Showing posts with label apple iPhone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label apple iPhone. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Smartphones 2012: the big players
By:
Ravi Panjwani
On: Tuesday, September 04, 2012
As a frantic round of smartphone launches begins, Matt Warman and Shane Richmond assess the runners and riders.
Last week, at IFA in Berlin, Samsung dominated with a string
of announcements, including a new and improved Galaxy Note. In the weeks that
follow, many of the Korean firm's competitors are expected to announce their
latest entrants into a mobile market that is increasingly competitive. How will
the Smartphone landscape look when the dust settles? We can make a few guesses.
At the top of the market, it is a three-horse race - for the time being at
least. Here are the big three.
Samsung
Korean electronics giant Samsung was once a manufacturer that simply made products that were cheaper than its rivals, such as Sony and Panasonic. Now, however, the manufacturer is reaping the rewards of a serious focus on much higher quality. While it continues to make some 60 phones each year, it now has the flagship models to cater for every market and the scale to make sure that innovative features quickly show up in cheaper models.
Korean electronics giant Samsung was once a manufacturer that simply made products that were cheaper than its rivals, such as Sony and Panasonic. Now, however, the manufacturer is reaping the rewards of a serious focus on much higher quality. While it continues to make some 60 phones each year, it now has the flagship models to cater for every market and the scale to make sure that innovative features quickly show up in cheaper models.
Its success has seen it quickly embroiled in a host of
lawsuits over patents, most famously last month when it lost a $1bn case to
Apple. But Samsung is also Apple’s supplier for many of its chips, and it makes
televisions, excellent audio equipment and much more besides. In that sense
it’s an example of the mega-corporations that we are seeing more and more of –
it’s grown rapidly while Sony, Panasonic and HTC have struggled and often
failed to stay profitable. For now, Samsung is Apple’s biggest rival.
Galaxy
S3
The Galaxy S3 is the best phone on the market to use the most popular operating system, Google’s Android. It’s also the first phone to come close to generating the level of excitement that Apple enjoys.
The Galaxy S3 is the best phone on the market to use the most popular operating system, Google’s Android. It’s also the first phone to come close to generating the level of excitement that Apple enjoys.
Key to the S3’s appeal is a combination of lovely design, a
beautiful 4.8” screen and a fast processor. Highlights include ‘Smart Stay’,
which uses the front-facing camera to track your eyes as you look at the phone
- as long as you're looking, the display won't go to sleep. As yet, it’s not
quite consistent, but this seems like a feature that will be standard soon.
The camera offers decent quality, a burst mode and
integrates with Facebook to automatically recognize the people in your
pictures. And the huge battery (2,100mAh) will get most users easily through
the day.
Fans of the iPhone dislike the size of the S3 – the screen
is enormous, even if the device is thin – and for feeling plasticky compared to
the iPhone’s glass-and-steel solidity. But the sales figures speak for
themselves. Though when the new iPhone comes out users will have a proper point
of comparison
Samsung
Galaxy Note 2
It’s hard to say quite whether that Samsung Galaxy Note is a big phone or a small tablet – either way this unusual device has carved out a niche of loyal users despite considerable press skepticism at its debut. The idea is that this is a highly portable device, with a 5” screen that is better for web browsing, games or watching films than a mobile phone, but also very portable.
It’s hard to say quite whether that Samsung Galaxy Note is a big phone or a small tablet – either way this unusual device has carved out a niche of loyal users despite considerable press skepticism at its debut. The idea is that this is a highly portable device, with a 5” screen that is better for web browsing, games or watching films than a mobile phone, but also very portable.
Uniquely, however, Samsung has focused on how to make the
Note a useable substituter for pen and paper; its Pen allows users to annotate
web pages easily then send their thoughts to other users, as well as to write
notes directly on the screen and use handwriting recognition software to
convert them into text.
A new version of the note, announced at the end of August,
provides substantial improvements – users will still need to get used to
writing on the very smooth glass surface, but it is probably a glimpse of the
future.
Apple
Critics of Apple will be quick to tell you that the company did not invent the Smartphone or the touchscreen but there is little doubt that the iPhone set a standard that the competition has been trying to reach ever since. If you want evidence of Apple's influence, just take a look at the flagship handsets of the mobile manufacturers in early 2007, before the release of the iPhone, and compare them with today's handsets. Then, physical keyboards took up half the device or slid-out from underneath, and now all of the top handsets are touch screens, with minimal buttons on the face.
Critics of Apple will be quick to tell you that the company did not invent the Smartphone or the touchscreen but there is little doubt that the iPhone set a standard that the competition has been trying to reach ever since. If you want evidence of Apple's influence, just take a look at the flagship handsets of the mobile manufacturers in early 2007, before the release of the iPhone, and compare them with today's handsets. Then, physical keyboards took up half the device or slid-out from underneath, and now all of the top handsets are touch screens, with minimal buttons on the face.
Apple has innovated plenty of smartphone features but
they've borrowed some, too. The addition of Notification Centre to iOS last
year was seen by many as a lift from Android. The operating system is acquiring
a degree of tweeness, too, with fake leather and 'torn' pages adorning almost
every new official app. In industrial design, however, the company remains
light years beyond Samsung in delivering handsets that feel meticulously
crafted, with enormous attention to detail. Their biggest threat in this area is
not Samsung, but Nokia.
The new
iPhone
It won't be called the iPhone 5 because, among other reasons, it isn't the fifth iPhone. Apple's sixth iPhone model, which we expect to be called simply 'the new iPhone', is likely to be significantly redesigned, with a thinner, metal, case and a taller, but not wider, screen. Part of the reason the phone is expected to be thinner is a new screen design that integrates the touch layer of the phone with the display itself. In a move that is likely to exasperate those with a lot of docks, chargers and other accessories, Apple is also thought to be ditching the familiar dock connector from this handset, in favour of a smaller version.
It won't be called the iPhone 5 because, among other reasons, it isn't the fifth iPhone. Apple's sixth iPhone model, which we expect to be called simply 'the new iPhone', is likely to be significantly redesigned, with a thinner, metal, case and a taller, but not wider, screen. Part of the reason the phone is expected to be thinner is a new screen design that integrates the touch layer of the phone with the display itself. In a move that is likely to exasperate those with a lot of docks, chargers and other accessories, Apple is also thought to be ditching the familiar dock connector from this handset, in favour of a smaller version.
Of course, none of this is official because Apple does not
announce specifications for its new iPhone outside of its special events. We
don't even know when the launch is happening but the smart money is on a
September 12 announcement with the release of the new handset following a week
or two later.
Nokia
For years Nokia was the largest phone manufacturer in the world. Even as it slipped behind the technological curve, customer loyalty and huge sales of cheap devices, especially in the developing world, sustained it and even saw it grow. But no longer. The company is struggling as never before, with its title as largest manufacturer snatched by Samsung and its reputation for innovation in tatters.
For years Nokia was the largest phone manufacturer in the world. Even as it slipped behind the technological curve, customer loyalty and huge sales of cheap devices, especially in the developing world, sustained it and even saw it grow. But no longer. The company is struggling as never before, with its title as largest manufacturer snatched by Samsung and its reputation for innovation in tatters.
New chief executive Stephen Elop, however, has a strategy
that nails Nokia’s future to Microsoft’s Windows operating system and it may
just work. The idea of the Nokia-Microsoft tie-up is that it gives the Finnish
mobile phone giant access to Windows Phone ahead of other manufacturers, and
they also benefit from Microsoft’s huge marketing budget for the operating system
overall. Microsoft has begun to use mapping technology that Nokia developed,
too, so it’s a two way thing.
Nokia
920 and 820
Eager to get out ahead of Apple, Nokia and Microsoft are holding an event in New York tomorrow to announce their new handsets. It is expected that we will see two new Lumia handsets - a larger, more powerful 920 and a smaller, cheaper 820. The Lumia handsets are arguably the most impressive pieces of pure mobile phone design on the market, and the Windows mobile operating system is innovative, intuitive and original.
Eager to get out ahead of Apple, Nokia and Microsoft are holding an event in New York tomorrow to announce their new handsets. It is expected that we will see two new Lumia handsets - a larger, more powerful 920 and a smaller, cheaper 820. The Lumia handsets are arguably the most impressive pieces of pure mobile phone design on the market, and the Windows mobile operating system is innovative, intuitive and original.
In terms of the devices themselves, Nokia’s Lumia line runs
from the budget 610 to the premium 800 and 900 models. The 820 and 920 are
expected to move the series on - bringing the Windows Phone 8 operating system
for the first time - and adding new features such as wireless charging.
Nokia also adds its own touches to the software, such as
improving the standard mapping services in Widnows Phone with its own, allowing
users to get much-improved driving directions. There’s also an attempt to
encourage users into listening to music on their phone by providing what are
effectively genre-based exclusive radio stations.
Windows
Phone
Windows Phone is an operating system that looks like no other; rather than a series of icons or widgets, like Apple or Google, it offers a neatly arranged set of what Microsoft calls ‘Live Tiles’. The idea of these is that they show more information than a simple icon – so the Live Tile for mail shows your latest message, or at least who it is from, while the one for your pictures cycles through your own images and those from social networks. It means that as soon as you log on to your existing services, such as Facebook and Gmail, with a Windows Phone, it instantly feels more personal.
Windows Phone is an operating system that looks like no other; rather than a series of icons or widgets, like Apple or Google, it offers a neatly arranged set of what Microsoft calls ‘Live Tiles’. The idea of these is that they show more information than a simple icon – so the Live Tile for mail shows your latest message, or at least who it is from, while the one for your pictures cycles through your own images and those from social networks. It means that as soon as you log on to your existing services, such as Facebook and Gmail, with a Windows Phone, it instantly feels more personal.
Sales have not been sufficient to really yet turn this into
the third ecosystem, but Microsoft’s backing ensures a degree of success. As
phones, tablets and laptops increasingly become a way of accessing the same
information, the Windows-maker cannot afford to fail in mobile computing.
Monday, September 3, 2012
Samsung Galaxy S3 review
By:
Ravi Panjwani
On: Monday, September 03, 2012
The day before its official announcement, Matt Warman got some time with the new Samsung Galaxy S3. Here are his first impressions.
Specifications:
Screen:
4.8” Super Amoled HD display
4.8” Super Amoled HD display
Storage:
16/32/64GB depending on model, plus expandable MicroSD card
Cloud storage:
50GB Dropbox for two years
Colour:
Pebble blue or marble white
Battery:
2,100mAh (wireless charging optional extra)
Camera:
8MP rear; 1.9 MP front
Resolution:
720 x 1280 px (306ppi)
RAM:
1GB
Dimensions:
136.6 x 70.6 x 8.55 mm
Weight:
133g
Operating System:
Android 4.0.4
Processor:
Exynos 4 Quad (1.4GHz)
There’s a lot riding on the Samsung Galaxy S3 –
it’s the successor to the 20 million selling S2, it’s the Android phone
best-placed to take on Apple’s iPhone, and it’s the device that Samsung hopes
will cement its reputation as an innovator.
I had less than an hour with the S3, but that’s a lot longer
than people were able to grab easily with the device when Samsung announced it
at London’s Earl’s Court tonight.
The first impression I came away with was not that the
screen was the best on the market, although it has a depth, responsiveness and
sharpness that bests, to my mind the HTC One X, although I wasn’t
able to compare the two directly. Nor that the huge 4.8” screen was too big,
although it’s heading that way. The compelling thing about the S3 is the
package it offers. Like the iPhone 4S after the 4, it offers iterative improvements
over its predecessor, but the total effect is to create a radically innovative
new device.
In among those things is a new sensor that tracks your eyes
– so long as you’re looking at the S3’s screen, it won’t dim or lock itself.
Yes, you could just set the screen timer to longer, but “Smart Stay” means you
don’t have to. In use, the feature seemed to work very well, with a little icon
indicating the phone is watching your eyes.
On a similar note, if you’re looking at a contact, or a
message from a contact, the S3 automatically dials that person when you put the
phone to your face. It’s one less button to press.
An improvement to voice control, called S-Voice, that lets
users control their phone using normal, natural language. So it’s like Siri,
only it does more – you can say volume up, for instance, and the phone will
filter out the noise of the song it’s playing so it can hear you. The S, we
assume, stands for Samsung.
Elsewhere, the phone adds useful features that, for
instance, can automatically share a photograph you take with people whose faces
are recognised, called 'Buddy Photo Share', or display social media profiles
directly on a photograph when those face are recognised. These are features
that are useful rather than revolutionary, but they feel like they will be
obvious standards in the near future. Tagging groups and offering an automatic
slideshow zooming into the faces in a picture are also useful additions.
Samsung, unless the patent wars cause further upset, is setting new standards.
When it comes to features such as S-Beam, which transfers
files quickly between devices by touching them together, or sharing the phone’s
screen content with other devices, these are increasingly becoming more
widespread industry standards, as indicated on the new Motorola Razr, which
offers similar concepts. The Samsung processor is fast enough to allow crystal
clear video to play in a window on your homescreens, which again is nifty, but
not vital.
Are there areas where the phone disappoints? The camera is
just 8MP – good, but not market leading – although it has been upgraded to
offer a 20-shot burst mode and the automatic selection of a best picture. The
firm insists on pre-loading apps which I don’t see much use for – while Dropbox
(including a remarkable 50GB of storage for two years) and Flipboard are
useful, the Music, Game and Video Hubs will have to offer remarkable content to
outplay the entirety of the app store, Google Play.
I didn’t get long enough with the phone to talk about the
battery life – a 2,100mAh battery is big, but this is a demanding phone that
users will have on more than ever before, not only thanks to the screen that
stays on because you’re looking at it. Samsung assures me that the performance
will be better than the SII; it needs to be much better. It’s good to see,
however, that one of the range of optional accessories will be wireless
charging, via a special back and charging pad ideal for the bedside table.
Overall, the device is in many ways much like its
predecessor: does it feel as solid or heavy in the hand as the iPhone? No,
although it’s certainly a lot bigger. Is it a different, superb product in its
own right? Absolutely. On spending just a short time with the S3, I’m confident
in saying that it’s a worthy successor to the globally popular S2. But I also
want to see how much all those new features make a real difference in everyday
use to form a fuller opinion.
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Specifications Of Apple iPhone 4 Verizon
By:
Ravi Panjwani
On: Wednesday, January 19, 2011
del.icio.us Tags: apple iphone 4,specifications,launch date
Availability
General info
Availability
Officially announced: 11 Jan 2011
Scheduled release: 10 Feb 2011
Specifications Of Apple iPhone 4 Verizon
General info
Phone type: Smart phone
Network technology:
CDMA: 800, 1900
Data:
CDMA Data: 1xEV-DO rev.A
Global Roaming: Yes
Design
Form Factor: Candybar
Dimensions: 4.54 x 2.31 x 0.37 (115.2 x 58.6 x 9.3 mm)
Weight: 4.83 oz (137 g) the average is 4.3 oz (122 g)
Antenna: Internal
Side Keys: Left: Volume control, Other
Colors: Black, White
Sunday, January 9, 2011
Google Nexus: Tough Compitition For Apple iPhone 4
By:
Ravi Panjwani
On: Sunday, January 09, 2011
Apple has given unforgettable products in 2010. its range of smartphones rules the market’s top position.
Have you ever wondered can there be something better than the best? Yes there is 1 such option – Google Nexus, Google launching it in 2011.
Today most discussed OS Android by google touches each segment with its flexible & advanced features available in the brands like Motorola, Samsung, LG, HTC and Sony Ericsson.
The owner google is all set to launch its expected rival Apple with its weapon Google Nexus. On the other hand apple’s iOS is running on iPhone 4, the iPod touch and the iPad & ruling the tech market.
The Nexus is likely to have Android OS to launched soon this & it is considered as promising rival for Apple’s ipad. It has currently got nice reviews by critics. It has having heart throbbing features like Slim, powerful and with an excellent screen.
Moreover it is considered to best competitor for iPhone 4.
On the other Apple is also all set to give a tough competition to Google Nexus. Yes Apple is likely to launch one more iPhone this year.
Over & above, choosing a winner will be very difficult here due each & every having their personal taste but the competition will get encouraged with the help of the users by fighting to prove whose smartphone is better…
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