Saturday 5 May 2012

iPhone file swapping: How Apple could blow Android beam out of the water




You’ve got files on your phone and files on your computer, and increasingly the two are becoming equally capable of not only displaying these files, but allowing you to edit them. Problem is, it’s never that easy to send one to the other. In fact, it’s a right rigmarole sometimes. That’s where Ishac Bertran’s ingenious concept comes in. You wanna watch this: it’s the future of computing.

Bertran’s discovered a problem. “Our devices are well connected virtually, through services like DropBox or iCloud,” he says. “Those offer wireless synchronization for data, but the devices that contain this data still miss a tangible connection. I thought that a representation of a physical connection would facilitate a more intuitive interaction based on traditional mental models from the physical world.”

What that means is, it’s easy to send files about, but it doesn’t feel easy because you can’t see anything actually move. As simple as it sounds, seeing something start in one place and end up on another in a fluid transition puts our minds at rest. And that’s where Bertran’s concept for ‘spatially aware devices’ comes in.

WP7 concept shows Android Beam killer

The idea is blindingly simple: hold your iPhone up to the side of your MacBook, and the two devices will recognise a connection. A connecting ring appears for you to drag and drop files into. It’d obviously take a MacBook with a touchscreen to work, alongside some sort of NFC tech, but other than that it’s incredibly smart, and very simple.

Have a watch of the video below and let us know: does this wipe the floor with what Google’s don with Android Beam?

Samsung Galaxy S3 arrives: Giant screen and Siri slaying skills

GALAXY-SIII-4


And here it is. The Samsung Galaxy S3 has just been made official at the South Korean company’s official launch event in London by JK Shin, President of Samsung’s mobile communication division. It’s been the subject of rumours ever since the iPhone 4S went on sale, we can now finally put them to bed. The new flagship Android phone is here and we’ve got the details – including an all new voice command service. Read on for all the news.


If you’ve been following the rumour mill online, the Samsung Galaxy S3 may not come as too much of a surprise: it is indeed the curvaceous phone with a physical home button we’ve seen nestling in a variety of different cases over the last fortnight.

But it should still get you salivating. Samsung has confirmed that the Samsung Galaxy S3 packs a giant 4.8-inch HD Super-AMOLED display. That’s as well as an 8-megapixel camera (with features like burst shot) and the Exynos 4412 quad-core processor that appears to have spanked all-comers in leaked benchmark results recently.

Galaxy S3: Has it beaten the best of Android?

But of course, hardware’s only ever part of the story. The Samsung Galaxy S3 runs Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) out of the box, but it’s no watered down version like the TouchWiz-infused update belatedly pushed out on its predecessor, the Galaxy S2.

Instead, you get a new, much-improved version with easy, intuitive multitasking and a ream of tweaked Android 4.0 features, as well as an improved homescreen that lets you plonk Google’s array of new Android 4.0 widgets on it happily. S-Beam, for example, is Sammie’s bespoke version of Android Beam.

Samsung’s also added a few new features on top of Ice Cream Sandwich, including S Voice, a new voice assistant that looks remarkably like Siri on the iPhone 4S. Samsung says S Voice “provides powerful device control and commands. When your phone alarm goes off but you need a little extra rest, just tell the Galaxy S3 “snooze” – and it snoozes.” That’s on top of being able to play songs and the like.

What’s impressive is that it’s always listening. Instead of pressing a button, you simply say “Hi Galaxy,” and it’ll wake up. It also lets you open the camera, which Siri currently doesn’t let you do. (Of course, Google’s own Voice Actions can still be run, though having two different virtual butlers might prove rather confusing).

iPhone 5 rumours: The latest

On top of that, the 1.9-Megapixel front-facing camera recognises your eye movements, leaving the screen on for as long as you’re looking at it. It’s a feature called ‘Smart Stay’, and it’s genius. That ties in with the proximity sensor too; texting? Bring the phone up to your ear and it’ll automatically call who you’re talking to.

It’s just 8.6mm thick, and is “inspired by nature” – leaves and pebbles, to be specific. It’s made from a new ‘Hyperglaze’ process, making it seamless, and is available in ‘Pebble Blue’ and Marble White’. The Samsung Galaxy S3 has been designed to be an intuitive, natural experience. “It sees what you see, it listens to what you say, it shares what you love. It is designed for humans,” said the opening video at tonight’s event. It seems that, for all the hyperbole, that Samsung’s managed that.





Carphone Warehouse and several UK networks including Vodafone and O2 have already announced that they will be stocking the Samsung Galaxy S3; Samsung says that the 3G version will be released end of May in Europe (May 29th), and an LTE 4G model will drop the June in the US. We’re live at the event right now so stay tuned for our hands on shortly. Although we haven’t heard anything about pricing yet, we’d expect tariffs to start popping up sharpish.

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Motorola Atrix 2: Video Review



Motorola has recently launched the Atrix 2 Android smartphone in the Indian market. Successor to the original Motorola Atrix, which was launched last year at Consumer Electronics Show, Atrix 2 comes with some decent upgrades over the original.Priced at INR 23,000, is Atrix 2 a great performer, find out in our video review.
Key Specifications
4.3-inch qHD display
1GHz dual core TI OMAP 4430
Android 2.3
8MP rear camera with auto-focus, LED flash
8GB internal storage, 1GB of RAM

Via NDTV

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 India License.
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