Sunday, 30 October 2011

Samsung will have flexible screens in their coming phones



Samsung‘s new mobile device lineup will feature flexible screens starting in 2012, the company announced today.
In its quarterly earnings call, Samsung’s vice president of investor relations, Robert Yi, told investors, analysts and press, “The flexible display we are looking to introduce sometime in 2012, hopefully the earlier part. The application probably will start from the handset side.”
After flexible-screen mobile phones roll out, the company plans to introduce the same technology for tablets and other devices.
In January 2011, Samsung purchased Liquivista, a strategic acquisition that will allow it to produce the kinds of displays that were announced today. Liquivista made electrowetting display technology, which is used to create mobile and other consumer electronic displays that are bright, low-power, flexible and transparent.
Flexible screen technology was also a focus of Samsung’s in March, when Yongsuk Choi, director of Samsung Mobile Display, gave an overview of the company’s future mobile device plans. At that time, Choi said most of the flexible-display technology Samsung was working on was still in very early stages.
Flexible displays have been on the fringes of up-and-coming mobile technologies for some time. For example, we saw a bendable e-reader from Plastic Logic back in 2008.
More recently, Sony, in particular, has shown some interesting work in the field, demonstrating its first flexible display at CES in early 2009 and showing off advanced, thinner, more flexible displays just last year.
Still, flexible screens aren’t something we’re seeing on the mass market yet; we wonder if consumers will warm to the idea when Samsung takes the wraps off these new devices.
Samsung recently surpassed Apple as the top smartphone manufacturer, shipping 27.8 million smartphones last quarter. Altogether, Samsung’s current share of the smartphone market is 23.8 percent.

Sunday, 9 October 2011

Make a remote connection with any Computer through Google Chrome Remote Desktop Extension



Chrome Remote Desktop BETA is the first installment on a capability allowing users to remotely access another computer through the Chrome browser or a Chromebook.

The goal of this beta release is to demonstrate the core Chrome Remoting technology and get feedback from users. This version enables users to share with or get access to another computer by providing a one-time authentication code. Access is given only to the specific person the user identifies for one time only, and the sharing session is fully secured. One potential use of this version is the remote IT helpdesk case. The helpdesk can use the Chrome Remote Desktop BETA to help another user, while conversely a user can receive help by setting up a sharing session without leaving their desk. Additional use cases such as being able to access your own computer remotely are coming soon.


Chrome Remote Desktop BETA is fully cross-platform, so you can connect any two computers that have a Chrome browser, including Windows, Linux, Mac and Chromebooks.

Friday, 7 October 2011

Sony Looking to Buy Ericsson Share in their Mobile Handsets Development Partnership

In the smartphone world, there are several players out there and many of them are banking on the popularity of Google’s Android operating system for continued success. Sony Ericsson was one of the firms that came later to the Android game.

Reuters reports that Sony is in talks to buy out the Ericsson stake in the mobile phonecompany. That would mean the smartphones would be solely under the Sony brand. Considering one of the more interesting smartphones to come out of the partnership between the two firms was the Xperia Play that is heavily focused on gaming, it's not surprising that Sony want the devices under its own brand.

Right now, Sony makes tablets, music players, and computers under its name and the only products offered under the Sony-Ericsson brand are mobile phones. According to Reuters, the negotiations with Sony and Ericsson have been ongoing for weeks. The Sony Ericsson brand is a 50:50 joint venture and the decade-long deal that started the venture must be reapproved this month.

A source close to the deal that Sony was talking buyout as of Friday. The deal could net Ericsson $1.3 billion depending on what the telecom patents Ericsson holds and uses in the smartphones are worth according to analyst Yoshiharu Izumi of J.P. Morgan in Tokyo.

Izumi said, "Up to now Sony's products and network services have all been separate. Unifying them would be positive. If they can leverage their games and other network services I think they can lift their share."

The Sony Ericsson venture has reportedly turned a profit of 90 million euros as of last year after a massive loss of 836 million euros in 2009. However, its share of the cell phonemarket has dropped from fourth place to 9th place in only a few years time.

Ice Cream Sandwich Launch Delayed - Samsung Unpacked Event Cancelled


Google and Samsung mysteriously pulled the plug Friday on the expected release of a new version of the Android operating system code named Ice Cream Sandwich (ICS).

The new release of Android is highly anticipated because it is expected to tie the smartphone version of the operating system, known as Gingerbread, and the tablet flavor, called Honeycomb.
An event billed as "Samsung Mobile Unpacked" was scheduled by Google and Samsung for next Tuesday at the CTIA show in San Diego where ICS and a new Samsung phone running it were expected to be unveiled. However, the companies have canceled the event.
“Samsung and Google decide to postpone the new product announcement at CTIA Fall," the companies said in a statement. "We agree that it is just not the right time to announce a new product. New date and venue will be shortly announced."
According to a Google spokesperson, the event was cancelled out of respect for Steve Jobs' passing.
Even with the postponement, the companies still have plenty of time to fulfill Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt's promise that ICS will be released in the October/November time frame.
The companies' announcement coincides with release of a video purportedly showing the new Samsung ICS phone in action. The phone, referred to by some Android watchers as the Nexus Prime or Galaxy Nexus, doesn't have any physical or capacitive buttons. Instead, they've been replaced by on-screen icons. In addition, the appearance of widgets on the device is similar to their appearance in Honeycomb.
Although Google has kept its cards close to its vest about ICS, a number of things have been reported about it.
Widgets will be richer and resizable, as they are in the tablet version of Android.
More multitasking will be added to the system and the OS will be open source.
The system will be tailored to take advantage of devices that use the Texas Instrument's OMAP chip.
As with any Android upgrade, what Android devices will be eligible for the new system will remain with the manufacturers, but two good bets for the upgraded OS are the Samsung Nexus S and the Motorola Xoom.

Samsung's new phone revelation at Samsung Unpacked Event : Samsung Galaxy Nexus

The Samsung Galaxy Nexus has apparently leaked on video, with the first live shot of the Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich smartphone emerging ahead of its official launch next Tuesday. The video shows the 4.65-inch Android handset in action, according to the video uploaded by Mobilissimo, while screenshots purportedly from the Galaxy Nexus seemingly confirm that Ice Cream Sandwich will be Android 4.0.


The specifications are not still not very clear but what could be expected is a 1.2 or 1.5 GHz Texas Instruments dual core processor, 4.65-inch AMOLED curved screen (diagonally), 8 Mega Pixel Camera, 1GB RAM, 32GB of inbuilt Media storage.


All the rumors in the air will be cleared in the Samsung Unpacked event on coming Tuesday. So be patient until then.

Thursday, 6 October 2011

India Develops World's Cheapest Tablet "Aakash"



India launched what it dubbed the world's cheapest tablet computer Wednesday, to be sold to students at the subsidized price of $35 and later in shops for about $60.
Most of India's 1.2 billion people are poor and products such as Apple Inc's iPad are beyond the reach even of many in the fast-growing middle class.
"The rich have access to the digital world, the poor and ordinary have been excluded. Aakash will end that digital divide," Telecoms and Education Minister Kapil Sibal said.
The government is buying the first units of the lightweight touch-screen device, called Aakash, or "sky" in Hindi, for $50 each from a British company which is assembling the web-enabled devices in India.
A pilot run of 100,000 units will be given to students for free, with the first 500 handed out at the launch to a mixed response. It supports video conferencing, has two USB ports and a three-hour battery life but some users said it was slow.
India has a reputation for creating affordable products that are easy to use and sturdy enough to handle its rugged environment -- from Tata Motors' $2,000 Nano car to generic versions of pharmaceuticals.
Two years in development, the paperback book-sized Aakash may help the government's goal of incorporating information technology in education, although critics were doubtful of its mass appeal.
Despite being a leader in software and IT services, India trails fellow BRIC nations Brazil, Russia and China in the drive to get the masses connected to the Internet and mobile phones, a report by risk analysis firm Maplecroft said this year.
The number of Internet users grew 15-fold between 2000 and 2010 in India, according to another recent report. Still, just 8 percent of Indians have access. That compares with nearly 40 percent inChina.
The Aakash is aimed at university students for digital learning via a government platform that distributes electronic books and courses.
Testing included running video for two hours in temperatures of 48 degrees Celsius (118 degrees Fahrenheit) to mimic a northern Indian summer, said DataWind, the small London-based company that developed the tablet with the Indian Institute of Technology.
Rajat Agrawal, executive editor of gadget reviewers BGR India, said the 660 mhz processor from U.S. company Conexant Systems was "decent" for the price, but warned the machine seemed slow and the touch screen not very agile.
"Because of the price there is a lot of excitement," he said. "People might use it initially but if it is not user friendly they will give up within a week."
After first giving them out for free, the government aims to sell them to students for $35 next year. A retail version will be sold in Indian shops for about $60.
The device uses resistive LCD displays rather than a full touch screen and connects via wireless broadband. DataWind CEO Suneet Singh said future versions would include a mobile phone connection, making it more useful in rural areas.
The launch last week of Amazon's Kindle Fire shook up the global tablet market, with its $199 price tag and slick browser a serious threat to Apple's iPad.
Like the Kindle Fire, the Aakash uses the Google Android operating system.
Some of the mainly middle-class technology department students at the event said it needed refinement but was a good option for the poor.
"It could be better," said Nikant Vohra, an electrical engineering student. "If you see it from the price only, it's okay, but we have laptops and have used iPads, so we know the difference."
Some 19 million people subscribe to mobile phones every month, making India the world's fastest growing market, but most are from the wealthier segment of the population in towns.