Is AT&T already testing the Galaxy S5?
According to @evleaks, which is one of the most reliable sources around, AT&T has already begun to test the Samsung Galaxy S5 in its labs. We know the Galaxy S4 was unveiled in March of this year and later available in April. So it is unlikely to hear anything “official” about the S5 until February. Now we all know that rumors are rumors, but what do you think?
Are you holding out for the “Next Best Thing”? Let us know below!
Source: Phone Arena
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Samsung has its own 105-inch, ultrawidescreen UHD TV to show at CES
Samsung couldn’t possible let its Korean rival LG jump ahead in the race to produce astoundingly large super high res televisions we can’t afford, and as such has unveiled its own 105-inch, ultrawide, ultra high definition TV. It will be at CES, just like the model LG announced earlier tonight, and while it’s unlikely to fit in our living rooms — or budgets — we’re planning on taking a closer look as soon as possible. After apparently fading out late last year, it appears the ultrawidescreen 21:9 format is also suddenly hot again, at least for these demo models, matching the IMAX-style curvature of these screens. The pixel count is a stunning 5,120 x 2,160, and Samsung is already claiming this one is “the world’s most curved.”
Filed under: Home Entertainment, HD, Samsung
Source: Samsung Tomorrow
Samsung to introduce a 10.5 inch tablet at CES?
Yesterday, we learned about some new rumors about the Samsung Galaxy S5, and now it’s time to hear about the tablet Samsung is planning to introduce at the CES 2013. Back in May, we heard about the ‘flexible’ tablet Samsung is planning to introduce, but is it really what Samsung is planning to introduce? Well, ETNews believes that Samsung will introduce a 10.5-Inch tablet with an AMOLED display. We will hopefully see it at the CES next month.
Also the first ever AMOLED tablet, the Galaxy Tab 7.7, didn’t do well in the market. And on the other hand, Samsung smartphones are doing really well, so Samsung has decided to focus on their tablet strategy this year.
What do you think Samsung is planning to unveil at the CES? Tell us about it in the comment box below.
Via: Sammobile
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Daily Roundup: Samsung’s sound lab, the gadgets of 2013, HFR movies 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.

Samsung is reshaping its identity, one note at a time
Samsung treats sound as key to its identity — a melody or a water drop is as important as the company logo. But why does the company feel that way, and what is it doing to improve its audio experience? We visited its Sound Lab to find out.

On the Gadget Table: the products that defined 2013
The past year has been chock-full of technology launches, ranging from game systems to smart eyewear to tablets. Which ones will we still be talking about next year, however? We’ve brought back a classic Engadget Show segment, On the Gadget Table, to reminisce about the most memorable devices of 2013.

The Desolation of Smaug shows Peter Jackson still hasn’t perfected HFR
Peter Jackson pioneered high frame rate (HFR) movie-making techniques with the first part of his Hobbit movie trilogy, but his approach left plenty of room for improvement. The Desolation of Smaug promises to fix that with a more film-like quality. We went to the theater to learn whether Jackson has solved HFR’s technical woes.

Microsoft will have a new CEO ‘in the early part of 2014′
Microsoft said that it would find a replacement for Steve Ballmer by August next year, but we likely won’t have to wait that long. The crew in Redmond now expects to have a new CEO in early 2014, and it’s down to 20 candidates for the top spot.
Filed under: Cellphones, Misc, Home Entertainment, Software
Samsung Galaxy S5 to have QHD and Iris scanner?
In past few weeks, we have heard a lot of rumors about the upcoming Samsung Galaxy S5. Like it will have an aluminium unibody, it will be launched in two versions and just few days ago, we heard that it will come with a PLS LCD display. But now we are hearing something else, that instead of the PLS LCD, the S5 will come with a QHD display with a resolution of 2560×1440, and it will be Samsung’s first ever smartphone with such display. However, Oppo Find 7 will be the first ever smartphone with a QHD display.
Also, the Galaxy S5 will feature a new security method known as the Iris technology – a scanner that scans user eyes as a security measure. Well, a 4GB RAM, ultra HD display, and a next-generation security technology on a smartphone? I will take that rumor with a grain of salt.
We are hearing a lot about the Galaxy S5, and the rumors will keep coming until unless the cat is out of the bag. So, what are your thoughts about the upcoming Samsung flagship? Will it be the best a Samsung smartphone can get?
Source: ZDNet
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Samsung to introduce 4 tablets in early 2014, report says
Samsung is rumored to release 4 new tablets… just in Q1!
When you release as many devices as Samsung in any given year, there are bound to be a slew of rumors that seem like they never stop. According to SAMMOBILE, Samsung could debut at least 4 different tablets at the beginning of 2014.
A lot of the time, a big percentage of devices released by Samsung never make it to the United States, so it might not seem like its raining tablets like we’d hope. However, it should come to no surprise that we are getting our fare share of variety from the tech giant. It is rumored that the Galaxy Tab 3 Lite could be introduced, making it the cheapest Samsung tablet yet. Another rumored variant is a 12.2-inch Galaxy Note, and a 13.3-inch tablet as well.
All of these rumors would be great to see, especially because Q1 isn’t that far away!
Source: SAMMOBILE
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Samsung is reshaping its identity one note at a time
A car barrels across a highway, accompanied by a gently stirring orchestral movement. Wait, it speeds away in silence. Actually, it’s careering along to a rapid drumbeat and a brutal string arrangement, suggesting there’s trouble ahead. That’s how Samsung’s Joong-Sam Yun prefaced our meeting at the company’s Sound Lab in Korea, overlapping different backing tracks to a TV show opening and highlighting the drastic effect audio can have and warming up to how his team is trying to bring a similar aural clout to the company’s devices.
Samsung’s Galaxy S series has become known as the iPhone rival, no doubt magnified by the ongoing legal tussles between Samsung and Apple, and its own ads for the Galaxy S III. Becoming arguably the most visible (and successful) Android smartphone maker has made it a magnet for criticism, fair or otherwise. Despite multiple critically and commercially well-received smartphones, dominating the TV market and spending $10.8 billion a year on R&D, it seems the Korean company hasn’t quite achieved the identity it wants. Now, with an eye on changing consumer perception, the company has turned to sound design to make Samsung distinctly recognizable to your ears.
Aside from shifting to studio recording and increasingly sophisticated methods aimed at making its ringtones and start-up melodies unique, Samsung’s Sound Lab is also tasked with testing and creating new uses for haptic technology — another effort that the company hopes will ensure its future mobile products maintain that smartphone market share.
The department has existed for decades, but its output was previously dedicated to more by-the-book digital audio work, pulling from a huge catalog of generic Foley sounds (everyday sounds, reproduced in a studio) when needed. However, two years ago, when it came to developing the audio for the Galaxy S III, the Sound Lab needed to deliver a more natural, less “cold” sound to go alongside new hardware “inspired by nature.” It had to deliver something different that would make its new smartphone undeniably Samsung-made.
Early feedback said that recordings “sounded like they came from the toilet.”
Foley recording techniques suddenly came back to the fore, because the sound bank Samsung used wasn’t unique. So, the engineers and designers at the lab got out the glassware, some mics and varying quantities of liquid in an effort to make their very own nature-inspired sound library. The splash notification sound you heard on the Galaxy S III isn’t actually water. It’s not milk or yogurt either (though these were both tested); but orange juice. Samsung’s explained this before, but the sound team admitted that the eventual sounds took some revising: Early feedback suggested that recordings “sounded like they came from the toilet.”
“We fell into a panic,” Yun admits.
The team returned to the studio and tweaked both the Foley recording and how it sounded on the device. The resulting natural soundtrack that peppered the Galaxy S III might still have a slight ring of domestic plumbing, but it remained a statement of intent as the company offered more resources to its sound design arm.
“[The company] wanted to add emotional value; that was why they hired sound designers,” Yun said. “Recording sounds via orchestra? Ten years ago, this would have been impossible, but we can [now] present a high-quality … emotional sound.”

The practice of sonic branding (as it’s referred to at its most insipid level) is familiar territory for other Top 10 Global Brands, where the likes of McDonald’s and Microsoft have their own unmistakable audio identity. Samsung wants the same and the de facto ringtone melody on Galaxy phones reappears on other devices, is repurposed for backing music in its own retail stores and is even put to work at the company’s big press launches.
We’re not sold on the notion that a lone notification or ringtone can ever bring a tear to our eyes, but it’s hard to argue with the fact that Samsung’s seven-note ear worm and those nature-inspired notifications are creeping into the public consciousness — a watery swipe-to-unlock at Starbucks, a splash sound in the middle of a crowded train. It helps that the rest of the built-in ringtones are simply higher quality than what’s come before.
2011
2013
Under Yun’s supervision, Samsung’s signature melody, “Over The Horizon,” (embedded above) has made its way into most of the company’s smartphones since the Galaxy S. Yun previously penned music arrangements for commercial films and brought that experience with him to Samsung. The team now makes its compositions with real musicians, rather than using digital sounds, as it did in years past. It doesn’t matter how rich or lilting a composition sounds on a digital piano; transform those into a live performance and you immediately elevate whatever sentiment or emotional reaction that was being aimed for.
The team reaffirms that its new identity is focused on consistency across Samsung Electronics’ myriad products — a sound that says, “This is a Samsung product.” It’s something the company reckons will only increase in importance as it continues to expand and push smart appliances and home systems.
There’s huge potential in haptic tech, although anything groundbreaking might be a ways off.
But making products “sound” Samsung (in a traditional sense of the word) is only a portion of the lab’s goal. It’s also heavily involved with the development of “non-visual sound,” like haptic and vibrational technology. Along those lines, it’s currently readying an entire UX aimed at users with disabilities in addition to rolling out further haptic features and enhancements on its smart devices. The efforts here mark another attempt to separate Samsung’s consumer tech from its rivals, to offer something that users won’t get elsewhere. However, the Sound Lab will have to push deeper than what we’ve seen so far.

Samsung’s Galaxy Note 3 offers unique vibrational feedback to the stylus for different (digital) pens, which is meant to bring the writing experience closer to paper, but it’s hardly a killer feature. Development is treading carefully, and we’re told that any expansion will require “in-depth study” with regard to the strength and frequency of haptic notifications. The haptics found in the Galaxy Gear prove a good example. Because the wearable attaches directly to your wrist, it meant halving both the ringing volume and haptic feedback for the company’s first smartwatch. According to its research, the average distance between the wrist and the ear is 50cm, while your smartphone (in your pocket or on the desk) is about a meter away.
There’s huge potential in haptic tech, although anything groundbreaking might be a ways off. “Our homework is to work out to what extent haptic notifications and feedback can be improved. As hardware evolves … haptics will too,” Yun explains. If Samsung gets it right, it might not be all that disparate from what it’s trying to achieve with its ever-adapting anthem: something that could define the company and its future.
Richard Lai contributed to this report.
Filed under: Cellphones, Tablets, Software, Mobile, Samsung
Samsung debuts redesigned GamePad controller for smartphones
Samsung has introduced a new version of its GamePad game controller for Galaxy and other smartphones. Things look strikingly different than the first generation and now feel considerably less like an XBOX 360 controller. Color has switched from white to black and the analog sticks are now concave instead of convex. What’s more, the buttons have gone from the traditional ABXY layout to dots numbering 1-4.
The GamePad can work with any Android smartphone ranging in sizes of 4-inches to 6.3-inches. You will need Android 4.1 Jelly Bean or newer; NFC-ready Galaxy handsets with Android 4.3 can pair automatically.
Samsung is also introducing a new Mobile Console app which curates a list of compatible games to browse and/or purchase. At launch there are 35 games but Samsung says there’s “much more to come in 2014.” Samsung is selling the GamePad in some European markets and will be available in additional regions in the coming weeks. Pricing is not immediately clear.
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Samsung expands HomeSync compatibility to other Android devices
Samsung on Tuesday announced that it will now allow other branded devices to connect and sync with its HomeSync storage. Previously limited to Samsung’s own devices, the 1TB storage device connects to HD TVs via HDMI and allows for up to eight separate accounts. Each account could then store and share music, photos, videos, and other content in and out of the house. Samsung HomeSync went on sale earlier this year and currently costs $299.
With HomeSync’s Android Media Center, enjoy the best of Android gaming, videos, and music, or flip through photos on your home television for a full HD viewing experience. You can also use your mobile device as a remote mouse, with easy control of compatible devices.
We took a look at the app listing in Google Play and found a rather short list of devices supported thus far. Here’s hoping that Samsung continues to expand compatibility.
- HTC smartphones : One , ButterFly
- Sony smartphones : Xperia Z , Xperia ZL , Xperia SP
- LG smartphones : Optimus G pro , Nexus4
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Google’s 2013 Zeitgeist includes Mandela, iPhones and a 3D trend map (video)
Google is back again with its annual list of the most popular searches of the year — only this time, with a 3D twist. In addition to old-fashioned 2D charts, the internet giant’s 2013 Zeitgeist includes a trend globe that lets you see what major cities were looking for on any given day. Google+ also plays a large role, as you can share and browse the social network’s most memorable public photos.
Like in years past, 2013′s top searches were a mixture of tech and tragedy. The deaths of Nelson Mandela and Paul Walker led the world’s queries, but many also spent a lot of time looking for the iPhone 5s, Galaxy S 4 and PlayStation 4. Other notable searches ranged from serious matters like the Boston Marathon bombing to the silliness of the Harlem Shake. Want to see more? Hop past the break, where we have both the full top 10 list as well as Google’s year-in-review video.
Top 10 Global Searches
- Nelson Mandela
- Paul Walker
- iPhone 5s
- Cory Monteith
- Harlem Shake
- Boston Marathon
- Royal Baby
- Samsung Galaxy S4
- PlayStation 4
- North Korea
Filed under: Internet, Apple, Samsung, Sony, Google
Via: Google Official Blog
Source: Google Zeitgeist

















