. MWC happens in Barcelona, Spain, between February 24th to the 27th, so not too for away to see if this information is accurate. Hopefully Sammy has designed the Galaxy Gear 2 with a little more style, and stepped away from the bulky design of the first one. Let us know your thoughts about this.

Source: Phandroid

30
Dec

12.2″ Samsung Galaxy Note Pro headed to AT&T, leak suggests


The 12.2-inch Samsung Galaxy Note Pro will touch down at AT&T in the coming months, says omnipresent leaker @evleaks. Bearing the model number of SM-P907A, the tablet is rumored to feature a  2,560×1,600 display, 3GB RAM, 32 GB of internal storage and a 9,500mAh battery.  Expected to run Android 4.4 KitKat, the tablet will likely debut in the first two months of the year. Mobile World Congress seems a likely choice, perhaps around an Unpacked event.

evleaks

The post 12.2″ Samsung Galaxy Note Pro headed to AT&T, leak suggests appeared first on AndroidGuys.

30
Dec

Samsung intros 8Gb LPDDR4 Mobile DRAM for next-gen smartphones


Samsung on Monday announced a new form of memory chip for smartphones, tablets, and other mobile devices. In specific terms, the module is an 8Gb, low power double data rate 4 (LPDDR4) DRAM chip on a single 1GB die. In general terms, it’s a much faster memory module than what we’re dealing with today.

With the new chip, Samsung will focus on the premium mobile market including large screen UHD smartphones, tablets and ultra-slim notebooks that offer four times the resolution of full-HD imaging, and also on high-performance network systems.

These chips offer “50 percent higher performance” while using “approximately 40 percent less energy” than the current stuff. According to Samsung, four of these can be combined to create a single 4GB RAM module and that volume production is expected in early 2014.

Sounds like we might look forward to 4GB RAM in the Samsung Galaxy S5, no?

Samsung Tomorrow

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30
Dec

Samsung Galaxy Gear 2 rumored for Mobile World Congress


A Galaxy Band is also expected in the new year

That Samsung is already working on a successor to the Galaxy Gear smartwatch shouldn’t come as much of a surprise. We actually heard a few months back that such an animal was already in the works. But, as to when it’s going to be released has not been made clear. According to the Korea Herald, the next-gen wearable should debut at Mobile World Congress.

Another device expected from Samsung for the MWC is the Galaxy Band, which is reportedly a health and fitness wristband with which can monitor physical conditions such as pulse and blood pressure.

In addition to the Galaxy Gear 2, we are advised to look for a Galaxy Band fitness tracker in the new year. As you might expect, the device would track and sync your workouts, steps, and other health-related details.

Samsung has historically held an Unpacked event around the annual February event so we expect that for 2014. With rumors suggesting that Samsung has a bunch of smartphones, tablets, and other devices due in the first half of the year we should look for a big introduction at one, maybe two, events.

The post Samsung Galaxy Gear 2 rumored for Mobile World Congress appeared first on AndroidGuys.

30
Dec

Samsung’s new chip could put 4GB of memory in your next smartphone


Samsung LPDDR4 RAM chips

Think the 3GB of RAM in the Galaxy Note 3 was a lot? Samsung was only getting started. The company has just unveiled the first 8-gigabit (1GB) low-power DDR4 memory chip, which could lead to 4GB of RAM in a multi-layered, mobile-sized package. Moving to the higher-bandwidth (3.1Gbps) DDR standard should also provide a hefty 50 percent speed boost over existing DDR3-based chips, even though the new silicon uses 40 percent less power than its ancestors. Samsung is only promising mass production of the new RAM sometime in 2014, but it’s already clear about the target audience. The technology will go into laptops, smartphones and tablets with Ultra HD displays, where additional memory will be crucial for powering all those extra pixels.

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Source: Samsung Tomorrow Global

30
Dec

Samsung’s 110-inch Ultra HDTV is the world’s largest, and it goes on sale Monday


Samsung promised at CES in January that it would deliver a 110-inch UHDTV this year to dwarf its already-gargantuan 85-inch model and with just a couple of days left to spare here it is. Apparently rolling out in China, the Middle East and a few European countries first, there’s no word on price (the 85-inch had a $40K pricetag attached when it launched), but can you really put a price on a TV that’s bigger than a king-size bed? That’s right, at 2.6-meters by 1.8-meters, there’s more than enough room for the well-heeled VIPs, large companies and government agencies Samsung is expecting to buy this to catch some z’s on the S9110, and bring a few friends. It’s available for custom orders just before we see the new generation of Ultra HD (including a 105-inch curved model) at CES 2014 next week, although most of us will be looking for TVs that actually fit inside our living room.

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Source: Samsung (Korea)

28
Dec

HTC One 2 Spotted…Kinda! Galaxy S5 Screens Seeing Mass Production! – The ManDroid Show


htcone2-oppofind7display

Happy Friday my Android friends. Time for some of that ManDroid madness. The HTC One 2, or HTC M8, has “sort of” been spotted in the wild. Oppo also sent out another tweet talking about the FInd 7′s screen, and how beautiful it will be. Next year should see some pretty displays. Enjoy the show!

News topics
HTC One 2 3D model
Oppo Find 7 display
Galaxy S5 displays being mass produced
Samsung evolution of display
Noia Normandy images